YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Tired Nurses
Essays 241 - 270
no education. Children were left to their own devices to discover the intimacies of one of the most personal activities of human ...
In eight pages this essay discusses efforts to reconcile euthanasia and the Nurse's Code in a consideration of the ethics nonmalef...
In five pages this paper discusses the plight of the homeless and health care access in a consideration of a nurse's role. Six so...
In twelve pages this literature review considers the changes in nursing roles as they involve the postoperative management of pain...
In five pages this paper discusses nurse socialization and gossip's role in this research article evaluation. Three sources are l...
In ten pages a home healthcare case study is employed to examine what nursing approaches would best be used in this scenario and a...
In seven pages the NCLEX RN testing and its associated issues are examined in this topical overview. Nine sources are cited in th...
In fifteen pages male nursing is examined in an overview that includes history, the increasing role of men in the profession in th...
In two pages an article featured in a nursing journal is reviewed that considers the correlation between patient health care quali...
In six pages this nurse's job loss is examined in terms of the reasons behind it after her failure to save a terminally ill patien...
nurses regarding physical touch, found that these study participants used touch as a therapeutic form of nonverbal communication, ...
In six pages this paper examines the nurse's role from an ambulatory care perspective with service complexities and constant chang...
In six pages this essay discusses nursing shortages and examines the employment satisfaction aspects or lack thereof as it pertain...
In six pages this paper examines the family nurse practitioner within the context of the transcultural nursing theories of Dr. Mad...
considered one of a number of high stress jobs, and stress is problematic, causing inefficiencies, high staffing turnover rates an...
the central problem is often the inappropriate use of unlicensed personnel in the workplace setting. Though nurse mangers are ins...
of a unified health care organization that included both Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH...
recognition of cultural and social influences on health care outcomes. As a result, advanced practice nurses have also become int...
2003). Most international nurses coming to the US come from the Philippines, but many also come from Canada and India with addit...
Today, the problem of the nursing shortage has grown to the point that it is no longer only added stress and long hours for those ...
several years. Psychologically, it has been found that individuals more actively involved with their own health care often fare m...
nursing care over the past decade and how do they support the argument for a continuum of educational practices for nursing profes...
not only better oriented overall to do the job but who also would be paid enough to have an incentive to stay in the job or put ma...
of patients that not only speak about the medical problem, but also monopolize the staffs time by discussing volumes of informatio...
post-surgical patients. Normal Bowel Elimination Allison (1995) recognized that maintaining bowel elimination is a substantial ...
most often have a great deal of training and, in most mainstream settings, are also nurses or nurse-midwife practitioners. Many ar...
in the U.S. stands at 8.5 percent to over 14 percent, depending on the specific area of specialty (Letvak and Buck, 2008), by 2020...
report, admissions, and emergency situations" (Griffin, 2003, p. 135). The rationale for this policy is that it protects the confi...
relationships between self-care agency and the self-care demand" (Kumar, 2007, p. 106). Within the context of Self-Care Deficit ...
proven to be the principal reason for nosocomial infections, that is, infections that are acquired after hospital admittance. Impo...