Professional Values And Belief In Nursing Essay

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    Challenges of Nursing Practice in a Correctional Setting In the recent years, the essential challenges faced in correctional nursing have received little to no attention and continue to spiral out of control. This has dramatically affected a correctional nurse’s ability to provide safe, therapeutic, and efficient patient care, as well as act as an effective patient advocate within the correctional facility. It is important to identify and analyze these issues faced by correctional nurses today and

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    supplementary backbone discover what governs a therapeutic relationship according to the code of practice’ 9 ‘established by the nursing governing frame, Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia. (NMBA 2006) considering into reflection what is expected from health worker as health professionals. The therapeutic relationship is built on conviction, admiration, sympathy and professional communication, and also involves appropriate custom of features in the nurse actions (Arnold &Boggs 2007). The care giver-persistent

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    I can’t believe how fast time flies! We are almost done with our first semester of nursing school. Reading literature, stories, and other humanities-based readings, engaging in reflective writing assignments, and composing and listening to cultural introductions was an amazing experience of learning in the nursing classroom. It helped me establish my identity in the nursing profession. In addition, I learned selected basic skills in this class that will help me function as a nurse in my future clinical

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    purpose of this paper is to examine the attitudes, beliefs, and values that affect nurses when reporting a medication error,

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    personal philosophies and values and religious beliefs (Arnold & Boggs, 2007). Personal ethics may guide reactions and initial choices, but the needs and rights of the patient should always serve as guideposts for ethical communication and behavior in administering healthcare services (Reiter-Theil, 2012). This paper explores a hypothetical but common occurrence in health care today: the ethical challenge of patient care when it contradicts their personal religious beliefs. Specifically, this paper

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    Kathleen Holzerman Individual Analysis Paper Because of the versatility in nursing today going to nursing school and passing licensing exams doesn’t mean you can function anywhere in the clinical setting. However, the basic level of the scope of practice is the same for all nurses. This paper will examine how the American Nurses Association (ANA) and the State of Pennsylvania’s Standards for Nursing Practice are implemented in my plan of patient care. My scope of practice involves caring for patients

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    in the nursing profession. Philosophy is the basis of ideologies, beliefs, and interpretations developed through one’s experiences. Thus, nurses use philosophical ideologies based on their perceptions, values, and experiences that give them meaning to pursue the nursing profession. What makes nursing different from various medical fields is essentially in its ability to question aspects such as: What does it mean to care for an ill person? Why have I chosen to dedicate myself to the nursing profession

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    For this reason, what follows is the first take of my own personal nursing philosophy, one that is not only prone to change but will enact an evolving bidirectional influence on my nursing practice, that is, as my practice changes, so will my philosophy, and vice versa. The four parts of the metaparadigm of nursing are person, environment, health, and nursing. Each of these areas requires special attention before a full nursing philosophy can be formed. To me, a person is anyone with the biological

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    Nursing can also be considered a cultural group; whereby the role of a nurse within the healthcare settings is strongly influenced by cultural beliefs about the importance of caring for those who are ill (Rogers-Clark et al., 2005). It is essential to provide effective nursing care in making cultural sensitivity, where health beliefs and practices may vary from culture to culture (Chan and Yau, 2009). Singapore is a multicultural Asian country which consist of Chinese, Malay and Indian ethnicities

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    finding their way back to the roots of nursing in different ways. During its origination, Nightingale, based the filed off the notion of providing adequate care. This care focused on the patient, their immediate environment, and community considering all aspects that can affect the patient’s health. However, over time nursing began to focus more on disease processes and appropriate treatments, slowly moving away from its core. With a new push to direct nursing back to its origin, these new theories

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