YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nurse Practitioner Perceptions
Essays 361 - 390
the developed world primarily embrace a democratic process that have paved the way for several other countries to follow this patt...
hundred years of managed care Zieman steps backward in chapter 2 and offers a discussion of the history of prepaid health plans i...
to body changes due to issues of self-image and acceptance speaks to a very vulnerable group of individuals whose focus is more up...
individual women (Walker. 1990). It is my belief that we live within a culture that has created inherent inequities based on gend...
This research paper examines various aspect of the Affordable Care Act within the context of the need for national health coverage...
While CHF has a mortality rate that ten times that of AIDS and is also responsible for far more hospitalizations than cancer, even...
nurses should understand these patients thoroughly, "who they are, where they live and with whom, their current health status and ...
"interactive, systems, and developmental" approaches (Tourville and Ingalls 21). The systems model of nursing perceives the meta...
endeavor. Nursing in any context requires a detailed knowledge of individual patients. Specifically, a forensic nurse will have a...
The paper begins by briefly identifying and explaining three of the standard change theory/models. The stages of each are named. T...
It is well known that there is a significant shortage of registered nurses that will continue to grow. There is a difference of op...
expectancy is increasing and more people are surviving serious illness and living longer with chronic illness. At the same time, t...
(2003) gives the example of an nurse assigned to a busy intensive care unit (ICU) began experiencing clear signs of traumatic stre...
the "niche were multiple members encounter and respond to disease and illness across the life course" (Denham, 2003, p. 143). Nurs...
the nurse is uncertain of which tasks are appropriate to delegation, as well as the skill level of UAPs, their reluctance becomes ...
12-21, live relatively sedentary lives, as they are not active enough to successfully maintain good health (Covelli, 2007). The in...
to five-times the risk for CHD, which contrasts sharply with the double risk encountered in African American men. There is also a ...
a peaceful death among terminal patients. HSBs of specific groups of any size - whether large or small - are positively related t...
Background/Review of Literature The eight articles/studies that constitute this literature review encompasses several key concept...
in any other state must, as of January 1, 2008, have a masters or another advanced graduate degree in nursing (Phillips, 2005). Wi...
fact that an individual "can be called to account for ones actions in regard to a duty" (Cornock, 2008, p. 64). While responsibi...
perspective, is viewed as "the optimal level of ones potential relating to the environment" (Tourville and Ingalls 22). For examp...
This research paper describes the strategies and factors found in recent nursing research that are associated with achieving acad...
a statement made early-on in the post, which is that nursing has the potential to make a huge contribution to the transformation o...
rituals of this religion in order to offer quality care. They should know, for instance, that an Orthodox Jew is required to wash ...
proven to be the principal reason for nosocomial infections, that is, infections that are acquired after hospital admittance. Impo...
workplace is a critical component of occupational rehabilitation (Morrison, 1993). In one study it was found that employees of inj...
entails job commitment and a resolution to not to waste time resisting change processes simply because they contradict the way in ...
of nursing and by lobbying" both Congress and regulatory agencies in regards to healthcare issues that affect nursing (ANA, 2008)....
be increased substantially, of course, by those immigrants families who would likely be admitted to the country as well. The inte...