YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nursing Article Summaries
Essays 2221 - 2250
MEANING AND CONCEPTS Jones & Krysa (1998) describe the three essential comfort interventions as listening (to...
a list of advantages for patients, which include: * Greater coordination of services leads to higher quality care for the patient ...
five different groups of people whose ancestors were typically isolated by oceans, deserts or mountains" (Bamshad and Olson, 2003)...
a process that assumes that a persons own subjective construction of reality is more accessible than anything else. The process o...
2003, p. 50). Comments went on to say that it is disheartening when they arent acknowledged in any way for the hard work they do (...
(Hammond et al, 2004). Looking at the Memory and Problem Solving items, 34 percent improved, 48 percent did not change in either d...
charted component of my daily patient interaction. However, to remind myself of the other responsibilities during busy per...
open the door to possible problems where mad scientists are creating babies just to harvest their organs and so forth when what is...
where the strategy stretches the company. For the larger company the gap is usually less. Where the company is the leader ...
"a heterogeneous disorder characterized by 2 pathogenic defects, impaired insulin secretion and insulin resistance. The resultant ...
that emerge in therapeutic settings, for example. They are referred to as boundary issues. Reamer (2003) notes that boun...
for nurses who come into intimate contact with clients from diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds. Ott, Al-Khadhuri and Al-Junaibi...
are working, for example, in pediatrics(Sherman 2004). Therefore, she suggests, as many have, that the nursing professional learn ...
suffered frontal lobe damage are often misdiagnosed as having ADD, as the symptoms tend to mimic each other (Shelley-Tremblay et a...
for protocol and for adhering to standard practice. There are many aspects of the job for which the nurse is best suited to addre...
meddling, it further presents an improved picture of Russia. The article goes on to criticize the United States because it refuse...
attending the University of Leipzig in Germany (Tschirner, 2004). The number represented 40 percent of the entire first semester s...
staff them (Ocala, Fla., Hospitals Tackle Nursing Shortage, 2002). The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizati...
in acute care is sensitive about the use of drugs in recovering patients. Exposure of abuses of past years has raised awareness o...
An article by Kofman and Senge is the focus of this examination consisting of six pages of the learning organization with Abraham ...
today, but health care delivery appears to be more of a team project than the responsibility of one doctor. In earlier days, a nu...
as already noted, in the Introduction. The introduction of this article clearly tells the reader what the study is about by citin...
instance, causes "rapid onset of severe hyperglycemia associated with the progressive loss of islet area and insulin immunoreactiv...
deaths each year are related to medications" (Meadows, 2003). The actual number is estimated to be much higher because these kinds...
as business practices, documentation systems, process flows and lines of communication can differ (Blevins, 2001) Home health nur...
the home country corporate tax is 60 percent (Davidmann, 1996). However, in the case of transfer pricing, the home corporation can...
clinical nurse specialist and the advanced nurse practitioner is decidedly hazy. However, Wickham (2003) states that a nurse worki...
afraid to donate organs for various superstitious or religious reasons. Some fear that their participation in an organ donation pr...
percent); * Management by walking around (15 percent); * Coaching/empowerment (11 percent); * Team (7 percent); * Transformational...
life needs to change in response to the patients health care needs, then the nurse needs to be sensitive to that factor as well. ...