YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nursing Practice and Classical Virtues
Essays 271 - 300
relations. Nurses must assess person and environment in relation to their impact on health. Both person and environment can vary...
begins using drugs, stealing, experimenting with sex, and seeking out more radical means of self mutilation. Each of these change...
awareness of the self within the context of the environment grows in association with each other in a manner that allows the indiv...
(Bliss-Holtz, Winter and Scherer, 2004). In hospitals that have achieved magnet status, nurses routinely collect, analyze and us...
significantly as ethnicity and can encompass many different forms of beliefs. Spirituality plays a major role in how individuals...
to reach the disease" (Colwell; 2). The author also examines aspects of surgical treatment, indicating that a particular type of s...
increase; third-party payers strive to keep payments as low as possible; individuals seek to enhance performance or gain the great...
ratio, the mortality rates are 44 percent lower (Degree-level nurses, 2005). Substantiating this research, a Canadian study cond...
now regarded as a crucial and defining component of nursing, as caring defines "nursings unique area of practice and provides dire...
need of treatment following tours in Rwanda, the Balkans and Somalia" (Auld). Mental health problems in regards to soldiers retu...
drivers" than do states that do not require test automatic testing (Murden and Unroe, 2005, p. 22). Most states do set standards f...
Additionally, at the completion of this study intervention, evaluation of results showed that the project also resulted in improve...
Among the challenges facing the integration of EBP into nursing behaviors is the idea that staff, which is clinically competent, a...
to do with how a person feels about him- or herself. Those with a high sense of self-efficacy believe that they can master even di...
Intervention using Mishels theory facilitates the process of patients accepting the inevitability of uncertainty as a factor in th...
staff that can result in moral stress or stress of conscience (Fry, Hurly & Foley, 2002). Because unresolved ethical issues can ...
Both of these individuals have limited education. Ms. A. graduated from high school but Mr. B. did not, and dropped out at the en...
& Kantor-Kaufmann, 2002). The meso level of the ecological model looks at the role of institutions and organizations in shaping ...
-3.14 2.83 6.05 As the numbers indicate, in all but Q3 2009, the number of falls experienced exceeded the target. This suggests t...
to bridge the gap between nursing research and nursing practice, two formal program efforts were undertaken: the Western Interstat...
practice. Research reveals best practices and these will improve nursing practice. For example, nurses knew that people coming out...
from those of education- focused institutions, when the institution in question is a nursing school, there are similarities, as we...
The vision is to be a leader in providing high quality health care services. Their values include a customer-focus and to exceed t...
there is very little information about predisposes people to these episodes (Swann, 2006). Therefore, for the most part, nursing a...
of course, it only takes one person in any organization to "make a difference" (Sanborn, 2004, p. 8). The second principle, Succe...
care (OMalley, 2007). The aim of this essay is to offer an overview of this problem, focusing on how it applies to a specific ho...
beliefs and worldview of the nurse. Salladay (2006) in her review of A Christian Vision of Nursing Practice by Mary M. Doornbos,...
the following: In my practice setting, a major barrier against using EBP is that it takes an inordinate amount of time. This is...
not only relates to the societal restrictions with which women had to contend in regards to their expected societal roles, but it ...
Baumann, et al, in 1995, which was purely qualitative. The point is that through qualitative research, data was provided that can ...