YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Patient Depression and Nursing
Essays 151 - 180
and the church" and encompasses "spirituality, social support, and traditional, non-biomedical health and healing practices," whic...
The writer presents a paper which looks at the implementation of electronic patient records for a company providing medical care f...
diagnosing it. It is not as if depression is difficult to diagnose. What is difficult is getting clients into facilities and to ad...
This 6 page paper discusses the merits of treating depression with marijuana instead of Prozac. The writer argues that using marij...
This paper examines the stroke recovery of young patients and the effects of depression in twelve pages. Six sources are cited in...
In seven pages this medical condition is examined in terms of its symptoms and treatment with a consideration of the role depressi...
the difficulties and losses inherent with aging. The assumption is often made that, with age comes transcendental wisdom, but res...
of angina, but no indication of muscle damage or clotting (as would be the case in coronary thrombosis). It should also be...
analysis. Making use of a sample of 100 patients, the test group is made up of 60 depressed patients with reflex sympathetic dystr...
This research paper describes 3 prescription, non-prescriptive and alternative/complementary drugs that can be used to address dep...
memories will be based on more negative aspects of their lives, this does not effect the more negative nature of their life that l...
treatment in most cases according to the practice parameters of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. This is t...
ten years and in raising her son has also incurred several debts which have created stress, these are an issue. Joan needs to work...
"become a universal law" (Kant, 1993, p. 30). In other words, Kants main criteria for action is that the individual should conside...
of chemicals in the brain that result or enhance depressive conditions. For some patients this treatment is not always effective, ...
why this population may be seen as particularly vulnerable. The paper will then look in detail at the service offered, and then co...
the childs life. Children are not simply adults in miniature, as their bodies and organ function are in a continual state of deve...
one-third of patients with major depression experience remission using the first medication prescribed. This leads the doctor will...
(Smith, 2006). They need to realize they will become tired and frustrated. What family and friends can do to help the patient is...
2008, p. 208). The purpose of the study designed by Sorensen and Yankech (2008) was to investigate whether a "research-based, th...
begins with "orientation," which is a period in which the nurse and the patient become acquainted. The relationship then proceeds ...
background and knowledge to evaluate when there is a need to consult a transcultural nurse specialist, as these specially trained ...
with humanity, that is, to be humanistic in ones orientation refers to the principles of humanism, which has been given a variety ...
leaders should facilitate their development of trans-cultural nursing skills such as being able to assess patterns that are eviden...
While CHF has a mortality rate that ten times that of AIDS and is also responsible for far more hospitalizations than cancer, even...
that not only were nurses retained but that everyone on staff is motivated to be actively engaged and involved in the work environ...
based on a research study that surveyed over 2,000 RNs who provide direct nursing care in three mid-western hospitals. This result...
healing. Respondents who reported moderate stress before group (56.3%) experienced a decrease (43.8%) after group that dropped th...
In nine pages depression as it affects the chronically ill and disabled veteran portions of the population is discussed in terms o...
by Johansson, Dahlstrom and Brostrom (2006), they found 10 studies that examine4d the relationship between depression in HF patien...