YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Three Nursing Theories
Essays 511 - 540
In eleven pages this paper discusses the influence of Carl Rogers' Client Centered Therapy upon the 1964 development of Lydia Hall...
grounds that it is not caring at all but rather reduces the patient to a process component that needs medical attention. While tr...
different aging theories, i.e., what causes the aging process. Three such theories are discussed in this essay: The Wear and Tear ...
become stressed and this lowers morale. A nurse manager writes that at her hospital, her job has become overwhelming, but when dis...
The non-technical interpretation of the results of a study is presented and assessed in the Discussion section. The Introduction ...
therefore, not only an extensive history but it can be contended to be just as applicable in todays nursing practice as it was whe...
and case management. Maras shares the leadership of the nursing department with another individual at the VP level, L. McChesney....
transformative perspective because Newman argues that rather than being diametrically opposed, disease and health are merely facto...
draw on the fundamental concepts espoused by the metaparadigms. Nevertheless, each branch of nursing theory approaches the subjec...
19th and early 20th centuries. Hughes and Romeo (1999) question the usefulness of education that does not address the growing div...
make a real difference. In helping professions, such leadership is desirable. The health care industry today is fraught with probl...
with standardized procedures, health codes, and licensing requirements, all of which have been initiated to support a level of pro...
on education and prevention, and on how individual and social systems work together in the "society" of the health care industry. ...
These theories emphasize the fact that the concept of holism is integrally linked with the goals and objectives of nursing. Holis...
will the organization finance those costs? How will current and future employees view the planned changes? Once senior man...
can facilitate a different type of learning and examination, peer groups may allow an exploration with fewer confines groups with ...
From this perspective, individuals can be viewed as open systems, in which energy is transformed within the body, gaining or losin...
diabetic education that uses the Neuman Systems Model, which supports and facilitates taking a "holistic view of people with diabe...
more on intuition and to "a hidden knowledge that is not so open to cognitive description" (Bradshaw, 1995, p. 83). In other words...
or not they are expected to use it. Meetings at IBM years ago contained references to some meeting factor being off- or online. ...
caring; 2. every human culture has lay (generic, folk or indigenous) care knowledge and practices and usually some professional ca...
is they do, when they change their actions, then the image of nursing will change" (Watson, 1996, p. 142). Watson has recognized ...
to do with how a person feels about him- or herself. Those with a high sense of self-efficacy believe that they can master even di...
This paper discusses Leininger's theory, which outlines the parameters of transcultural nursing. Five pages in length, six sources...
This research paper concerns Jean Watson's theory of human caring and its use within nursing clinical practice. Eleven pages in le...
This paper offers an annotated bibliography that discusses articles on the integration of nursing theory into research studies. Fi...
brief excursion into heterosexuality twenty years earlier, who Armand and Albert raised. Son Val (Dan Futterman) does not share A...
presents a discussion and his belief that the unavoidable conflict is created in every individual by the demands made by their ind...
nursing practice and nurses are formally authorized from the society to touch their clients in the course of nursing activities. ...
was well educated (Le Vasseur, 1998), from a family of wealth and yet held an unusual compassion for those less fortunate. She wa...