Mental Illness Essays

  • Healthcare Finance Policy in the U.S.: Long-Term Care for Baby Boomers

    Description: The aging of the Baby Boomers present challenges to the healthcare system. Currently, Baby Boomers make up 15 percent of the population in America. All the boomers will be 65 years or older in 2013. By 2060, about one in individuals in the U.S. will be 65 years and above. At the same time, the number of ...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Case Study |
  • Breast Cancer: Epidemiology, Pathophysiology, Diagnosis, Treatment, and Management Technique. . .

    Description: Breast cancer remains the leading malignancy in females globally. Statistics indicate that the disease affected up to 570,000 women in 2015 and that experts diagnose over 1.5 million new cases every year worldwide (Sun et al., 2017). The authors further revealed that approximately 30% of newly diagnosed...
    5 pages/≈1375 words | 5 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Business Ethics: The Environment and Sustainability

    Description: Ethical companies appreciate the significance of undertaking business by being mindful of the social welfare, and they recognize that by being ethical, the business thrives and customers are more satisfied while employee turnover decreases as well. Ethics is concerned with implementing an ethical structure...
    7 pages/≈1925 words | 5 Sources | APA | Business & Marketing | Essay |
  • Physical Activities and Their Effects on the Heart

    Description: Do increased physical activities in patients with cardiovascular diseases improve their health status? What is the effect of physical exercise on the mortality rate? Write your hypothesis phrased as an if/then statement. [If patients with cardiovascular diseases increase their physical activity to a...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • PICOT Question for Home Care Logistics Problem

    Description: Home care refers to any professional support services that allow a person to live freely and safely in their home. In-home care is particularly important for aging people who need assistance to live independently, manage chronic health problems, recover from an illness, or find a disability or special needs...
    2 pages/≈550 words | No Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • History of the Vodun of Benin

    Description: For most Americans, Voodoo is associated with witchcraft through visual representation of black magic, spells, and curse by witchdoctors, zombies, and dolls impaled with stickpins.[1] The Voodoo religious practice is essentially the eye of a stock of stereotypes and fear.[2] This perception of Voodoo is not...
    8 pages/≈2200 words | 10 Sources | Chicago | History | Essay |
  • Delivering a New Cleaning Product to Maximize its Potential for Sustainable Development

    Description: As a profit-for-company, sustainability will be a vital issue because of the need to balance sustainable ways regarding protecting the environment and profitability motives. The new cleaning product needs to be sustainable and ensure that the environment is not adversely affected. The organization that...
    15 pages/≈4125 words | 4 Sources | APA | Management | Essay |
  • COPD and CVD Pathophysiologic Processes

    Description: André et al. (2018) indicate that chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (COPD) is a highly prevalent and treatable respiratory condition with persistent airflow limitation and other respiratory-related complications due to alveolar and airway abnormalities. The severity of this disease arises from the fact...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Case Study |
  • Implementing Hospital Readmission Reduction Program in Healthcare Organization

    Description: In the recent past, healthcare organization leaders have increased their efforts towards reducing rehospitalization rates in their facilities. A hospital readmission case happens when patients are readmitted to a healthcare facility within a given period (30 days according to Medicare guidelines) following...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Case Study |
  • Death, Dying, and Grief: End of Life Decisions

    Description: End-of-life decisions in healthcare are some of the most challenging experiences faced by both the care providers and patients. Healthcare practitioners, for instance, face an ethical dilemma when faced with such requests from their terminally ill patients. A conflict of principles of bioethics ensues in...
    6 pages/≈1650 words | 4 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Case Study |
  • Identification of Sexual Health Issue: Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)

    Description: A healthy life makes people easily interact with peers in any social environment. Urinary tract infection is a critical sexual issue that jeopardizes the ability to interact in the social space. UTI is a critical health issue that affects the urinary system. The major areas impacted are the urethra, bladder...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 3 Sources | Other | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Other (Not Listed) |
  • Speak-Up About Your Care Program: RUA Safety Goals

    Description: The "Speak Up About Your Care" brochure was published by the Joint Commission in March 2002 (The Joint Commission, 2019). According to the Joint Commission (2019), the speak-up program focuses on helping patients and their advocates to become involved in their care. It offers patients, their relatives, and...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Diagnosis, Etiology, Pathophysiology, and Complications of Rhabdomyolysis

