This is AcaDemon UK

Home Sellers Area Buy Term paper FAQs Custom Term Papers Contact Us Go to AcaDemon.com Go to AcaDemon AU Go to AcaDemon Canada Go to AcaDemon France

Papers [1-14] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 8]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 —>

Search results on "NURSE ADMINISTRATOR":

Essay # 101634 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Military Nursing Administration, 2008.
This paper discusses nursing administration in the military.
2,484 words (approx. 9.9 pages), 14 sources, APA, £ 52.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
In this article, the writer describes the typical medical retention processing unit found at a military installation and looks at the nursing administrative positions as the responsibilities the individuals holding these positions must shoulder. In particular, the writer delves into the management responsibilities of such men and women. The paper also looks at the nursing care delivery system in a military installation and considers the twin matters of leadership style and communication strategies by reviewing the case of one particular administrator. Finally, the paper looks for evidence that the individual in this case successfully employs conflict management and negotiation skills.

Outline:
Abstract

From the Paper
"In any case, the responsibilities of MRPU's anywhere within the United States Army do not vary over time. Specifically, these units exist to provide injured servicemen and servicewomen with professional medical care while simultaneously seeing to it that all injured or convalescing soldiers meet retention standards; if the soldier does not meet the appropriate retention standards, he or she is released from Active Duty and/or separated from the military. Clearly, the proper interpretation and utilization of retention standards requires a medical staff of conspicuous competence and integrity. More than that, any senior nursing administrator who works on behalf of the United States Army must - at least theoretically - have a passable knowledge of forensic accounting, strong administrative and organizational abilities, and a capacity for getting the most out of subordinates. Without these skills, the responsibility of all senior staff to ensure that over-payments such as those highlighted previously are avoided cannot be met."
Essay # 41194 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Nursing Home Administration Problems, 2002.
An overview of the problems found in nursing homes and possible solutions.
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 1 source, £ 24.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper questions what problems nursing homes have and how these problems proceed from assumptions made about the elderly by both healthcare workers and people in general. The primary source is an interview with a geriatrics specialist. The paper concludes that nursing homes would be much better places if the patient-for-profit mentality was not so widespread and if adult children were more willing to take in their elderly relatives.
Essay # 72502 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Nurse Administrator, 2004.
A look at all that is involved in the leadership role of the nurse administrator.
1,582 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 9 sources, APA, £ 38.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper analyzes the role, practice and performance of the nurse administrator. More specifically, the paper examines the elements of leadership required by the advanced role of nurse administrator as well as identifies the scope and duties of the role.

From the Paper
"Marquis and Joregensen-Huston state that the health care system in America is rapidly changing and evolving and that this change requires a continuous effort to plan and manage health care providers. This means that Nurse Administrators in the twenty-first century perhaps more than ever before must be good leaders. They must be leaders who can manage and yet be sufficiently flexible to establish collaboration across a diverse and complex healthcare system."
Essay # 49101 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Public Administration: Four Major Administrative Traditions, 2004.
This paper reviews four fundamentally different intellectual traditions and offers input as to where the ?public administration? of the U.S. is in 2003.
1,425 words (approx. 5.7 pages), 5 sources, MLA, £ 32.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper introduces the issue of public administration and then discusses four major theories of public administration: the Hamiltonian Tradition, the Jeffersonian Tradition, the Madisonian Tradition, and Wilsonian Tradition. The paper then compares these traditions and provides an analysis of the traditions and today?s U.S. executive administration.

From the Paper
"Alexander Hamilton?s insistence on a strong executive branch was not based solely on his desire to push his own philosophy of public administration on the young nation. He had seen the failure of the Articles of Confederation in its attempt to solidify the country; states quarreled about everything before ratifying the Articles, and some even went out on a limb and had their own foreign policy. States couldn?t agree on paying for a national army, nor on taxation and spending. Hamilton?s balancing act was, how does the country create an executive ?powerful enough to make the government strong? (Kettl, page 30) and yet how does the country prevent a concentration of too much authority and power in the White House? Hamilton had plenty of experience in executive decision-making, as he was the very first treasury secretary in the nation; and it was his authorship of documents on public credit, national banking, and manufacturing that later formed the basis of the executive branch of national government."
Essay # 18002 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Control Of Nursing, 1989.
A discussion of changes in the health care delivery system including higher costs and types of hospitals. An exploration as to how this affects nursing autonomy, nurse-patient relationships and the role of managers and administrators.
2,475 words (approx. 9.9 pages), 23 sources, £ 60.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

