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Essays 1141 - 1170
which a person demonstrates fundamental functioning in their life environment (Jones and Kilpatrick, 1996). In other words, the c...
advocates, providing medical treatments prescribed by physicians, and keeping accurate records of changes in patient status (Nurse...
of a unified health care organization that included both Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH...
recognition of cultural and social influences on health care outcomes. As a result, advanced practice nurses have also become int...
as a facilitator of human resources, but also encompasses consideration of financial resources. These two roles were selected as m...
risk. For example, Mahlmeister (1996) relates a pediatric situation in which a night nurse in a small hospital was expected to wor...
nurses by 2012 to eliminate the shortage (Rosseter, 2009). By 2020, the District of Columbia along with at least 44 states will ha...
in Abrams (2004) article, as the author noted, have been successful in different organizations to recruit and retain talented empl...
regarded as creating obligations on others to help her exercise her rights. An inherent theme that is implied in all of the questi...
at the moment of unconcealedness. She wanted a poet to describe nurses work: not what was visible, such as the emptying of a bedp...
members to students, as state registered nurse practice acts typically mandate a ratio 1:10 (AACN, 2009). Individually, students,...
to increase the quality of care given in long term care facilities in the country, in order to ultimate reduce health care costs t...
and how this equipment should differ for this population: Bariatric patients are typically defined as those who are extremely obe...
Intervention using Mishels theory facilitates the process of patients accepting the inevitability of uncertainty as a factor in th...
of the department and the achievement of goals by motivating staff through the offer of rewards (Sellgren, Ekvall and Tomson, 2006...
population" (Nyman, Butterfield and Shreffler-Grant, 2009, p. 282). Description of farming: Farming is "more than a business; i...
group of health care providers," which means that based on their sheer numbers, nurses have the power to reform the way that healt...
the context of severe nursing shortage, it is imperative that employment strategies are designed to persuade older nurses to remai...
as a central tenet to professional practice (Hanks, 2010). Both the American Nurses Association (ANA) Code of Ethics and the Code ...
Among the challenges facing the integration of EBP into nursing behaviors is the idea that staff, which is clinically competent, a...
utilized 184 consecutive patients. All of the patients who were admitted were provided with informed consent. The researche...
found on the Internet is accurate. As researching a topic using a Web browser is simply a matter of using a handful of keywords, t...
In a paper of six pages, the author writes about research on the problem of workplace violence against nurses. The studies used i...
their coworkers and their employees, because the leader creates a foundation from which the organizational goals can be achieved. ...
relational dyads, and the part of a larger social collective. Family values, individual culture and social constructs all impact ...
a negative effect on patient care. Sara will most likely need to use conflict management strategies. These include using active ...
By addressing this need, which includes rehabilitation designed to aid her mobility, nursing intervention can also have a positive...
prompts nurses to cultivate the "conscious intent to preserve wholeness; potentiate healing; and preserve dignity, integrity and l...
well with Watsons care model. Watson has seven assumptions, the first is that care is demonstrated in an interpersonal level (Geor...
the Internet and also the availability of a patients electronic health record (HER) facilitate nurses providing the highest level ...