    Description: The appropriate next step to confirm the diagnosis of rhabdomyolysis is to check the kidney function and the electrolytic panel. The reason behind that is because a concentration greater than 5,000 IU/L depicts renal damage (Cabral et al., 2020). In this case, rhabdomyolysis is causing a malfunction of the...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • Clinical Manifestations of Malignant Nodular Melanoma

    Description: In this case, there is suspicion of a probable melanoma. The absence of clinical indices in the review of systems is noteworthy. A good prognosis shows that in the case that it was a cancerous growth, there was no spread or metastasis to the other body systems (Claridge, 2017). Therefore, it is...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Case Study |
  • Osteoarthritis and Rheumatoid Arthritis and the Pathophysiology of Osteogenesis Imperfecta

    Description: It is indeed true that both osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis present similar symptoms like joint pain and stiffness. However, the main difference between the two diseases is the cause of the joint symptom. For example, it is caused by mechanical tear and wears on the joints, and it starts in an...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • Noise Pollution around Boston Logan Airport

    Description: This essay will focus on the problem of persistent airplane noise around Boston Logan airport. This problem fits into economic theory because it concerns property rights and how an entity’s actions, in this case, the airport’s, affect the community’s outcome surrounding the Boston Logan International...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 5 Sources | MLA | Mathematics & Economics | Essay |
  • Diagnosis, Pathophysiology, and Complications of Rhabdomyolysis

    Description: To confirm the diagnosis of rhabdomyolysis, a blood test is necessary to distinguish which component of the enzyme creatine kinase (CK) is elevated. The enzyme exists in three major isoenzymes: CK-MB, CK-MM, and CK-BB, where CK-BB is the fraction in the brain. CK-MB is present in the heart muscle, while...
    1 page/≈275 words | 1 Source | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • Business Ethics: Substandard Services in Veterinary Practice

    Description: Businesses' values, ethics, and beliefs have gained importance recently. Corporate accountability has helped fairtrade, civic responsibility, and effective governance (Hartman et al.,2010). Ethics in business arising from moral considerations is more common in veterinary practice. While this ethical...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 5 Sources | APA | Business & Marketing | Essay |
  • Rapid Development of Covid-19 Vaccine, Achievements, and Lessons Learned

    Description: The rise of the COVID-19 pandemic surprised many countries due to its seriousness and impact on all sectors. The journal article by Bok and colleagues recognizes the urgency that followed as the government, including the United States administration, pulled resources to collaborate with other like-minded...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 1 Source | APA | Biological & Biomedical Sciences | Essay |
  • Racial Profiling and its Consequences

    Description: Racial profiling is the practice of discrimination performed by law enforcers targeting specific persons by claiming that they were involved in crimes due to their race, national origin, or religion with no proof. Racial profiling is believed to be practiced by police officers targeting people, especially...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 4 Sources | APA | Social Sciences | Essay |
  • Science in the Real World: Application of Scientific Lens to Personal Event

    Description: [Studying natural science is gradually becoming a fundamental aspect for all individuals because of the diverse challenges facing the world in the contemporary era. For instance, Gilding (2012) emphasizes that the pressures in the current world have increased people’s vulnerability to various risks. His...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 1 Source | APA | Social Sciences | Research Paper |
  • Safriet Federal Options for Maximizing the Value of APRNs

    Description: The article by Barbara Safriet offers knowledge on how state-led limitations about the approved advanced practice nurses (APNs) scopes of practice restrict their full practice (Safriet, 2011). It highlights the policies as limiting provisions to the full exploitation of APNs in medical practice. The pape...
    7 pages/≈1925 words | 11 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Water Quality in California and Invasive Species in Everglades

    Description: It is no doubt that the impact of climate change is pervasive. Climate change is affecting every part of our lives, from the water we drink, the air we breathe, and the food we consume. Excessive demand for foods has pushed farmers into using excessive fertilizers to improve their yields, climate change and...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 2 Sources | MLA | Creative Writing | Case Study |
  • Potential Health Risks for Obesity and the Appropriate Intervention

    Description: Mr. C suffers from obesity III as indicated by his body mass index of 45.1kg/m2. He reports having added approximately 100 pounds in two to three years. He suffers from apnea, pruritus, and shortness of breath on exertion (SOBOE). He has bilateral pitting edema that indicates fluid retention in the arm and...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 4 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Nursing Practice Problem versus Medical Practice Problem

