YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Management of Diabetic Patients and Nurse Practitioner Practice
Essays 91 - 120
This research paper discusses a number of issues in advanced practice nursing, such as barriers to practice, credentialing, the hi...
This paper presents the speaker notes that go with a power point presentation, khaacn.ppt, which includes fifteen side and pertain...
or chronic illness; however, nurse practitioners also have additional intensive education that involves risk reduction and prevent...
certification program (Policy statement, 1999). On the other hand, the additional education required to become a licensed NP may t...
In 1999, Albertas Nursing Profession Act Extended Practice Roster Regulation provided province authorities with the legal capacity...
"become a universal law" (Kant, 1993, p. 30). In other words, Kants main criteria for action is that the individual should conside...
seek the same health goals for clients as in mainstream nursing, nurses in remote locations often cope with problems and obstacles...
In fifteen pages this paper focuses upon a diabetic home health care setting in a research proposal that studies and compares two ...
some determining the study was inconclusive, others saying certain interventions should be made universal and still others stating...
Yet both organizations also observe that, sometimes, it is necessary to use seclusion and restraint, as a last resort, in order to...
This research paper pertains to actions that nurses undertake to aid heart failure patients in regards to self-care management. Th...
This research paper offers discussion of a various issues that pertain to advance practice nurses (APNs), such as their involvemen...
for its lack of market-changing competition (Porter and Teisberg, 2004), but competition exists nonetheless, if only indirectly. ...
this condition. If the student does not have asthma, the student may feel motivated to help this population because of he/she rea...
later adding informational pamphlets discussing heart disease in the aging. My first meeting with Ms. Bross largely was informati...
old signs of questionable care still apply, however. Unexplained injury or falls, the occurrence of pressure sores, and evidence ...
that not only were nurses retained but that everyone on staff is motivated to be actively engaged and involved in the work environ...
cope with ethical situations primarily from experience and only minimally from formal education, which leaves novice nurses with "...
that is, a full-fledged study, the independent variable refers to the part of the methodology that is manipulated and the dependen...
or values. It is by understanding leadership and its influences that the way leadership may be encouraged and developed in the con...
with humanity, that is, to be humanistic in ones orientation refers to the principles of humanism, which has been given a variety ...
factors that have been identified include "diabetes, alcoholism, malnutrition, history of antibiotic or corticosteroid use, decrea...
between those who supported mandatory staffing ratios, based on research such as the study conducted by Linda Aiken, and the stanc...
potential for long term physiological complications as well as long-term emotional impacts. Not only does the type of care needed...
In this paper consisting of seven pages the importance of adequately assessing patient needs is discussed by examining the theorie...
In eight pages this essay discusses efforts to reconcile euthanasia and the Nurse's Code in a consideration of the ethics nonmalef...
In eight pages this essay discusses the ethical conflict between a patient's 'right to die' and the Nurse's Code. Five sources ar...
Dr. McCullough is "Director of the Sexual Health and Male Fertility and Microsurgery Programs at New York University School of Med...
with clear results provided. Quantitative and Discussion articles needed to present information that directly addresses the purpos...
This essay focuses on Watson's nursing theory of caring. It reports and explains the meta-paradigms, caratives, and how nurses dev...