Caring Nurse essay topics

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  • High Salaries For Women In Health Occupations
    1,453 words
    In the 21st Century the number of women enrolling in higher education institutions is surpassing the numbers of men enrolled. The graduation rates of women from high school and higher education are most often higher than for men. The number of women graduates from most professional occupations, including higher paying medicine, law and business, will exceed the number of men graduates in the near future. In numerous occupational areas with a majority of women graduates, salaries already surpass ...
  • Nightingale's Beliefs And Theoretical Models
    2,020 words
    Florence Nightingale was born on May 12, 1820 in Florence, Italy. She came from a wealthy family. As a child she had a vivid imagination, was considered a dreamer and often dreamed of helping others. Nightingale was well educated, a benefit of her family's wealth and her fathers belief in education, even for women. She studied all of the basic subjects, such as history, math, philosophy, science, music and art. She also learned five different languages. At a very young age she discovered her pas...
  • Nursing Care Negligence And Malpractice To The Patient
    532 words
    Negligence is the breech of an obligation or duty to act with care, or failure to act as a reasonable or prudent person under certain circumstances. Actual loss or harm must occur in order for negligence to be considered. If loss or harm has occurred as a result of negligence, the act is considered a tort, and damages may be recovered (money or form of compensation awarded by law as the result of the negligent action). Torts are willful or unintentional wrong doings committed by one individual t...
  • Usefulness Of Kolcaba's Theory Of Comfort
    4,044 words
    Katharine Kolcaba's Theory of Comfort Kelly Ferreira Summer, 2004. In the early part of the 20th century, comfort was the central goal of nursing and medicine. Comfort was the nurse's first consideration. A "good nurse" made patients comfortable. In the early 1900's, textbooks emphasized the role of a health care provider in assuring emotional and physical comfort and in adjusting the patient's environment. For example, in 1926, Harmer advocated that nursing care be concerned with providing an a...
  • Terminally Ill And Nurses
    745 words
    Euthanasia is a term that originated from the Greek language: eu meaning "good" and thanatos meaning "death". Generally, euthanasia implies the intentional termination of life that is initiated by a person who wishes to commit suicide. However, euthanasia has many meanings and as a result, has several terms that define and differentiate various types of euthanasia. For instance, passive euthanasia is altering a form of support thereby hastening the death of a person, i.e. removing life support o...
  • Health Care Team
    1,179 words
    CARING MOMENTS The caring project our group chose involved taking a test. We felt test day was an unusually stressful event for everyone. We wanted to come up with a caring way that would help to alleviate some stress on our fellow students, the faculty, and ourselves. We decided to hand out peppermint candy on test day to help stimulate brain function. we felt this might help us all do well. We also talked to everyone and wished them well on the test which was a good way to help relieve stress....
  • Jean Watson's Theory Of Human Caring
    2,517 words
    Analysis and Evaluation of Jean Watson's Theory of Caring Since its establishment as a profession more than a century ago, Nursing has been a source for numerous debates related to its course, methods and development of nursing knowledge. Many nursing definitions and theories have evolved over time. Furthermore it is in a constant process of been redefined. The purpose of this paper is an overview of Jean Watson's Theory of Caring. This theory can be taken into account as one of the most philoso...
  • Ralph's Care As His Nurse
    588 words
    Knowledge of Information DESCRIPTION OF THE CASE: Ralph is a recent widower in his midi-60's, who was diagnosed colon cancer. He is a home health agency patient, and his primary caregivers are his two daughters. Ralph is unaware of the severity of his condition and wanted to know what his state of health and prognosis were. The nurse evaded his questions initially, and his daughters did not want to tell him that his cancer was terminal. The nurse's position was not to continue providing care for...