From the Paper
" The issue of who should control nursing is rooted in an age old conflict between nurses and physicians (Webster, 1988), and it is rooted in the contemporary restructuring of the health care delivery environment (McNerney, 1988). Physicians have traditionally assumed a superiority of status with respect to all other care givers, in the delivery of health care services to patient (Friedson, 1970). Nursing, however, considers the patient and patient care from a different, but equally valid, perspective from the approach of physicians (Nelson, 1988), and nurses think their profession requires a significant degree of autonomy from the physician in the delivery of patient care (Brunner, 1985)."
Essay # 52700 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Medication Administration Errors, 2004.
An examination of what nurses perceive as the causative factors contributing to medication administration errors.
1,742 words (approx. 7.0 pages), 16 sources, MLA, £ 39.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper examines how, too often, health care systems do not take the time necessary to define causative factors for medication administration errors and how, rather, it is more convenient to simply assign blame. It looks at how studies suggest that medication administration errors are on the rise and how far more errors happen than are currently reported. It proposes a study to investigate how health care systems contribute to medication administration errors and to better define exactly what critical factors are most to blame for those errors. It aims to examine the notion that systematic errors are in large part to blame for administration errors, rather than individual errors. It also intends to develop a framework for identifying potential causes for errors, thus supplying nursing care professionals much needed tools to enable them to prevent such errors.

Outline
Introduction
Background of Problem
Significance of the Problem
Problem Statement
Conceptual Framework
Preliminary Literature Review
Method
Research Design
Data Collection Procedure
Ethical Considerations

From the Paper
"In a health care environment, a system may be defined as the following: an integrated delivery system, a centrally owned multi-hospital system, an operating room, an obstetrical unit or an oncology unit (NAP, n.d.: 45). To understand how errors might happen in a system, one must first examine the more far reaching elements of a system. For example, the operating room can be tied to the larger surgical department, which is part of a hospital, which is ?part of a larger health care delivery system? (NAP, n.d.:45). This makes the process of identifying an error within the system more challenging, because there are greater areas to examine."
Essay # 55325 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Nursing Practices, 2004.
An analysis of cost-effective health care practices in nursing today.
6,330 words (approx. 25.3 pages), 33 sources, MLA, £ 102.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper identifies the successful cost-effectiveness practices that are in place in various health care settings in the United States. It then takes a look at how nurses and nursing fit into these practices and which cost-control factors can make a contribution to a successful nursing budget. A summary of the research on nursing administration and the efficiency, cost-effectiveness, cost-containment, and quality control issues facing the nursing profession is provided in the conclusion.

Outline
Introduction
Review and Discussion
Medicine and Cost-Efficiency
Total Quality Management Approach
Creating a Leaner Organization
Use of Technology to Increase Efficiency
Reducing Medication and Other Errors
Law and Cost-Efficiency
Theology and Cost-Efficiency
Summary and Conclusions

From the Paper
"The health care reforms that have been introduced around the world, including privatization and the introduction of market-based approaches to health care, have succeeded in bringing numerous new pressures to bear on health care systems and health care workers (Clark, Clark, Day & Shea, 2001). While the crisis in health care is multifaceted, encompassing shortages of trained medical personnel, epidemics (including AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria), environmental problems (air pollution, water contamination), natural disasters, the consequences of war (civilian casualties, refugees), and changing demographics, the root of the problem is ultimately economics. In today?s world, developing nations cannot provide the most basic of health care to their citizens. The public and the private sectors in developed countries have difficulty keeping pace with the rapidly escalating cost of health care (Clark & Clark, 2003)."
Essay # 52530 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
?Who Moved My Cheese? and Nursing, 2004.
Discusses Spencer Johnson's book and applies it to nursing management.
1,124 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 3 sources, MLA, £ 26.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
The book, "Who Moved My Cheese" by Spencer Johnson, is very relevant to the field of nursing management. Nursing is in a constant state of flux. The rules and paradigms under which nursing and health care professionals currently operate are consistently changing, with nurses facing ever increasing challenges and changing environments. The paper explains that Johnson's book provides insight as to how nursing administrators might better focus on approaching change and incorporating it successfully into their environment.

