'Univesiti Fakafonua 'a Tonga -
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Ko e Mo’oni, Ko e Totonu mo e Tau’ataina - Truth, Justice, Freedom



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Clinical challenges : focus on nursing / edited by Judy Lumby and Debbie Picone ; assisted by Belinda Chaplin and Julienne Onley.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Focus on nursingPublisher: London : Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group, 2020, ©2000Description: 1 online resource (240 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781003115175
  • 1003115179
  • 1000249034
  • 9781000252781
  • 1000252787
  • 9781000256499
  • 1000256499
  • 9781000249033
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 610.73 23
LOC classification:
  • RT41 .C59 2020eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Managing Pain -- Managing Wounds -- Nurse Practitioners -- The NSW Nurse Practitioner Project -- Suicide -- Drug Use -- Ageing -- Extending Life -- Clinical Information Systems -- Health Care as a Market Place -- Always in the Red.
Summary: Nurses work across the health care system in a great variety of roles. From patient care to administration, nurses see where the pressures are, and how well we are managing to look after some of the most vulnerable people in our society. Clinical Challenges explores contemporary issues central to nurses' work. Part I explores clinical concerns such as pain and wound management, the role of the nurse practitioner, and the effects of extending life. For many years the health sector has been coping with cutbacks in government funding, and Part II examines how this impacts on the way we handle social illnesses such as suicide and drug dependence, as well as the needs of our growing ageing population. Part III looks at management issues affecting nurses including the growing use of business strategies and rhetoric in the health care system, and the introduction of information systems and of more flexible ways of working. Written by nurses working in a variety of professional roles in the system and critiqued by experts in the field, Clinical Challenges offers valuable insights for nurses at every level, including students.
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Computer Files - cmm Computer Files - cmm TNU, Faculty of Nursing and Health Science Internet Link to resource Available

Online resource; title from PDF title page (Taylor and Francis, viewed August 14, 2020).

"First published 2000 by Allen & Unwin."

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nurses work across the health care system in a great variety of roles. From patient care to administration, nurses see where the pressures are, and how well we are managing to look after some of the most vulnerable people in our society. Clinical Challenges explores contemporary issues central to nurses' work. Part I explores clinical concerns such as pain and wound management, the role of the nurse practitioner, and the effects of extending life. For many years the health sector has been coping with cutbacks in government funding, and Part II examines how this impacts on the way we handle social illnesses such as suicide and drug dependence, as well as the needs of our growing ageing population. Part III looks at management issues affecting nurses including the growing use of business strategies and rhetoric in the health care system, and the introduction of information systems and of more flexible ways of working. Written by nurses working in a variety of professional roles in the system and critiqued by experts in the field, Clinical Challenges offers valuable insights for nurses at every level, including students.

Managing Pain -- Managing Wounds -- Nurse Practitioners -- The NSW Nurse Practitioner Project -- Suicide -- Drug Use -- Ageing -- Extending Life -- Clinical Information Systems -- Health Care as a Market Place -- Always in the Red.

Judy Lumby RN, PhD, MHPEd, BA, FCN (NSW). FCN (RCNA) is Executive Director, NSW College of Nursing; Emeritus Professor, University of Technology, Sydney; Honorary Professor, University of Sydney; and Research Fellow, Victoria University, Wellington NZ. Debbie Picone RN, BHA (NSW), FCN (NSW) is Chief Executive Officer, Corrections Health NSW and Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Surgery at the University of Sydney.

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