    Description: Both nursing and medical practice problems address the patient's problems. However, there are significant differences between the two. A nursing practice problem is usually identified when nurses perform patient assessments to determine the patient's condition (Curtis et al., 2017). Here, the nurse looks at...
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • The Disease and Developmental Models

    Description: The disease model focuses on identifying what is wrong with people to fix them. It assumes that behavior is an illness or sickness that a person cannot control without intervention. On the other hand, developmental models integrate concepts of a disease model with a person’s developmental model of recovery....
    1 page/≈275 words | No Sources | APA | Psychology | Essay |
  • How Government Interventions to Correct the Market Failure Do More Harm than Good?

    Description: Market failure is understood as an event when the market does not achieve the results that society anticipates and thus fails to serve the needs and interests of people from an economic perspective (Marciano & Medema, 2015). Jackson and Jabbie (2019) have defined the concept as the lack of Pareto optimality of...
    6 pages/≈1650 words | 15 Sources | Harvard | Mathematics & Economics | Essay |
  • Health Insurance: Specific Purposes and Current Status in the US

    Description: The nationwide discussion over the role of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) entails substantial debate about the impact of health insurance on populations’ health outcomes. It is anticipated that replacing Obamacare might undermine the capacity of millions of Americans to access medical coverage. In political...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Case Study |
  • Ego-Defense Mechanisms and How They Protect Us from Reality

    Description: There are times when a person is too scared to expose his vulnerability. A person’s fear or anxiety may be triggered when he encounters an unfavorable situation, and ego defense mechanisms assist an individual in preventing anxiety when exposed to an unfavorable situation. Sigmund Freud initiated the...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Psychology | Essay |
  • Health Promotion Project on Rising Rate of Colorectal Cancer in Hong Kong

    Description: There are consistently increasing public health issues globally. Such health challenges have triggered emphasis on the need to implement more health promotion projects. Health promotion programs emphasize keeping individuals healthy by empowering communities and individuals who are susceptible to some health...
    13 pages/≈3575 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Benefits and Drawbacks of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act

    Description: Health insurance should be made mandatory to mitigate the uneven distribution of healthcare based on determining factors rather than necessity. Failure to make health insurance mandatory increases disparities in volumes of care and access to consumers, inevitably undermining the ability of the historically...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Community Relationships and the Health Service Coordinator

    Description: This essay aims to analyze the role of a Healthcare Service Coordinator (HSC), especially when there is an increase in the number of patients suffering from chronic illness. It is critical for an HSC officer to work with the patients and close the communication gaps between different stakeholders to ensure...
    10 pages/≈2750 words | 4 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Hormonal Endocrine System

    Description: The endocrine system in human body is responsible for the production of hormones that are used to regulate the various processes and actions in the body. The activities of certain cells and organs need to be regulated because they can cause harm to the body without effective regulation. The hormones are secreted...
    2 pages/≈550 words | No Sources | Other | Biological & Biomedical Sciences | Coursework |
  • The Role of Nurses in Title VIII Nursing Workforce Reauthorization Act (H.R. 728)

    Description: The healthcare system in the U.S. has been one of the hottest potatoes when it comes to governance and the policies formulated in that direction. It continues to be quite a pertinent issue, given that it is something that affects virtually every citizen. The bone of contention has always been insurance and...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Sexually Transmitted Infection Etiology, Presentation, Transmission, and Management

    Description: Cases of sexually transmitted diseases have been around for a long time, since the 15th Century. There are several types of STDs. However, syphilis is one of the most rampant and known cases observed in patients. The origin of this disease is not known, but there are different accounts. For example, some say...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • DSM-5 Case on Separation Anxiety Disorder

    Description: Clarita, a five-year-old girl, has exhibited certain symptoms that her parents (Mike and Ann) think are depression symptoms. They recently moved to California from Florida due to their business ventures. They changed Clarita's home environment, but they also changed her school, where she is uncomfortable...
    11 pages/≈3025 words | 4 Sources | APA | Psychology | Essay |
  • Profile Essay About a Person who Loves Soccer

