YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Overview of Executive Nursing
Essays 1951 - 1980
nurse-patient relationship, the nurse gives without the expectation of reciprocation (1991). Thus, a patient need not return the f...
In seven pages this paper discusses juvenile diabetes in a consideration of the role of nursing intervention in monitoring and tre...
In eight pages this research paper discusses the healing art from a nursing perspective. Eight sources are cited in the bibliogra...
19th and early 20th centuries. Hughes and Romeo (1999) question the usefulness of education that does not address the growing div...
US shortage has caused many healthcare institutions to look for nurses outside their countrys borders and many nurses are leaving ...
after the exposure to the initiating traumatic event (Stein, 2002). If PTSD-like symptoms become evidence and are intense prior to...
individual, this woman does reflect on the past and has some regrets, but some optimistic comments are made as well. In evaluat...
While these definitions are extremely similar, a differences in emphasis can reflect a differing philosophical stance. The manner ...
the religious fervor generated by the teachings of "love and mercy" by Jesus Christ resulted in a dramatic increase in charitable ...
educators in the past, are lured away from academia by better-paying positions in clinical and private practice (Mee, 2003). Furth...
lives, especially the course of their daily professional lives. We tend to get stuck in ruts where we rely on the same patterns an...
disagree with his wife could disrupt their marital relationship at a time when he needs this support, which is undoubtedly one of ...
appears a simple enough way in which to establish the particular approach toward pain management for a given patient. However, re...
In fourteen pages this research paper considers how a nursing intervention can be designed to assist adults with PTSD resulting fr...
in 1999 alone "returned almost $500 million to the federal government." (Butler, 2000, 1). The first question to consider...
face and chest that it causes, and it is characterized by chills, fever, headache, vomiting, rapid pulse, red rash and an inflame...
all areas of professional nursing. Provisions 1 through 3 address the principal obligations of nursing, which are to the patient/c...
ability has improved considerably, inasmuch as the decisions I now make are more analytical and based upon a broader and more dive...
education for nurses in the US followed the model established by modern nursings founder Florence Nightingale (Fitzpatrick 63). Th...
CP/M, which was shortly to be succeeded by MS/DOS (Alsop 188). The Macintosh operating system offered an icon-driven system that a...
expected to develop some form of cancer "or another rapidly debilitating condition and well be dead within a year of getting the d...
and in 2001 unofficially took over daily operations of Johnson & Johnson as he was being trained to succeed Ralph Larsen upon his ...
ventilation. This included placing hip pads with egg crate foam under the patients iliac crest to prevent hyperextension of the lo...
Beginning in the early 1990s, managed care targeted nursing as an expenditure where hospitals could cut costs. Managed care consul...
often a factor in nurse/doctor communication. Nurses can bring power to nurse/doctor interchange by harnessing the power of lang...
absence of disease and infirmity" ("Definitions of Health and Fitness," 2006). Health promotion, on the other hand, " is the combi...
The reason is that the hospital has been unsuccessful in recruiting an adequate number of qualified nurses. Ultimately, the blame...
parents of children with cancer regarding the needs of siblings and on the support that was offered by hospital staff. The results...
Partially as a result of improved heath care practices which result in longer life and partially as the result of the movement aw...
is defined as the needs of that individual to meet "Universal self-care requisites associated with life processes and maintenance ...