YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Marketing for Nurse Practitioners
Essays 2761 - 2790
wages and benefits to its nurses that are competitive for its market or that have been collectively bargained with a labor organiz...
proposed method of resolution is to design, develop and evaluate a clinical, evidence-based "diabetic education program to increas...
draw on the fundamental concepts espoused by the metaparadigms. Nevertheless, each branch of nursing theory approaches the subjec...
evaluate nursing care and use research findings in clinical practice" (Barnsteiner, Wyatt and Richardson 165). This survey reveal...
departments (Courson, 2004). It isnt that nurses have not been serving in these roles, they have but today, nurses receive speci...
the importance of taking assessment from a number of different, relevant perspectives. For example, mentors who are conscious that...
also as a result of the environment in which they are cared for, where smoking is banned. Teaching patients may be seen as a funct...
in African American communities in though it has level off and is falling in other US populations (Dyer, 2003). Adolescents are am...
includes strategies that are designed to make the individual feel better, such as "exercise, spirituality, support groups and humo...
many people have these factors in common within their personal value sets, but I believe that the nurse possesses them in specific...
An effective and valuable nurse is one who has sound technical knowledge and experience in applying it, but who also is a superlat...
A nurses dedication and selflessness recall a mothers sacrifice and care (Dworkin, 2002). Furthermore, Dworking (2002) points out ...
declined as "educators, employers and others recognize the need for educational changes in nursing" (Bednash, 2000, p. 2985). Asso...
McKenna (1997) points out that mid-range nursing theories tend to focus on concepts of interest to nurses. This can encompass pati...
In four pages this research paper argues that nursing's image needs to be changed and focuses on accomplishing this through the in...
reasons given by nursing staff for not providing this care (Kalisch, 2006, p. 306). At the end of the study article, in the "Di...
also occupied a role or part in the setting, reflecting how participant observation is both extensive and intuitive by nature. In...
There are different studies that have made a partial examination of the developmental models of clinical mentorship and supervisio...
paying salaries). Patients are going to generally go to hospitals where their doctors are - though when it comes to emergencies or...
transformative perspective because Newman argues that rather than being diametrically opposed, disease and health are merely facto...
activities" (Orems Self-Care Model Concepts) that patients need to undertake to meet their own health care needs on a routine basi...
only one group, no control group. Group exposed to treatment and then measure (Creswell, 2003). Measured participants blood gluco...
was perceived as merely the "handmaiden" of medicine, that is, a service that was there to facilitate the practice of the physicia...
rather than requiring patient transfer to ICU. This plan is consistent with the principles of planned change in that it focuses o...
relations. Nurses must assess person and environment in relation to their impact on health. Both person and environment can vary...
Social Services they have complained that that funding is insufficient to provide for even their most basic dietary needs. Part o...
the environment" (Reynolds and Cormack, 1991, p. 1123). Within this main system are eight subsystems: the "ingestive, eliminative,...
discourse that I find confusing. Philosophy has often struck me as an amorphous subject. Its slippery and refuses to be categoriz...
the plan may be objective where the actual healing can be measured or it may be subjective according to what the patient says (Dup...
quality of the provided care (ANA, 2008). Empirical research studies have confirmed that the risk for medical error increase subst...