YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Job Satisfaction Nursing
Essays 751 - 780
and can be applied in a variety of clinical settings, as well as in educational programs and research. Orems theory is bas...
for caring for the wounded (Holder, 2003). For the first time in American history, women were asked to leave their homes and act...
This left Mee with little opportunity to connect with these patients as human beings and she started "to feel like a machine," whi...
lawyers, uncaring nurses and pedophile clergy is to cut back on scientific research--a tenuous conclusion at best. Where the art...
viewpoints that articulate their own unvoiced feelings toward their profession. For example, in a discussion in an online nursin...
paradigms According to Parse (1987), the simultaneity paradigm of nursing offers a substantially different view worldview than th...
In the meantime, I plan to study teaching strategies and rationale, and also expand my personal travel experiences. Today as neve...
affects specific individuals, but the future of society as a whole. As HIV infection has affected African American youth in greate...
the mountains in California, ride a horse in the Grand Canyon, volunteer in a cancer center, finish painting his house, attend his...
formulation with others, testing new behaviors, integrating this learning into "new, more satisfying behavior, and then using thes...
as well as those studies that have suggested broadening students exposure to families and children with special needs. This discus...
it comes to orders, medications, tests, transfers and so on. Another problem for both physicians and nurses is identifying all p...
much broader in its application. It is this broadness that allows nurses to reach across religious lines and distinctions. In a su...
of the patient experience" (Engebretson 20). The background provided by a large, close-knit family means that, from childhood, I h...
all aspects of nursing. While the prime relationship in nursing is the one between the nurse and patient, relationships between nu...
are necessary for patient survival" (Kelley, 2005, p. 2). When the blood volume in the body is too low, it activates "compensatory...
in nursing educators aged 36 to 45 (Lewallen, et al, 2003). To complicate matters further, recent statistics show that nurses wh...
perceived self-efficacy (Capik, 1998). JJ explained how Penders theory guides her priorities in establishing educational goals, ...
Family crisis). However, society itself is made up of smaller units, of which the family is one, and therefore structural function...
move in concentric circles of caring--from individuals, to others, to community, to (the) world" (Vance, 2003). Caring science inv...
2005, p.165). In obese children, the number of fat cells present in the body can be as much as three times higher than in normal w...
For example, in regards to nurse practitioners from other state, the law states, "The Board (meaning the Board of Nursing) may iss...
partners in the healthcare process. Through training and education, nurses learn to make decisions on multiple issues of patient c...
the nursing theorists that have come after her (Tourville and Ingalls, 2003). The interactive model focuses on the significant of ...
naturally create a prime source of psychic conflict for nurses, which would facilitate the development of burnout. Jenkins, Ellio...
a mentor and/or a preceptor. Mentoring is the "process through which a relationship is established between an experienced indivi...
p. 311). Specifically, this study focused on discerning how indicators of the "psychosocial work climate" affected the frequency w...
nurse working on a medical unit at the University of California, San Francisco Medical Center. According to Kodet, the only thing ...
to work efficiently and effectively across cultural boundaries. This concept also encompasses not only the assumption that nurses,...
illustrates how she ignored the potential for causing harm when she increased the patients drugs; only after the medication had be...