YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nursing Medical Vocabulary
Essays 1591 - 1620
nurses considering returning to school for a Masters of Science in Nursing (MSN), the perceived barriers include issues directly r...
the condition. More frequently it is the healthcare system which is both exposed to the condition and thus responsible for detect...
In six pages this tutorial presents information on how to create a nursing instruction plan for how wounds can be self treated. F...
Emergency rooms are, at least in many cases, the primary health care provider to the underinsured and uninsured patient (Isenstein...
and empowerment must be mutually exclusive. Falk (1995) describes empowerment as a more contemporary concept than advocacy, and...
In nine pages this paper examines causes, symptoms, and results of patient stress in a nursing overview that includes the servant ...
In addition, among hospitalized patients over 65, CHF is the leading hospital admission diagnosis. In 1988 alone, it accounted fo...
quality of a patients life, (4) implementing managed care policies that threaten quality of care, and (5) working with unethical/i...
In a paper consisting of six pages the argument is presented that nurses should be paid not on their level of education but rather...
In five pages a 2001 article by Sarah Jo Brown on the relationship between patient outcomes and nurse staffing according to a stud...
laboratory specialists to obtain the appropriate level of anticoagulation independent of related laboratory reagents. Because the...
who choose to use qualitative methods tend to seek a deeper reality, inasmuch as their aim is to "study things in their natural se...
of happiness, contentment or relief, or something above ordinary existence. The patient should do more than subsist. 4. Care shoul...
patient care" (p. 438). Prior to 1970, nursing training in the UK could be described as rigid and highly structured. After...
Primary Care Act, a feature of both practices is that the patients have the option of seeing a GP or a NP as their first point of ...
their wishes for the patients care. Every nursing home resident has a right to such a plan by law (Stern), and it does not only p...
call for compliance with standardized procedures, health codes, and licensing requirements, all of which have been initiated to su...
"Many changes in health care yesterday, have major unforeseen consequences today. While it is easy to predict results with the be...
Issues pertinent to these five elements include conceptual framework, scope of practice, policy implications and support of social...
their roles. As a result, there is a need to temper the actions of the nurse in the carative environment with a recognition of th...
and the directives of the medical environment. For over two decades, for example, the health care industry has recognized a decli...
governor should strive to at least make a dent in the problem in the next four years. It seems that the most pertinent problems ar...
on a global scale. Therefore, for nurses to succeed in the complex world of the twenty-first century, many authorities feel th...
regards to aiding nursing managers in achieving improved patient outcomes focuses on the current leadership style of the student r...
This paper is an annotated bibliography written in support of a nursing paper examining environmental factors which may influence...
documentation towards the use of electronic medical records (EMRs). This frequently, however, causes conflict among nursing staff,...
being examined from the physical perspective it was also necessary to look at the falls from a practical, social and a psychologic...
falls. Of course, performance measures must utilize meaningful metrics if the performance they measure is to be of any use to the ...
also possess knowledge concerning a particular family as a whole, including the intricacies of its family system, the position of ...
nursing from the time when Florence Nightingale founded modern nursing in the nineteenth century. Since Nightingale, a variety of ...