YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nursing ED Overcrowding
Essays 1321 - 1350
have "little or no training in fundamental management skills" (Baer, 2006, p. 60). As well as absenteeism, problems with managemen...
a nurse to determine which elderly patients are being abused because a sense of shame or a desire to protect the family member who...
Roughly 50 percent of the current working nursing population will retire within the next 15 years (Mee and Robinson, 2003). Adding...
completing the ranges of study required to attain the licensing level each holds. Aides are not licensed individuals and may or m...
Not only are the direct health impacts to the nurse deleterious, impaired nurses cannot meet their responsibility to provide top q...
and three stores," which served as "stock rooms, milk stations, clinics," etc. (Lillian Wald). Roughly 3,000 people typically were...
(Cardozo, 2003, p. S35). Within a few hours of being admitted to the ICU, Jacks condition was evaluated using the Waterlow risk as...
food, clean water and - most important for some people who did not survive - electricity to keep their life-sustaining equipment r...
one else to do them and she saw a need (Krain, 2002). "She recruited another nurse and began working out of a fifth floor apartmen...
by trying things out)...reflective learners (learn by thinking things through, working alone) 5. sequential learners (linear, orde...
drain on the healthcare system of the nurses home countries. Personal : It is, of course, impossible for this writer/tutor to id...
a summation of how addiction occurs. They then address the scope of the problem, which relates the issue under investigation dir...
by the caring physical presence of this nurse in her last remaining hours. However, the way in which this case turned out saw the ...
in those nursing homes that maintained adequate staffing, but beyond that, the administrative climate of the nursing home facility...
and the effect on the occupational arena. Both articles, however, emphasize that asthma takes a tremendous economic toll in the U...
associated with a considerable change in the traditional locus-of-control can be safely confronted, and professional practice can ...
the term public health nurses" (JWA - Lillian Wald, n.d.). The public health nurses at the turn of the 20th century visited...
basic assumptions surrounding specific topics. My short-term goals include developing Consultants in Complex Neurodisability, a h...
to are not likely to be illicit drugs but rather the same prescribed drugs with which they treat their patients (Texas Medical Ass...
information brochure that described the standard course of care for CHF patients (About Virtua, 2004). The team modified the flow ...
(Link and Tanner, 2001). Research has found that some clients may be suffering from myocardial infarction (MI) even when they have...
Understanding that there is a step by step progression, both physically and psychologically, can be part of the nurses role in thi...
establish policy guidelines. In the administration of medication, "processes have been virtually ignored in the search for EBP" (...
that MCOs develop their capacity to handle changes that are driven legislatively by congressional response to public reactions to ...
how change can be effectively managed and challenges in the transformation of nursing and health care delivery. Clearly, Roys mod...
and with others interacting with the patient. Mezirow (1991) promotes the use of critical reflection in building new knowle...
criminal and social repercussions, creating a punitive response to alcoholism that can impact the views of service providers. Cha...
American Psychiatric Association. The authors indicate that postpartum depression has received a great deal of research att...
led to alter his position. The old philosophers gave much attention to the issue of knowledge and epistemology. Aristotle ...
carcinoma in situ (DCIS). This is also known as "intraductal carcinoma or non-invasive breast cancer" (Breast Cancer, 2004; p. PG...