The Role of a Nurse
This paper details the role of a nurse in various aspects of his/her day to day duties.
2,435 words (
approx. 9.7 pages) |
12 sources |
MLA | 2004
|
Published on: Mar 17, 2005
Paper Summary:
In this paper, the author considers the role of a nurse from a perspective based on a six week student placement in nursing practice. This involved; two weeks with the primary care and community nurses (otherwise known as District Nurses); a week with a health visitor; two weeks of two units of mental health, one in a mental health rehabilitation unit and another in community mental health and a week in an acute elderly rehabilitation ward in a hospital.
Outline
As an Assessor of Care: Conducting Assessments
As an Advocate: Representing the Interests of the Client
As a Primary Carer: Providing Frontline Care
As a Manager of Care: Coordinating all the Care Required
As a Counsellor: Providing Talking and Listening Therapies
As an Educator: Promoting Health Through Educating Clients
As a Researcher: Providing Evidence Based Practice
From the Paper:
"The role of the 21st century nurse in the United Kingdom is a highly varied, dynamic and multidimensional one. This is more important perhaps, due to the changes that have come about in the last two decades of the last century. There are demographic, epidemiological, political, economic and technological changes that have forcibly caused the NHS to undergo great organisational changes in the 1980s and 1990s. And now recently the government continues to outline further changes in the health care system which puts an emphasis on partnership and continuity of care between hospitals and the community. All this has seen nurses continuously readapt themselves in the role they play in the delivery of health care (Melia 2004)."
The Role of a Nurse (2012, April 01). Retrieved May 25, 2012, from http://www.academon.co.uk/Essay-The-Role-of-a-Nurse/56957
"The Role of a Nurse" 01 April 2012. Web. 25 May. 2012. <http://www.academon.co.uk/Essay-The-Role-of-a-Nurse/56957>