YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Treatment of Women 17th Century New England
Essays 2221 - 2250
when not much was known about mental illness and the right way to treat it. Many medications used today were not developed at the ...
In seven pages this research paper considers a model diabetes treatment program that would be situated in a hypothetical metropoli...
In seven pages this paper discusses juvenile diabetes in a consideration of the role of nursing intervention in monitoring and tre...
treated. He believed treatment should now set out to address the complex set of relationships and family structures in which the ...
cell growth in the brain (Vogel, 2000). This latter theory is not widely accepted but there is an incasing amount of evidence, suc...
and interstitial lung disease (Ross, 1997). It too is characterized by joint inflammation and sometimes severe pain (Ross, 1997)....
be accounted for approximately 15 percent of perinatal mortality (Angelini and Menihan, 1996). The diagnosis of placental ...
believed that schizophrenia was a psychological rather than a physical problem and he felt that it could best be treated by a cour...
moderate to major depression. One reason for this may be that major depression is a longer term condition whereas mild depression...
Clarks (1997) research incorporated variables that addressed the childs ability to respond to tutorial assistance. Operational de...
suffer from bipolar disorders (Simon, 2001). For those who do not respond well to the traditional medications offered to stabiliz...
an SD of 17.2, compared with the heavier mean of those seeking treatment of 194 with a SD of 38.5. The sample used was 100% whit...
widely used substance. Statistics from 1997 show that about 1.5 million ("New treatments," 2001, p.6) Americans had recently used...
beyond the domestic sphere into virtually every profession and job category from which they were once barred, they have had to con...
the incidence of cases such as this will be increasing in the coming years, which will definitely affect healthcare practitioners ...
of open heart/open door mentality, the melting pot has created wealth and stability for immigrants who would have otherwise strugg...
& McCorkle (2002) did not explicitly state any research problem or research question, but they do identify two objectives for thei...
patients experiencing either symptoms or full episodes of depression much more frequently than those of mania or hypomania" (Micha...
one comprising chronic illness or injury. Consider, for example, an individual coming to the emergency room complaining of chest ...
A 6 page essay that discusses Charlotte Perkins Gilman's short story, "The Yellow Wallpaper," which continues to capture and fasci...
sparse for the HIV-positive gay man beyond that of the homosexual community, however, Serovich et al (2006) point out how the choi...
a consensus among various research studies that a patients voluntary attendance and participation in an Alcoholics Anonymous or si...
they offer much hope. As such the arrival of Iressa seemed incredibly promising: "Adriane Riddle, had traveled from San Bernardin...
emotional growth and learning [through] a short term effort between a therapist and a horse professional [whereby] the participant...
took her two children, a toddler and an infant, out in 20 degree cold to get Snickers bars (Eller, 2006). Littleton claims she was...
life, though they may never be completely free of the disease (Wilkins, 2007). Its important to recognize that OCD is different f...
on the choices of families and on treatment options for autism. This study will consider the existing controversies, including as...
Cellulitis is an "infection of the skin"; boils are "pus-filled infections of hair follicles"; abscesses are "collections of pus u...
negative health impacts are felt. This means that there is a lag in the conditions as well as the associated costs. The short term...
and in different stages; as such, adolescents are not treated with the same corrective methods as their adult counterparts are bec...