YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Nursing Articles Assimilation and Interpretation
Essays 151 - 180
seek the same health goals for clients as in mainstream nursing, nurses in remote locations often cope with problems and obstacles...
30 months, as this is when between 13 and 28 percent of senior nurses are due to retire (Sibbald, 2003). Currently, close to a thi...
imply, a standardized nursing language provides a "uniform nomenclature for the diagnosis, intervention, and evaluation components...
quality and care" of health services that offered to rural areas throughout the US (Clinton, 2007). In addition to providing fun...
graduate nursing hires (Truman, 2004, p. 45). The novice nurses participate in six hours of classroom instruction, plus thirty hou...
generations. Though Nightingale promoted a professional demeanor, nursing was not something that most well-bred women would even ...
socially isolating, as outside opinion is discounted. The team adopts a "defensive posture," which is evidenced by "derogatory, de...
the question of what effect an aging nursing work force has on American healthcare in general. First and foremost, the aging of ...
upholding the human dignity of the people involved, as well as their "unique biopsychosocial, cultural, (and) spiritual being" (LM...
the perception that the "melting pot" of American society worked better in previous generations. However, consider this quote conc...
Washington Medical Center, Seattle, and a clinical instructor, bio behavioral nursing and health systems, at the University of Was...
even through government agencies (Visiting Nurse Association-Omaha/Southeast Nebraska, 2002). Various programs and services are sp...
field of nursing and in particular for nursing home facilities. Valid data could put pressure on nursing homes to hire an adequate...
synopsis will be provided for each of these articles and one article will selected for a more detailed discussion of how its findi...
in which nurses had to request perceptions for certain types of dressing was a waste of time and resources, which in turn impacted...
to changes which in turn can result in higher costs and reduced perceived quality of care. Primary nursing is not a new con...
(p. 835) among Medicaid residents of Massachusetts nursing homes between 1991 and 1994. This mixed method (i.e., quantitative as ...
well. This study also appears to be sound scientifically. Its primary means of data analysis is statistical; the methods b...
(p. 1617). This suggests that the subject for this study is so under-researched that there are no previous studies to cite, which ...
nurses which makes job searching easier. Registered nurses are in great demand and it is thought that there will be a significa...
to identify and to relate in terms of actual patient care. Ida Jean Orlando created a conceptual view of the nursing process whic...
development of nurse-operated continence centers, which provide conservative management for UI (Bernier, 2002). Continence nurses...
Based on their results, the authors suggested nurse educators add more critical thinking exercises to their classroom curriculum. ...
which are factors that are likely to have a beneficial affect on the chronic nursing shortage that is currently affecting the heal...
frees him from this indignity and travesty of life by smothering him with a pillow and then escapes from the asylum (One Flew, 199...
and the effect on the occupational arena. Both articles, however, emphasize that asthma takes a tremendous economic toll in the U...
and nursing literature abounds with how such theories influence and guide nursing practice in all of its varied aspects. For exa...
and Ingalls (2003) describe the four metaparadigms allegorically as the "roots" of a living tree, emphasizing that the metaparadig...
establish policy guidelines. In the administration of medication, "processes have been virtually ignored in the search for EBP" (...
Under her wing, Nightingale took care of the soldiers while at the same time training other women to "nurse" them back to health. ...