YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Overview of Executive Nursing
Essays 421 - 450
considered one of a number of high stress jobs, and stress is problematic, causing inefficiencies, high staffing turnover rates an...
the central problem is often the inappropriate use of unlicensed personnel in the workplace setting. Though nurse mangers are ins...
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...
then CEO Don Carty apologized to the unions, explaining he had erred in not telling unions about the executive compensation packag...
Colorado/Utah and 3.7 percent of the hospitalizations occurring in New York resulted incurred adverse events (Dunn 45). Death occu...
of anxiety, and relate these to nursing studies, protocols for care and general theory and practice. As a result, this study will...
the medical profession as a whole. Nurses themselves face a number of concerns in the performance of their jobs in organ transpla...
not quite so obvious (Priem and Rosenstein, 2000). But the point is, the CEO has a variety of tools from which to...
required qualified, competent staff. This resulted in the establishment of training schools for nurses (Formal training, 2005). Un...
not money" (Collings, 1997; p. 52). The sentiment was true long before the 1980 survey, and its persistence over time likely woul...
result that nursing pays well enough to support a family now, which is in great contrast to conditions in the distant past. The p...
Physicians occupy center stage in this modern-day morality play and remain the central focus of most analytical investigations. P...
leadership training, including training that focuses on motivational elements, communication skills, and the development of leader...
in young people (age 15-24) and 40% include women ? Newborns comprise 600,000 of the newly infected people ? More than 500,000...
in scientific reasoning that she changed the face of nursing. She made use of statistical analysis in order to demonstrate the way...
paradigms According to Parse (1987), the simultaneity paradigm of nursing offers a substantially different view worldview than th...
In the meantime, I plan to study teaching strategies and rationale, and also expand my personal travel experiences. Today as neve...
affects specific individuals, but the future of society as a whole. As HIV infection has affected African American youth in greate...
the mountains in California, ride a horse in the Grand Canyon, volunteer in a cancer center, finish painting his house, attend his...
formulation with others, testing new behaviors, integrating this learning into "new, more satisfying behavior, and then using thes...
viewpoints that articulate their own unvoiced feelings toward their profession. For example, in a discussion in an online nursin...
lawyers, uncaring nurses and pedophile clergy is to cut back on scientific research--a tenuous conclusion at best. Where the art...
This left Mee with little opportunity to connect with these patients as human beings and she started "to feel like a machine," whi...
There is, in fact, an ongoing shortage of well-trained, competent, nurses. This shortage could be expected to intensify beginning...
and can be applied in a variety of clinical settings, as well as in educational programs and research. Orems theory is bas...
In a paper consisting of twenty five pages that includes an annotated bibliography of nine pages the addition of a staff nurse pra...
In eight pages this paper discusses holistic practice in terms of nursing's role, spirituality, and what mental health means. Sev...
effectiveness has been studied extensively, and that studies consistently conclude that NP-based care is comparable to that origin...