    Description: It was a beautiful day, and Savannah appeared to be well-prepared for the upcoming interview via Zoom. She remained in her room and was at ease and confident throughout the conversation. She responded enthusiastically to the questions posed to her. Her movements and smiles revealed that she was overjoyed. Her...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 1 Source | MLA | Creative Writing | Essay |
  • Nursing Care Delivery Model: Rising Demand for Patient-Centered Care

    Description: A nursing care delivery model involves the procedures involved in the provision of care to patients. The choice of a care delivery model depends on its purpose and impacts on the quality of care. Evaluation of the different models is important for ensuring both nurses and patients gain positive outcomes...
    5 pages/≈1375 words | 5 Sources | APA | Literature & Language | Essay |
  • Psychiatric Assessment Form for Depression

    Description: Depression is a major issue in contemporary society. Depression is a critical condition and a medical illness that affects how one feels and thinks (Lotfaliany et al., 2018). It also makes an individual lose interest in different activities and other social engagement. Depression is a common issue among...
    5 pages/≈1375 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • Management of Terminal Illnesses: Reflection on the Film "Wit"

    Description: Nursing and medicine, in general, are not the normal professions where one works for eight hours and then leaves for home. This is more like a calling, where one can be called upon at any time to attend to an emergency medical case. The expected allocation of patients per practitioner is supposed to be...
    3 pages/≈825 words | No Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • The Relevance of an Effective Team

    Description: The stakes, in this case, are raised, consequently changing the standard of what is considered an effective team. 15 expeditions had taken place attempting to reach the summit of Mt Everest; however, 24 men died before the first team's success. The psychology of the climbers is interesting, considering the ...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 1 Source | APA | Management | Case Study |
  • Historical Events Since 1945 in the US versus Haney Family

    Description: The book "Amity and Prosperity: One Family and the fracturing of America" authored by Eliza Griswold, narrates the historical events of 1945 in the ancient US, which included the extraction of energy meant to promote industrialization (Kerr & Robert 78). The events in the story surround Washington County...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 4 Sources | MLA | Literature & Language | Essay |
  • Nursing Organizational and Systems Leadership

    Description: Nurses should be able to apply their education, knowledge, and skills in real-life nursing practice. The nursing practicum project allows nurses to apply this knowledge and skills into practice with the support of a leader or mentor. It also allows nursing students to incorporate the essentials of a...
    5 pages/≈1375 words | 6 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Palliative Care and Issues in Hospice Programs

    Description: Patient-centered care emphasizes the patient and the patient's medical needs. Patient-centered care aims to help people feel that they are in charge and engaged in their care. Patient-centered care requires health care providers to foster excellent communication to address the patient's needs efficiently...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 3 Sources | APA | Life Sciences | Other (Not Listed) |
  • Interpretation of Suffering and the Fallenness of the World

    Description: When it comes to decisions about end-of-life, different people seek guidance not only from the existing medical resources but also from spiritual and religious resources. This is particularly important because death and dying or end-of-life situations are difficult for patients and their families, and they...
    5 pages/≈1375 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Extraverted Intuition and Introverted Sensation by Carl Jung

    Description: In his book Psychological Types, Carl Jung describes intuition as the irrational function that is strongly opposed by sensation and less strongly by rational functions of feeling and thinking. He said that intuition is the perception through the unconscious. Indeed, it uses sense-perception as the starting...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 2 Sources | Other | Psychology | Case Study |
  • Nursing Regulatory Challenges, Qualitative Methodologies are Essential

    Description: For studies on nursing regulatory challenges, qualitative methodologies are essential. They ensure that their perspectives and experiences are taken into account when assessing the effects of enacting policy and informing regulation. Quantitative approaches, on the other hand, rely on statistics and ...
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • A Death of One’s Own: The Concept of Euthanasia

    Description: According to Young (2019), euthanasia refers to an act of helping a patient end their life as a way of preventing an individual from suffering due to a terminal illness. Euthanasia is something that most countries do not support since people view it as something that devalues life. In countries where...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 3 Sources | APA | Life Sciences | Other (Not Listed) |
  • Several Strategies Ensure that Off-Label Drug Use and Dosage are Safe

    Description: Drugs can be prescribed to children for off-label use under various circumstances. Unavailability of normal, appropriate, approved, and safe treatment options to treat a particular disorder or illness in children and inconsistent pediatric knowledge in SmPC available for a treatment option are the ...
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Research Paper |
  • Workplace Insurance & Benefits: Canadian Pension Plan

