YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nursing Theories Core Concepts
Essays 121 - 150
fatigue is related to functional state. Older patients are more likely to have persistent pain, to experience less relief from an...
change the position before completing three years of clinical practice (MacKusick and Minick, 2010). This research article is very...
cope with ethical situations primarily from experience and only minimally from formal education, which leaves novice nurses with "...
Yet both organizations also observe that, sometimes, it is necessary to use seclusion and restraint, as a last resort, in order to...
This 4 page paper gives an overview of using concept analysis within the field of nursing. This paper explains how different appro...
some determining the study was inconclusive, others saying certain interventions should be made universal and still others stating...
order to infer what theoretical framework is being utilized, and why such a framework is appropriate for the context. This parag...
a peaceful death among terminal patients. HSBs of specific groups of any size - whether large or small - are positively related t...
patient care (Hassmiller and Cozine, 2006). Some strategies proposed by RWJF for helping to decrease the tremendous workload on nu...
transcendence is moving beyond the meaning moment with what is not-yet. Moving beyond is propelling with envisioned (Parse, 1998, ...
are licensed individuals who go through at least one year of formal education in addition to clinical instruction, and the focus o...
as a therapeutic relationship between patient and nurse (Frisch and Kelley, 2002). Other theorists since that time have examined t...
family as it enables the family system to be regarded in a myriad of ways (1998). Here, the family may be evaluated holistically, ...
In seven pages this research paper examines how nursing was defined in the 19th century by Florence Nightingale and in the 20th ce...
old signs of questionable care still apply, however. Unexplained injury or falls, the occurrence of pressure sores, and evidence ...
In six pages this paper examines the family nurse practitioner within the context of the transcultural nursing theories of Dr. Mad...
36). Both a therapeutic and social relationship are featured in the film Good Will Hunting (1997). The protagonist in the film, ...
and continues to do so, over the past two decades, as it was first published in 1979 (Falk-Rafael, 2000). In formulating her theor...
I replied that I could develop a program with her supervision, that nurses were more interested in furthering their training than ...
not money" (Collings, 1997; p. 52). The sentiment was true long before the 1980 survey, and its persistence over time likely woul...
at the moment of unconcealedness. She wanted a poet to describe nurses work: not what was visible, such as the emptying of a bedp...
all aspects of nursing. While the prime relationship in nursing is the one between the nurse and patient, relationships between nu...
perceived self-efficacy (Capik, 1998). JJ explained how Penders theory guides her priorities in establishing educational goals, ...
Family crisis). However, society itself is made up of smaller units, of which the family is one, and therefore structural function...
move in concentric circles of caring--from individuals, to others, to community, to (the) world" (Vance, 2003). Caring science inv...
Aesthetic, the need for beauty, order and symmetry (Huitt, 2004). 7. Self-actualization is a plateau not all people reach. At this...
many of the findings of nursing research have little or no relevance to their daily practice. Im and Meleis (1999) cite several re...
concepts dominated the field of stress research beginning in the 1950s; however, by the 1970s, there was opposition to Selyes stre...
of professional nursing, nursing theory provides perspectives and guidance that aids nurses in achieving their primary goal of pro...
This essay focuses on Watson's nursing theory of caring. It reports and explains the meta-paradigms, caratives, and how nurses dev...