Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Adopting a Professional Practice Model in the ER. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper discussing the benefits of the professional practice model and suggesting implementation in the ER. The development of professional practice models is a rather recent innovation growing from a variety of needs and goals. One of these goals lies in achieving higher standards of practice in nursing; another is gaining more improved patient outcomes. Another relates to the still-evolving nature of health care in general. The cost of health care delivery has been problematic for years; cost-related crisis levels have arrived at largely the same time that technology advances rapidly to give even greater choices in determining plans of care. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSnursProfPracER.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
The development of professional practice models is a rather recent innovation growing from a variety of needs and goals. One of these goals lies in achieving higher standards
of practice in nursing; another is gaining more improved patient outcomes. Another relates to the still-evolving nature of health care in general. The cost of health care delivery
has been problematic for years; cost-related crisis levels have arrived at largely the same time that technology advances rapidly to give even greater choices in determining plans of care. The
Professional Practice Model In earlier times, there was a clear line between the responsibilities of physicians and nurses. Nurses followed doctors orders,
attended to the comfort of patients and were allowed to do little else. Today, advanced practice nurses, physician assistants and even RNs have advanced in their roles to highly
effective blur that line between the two primary disciplines. One result in an environment such as that within the emergency room can be
confusion over who does what. As health care changes and patients increasingly take active roles in their own health care, they care less
about hierarchy than they do results and practical application rather than medical theory. Though the overt struggle is between advanced practice nurses and physicians, it is the patient ultimately
most affected. In todays health care system as it currently exists, nurses not only have "more time" for direct patient interaction than do MDs, they also generally have greater
motivation. Patients are appreciative, not in the least because they are better able to establish a rapport of trust with the advanced practice
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