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Make parish nursing an alternative to shrinking healthcare
resources!
Because of shrinking healthcare resources, both human and
monetary, parish nurses in the future will be called upon to deal
with rising numbers of elderly and the end-of-life issues that
accompany aging. Parish Nursing: A Handbook for the New Millennium
is a guide to designing programs that can complement a
congregation's ministry priorities for senior adults, identifying
strengths to reinforce and weaknesses to avoid. Stories from the
fields of service capture the sweat equity and history of the
re-emergence of nursing in churches.
Parish Nursing: A Handbook for the New Millennium is a practical
planning guide for parish nurses and congregational committee
members with limited experience in program development. Suitable
for use with multiple faith traditions, the book demonstrates how
to take responsibility for health ministries without leaning on
direction from local hospitals. Parish Nursing presents multiple
practice models, intervention strategies, and methods of program
evaluation responsive to boundaries and traditions of various
communities of faith.
Parish Nursing includes: conceptual frameworks program design
options outlines from field-tested training modules program
evaluation options and challenges and much more! In 2001, there
were 35 million people over the age of 65 living in the United
States--a number that's expected to double in the next 10 years.
The American Academy of Family Physicians estimates that nearly 20
percent of family doctors are no longer accepting new Medicare
patients. Parish Nursing: A Handbook for the New Millennium is an
essential resource for nurses, pastors, andchurch leaders starting
a parish nurse ministry to deal with the growing number of
"forgotten" elderly persons.
Make parish nursing an alternative to shrinking healthcare
resources!
Because of shrinking healthcare resources, both human and
monetary, parish nurses in the future will be called upon to deal
with rising numbers of elderly and the end-of-life issues that
accompany aging. Parish Nursing: A Handbook for the New Millennium
is a guide to designing programs that can complement a
congregation's ministry priorities for senior adults, identifying
strengths to reinforce and weaknesses to avoid. Stories from the
fields of service capture the sweat equity and history of the
re-emergence of nursing in churches.
Parish Nursing: A Handbook for the New Millennium is a practical
planning guide for parish nurses and congregational committee
members with limited experience in program development. Suitable
for use with multiple faith traditions, the book demonstrates how
to take responsibility for health ministries without leaning on
direction from local hospitals. Parish Nursing presents multiple
practice models, intervention strategies, and methods of program
evaluation responsive to boundaries and traditions of various
communities of faith.
Parish Nursing includes: conceptual frameworks program design
options outlines from field-tested training modules program
evaluation options and challenges and much more! In 2001, there
were 35 million people over the age of 65 living in the United
States--a number that's expected to double in the next 10 years.
The American Academy of Family Physicians estimates that nearly 20
percent of family doctors are no longer accepting new Medicare
patients. Parish Nursing: A Handbook for the New Millennium is an
essential resource for nurses, pastors, andchurch leaders starting
a parish nurse ministry to deal with the growing number of
"forgotten" elderly persons.
Hannah Duston hacks off the scalps of Indian women and children and
is a heroine of colonial Massachusetts. Her sister Elizabeth gives
birth to illegitimate twins she says were stillborn, yet she is
hanged as a murderess. This story of kidnaping, lust, infanticide,
and murder sounds like a true crime novel. The difference is, it
happened four hundred years ago. We Americans like to view our
history through rose-tinted glasses. We imagine the Puritans
dressed in drab homespun, sweeping hearths and harvesting corn. But
a close examination of these 'good olde days reveals our ancestors
suffered their share of horror, abuse and pain. The true story of
Hannah Duston and Elizabeth Emerson, written by an author who
shares their ancestry, begins with Elizabeth going to her death on
Boston Common. Cotton Mather, who later records the details of
Hannah's capture by warring Indians, preaches the sermon before her
hanging. Once you begin to read this novel you won't be able to put
it down. Smith's search of the archives has revealed tantalizing
clues to secrets barely hidden in the frayed cloak of history, and
she uses these to weave a gripping story out of the stark facts
that remain.
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