From the Paper
"The overall mission of nursing management should still be to enable nurses to provide and improve the health of the public through delivery of exceptional service and care (Donahue, 1). By accepting change and adopting a willingness to find ?new cheese? and accept diversity, nursing management will ultimately succeed despite the obstacles that face it."
Essay # 89167 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
School Nursing Issues, 2006.
A look at the problems associated with delegating the administration of medication by a school nurse.
1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 8 sources, £ 30.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
One of the major issues that school nurses struggle with is over delegating authority to administer student medications. This paper highlights statistics of student medication use and guidelines, nurse-student ratios and recommendations and delegation options. The paper concludes with a series of recommendations for delegating the administration of medications safely and comments on implications for nursing.

From the Paper
"Delegating the administration of medications to students, especially in elementary schools is one of the most challenging and precarious tasks a school nurse faces. McCarthy (2000) states that for the 5.6% of students that receive daily medication, only 25% of nurses actually administer the medications, with 66% of secretaries, 40% of school aides, 38% of teachers and 18% parents administering the rest. While Healthy People 2010 (US Department of Health and Human Services, 2000) advocates a ratio of at least 1 nurse to every 750 students, this is goal is rarely met, especially with declining funds for education. Price, Dake, Murnan and Telljohann (2003) report that only 52.9% of schools staff a school nurse on more than a 30 hour a week basis, with 43% of elementary schools having a school nurse on staff full time."
Essay # 23559 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
A Shared Nursing Leadership Model, 2002.
This paper presents the shared leadership model as a method for reducing stress caused by the nursing shortage.
1,435 words (approx. 5.7 pages), 10 sources, £ 32.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper discusses the problems created by the shortage of qualified nurses that is requiring unit managers to contribute additional effort to fulfill all of the required responsibilities of the nursing unit. The paper presents a shared leadership model in which the stress of the nurse's job is balanced as various nursing and administrative tasks are shared among several nurses. The author admits that the skills needed to develop this model are extensive and require training, but the development of this new organizational structure is likely to result in significant reductions in employee stress.

From the Paper
"The hospital unit must become a catalyst for cultural and organizational change in order for a shared leadership initiative to result in success. Although this task may be difficult, it is essential to provide nurses with the feeling that they are not taken advantage of in the workplace. If nurses are provided with new responsibilities, they are likely to exhibit gratification and a sense of exhilaration in their careers. Nurse Managers, who are often times overwhelmed themselves with endless responsibility, are likely to welcome the changes that would be demonstrated through a shared leadership structure."
Essay # 105111 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Nursing Leadership, 2008.
Looks at ways nurses can meet their ethical obligation to be skilled communicators, teachers, motivators and team builders
1,250 words (approx. 5.0 pages), 4 sources, APA, £ 29.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper notes that the ethical obligation and demand for leadership from nurses is the foundation for the public's trust in the medical profession. The paper then emphasizes the importance of understanding what it is a nurse is suppose to do ethically and relates that personal reflection and open communication between nurses and administrators is a proactive way of strengthening and protecting the public's trust in the profession of nursing. The paper concludes that the rigorous schedule of nursing school is a way of weeding out those who do not have the character and stamina to be teachers, motivators and team builders. Nursing is a profession of respect and responsibility--not everyone is cut out to be a nurse.

From the Paper
"There will never be an easy answer, but as a leader in your field you will be expected to always act accordingly. Nurses are looked upon as teacher, motivators and team builders. These responsibilities are a part of the profession. Leadership is a professional expectation. Nurses are encouraged to develop their personalities into a leadership role. We are encouraged to seek out our weaknesses and improve upon them to become effective leaders in our profession."
Essay # 105233 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Electronic Medication Administration, 2008.
This paper determines the effects electronic medication administration records (EMARs) have had on reducing medication administration errors and improving patient safety.
1,639 words (approx. 6.6 pages), 6 sources, APA, £ 36.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
The paper addresses the hypothesis that the use of electronic medication administration records (EMARs) should significantly improve overall medication administration accuracy in terms of efficiency, effectiveness and safety of medication administration. The paper shows how electronic methods remove risks of inattention or fatigue and maintains that patient safety should not be compromised by unnecessary and preventable clerical errors in medication administration.

