YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Heart Disease Prevention Clinic Led by Nurses
Essays 91 - 120
this disease impacts a much larger segment of the population than one might suspect. Congenital heart defects occur in approximat...
greater activity levels than those with PTCA (r=0.306, p = 0.014). * Perceived benefits had a high positive correlation with barri...
has been linked to risk for hyperreactive responses to stressors (Lehman et al., 2009). Parent education and training might mitiga...
(FoxNews, 2007). Apparently, according to the study cited, firefighters experience the same poor health conditions seen in...
[There will be a variety of responses, like taking medication, calling and e-mailing loved ones, etc.] Short discussion about the ...
In six pages this paper considers heart disease in terms of the investigation into its root causes and includes the identification...
in the general area, but that the population immediately surrounding the church is rather homogeneous. Nearly 29 percent of Coney...
Erie, Pennsylvania (Minnis, 2002). As is the case here, the aggregate for which this tool was developed is that of persons over t...
are intended to be marketing efforts for a variety of health services providers in the area. For a nominal fee, visitors can have...
HMOs now are listed as the responsible parties for 97 percent of all Americans who have insurance coverage and are not covered thr...
on the other hand are the event or situation which leads to certain physiological changes or reactions. Stressors can be ...
rest and sleep to the heightened conditions experienced during maximal exercise (Turner, 1994). In other words:...
restriction and that, for the rest of her life, "she would live for herself" (Chopin). With a feeling of freedom unlike anything s...
is important to consider how the incidence of heart disease can be attributed to a combination of genetics and ones own personal p...
with normal hormone production, causing a kind of drug-induced sex change -- men can become feminized, with shrunken testicles and...
and strokes. Heart disease became commonplace. The rate of heart disease increased so sharply between the 1940 and 1967 that the W...
advertising by big businesses that has contributed in a large part to the decline in the health of the average American citizen. ...
The link between behavioral components and risk factors has been a major element in the focus on nursing paradigms and treatment p...
for women, but as women get older, their rate of CHD incidence also goes up (Arnaldo, 2004). There are many risk factors associa...
issue of regulatory interest when attached to direct patient care (Nursing, 2004). As few nurses with no patient responsibilities...
the patient engage in more physical activity (Bypass surgery..., 2005). Chronic conditions that can increase the patients risk of ...
cholesterol has been believed to be a correlate in heart disease for several decades. In a February 1990 "American Family Physici...
but the prognostic factors that influence the progression of coronary disease in women has not been intensely investigated and may...
average age of just over seventy years of age in women, almost sixty years old in men. Coronary heart disease strikes women two t...
concepts dominated the field of stress research beginning in the 1950s; however, by the 1970s, there was opposition to Selyes stre...
number of heart attacks is that heart disease is associated with the wide scale accumulation of gunk in the walls of the arteries ...
more personal, incorporating "personal health behavior change" (Anderson, Palombo and Earl, 1998; p. 205) as well. 2. What...
incidence of heart disease are short statements commenting on the items weight of relative increased risk. It has been long recog...
later adding informational pamphlets discussing heart disease in the aging. My first meeting with Ms. Bross largely was informati...
is interesting to note that the increase of smoking in America has steadily correlated with the increasing incidence of lung cance...