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Books > Medicine > Nursing & ancillary services > Nursing > General
Building on the best-selling MEDICAL TERMINOLOGY FOR HEALTH
PROFESSIONS series, this comprehensive text is designed to help
students with no healthcare background achieve deep competence in
medical terminology. In addition to 14 in-depth chapters on body
systems and a unit on diagnostic procedures and nuclear medicine,
the text includes chapters dedicated to key specialty areas,
including mental health, infant and child health, gerontology,
oncology and pharmacology. With a time-tested chapter and learning
exercise structure that has made the series a leader for over 30
years, this reader-friendly new resource features streamlined
content, contemporary illustrations and real-world examples to help
make even complex material accessible to students with varied
learning styles, as well as ESL learners. Each chapter begins with
a vocabulary list of 60 key terms and 15 essential word parts.
Terms are pronounced in MindTap as they appear, and the Pronounce
app features innovative voice recognition software that allows you
to record your pronunciations and receive immediate feedback.
Application-based activities give you practice with critical skills
such as term dissection and word-building in a real-world context,
providing valuable exposure to a variety of medical reports.
The Covid-19 pandemic has presented the world with unprecedented
challenges. The effects on society have been comprehensive and
affected every walk of life. In Pandemic Heroes and Heroines,
Marguerite Bouvard offers the first book-length study of the
pandemic's impact on one of the most vulnerable groups, front line
medical workers charged with caring for the sick and providing
general health and welfare.
Child development comprises children's cognitive, linguistic,
motor, social and emotional development, communication, and
self-care skills. Understanding developmental periods means that
possible problems or roadblocks can be planned for or prevented.
Knowledge of child development is necessary for achieving
educational goals and is integral to promoting children's healthy
and timely development. Global Perspectives on Prenatal, Postnatal,
and Early Childhood Development is an essential scholarly reference
source that compiles critical findings on children's growth periods
and characteristics as well as the principles that affect their
development. Covering a wide range of topics such as at-risk
children, early intervention, and support programs, this book is
ideally designed for child development specialists, pediatricians,
educators, program developers, administrators, psychologists,
researchers, academicians, and students. Additionally, the book
provides insight and support to health professionals working in
various disciplines in the field of child development and health.
Fills a crucial need in helping nurses to provide safe,
culturally-competent care to LGBTQ+ patientsThis pivotal
resource-the first written specifically for nurses-focuses on the
unique health needs and inequities affecting LGBTQ+ patients and
discusses how to provide them with safe, respectful, and holistic
care. Written in an easy-access bulleted format with concise
paragraphs, this book sets the stage by examining the background
and history of the LGBTQ+ population and focusing on the health
disparities that set them apart. It addresses the nursing
implications and care of LGBTQ+ patients in all practice settings,
highlighting transgender medical, surgical, and mental health. To
help nurses create inclusive environments, chapters cover best
practices and strategies for appropriate communication and define
key terms nurses should know when obtaining patient history,
performing an assessment, and delivering overall care. Fast Facts
About LGBTQ+ Care delivers resources to help nurses create and
sustain changes within their practice and beyond. A multitude of
case studies demonstrate the importance of collecting gender
identity in the electronic health record and span a variety of
scenarios nurses are likely to encounter. Key Features: Fills a
critical need in the nursing literature on providing safe and
culturally competent care for LGBTQ+ patients Illuminates
communication best practices and terminology to help nurses feel
comfortable caring for LGBTQ+ patients Features "Fast Facts" boxes
and abundant case studies that highlight essential information
Covers developing and integrating LGBTQ+ content into nursing
education Includes tips and guides to promote advocacy for the
LBGTQ+ population
First used to describe the weariness the public felt toward
media portrayals of societal crises, the term "compassion fatigue"
has been taken up by health professionals to name--along with
"burnout," "vicarious traumatization," "compassion stress," and
"secondary traumatic stress"--the condition of caregivers who
become "too tired to care." Compassion, long seen as the foundation
of ethical caring, is increasingly understood as a threat to the
well-being of those who offer it.
