YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nurses Role in Pediatric AIDS
Essays 661 - 690
Smith, et al. (2002) explain that their purpose "was to investigate the effects of therapeutic massage on selected outcomes relate...
will--in all likelihood--result in a professional negligence suit, rather than criminal charges. Suits against nurses result from ...
NAON recognizes that learning and developing professional is a life-long processes and it helps orthopedic nurses achieve the goal...
in death is a wise safeguard. In the early part of the twentieth century, rationalizations abounded in medical literature that def...
nursing care over the past decade and how do they support the argument for a continuum of educational practices for nursing profes...
Rural Nurses, represented by registered nurse and practicing attorney Jacqulyn Hall, filed an amici curiae (friends of the court) ...
over the course of several years of research into the issue. Most styles also depend on an array of variables including "organiza...
much broader in its application. It is this broadness that allows nurses to reach across religious lines and distinctions. In a su...
all aspects of nursing. While the prime relationship in nursing is the one between the nurse and patient, relationships between nu...
as well as those studies that have suggested broadening students exposure to families and children with special needs. This discus...
naturally create a prime source of psychic conflict for nurses, which would facilitate the development of burnout. Jenkins, Ellio...
p. 311). Specifically, this study focused on discerning how indicators of the "psychosocial work climate" affected the frequency w...
partners in the healthcare process. Through training and education, nurses learn to make decisions on multiple issues of patient c...
a mentor and/or a preceptor. Mentoring is the "process through which a relationship is established between an experienced indivi...
different that needs attention, but many have been able to prepare for the changes that are happening to them. Geriatric patients...
relationships, in terms of power dynamics and the initiation and resolution of conflicts. Communication theory is, therefore, impo...
In six pages this paper examines nursing care from the perspectives of nurses and patients as reported by this Australian study. ...
the realization of the "dehumanizing" of patients that led to them being referred to as "Bed x," "Case x" or some other nameless, ...
2002 and allowed for a National Nurse Service Corps program to provide funding for tuition, expenses and a stipend to those nursin...
gives the appearance of increased attention to theory and evidenced-based nursing in an atmosphere of caring for the individual. ...
expressing his or her misery. Such caregivers may have experienced patients who are as likely to cry out, thrash around, or simply...
of the patients in a single unit will be assigned to one RN; the other half will be assigned to another. Another will be availabl...
or understanding when the staff or the doctors have to move on to the next client. Many patients complain that their healthcare pr...
Today, the problem of the nursing shortage has grown to the point that it is no longer only added stress and long hours for those...
techniques or theories as they pertain to the medical world, and it is as if the prison setting is the last place where these tech...
the chaos," she said (Serafini 1490). This nurse further stated that sometimes ER nurses are called to the intensive care unit for...
PG). Society also tends to associates professionals with prestige (PG). According to Lysaught, characteristics of a profession i...
family as it enables the family system to be regarded in a myriad of ways (1998). Here, the family may be evaluated holistically, ...
then transpose and restate it, in order to explain the phenomenon (1987). Then, the identification of content from the parent theo...
most often have a great deal of training and, in most mainstream settings, are also nurses or nurse-midwife practitioners. Many ar...