YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Role of Nurse Educator
Essays 661 - 690
percent of al cardiac surgery patients (Brantman and Howie, 2006). While this postoperative condition is typically well-tolerated ...
include an understanding of how insulin functions to control glucose levels and the interaction between variables that can affect ...
Sometimes the ability to perform foot self-exams for follow-up education or acute illness (Nettles, 2005, p. 44). Additionally, ...
interests and values considered and respected in the decision-making process" (Fly and Johnstone, 2002). This rationale is undoubt...
are possess "awareness and intention," and can construct a sense of self-identity and meaning," which includes the ability to choo...
patient care (Hassmiller and Cozine, 2006). Some strategies proposed by RWJF for helping to decrease the tremendous workload on nu...
quality and safety for the care they can expect to receive from nurses and midwives and other health professionals are the same" (...
individual family member are considered within this context (Friedman, Bowden and Jones 37). In analyzing the various theories th...
task forces, committees, and organizational projects," while also serving as "resources to other nurses to facilitate advancing sk...
nurses are part of this generation and a large majority of nurses are retiring. It has been estimated that 50 percent of the count...
supply and the importance of fruit and vegetables in the patients diet. She authored over 200 books, reports and pamphlets on nurs...
and Begun, 1996). The American Nurses Association has embraced an ambitious platform consisting of issuing formal policy statem...
In eight pages this essay discusses efforts to reconcile euthanasia and the Nurse's Code in a consideration of the ethics nonmalef...
In seven pages the confidentiality issues nurses must contend with are discussed within the weighty context of the trust between p...
In five pages this paper examines the model for holistic nursing in a consideration of its need for nursing approaches that are tr...
Case management is an important consideration in the nursing profession. Many examples are provided in the context of this researc...
In eight pages the concerns that have recently developed regarding the 1976 ANA Code for Nursing are considered including nursing ...
paradigms According to Parse (1987), the simultaneity paradigm of nursing offers a substantially different view worldview than th...
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...
affects specific individuals, but the future of society as a whole. As HIV infection has affected African American youth in greate...
This left Mee with little opportunity to connect with these patients as human beings and she started "to feel like a machine," whi...
effectiveness has been studied extensively, and that studies consistently conclude that NP-based care is comparable to that origin...
for caring for the wounded (Holder, 2003). For the first time in American history, women were asked to leave their homes and act...
to take insulin only when his blood glucose level was above the value established by his physician. The nurse laid out all ...
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...
is a term that refers to "a formal way of thinking (i.e. conceptualizing) about a process/system under study" (Conceptual Framewor...
verifies old knowledge (Wilkerson, 1998). As this suggests, the continuation of scholarly advances in the development of nursing t...
makes the point that EBP involves more than simply utilize research evidence; and Penz and Bassendowski emphasize this point by s...