    Description: Based on the information from the case, Ben’s life has been altered entirely, and he cannot continue with his normal activities. One of the best approaches to assist Ben is understanding the benefits of social insurance, which is offered and mandated by the government to protect individuals from income...
    1 page/≈275 words | 1 Source | APA | Literature & Language | Coursework |
  • Taiwan’s Single-Payer Healthcare System

    Description: According to Petrou et al. (2018), single-payer systems constitute one of the approaches to reducing health care costs and enhancing efficient utilization of the resources. Taiwan provides compulsory, universal health care coverage to its citizens through the single-payer approach. The country’s health...
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • Disease Summary on Malaria

    Description: The topic of communicable diseases is vital in modern society because such diseases are responsible for the biggest share of morbidity. Communicable diseases, as witnessed during the Covid-19 pandemic, can potentially overwhelm the public health system of a community. Threats from such diseases are better...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 4 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Incident and Liability Report and Employer’s Liability

    Description: There was an incident involving three employees in our company. They were hit by a truck on a well-lit crosswalk on their way to a meeting. Each employee suffered a broken right femur, bruises, and contusions. One victim lost his hearing aid. The injuries are temporary, and they are expected to be okay in 6...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 5 Sources | APA | Social Sciences | Essay |
  • The Existing Knowledge on a Topic of Scholarly Interest

    Description: A single-case study was conducted to determine the effectiveness of therapeutic assessment in adults. The case has been used to examine how change occurs during Therapeutic Assessment in a more controlled manner (Aschieri & Smith, 2012). It is separated into two parts: a Therapeutic Assessment presentation...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 1 Source | APA | Literature & Language | Essay |
  • U.S. and Canadian Emergency Management Systems

    Description: The American emergency management system is designed to deal with natural disasters that may result from unexpected metrological and geological events that may cause harm to any region falling within the boundaries of the United States of America. This system designates natural disaster-prone areas...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 2 Sources | APA | Law | Essay |
  • Rowling's Harry Potter and the Acceptance of Werewolves in Society

    Description: In the novel Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by J.K. Rowling we are being introduced to a new creature, werewolves. For as long as we can remember werewolves have become a topic that people love, hate, or misunderstand. The werewolf heritage has been exhibited in various books in literary...
    12 pages/≈3300 words | 7 Sources | MLA | Literature & Language | Research Paper |
  • Biomedical Ethics in the Christian Narrative: Faith in God

    Description: In Christianity, the biblical narrative describes the nature of God as the creator of heaven and earth and everything in it. Also, it describes God's intention to humankind which is to make them flourish and when they obey His word (Rev. Dr. Condie, 2020). In addition, it conveys the reality of punishment...
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Christian Perspective and Ethics in Family Health

    Description: Christians have unique perspectives on spirituality and ethics unique from postmodern relativism. Christians believe in the existence of God and his role in enhancing individual health. Christians also believe that spiritually strong people do not easily get due to spiritual manifestation in their lives....
    5 pages/≈1375 words | 4 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Research Paper |
  • Negotiation and Patient Education

    Description: Negotiation in patient education refers to a process through which the healthcare provider and the patient (learner) communicate and exchange information to ensure they both arrive at a mutually agreeable treatment plan that will benefit the patient (Miller & Stoeckel, 2019). It allows the patient to feel...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 4 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • A Greater Emphasis on Spiritual Care in Healthcare Research

    Description: In recent decades, there has been a greater emphasis on spiritual care in healthcare research. These have provided evidence that introspective, spiritual, or religious relevant factors and needs increase with an existing illness and that these needs heighten with the severity of the disease and the prospect...
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Social Protest Slideshow

    Description: My overall impression of the slideshow is the application of photography, mass media, and the internet in the modern world for individuals to communicate and express their messages. The first three words that come to my mind while describing the slideshow are the power of technology. If I could write one...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | No Sources | APA | Social Sciences | Reaction Paper |
  • Muscular Dystrophy: Risks, Common Types, and Signs and Symptoms

    Description: Muscular dystrophy is a group of hereditary disorders that result in progressive muscle weakness. The noninflammatory disorder is caused by missing or insufficient glycoproteins in the muscle cell plasma membrane owing to alterations of the sarcoglycans or the skeletal muscle membrane protein within the...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 3 Sources | MLA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Three Branches of Epidemiology

