Research Paper
Undergraduate
Medication Interactions in the Geriatric Population Explained
In this paper, the purpose is to Purpose: To examine the issue of polypharmacy in the geriatric population. Drug therapy in the elderly presents a special challenge as older patients are more sensitive to drugs and demonstrate wider individual responses.
CONTENT REQUIREMENTS:
Introduction: Student is to address current demographics of the geriatric population (numbers by age group over 50 years of age, gender, marital status, ethnicity, household income, educational level, etc. Address any demographic information you believe impacts or influences an elderly persons participation in a medication regimen.
Nursing Communication Confidence: PICOT and Literature Review
The nursing databases in CCN library that I found helpful are Academic OneFile,Academic Search Complete and
Nursing and Allied Health Collection. Academic OneFile offers above 13,000 titles, of which 7,300 are peer-reviewed journals and. These references offer vast coverage of the medicine, social sciences, the arts, literature etc. and thus it interested me to find references regarding nursing communication in segments of social science and medicine. Academic Search Complete isbroad scholarly, multi-disciplinary database, offering 6,100 full-text periodicals, and since it covers broad range of disciplines I hope to find nursing issues articles in there.Nursing and Allied Health Collection has 400 titles, and offers work of professionals working in the field and students in nursing-focused curriculum. This database offersnursing profession issues hence I find it useful.
Laban Movement Analysis: Philosophy, History, and Dance
Laban Movement Analysis Method (LMA) is a teaching method that is used for describing, interpreting, visualizing, and documenting human movement. The descriptive nature of the Laban approach is multidisciplinary, and it…
Personal Values, Morals, and Ethics in Nursing Practice
The nursing profession requires one who has a strong value system and the deeply personal sense of responsibility that comes with it. This informs the short answer responses provides in the following account. The responses offer reflection on the role played by ethics, morals and values in the quality of care and navigation of dilemmas which occur in a healthcare context.
Parkinson's Disease: Genetics, Symptoms, and Treatment
Parkinson's disease contains a genetic component to its development. Mutations on chromosomes 4 indicate a recessive autosomal mode of inheritance, while a mutation in the genes on the chromosome 6 allele indicates a dominant autosomal method of inheritance. This is important in determining the chances of future offspring to develop Parkinson's disease. There are numerous treatment methods to alleviate the trembling symptoms associated with the disease, however, a cure does not exist. There has been progress with stem cell implantation, but the ethical and moral objections to the use of stem cells has hindered any significant progress in this field.
Ethical Issues in Nursing: Consent, Autonomy, and Paternalism
The scenario in this study involves a nurse who has intentionally disregarded the elderly patient's expressed wishes to receive pressure area care. The patient finds the procedure uncomfortable, embarrassing, and painful. The nurse continues to turn the patient in spite of the patient's wishes. This study will answer if the nurse is justified in turning the patient and if so, on what ethical grounds and if not then why not. This case will be discussed in light of the principles of bioethics and at least one ethical issue.