YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nursing and Health Care Policy
Essays 1411 - 1440
obesity, tobacco use, substance abuse, responsible sexual behavior, mental health, injuries and violence, environmental quality, i...
population" (Nyman, Butterfield and Shreffler-Grant, 2009, p. 282). Description of farming: Farming is "more than a business; i...
This research paper is made-up of three sections, which each pertain to three different aspects of nursing. The first section occu...
This paper begins by offering ten questions that a nurse practitioner might pose when applying for a position with Optum health. T...
This paper pertains to a proposed educational intervention for mental health nurses engaged in teen suicide prevention. The writer...
This paper discusses Electronic Health Records (EHRs) and the role that nurses play in implementing and utilizing these record sy...
The question is whether or not e-cigarettes work in terms of quitting smoking. This paper continues some earlier papers that were ...
This research paper pertains to the nursing shortage and discusses its current state and possible policy approaches. Six pages in ...
This paper pertains to Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) privacy regulations and a scenario that depicts...
This nurse that leaving the acute care facility had to do with "When youre constantly short-staffed and feel your managers arent s...
government reimburses thirty percent of the insurance premiums paid by the patient. In addition to those noted above, the...
over between the social and the medical areas, the care plan needs to look at each and determine the way in which these will be de...
trillion over that same period. Notice Moffits (2006) words: "Under current law." Moffit is referring to the benefits provided t...
training" (Murphy, 2005, p. 23). As a prisoner, the author observed prison culture from the perspective of a participant. Various ...
diabetes in the future, the hospital cannot measure such results. Similarly, it cannot measure quality gains in terms of do...
Nightingale as power-crazed and iron-willed. Salvage (2001) tends to believe that these criticisms of Nightingale reflect lingerin...
are very difficult to resolve; people will seldom change their values (Gerardi and Morrison, 2005). The only solution is for peopl...
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...
rather than the reverse. The mission of this generic health care organization is to provide "comprehensive health services of the...
Effective community nursing demands a familiarity with the culture, subculture, and/or socioeconomic group being attended....
a printer or database. All paths of information must be accounted for, so that these paths and destinations can be secured. Slide...
at wasteful spending as well as waste in terms of paperwork that clogs the health care system and increases costs across the board...
643 Question 1 In...
This section describes how nurses partner with "individuals, families, communities and populations" in order to address a variety ...
because it exerts a powerful negative impact on others around the addicted individual; this is particularly true for children of a...
From a humanistic standpoint, the distribution of health care services should occur in accordance with the principle of equality o...
Health ("Right", 2011). From an ethical perspective, one might also invoke the Kantian deontological theory of ethics to explore w...
Outlook Handbook, which is published by the U.S. Department of Labors Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), registered nurses (RNs), a...
less people living in rural communities and the "more remote geographical regions" of Australia than in urban locales (Bushy 104)....