    Description: Epidemiology comprises different branches, each with distinct features. The descriptive one focuses on disease pattern determination, while the analytical one prioritizes testing hypotheses contained in the former. Finally, managerial epidemiology concerns itself with epidemiologic methods application to...
    1 page/≈275 words | 1 Source | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Nursing Patient Education on Impedance Cardiography Devices

    Description: Nursing professionals must know how to educate patients regarding their treatment and other follow-up procedures. It allows them to provide better holistic care that also considers the patient’s life circumstances. Accordingly, one of the things that nursing professionals should teach their patients is ...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Research Paper |
  • Johnson & Johnson's Use of Technology and Data

    Description: J&J relied heavily on data science and AI to find alternative channels and ensure timely delivery. In the case of orthopaedic companies, many have had to focus on manufacturing ventilators, face shields, and face masks, according to a recent survey of orthopaedic and spine companies by spine market research...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 3 Sources | APA | Business & Marketing | Essay |
  • Personality Develpoment: Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

    Description: In his theory, Maslow contends that people's actions are motivated by physiological and psychological needs that vary from simple to more complicated ones. He also believes that the needs are similar to inclinations that influence human behavior. There are five levels of Maslow's needs, usually depicted...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 3 Sources | APA | Literature & Language | Essay |
  • Bioethics in Euthanasia

    Description: Death is an inescapable occurrence in a person’s life. People sometimes tend to avoid the thought of dying; however, some people brave the thought of dying. These people choose to end their lives to alleviate their suffering from a terminal illness. This is known as “Euthanasia.” Euthanasia is also...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Literature & Language | Essay |
  • Risk Management and Patient Safety: CLABSI Prevention Plan

    Description: Health care errors leading to patient harm remain a leading mortality and morbidity cause in the United States (U.S.) despite the implementation of the Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Act (PSQIA). At the federal level, the PSQIA implementation regulations because practical since 2009. The legislation...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 3 Sources | MLA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Case Study |
  • Consent for Vaccination

    Description: Parisi is correct to suggest that parental consent is desirable when treating neonatal ophthalmia, but it is not a legal requirement. If left untreated, the illness could result in a severe disability. Therefore, it is in the child’s best interest to have this condition treated as soon as possible. The...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 3 Sources | APA | Law | Coursework |
  • Workplace Insurance and Benefits

    Description: The information provided by Rodrigo's Psychologist to the team is relevant as it will determine the claim's direction and justify that Rodrigo was not pretending. In addition, the data will allow the LTD to conduct an investigation and allow coverage for depression and anxiety. Before the information,...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Social Sciences | Essay |
  • Should Healthcare Practitioners Look Like Their Patients

    Description: For health institutions to provide quality patient care, they should minimize racial disparities by diversifying their teams of medical professionals to show that they recognize and acknowledge the differences among distinct populations. Some people might not care whether healthcare professionals look...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 1 Source | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Other (Not Listed) |
  • Overview of Vocational Rehabilitation

    Description: Canada has established multiple programs for vocational rehabilitation, most of which deal with veterans, spouses, or common-law partners and survivors. The rationale for these programs is to help reintegrate veterans into society by teaching new skills and competencies tailored to each individual's goals...
    10 pages/≈2750 words | 10 Sources | APA | Social Sciences | Essay |
  • Application Of Health Care Information Systems

    Description: Health information technology (HIT) is a technological tool impacting healthcare delivery and significantly contributes toward mitigating inefficiencies within hospitals to enhance health outcomes. Electronic Health Records (EHRs) are a component of HIT. It includes patients’ records and digital forms with...
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • Benefits of Using Big Data

    Description: One of the numerous potential benefits of using big data as part of a clinical system relates to aiding clinicians' decision-making process at the point of care. Big data refers to aggregate data collected from wearable devices, hospital records, pharmaceuticals, and research data (Shanthagiri, 2014). ...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Research Paper |
  • Diabetes Mellitus: Treatments, Dietary Considerations, and Impact on Patients

    Description: It is irrefutable that diabetes is one of the highly prevalent comorbid diseases associated with adverse health complications that fuel the high mortality rate among the American population. Each year, more than 1.5 million American people are usually diagnosed with diabetic conditions (American Diabetes...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 5 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Specialized Approach to Treating Community-Acquired Pneumonia

    Description: Community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) is a lung parenchyma illness from other contacts outside healthcare facilities. Its severity worsens when individuals have other underlying conditions that complicate its management or trigger drug-drug interactions. As a result, managing a patient presenting with signs ...
    1 page/≈275 words | 1 Source | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Since Covid Began, How have Online Classes Affected Students’ Learning?

