YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nursing Leadership an Interview
Essays 3421 - 3450
an adolescent client (Wallis, 2004, p. 59). Data on the development of abstract reasoning skills, as well as of the "recognition o...
appears a simple enough way in which to establish the particular approach toward pain management for a given patient. However, re...
condition, her lack of awareness of her own limitations or lack of limitations in activity, and her response to various types of p...
In fourteen pages this research paper considers how a nursing intervention can be designed to assist adults with PTSD resulting fr...
a patient to keep her own supply steady? Will she make a mistake and do something wrong as a result of substance abuse? So many th...
on diabetes into categories and addresses these topics on separate web pages, as does the first site. The homepage explains that t...
define what other mechanisms are brought into the healing process. For example, Gordon et al (2002) argue that depending on the v...
which resulted in 47 practices taking part and two of these having two patients. The sample : 98 (75 male) consecutive patients w...
The metaparadigms of nursing represent common concepts that are accepted throughout the profession and across international bounda...
In five pages this research paper takes a nursing perspecitve regarding the elderly's physical changes and increased dependence th...
In 8 pages the erogenous and nursing significance of breasts and the freedom and oppression they represent to Sethe are the focus ...
This paper addresses the ways in which the nursing field may benefit from a further understanding of feminist theory. This five p...
suggestions for future action in regards to this problem. Section A: Problem identification The Problem and its importance The G...
In six pages this paper argues that time issues do not allow nurses to become mentors. Seven sources are cited in the bibliograph...
In twelve pages this paper examines nursing in terms of various rationalistic and naturalistic paradigms. Seventeen sources are c...
their own condition. Judkins and Ingram (2002) designed a self-paced learning module in order to determine whether knowledge relat...
"significant anxiety, particularly before they discover the most effective symptom management" (Moloney, et al, 2001, p. 19). In o...
and allows the receiver to observe non-verbal cues as to the messages meaning. Feedback "reports back to the sender that the recei...
is a very important consideration in nursing. Indeed, some four thousand of so documents were published annually about pain in th...
In three pages this research paper discusses how humor can be a modality that assists nurses in patient care as well as self care....
be more enlightening and convey a more precise meaning than an extended descriptive passage. At this point, the student researchin...
for the precise coding of medication in order to avoid the errors listed above (Woods and Doan-Johnson, 2002). Cohen, Robinson and...
in 2000, allowing a long comment period before the final rule was issued in February 2003. Five rules were published in 199...
or chronic illness; however, nurse practitioners also have additional intensive education that involves risk reduction and prevent...
help each other by merely listening and offering words of encouragement. My psychologist friend firmly believed that lifestyle ch...
runs $127 on average (Cummings, 2002). The goal of the ALF is to help senior citizens maintain as much independence as possible wi...
the risk of medical errors, such as dispensing the wrong medication or the wrong dose (Nursing overtime, 2004). The study, which w...
thinks is, to a certain extent, a result of genetic influences; however, this capacity is also highly influenced by the process o...
10 years ago, the Christian Science Monitor, in covering an article about child care workers and the poverty-level wages they rece...
These authors conducted a large study of 3,830 individuals consisting of 17.8 percent nurses, 21.8 percent physicians, 29.6 percen...