  • Conventional Economic Principles
    368 words
    1. What conventional economic principles apply in the health care environment? Economics is defined as "The scientific study of the choices made by individuals and societies in regard to the alternative uses of scarce resources which are employed to satisfy wants (Rodd a, 2004)". The health care environment is based off of uncertainty (i.e. accidents, death, etc) thus, we can expect a large amount of uncertainty towards the future. Since we know there is a lot of risk and uncertainty involved, w...
  • Nurse
    630 words
    Night Shift I'm not sure what attraction I feel towards working in a hospital. When I was younger I hated even thinking about them. They smelled funny, everyone looked nervous, and a lot of places were off limits. But I think the thing that scared me the most was the thought of needles. Yet after working on the night shift for about a year, I've found hospitals to be more than just a place where people are sick. They are a place to observe life. But I'm still scared of needles. One of my most me...
  • Difference Between Rectal And Tympanic Readings
    338 words
    Accuracy of tympanic temperature readings in children under 6 years of age. Pediatric Nursing, 25 (1), 39-42. When treating the pediatric population, obtaining an accurate core body temperature is essential for effective care. Numerous studies have shown that core readings are the most accurate for determining true body temperature. Recently, however, the use of tympanic devices for obtaining accurate core temperatures in children under the age of 6 has come under scrutiny. The purpose of this s...
  • Nurse's Ethical Belief In The Patient's Right
    3,345 words
    INTRODUCTION In every nurse's career, the nurse is faced with many legal or ethical dilemmas. One of the professional competencies for nursing states that nurses should ' integrate knowledge of ethical and legal aspects of health care and professional values into nursing practice'. It is important to know what types of dilemmas nurses may face during their careers and how they may have been dealt with in the past. Itis also important for nurses to understand what malpractice is and how they may ...
  • Civil War Nurse
    578 words
    Civil War Nursing Over 5000 volunteer nurses' north and south served in military hospitals during the Civil War. Nurses were of all sorts and came from all over. Women wanted to be involved in this national struggle in any way they could. They did not want to stay home and play their traditional domestic roles that social convention and minimal career opportunities had confined the majority of their sex to. Many women thought of nursing as an extension of their home duties, almost like taking ca...
  • Miss Nightingale's Classic Education
    830 words
    Florence Nightingale Florence Nightingale was born into privilege and wealth. Born in Florence, Italy on May 12, 1820, she received her name from the city of her birth. It is noteworthy that Florence was considered an unusual name at the time, but this changed with the fame of Miss Nightingale. Although born in Italy, she grew up in Derbyshire, Hampshire, and London, where her parents kept large, comfortable homes. Nightingale was the offspring of parents of upper-class power and influence, She ...
  • Care Of A Cva Patient
    2,852 words
    Introduction Jean was admitted to us following a stroke. The nursing care required during the acute phase of her illness was complex. I found looking after Jean very rewarding. Her care on the ward was based on the Roper Logan and Tierney Activities of Daily Living Model and I felt that it would be beneficial to reassess her care using a different Model such as Orem's Self-Care Deficit theory which is frequently used in dedicated stroke units (O'Connor, 1996). Throughout this essay a pseudonym w...
  • Prescribing Of Controlled Substances By Nurse Practitioners
    2,545 words
    Running head: MEDICAL MONO PLOY Medical Monopoly and its Effect on the Emerging Role of the Nurse Practitioner A wide variety of licensing laws and other regulatory restrictions limits the scope of practice of non physician professionals and restricts access to their services. At the same time that it is restricting the practices of nontraditional health care professionals, government is providing subsidies for the education and training of physicians who fit the medical orthodoxy. The result is...
  • Leadership Advocacy Within The Profession Nurses
    912 words
    'Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about what matters' (Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.) Ladies and Gentlemen, invited guests and friends, it gives me great pleasure to be addressing this gathering today. It is an honour to be chosen to speak about my role as a nurse and how the responsibilities make me eligible to advocate on my patients' behalf, especially, when they feel helpless. Therefore, this auspicious event of the 'Nurses' pinning ceremony' is no better opportunity for me to ex...

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