    Description: After the Covid-19 outbreak, significant health measures were enacted in response. In 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared, “The disease a global pandemic, following adverse health implications and a high rate of the disease spread” (Armstrong-Mensah et al.). Protective measures like social ...
    8 pages/≈2200 words | 15 Sources | MLA | Social Sciences | Research Paper |
  • Hypertension Pharmaceutical Treatment Plan

    Description: Hypertension is a global issue of concern, considering the increased probability of developing the disease. This risk demonstrates the need for appropriate treatment options, despite the public remaining largely unaware of the side effects of medications on patients (Rabi et al., 2020). As a result, a ...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 4 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Type 1 Diabetes in Children

    Description: Type 1 diabetes remains one of the leading global diseases with far-reaching consequences on the patient’s quality of life. Whicher et al. (2020) report that the disease represents a commonplace endocrine disorder among youths. Patterson et al. (2019) support this observation by indicating that this...
    12 pages/≈3300 words | 20 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Research Paper |
  • Incidences of Medical Abuse and Medical Neglect Continue to Increase

    Description: Incidences of medical abuse and medical neglect continue to increase. Child protective services (CPS) are responsible for dealing with such cases when they come to their attention. The problem has been many children continue to suffer from abuse and neglect without coming to the attention of CPS. National...
    5 pages/≈1375 words | 6 Sources | APA | Law | Essay |
  • Expenditure on Healthcare in the U.S.

    Description: America’s healthcare system is considered one of the most complicated healthcare systems in the world. Even though the U.S. is one of the wealthiest nations in the world, the country lags behind in healthcare. It is a known fact that the U.S. does not have a uniform healthcare system and that its healthcare...
    9 pages/≈2475 words | 4 Sources | APA | Social Sciences | Research Paper |
  • Misinformation about Covid-19 is a Hindrance to the War

    Description: Misinformation about covid-19 emerged as a significant hindrance to the war against the pandemic. Netter (2022) indicates that this aspect was a critical reason for the increased complications and struggles related to eradicating the disease. The author confirms that diverse stakeholders, including ...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • No Cure Exists for Parkinson’s Disease

    Description: Parkinson’s disease is a concerning neurodegenerative disorder that disrupts the nervous system in specific parts leading to impairments of other extremities. The disease develops slowly and triggers uncontrolled and unintended bodily movements, including stiffness, shaking, and imbalance (National ...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 3 Sources | MLA | Biological & Biomedical Sciences | Essay |
  • Metrics Used to Evaluate and Track the Quality of Health Care Services

    Description: Metrics used to evaluate and track the quality of health care services include structure, outcome, and process measures. Structural measures give clients a sense of health care practitioners’ competency, processes, and systems to offer high-quality care. An example of a structural metric includes ...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • Viral Infection: Side Effects of Medications for Influenza

    Description: Influenza is a viral infection caused by the influenza virus. The illness is characterized by its contagiousness, which causes respiratory diseases. It infects the respiratory system, including the nose, throat, and lungs. The virus is classified into types A and B. If left untreated, the influenza ...
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Evidence-Based Practice Adaptation Theory

    Description: The development of theories plays a significant role in nursing. According to Im (2018), nursing theories guide nursing practice and research. They provide a hypothesis that professionals can test through research before it can be applied in practice. This paper's aim is to develop a middle-range theory...
    5 pages/≈1375 words | 5 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • Healthcare Professional Code of Ethics

    Description: Based on the American Nurses Association (ANA), caregivers are expected to behave professionally and ethically. In that light, the nursing code of ethics is vital since it is a guide that carries out nursing responsibilities in a way that is consistent with ethical obligations and the quality...
    5 pages/≈1375 words | 4 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • An Ethical Responsibility to Provide Care

    Description: Health care professionals play a vital role throughout epidemics and other disasters in aiding the grant of healthcare and reducing the harm caused by such adversity. The world Trade center disaster causes numerous recovery and rescue workers’ deaths because of corrosive dust and toxic waste....
    1 page/≈275 words | 2 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Lack of Physical Exercise May Lead to Hypertension

