
Nursing is a profession for giving continuous care to sick or/and disabled persons. Reports on nursing are always written in MLA, APA and Harvard Style:
Parts of Nursing:
* Nurses
* Midwives
* Specialist Practitioners
The root of the problems of modern health care, and modern nursing, may well be perceived as one of increasing demands, rising costs and dwindling revenue or as inefficient management and administration. The root may equally and perhaps more fruitfully be perceived as a problem of conception, of our contemporary mode of thinking about illness, health and health care.
Some nurses work in the community and others in research hospitals, some work with people who are well-trying to prevent illness-and others work with people who are critically ill but may make a full recovery, while yet others care for people who must shortly die. Some still work on large 'Nightingale wards' while others work in a small nursing home or hospice, and some work in large and constantly changing teams while others work in a 'primary nursing' manner.
Some nurses work under great difficulties caused by an inflexible and hostile administrative regime or shortage of resources or both, while others are much luckier. Many horror stories relating nursing homes have developed into almost usual. For almost three decades, central and state inquiries have continually documented extensive under staffing, mishandling of medicine and restraints, even bodily attacks on patients. However thousands of helpless people stay restricted in miserable, devastating and often fatal institutions.
In fact, a general question about the structure of health care is how far professional boundaries prevent ethical issues being identified or raised or resolved, and indeed how far the boundaries even define and create them in the first place.
No comments:
Post a Comment