YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nursing Spiritual Care
Essays 511 - 540
Nightingale as power-crazed and iron-willed. Salvage (2001) tends to believe that these criticisms of Nightingale reflect lingerin...
study also examined the availability of information resources available to the RN respondents (both at work and at home). Their fi...
(Domrose, 2001). However, current trends have developed that have greatly expanded the scope of med-surg nursing, which includes a...
Empirical research ahs consistently reported that when communication between the two professions is good, which includes doctors ...
This nurse that leaving the acute care facility had to do with "When youre constantly short-staffed and feel your managers arent s...
defined as a systolic blood pressure of greater than or equal to 140 mm/Hg) was linked most commonly to individuals whoa re overwe...
numbers of young students came to believe that perhaps nursing would provide an outlet for caring natures as well as support a fam...
promotion can address a variety of nursing clients in a variety of circumstances. For example, Richardson (2002) acknowledges that...
self-knowledge (Simpson, 2004). While anecdotal evidence is not regarded as conclusive, the experience of individual nurses in reg...
2001). Toms condition remained so precarious that personal care for him had to be done very tentatively. For example, brushing his...
age. Therefore, the patient population is increasing. This factor is also influenced by the fact that that the huge lump in the Am...
While CHF has a mortality rate that ten times that of AIDS and is also responsible for far more hospitalizations than cancer, even...
are RNs who are "prepared, through advanced education and clinical training, to provide preventive and acute health-care services"...
students values : This calls for personal reflection. A question that the student can ask herself/himself is how he or she might h...
of this decision. Ecological theory is an attempt to bring in many different influences in order to understand how a society ...
less people living in rural communities and the "more remote geographical regions" of Australia than in urban locales (Bushy 104)....
Kanters position that the situational aspects of a working environment have the ability to influence worker attitudes and behavior...
But, it also refers to the fact that nurses "shape and transform the environment" as well as offer care within the context of an e...
In four pages this research paper examines nursing's metaparadigm in a consideration of concepts including nursing, health, enviro...
and Robinson, 2003). Another element complicating the problem is the fact that in the early 1990s, many hospitals restructured a...
The concept of health also has undergone change over the years. It formerly referred to absence of disease, but now it generally ...
the emphasis to more localised care with the primary health care trusts holding more of a an administrative and strategic role. ...
or other special attention to the wounds caused by burns. Each day s/he spends in the hospital is creating another reason for the...
Statistics expects that number to rise to more than one million in less than 20 years. The American Nurses Association and Monste...
The ever-changing nature of Americas health care system has introduced a chaos in a population that for more than a century has be...
the chaos," she said (Serafini 1490). This nurse further stated that sometimes ER nurses are called to the intensive care unit for...
to changes which in turn can result in higher costs and reduced perceived quality of care. Primary nursing is not a new con...
Understanding that there is a step by step progression, both physically and psychologically, can be part of the nurses role in thi...
Under her wing, Nightingale took care of the soldiers while at the same time training other women to "nurse" them back to health. ...
are under our care. By promoting healthy and better communication between us and the patient, we do not need to involve the famil...