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Essays 1411 - 1440
a "collaborative quality improvement project" that focuses on PUs in nursing homes as its primary focus (Lynn, et al, 2007). QIOs,...
researchers (JBI, 2008). This section of the site also addresses the topic of "Research Training" and the availability of scholars...
unitary human beings (Newman). This theory is appealing because it acknowledges how each person is unique and, therefore, must be ...
Dr. McCullough is "Director of the Sexual Health and Male Fertility and Microsurgery Programs at New York University School of Med...
disciplined and well-organized care. On returning to England, she visited the Institute of Protestant Deaconesses at Kaiserwerth, ...
due to the fact that these medications lack the flexibility to provide fast hyperglycemic control (Seelandt, 2007). A diagnosis ...
to proper interaction with culturally diverse patients: "These standards provide comprehensive definitions of culture, competence,...
out care. Though there is a need for health care providers as a whole to have a greater awareness of the diagnostic process for b...
time to actively conduct a research study, lack of time to read current research, nurses do not have time to read much of the rese...
members to students, as state registered nurse practice acts typically mandate a ratio 1:10 (AACN, 2009). Individually, students,...
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...
at the moment of unconcealedness. She wanted a poet to describe nurses work: not what was visible, such as the emptying of a bedp...
regarded as creating obligations on others to help her exercise her rights. An inherent theme that is implied in all of the questi...
as a central tenet to professional practice (Hanks, 2010). Both the American Nurses Association (ANA) Code of Ethics and the Code ...
nursing quality of care" (Hart, et al, 2006, p. 256). These indicators specifically indicate that complications, such as pressure ...
from those of education- focused institutions, when the institution in question is a nursing school, there are similarities, as we...
profession is very rewarding, if at times very difficult and even heartbreaking. This paper describes the Good Samaritan College o...
nurses regarding physical touch, found that these study participants used touch as a therapeutic form of nonverbal communication, ...
Advances in technology have changed everything from how patients are diagnosed to acute care to managing chronic illnesses. Techno...
as relating information to patients families. Pugh relates that just thinking about this task made her anxious; however, the staff...
quite frequently, they are seldom defined specifically, yet both terms hold significant importance in terms of their relevance to ...
ensure that any data given is not capable of identifying any of the respondents, although this is unlikely, there is also the way ...
the American healthcare system, the debate concerning whether or not states should implement mandated nurse-to-patient ratios rema...
the context of severe nursing shortage, it is imperative that employment strategies are designed to persuade older nurses to remai...
Among the challenges facing the integration of EBP into nursing behaviors is the idea that staff, which is clinically competent, a...
group of health care providers," which means that based on their sheer numbers, nurses have the power to reform the way that healt...
population" (Nyman, Butterfield and Shreffler-Grant, 2009, p. 282). Description of farming: Farming is "more than a business; i...
distributive leadership models, rather than hiring leaders, is that distributive leadership focuses on methods to develop and enco...