Through the lens of hermeneutic phenomenology, the authors
present an insider's perspective on compassion fatigue, its effects
on the body, on the experience of time and space, and on personal
and professional relationships. Accounts of health professionals,
alongside examinations of poetry, images, movies, and literature,
are used to explore the notions of compassion, hope, and
hopelessness as they inform the meaning of caring work. The authors
frame their expose of compassion fatigue with the very Canadian
metaphor of "lying down in the snow." If suffering is imagined as
ever-falling snow, then the need for training and resources for
safe journeying in "winter country" becomes apparent. Recognizing
the phenomenon of compassion fatigue reveals the role that health
services education and the moral habitability of our healthcare
environments play in supporting professionals' ability to act
compassionately and to endure.
In this unique issue, Dr. Stephen Krau, Consulting Editor, is
serving as Guest Editor to present a topic not easily found in the
nursing literature: complementary and alternative medicine. This
issue serves as Part I and is devoted to therapies. Part II
publishes in March 2021 and is devoted to herbal supplements and
vitamins. This information is invaluable to nurses who care for
patients taking complementary and alternative supplements and
therapies, which often have an impact on care and healing. Specific
articles are devoted to the following topics of Part I: Overview
and History of Alternative and Complementary Interventions;
Presence and Therapeutic Listening; Impact of Music Therapy on
Mind-Body-Spirit; Impact of Music Therapy on Intensive Care Unit
Patients: A Pilot Study; Guided Imagery; Meditation Journaling;
Aroma Therapy; The Differences Between Healing and Therapeutic
Touch; Therapeutic Effects of Reiki; Acupressure and Acupuncture;
Therapeutic Effects of Tai Chi; and Exercise as a Therapeutic
Intervention. Readers will come away with hard-to-find information
on complementary and alternative therapies, which will have an
impact on patient outcomes.
Moving from Your Associate to Your Baccalaureate Nursing Degree is
designed to welcome and celebrate the experience, knowledge, and
expertise practicing nurses bring to the academic table as they
pursue a baccalaureate degree in nursing. The book aligns with
Institute of Medicine competencies and emphasizes leadership and
management, ethics and decision-making, critical thinking,
evidence-based practice, caring, collaboration, communication, and
self-reflective skills, all supported by literature and practice
examples. As future change agents, readers are asked to reflect on
current issues and trends influencing nursing education and
practice. They are challenged to choose a concept of interest,
develop a PICOT question, search the literature, and critique a
selected article to determine if it is, indeed, scholarly. Readers
also recall critical incidents and examine nursing theorists whose
theories align with their own individual, current practice. Quotes
from nursing leaders, nursing theorists, and members of the
interdisciplinary healthcare team, as well as stories from
practicing nurses, exemplify and support current evidence in the
profession. Chapter exercises provide readers the time and
opportunity to reflect on their professional practice. Moving from
Your Associate to Your Baccalaureate Nursing Degree is designed to
help nursing students better comprehend those processes inherent in
the successful transition to the role of the baccalaureate-prepared
nurse.
In Part II of this special issue of Nursing Clinics of North
America, Dr. Krau is serving as Guest Editor again to provide
information on complementary and alternative medicine with specific
focus on herbal supplements and vitamins. Distinguished authors
have contributed clinical reviews devoted to the following topics:
Precautions when using Herbal Medications and Supplements; Vitamin
B6 and its role in Women's Health; Fat Soluble Vitamins; Vitamin D:
Vitamin or Hormone; Enhancing Cognitive Function with Herbal
Supplements; Herbal Medications Used in Women's Health; Herbal
Medication to Enhance or Modulate Viral Infections; Herbal
Medications used to treat fevers; Traditional and Current Use of
Ginseng; Herbal Medications Used to ameliorate cardiac conditions;
Cannabis, Marijuana, and CBD oil; and Highs, Lows, & Health
Hazards of Herbology-A Review of Herbal Medications with
Psychotropic Effects. Knowledge of this information is not easy to
find in the nursing literature, and Dr. Krau believes readers will
come away with valuable information on managing patients who use
complementary and alternative herbal supplements and vitamins.
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