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Essays 271 - 300
In twenty pages this literature review considers social workers and nurses who work with alcoholic clients and families in an anal...
Understanding that there is a step by step progression, both physically and psychologically, can be part of the nurses role in thi...
This research paper pertains to various issues in transcultural nursing, such as support for pregnant women and characteristics of...
program will foster my highest level of achievement and help me focus on both the immediacy of my educational process and the deve...
This research paper offers an overview of the role of Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP). The writer discusses the metaparadigm conce...
This essay has several headings that include data/statistics of intimate partner violence, literature review, recommendations for ...
This research paper discusses ethical issues that affect family nurse practitioner practice. Three pages in length, four sources a...
This research paper pertains to family nurse practitioner (FNP) practice and ethical issues in regards to genetic counseling. Thre...
experience, particularly that immigrant experience as it occurs within the modern medical environment, revolves around cultural un...
In ten pages a tutorial review on the article 'Discharge Teaching Work Strategies for Patients and Families for Care in the Home'...
In two pages this paper discusses how a nurse should handle the emotional involvement of treating a terminally ill child and how t...
In six pages the role of nurses in the patient process of dying is considered in two scenario types that also involves caring for ...
In five pages a hospital environment is considered in a discussion of a family centered care approach with pediatric nursing being...
primary symptoms of COPD are "wheezing, cough, dyspnea on exertion and increased phlegm production" (Touhy and Jett, 2012, p. 289)...
In light of all the possibilities coping styles as it relates to the nature and scope of the issue are quite diverse....
nurses as they engage in diagnostic, prescriptive, and regulatory operations of nursing" (Horan, Doran and Timmins, 2004, p. 30). ...
that is, whether it will spread (metastasize) and what symptoms that it is likely to cause (Cancer diagnosis, 2005). The term "sec...
p. 1). Multi-infarct dementia (MID) is caused by a series of strokes, which are frequently small (MID, n.d.). Patients with MID ...
parents of children with cancer regarding the needs of siblings and on the support that was offered by hospital staff. The results...
features of family life; That the families will develop different strengths and capabilities of promoting family growth and develo...
the team to make a decision. The advantage of the casuistry approach to ethical decisions is that the team finds some sort of co...
their infants, and this factor is associated with increased morbidity and mortality, as well as significant financial expenditures...
or chronic illness; however, nurse practitioners also have additional intensive education that involves risk reduction and prevent...
define what other mechanisms are brought into the healing process. For example, Gordon et al (2002) argue that depending on the v...
in education and work experience. 2. Boyfriends work sporadically. 3. Neither appears to consider the possibility of breaking the ...
paradigm but without the fantasy that acceptance is the ultimate outcome. In treating this patient, a student writing on the subje...
for "population, intervention, comparison intervention and outcome" and therefore offers nurses a structure that prompts nurses t...
which is where the AIDS population appears to lose its right to privacy. Schmidt (2005) notes that more currently, the Kennedy-Ka...
This paper presents students with examples of how to phrase reflective journal entries. Each of these two entries focuses on what ...
(2005), in which samples of patients or patients families were enrolled. In a study in which the sample participants had lost a lo...