Outline:
Introduction
Significance to Nursing
Review of Literature
Summary

From the Paper
"Presently, error reduction in patient identification in hospital relies on accuracy of data collection and strict adherence to procedures ensuring the relay of patient data is error-free. This often involves a "human factor," because the steps involved, from the recording of data to signing out blood from the blood bank involves one or more personnel, each prone to errors, most especially when tasks are repetitive and fatigue sets in. Usually, these extreme situations are avoided but not totally. In this sense, another solution must be found to further reduce patient identification errors in blood transfusions."
Essay # 45745 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Cultural Diversity and Nursing, 2002.
Examines how cultural diversity influences the nursing profession.
2,052 words (approx. 8.2 pages), 9 sources, APA, £ 44.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper describes the features of cultural diversity as seen in nursing practice, education, administration, and research. It is important, at all levels of nursing practice, to have a solid understanding of cultural diversity. The paper shows that ethnocentric approaches to nursing practice are ineffective when dealing with the health and nursing needs of diverse cultural groups of patients. Thus, learning about different cultures and their impact on health care is crucial for all nurses, whether they are working in a clinical setting, education, research, or administration.

Table of Contents:

Introduction
The Importance of Cultural Diversity in Nursing
Models of Culture Care Theory
The Effect of Culture on Professional Nurse
Conclusion

From the Paper
"As an American nurse, with American values and beliefs, I have a tendency to place efficiency high on my list of priorities. However, it is important for me to consider that many cultures have values that must be taken into consideration, like modesty. While I may be concerned with performing a procedure quickly and efficiently, my patient may be mortified that I am failing to keep him or her covered during the procedure. In addition, as an American nurse, I value self-control. However, a patient that comes from a culture in which emotional expressiveness is the norm may interpret my self-control as coldness."
Essay # 108957 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Philippine Public Administration Reform, 2008.
Examines the concepts, issues and prospects for public administration reform and economic development in the Philippines.
13,635 words (approx. 54.5 pages), 35 sources, MLA, £ 172.95
» Click here to show/hide summary

Abstract
This paper explains that public administration, within the context of public sector governance, plays a key role in Philippine economic development. The author points out that major issues and factors vital to the attainment economic development of the Philippine are encompassed within the sphere of public administration and governance. This paper argues that crucial to better prospects for the Philippine economy are improvements in fiscal and administrative performance of public institutions and the public sector in general. The paper reviews some key macroeconomic issues affecting economic growth in the Philippines and attempts to give some insights into perplexing questions as to why the Philippine economy remain sluggish.

Table of Contents:
Abstract
Introduction
Public Administration Reform for Economic Development: A Conceptual Framework
Review of Related Literature: Economic Development and Role of Public Administration
Institutions and Economic Development
The Public Sector in Economic Development
Information Market Failure
Spillovers
Sunk Investment
Social Impacts
Political Pressure
Aspects of Public Finance and Growth
On Public Administration Reform and Economic Development
Fiscal Administration
Bureaucratic Efficiency and Innovation
Transparency and Accountability
Rule of Law and Judicial Reforms
Review of the Philippine Situation: Administration
of Economic Development
On Fiscal Administration
On Bureaucratic Efficiency and Innovation: Rationalization Program of Government
On Transparency and Accountability
On Rule of Law and Judicial Reforms
Implications to Prospects for Economic Development
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Efforts on mainstreaming transparency and accountability principles practices in government operations and anti-corruption measures still remain such a formidable challenge and progress have been lacking. This is very important area for reform since it has been found out that perceptions of corruption and weakness in government to maintain and promote the rule of law has far-reaching negative economic implications. Hence sincere effort has to start somewhere."
Shopping Cart
Cart total : £ 0.00

Find Essay
Search Guide

Search :


Category :
Paper No. :

Options
Show papers between
and pages
Display results per page
Currency :

Enter Coupon Code :
Papers [1-14] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 8]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 —>