    Description: Hypertension is most prevalent in older adults. It strains the heart's functionality and blood vessels leading to cardiovascular problems such as stroke, heart attack, kidney failure, and heart diseases. Aggressive pressure exerted on blood vessels causes damage to them. LDL, bad cholesterol, solidifies on...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 4 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Alzheimer's is a Type of Dementia

    Description: Among the most common cognitive issues, Alzheimer's is a type of dementia disorder that majorly affects the elderly associated with cognitive issues. Research indicates close to 70% of individuals with dementia are of the Alzheimer's type (Birks & Harvey, 2018). Individuals that suffer from dementia exhibit...
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Organizational Culture and How it Supports the Change

    Description: Prevention of stroke in organizations could involve individual-centered approach that could be feasibly attained with mobile technology – an inexpensive and simple screening for cardiovascular illness history as well as the presence of risk factors that could be modified (especially vaping and cigarette ...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 5 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Research Paper |
  • Effects of Unintended Algorithm Bias on Healthcare Social Outcomes

    Description: Hackenberger, B. K. (2019). Genetics without genes: application of genetic algorithms in medicine. Croatian Medical Journal, 60(2), 177-180. https://pgcc.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=cdi_pubmedcentral_primary_oai_pubmedcentral_nih_gov_6509630&context=PC&vid=01PGCC_INST:PGCC&lang=...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 2 Sources | APA | Literature & Language | Annotated Bibliography |
  • Hospital Readmissions: Causes and Prevention

    Description: In the article, Ziaeian and Fonarow (2016) discuss the heart failure (HF) problem, which continues to burden healthcare through hospitalization and readmission. The authors confirm that about 5.7 million individuals have been diagnosed with HF. Surprisingly, the number of individuals with chronic conditions...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 4 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • Evaluation of Health History and Medical Information

    Description: A clinical manifestation refers to the physical result of an infection or illness. In the case of Mr. M., these physical results include the inability to perform ADLs, wandering at night, getting lost, and needing help to get back into his room. He is also increasingly aggressive and easily irritable, with...
    2 pages/≈550 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • The Importance of Eating a Healthy Diet and Being Physically Active

    Description: Keeping a healthy diet and being physically active is important as it reduces illnesses and the deterioration of human health. A healthy diet includes reducing and moderating excess consumption of saturated fats, sugars, and salt. Healthy foods include a combination of vegetables and fruits, cereals, high ...
    2 pages/≈550 words | No Sources | MLA | Literature & Language | Essay |
  • The Negotiation as it Applies to Patient Education

    Description: Negotiation is a core strategy to help patients make specific lifestyle changes that improve their health. Negotiation is also a patient-centered care strategy (Scheel & Gockel, 2017). An effective negotiation process should incorporate paternalistic healthcare and a patient-centered approach to ensure that...
    4 pages/≈1100 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • The Risk Factors for Osteoporosis

    Description: According to Pouresmaeili et al. (2018), osteoporosis is a skeletal system disorder characterized by remarkable deterioration in bone material mass and subsequent bone structural disruption, impacting millions of individuals from diverse ethnic groups globally. Skeletal tissue loss, happening progressively...
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Nursing Practice Evolution and How it Changed the Scope of Practice

    Description: When nursing practice started, there was nearly nothing to do with specialized training or certification. It focused on gender, whereby men were mainly in charge of nursing. The willingness to perform nursing duties played a critical role in the practice. However, the profession has currently changed ...
    3 pages/≈825 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Essay |
  • Nursing: A Distinct Profession

    Description: Both the heart and the mind are required to be a good nurse, as nursing may be seen of as both an art and a science. At its core is an innate awareness of a patient's needs and a great respect for human dignity. This is reinforced by the intellect, in the form of intensive training in fundamental subjects....
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Coursework |
  • Culturally Appropriate Care

    Description: Communication is crucial for human interaction globally because provides a common platform for sharing ideas, feelings, and information. Communication can be verbal or non-verbal. These are learned by individuals according to their cultures and background. A significant concern is in intercultural...
    1 page/≈275 words | 3 Sources | APA | Health, Medicine, Nursing | Research Paper |
<<  <    51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55   >   >>
HIRE A WRITER FROM $11.95 / PAGE
ORDER WITH 15% DISCOUNT!