YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nurse Migration
Essays 1261 - 1290
the KA familys ability to utilize US healthcare systems (Donnelly, 2005). KA parents experience with schizophrenia in their chil...
discipline of nursing (Wilkerson, 1998). Examination of nursing theory shows that, on a fundamental level, nursing theories provid...
Beginning in the early 1990s, managed care targeted nursing as an expenditure where hospitals could cut costs. Managed care consul...
impact the treatment process. Research underscores the connection between a "fighting" attitude and the capacity of individuals t...
ventilation. This included placing hip pads with egg crate foam under the patients iliac crest to prevent hyperextension of the lo...
much closer look at the unwise choice to allow HIV-positive nurses to continue their practice. Britain provides statistics that i...
often a factor in nurse/doctor communication. Nurses can bring power to nurse/doctor interchange by harnessing the power of lang...
ability has improved considerably, inasmuch as the decisions I now make are more analytical and based upon a broader and more dive...
education for nurses in the US followed the model established by modern nursings founder Florence Nightingale (Fitzpatrick 63). Th...
all areas of professional nursing. Provisions 1 through 3 address the principal obligations of nursing, which are to the patient/c...
what was said in the first sentence of this essay - nurse shortages results in nurses being given unrealistic workloads (DPE Resea...
showing that they graduated from a nursing education program approved by the Georgia Board of Nursing or from a nursing education ...
factors as culture and even spiritualism in patient care delivery. While at one time nursing was a discipline which concentrated ...
According to one research study, the top five reasons why nurses employ restraints are "disruption of therapies, confusion, fall p...
1999). Elderly patients who are alert, and not declared incompetent, have the right to refuse treatment, which includes turning or...
suggestions for future action in regards to this problem. Section A: Problem identification The Problem and its importance The G...
the disease as well as around the prevention of the spread of the causative organism to other individuals that come into contact w...
that the doctrine of informed consent is "hopelessly flawed--or at least misguided," as it is often not possible to truly inform ...
Sharon Bernier, RN, PhD and President of the National Organization for Associate Degree Nursing, points out that Aikens study also...
The metaparadigms of nursing represent common concepts that are accepted throughout the profession and across international bounda...
on an evidenced based evidence based practice and the development of increased individual accountability in the area of clinical g...
they visited, and some tended to visit fairly frequently (Demling et al, 2002). Patients in general were very positive about thei...
The ANCI Competency Unit 4 demands that nurses accept accountability and responsibility for their actions in nursing. To do so we...
greater demand on health care services as more of them cross that line from employed to retired. Projections are just that,...
the basic paradigms of nursing professional theory are considered within a social context. For example, health is defined as a "dy...
considering this economic downturn, the numbers of undergraduates pursuing nursing careers began to also decline. In 1991, Canada ...
learned long ago the value of yet another Deming (1986) exhortation, that of continuous improvement. By definition, the concept i...
"significant anxiety, particularly before they discover the most effective symptom management" (Moloney, et al, 2001, p. 19). In o...
their own condition. Judkins and Ingram (2002) designed a self-paced learning module in order to determine whether knowledge relat...
define what other mechanisms are brought into the healing process. For example, Gordon et al (2002) argue that depending on the v...