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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 8 page overview of the many considerations a nurse must make when serving as the front-line between patient, family, and the medical profession in terms of interpreting organ procurement and transplant. The nurse must be prepared to carry out his or her technical duties as well as to discuss the issues surrounding the organ procurement process to family members in their time of grief. The nurse that makes an ongoing effort to gain trust and respect of the patient and family is more likely to receive permission for organ collection. Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: AM2_PPnrTrns.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the many considerations a nurse must make when serving as the front-line between patient, family, and the medical profession in terms of interpreting organ procurement and transplant. The nurse
must be prepared to carry out his or her technical duties in regard to properly tending to the dying patient and maintaining the types of information which will be needed
by the medical examiner to effect a timely release of the body so that tissue and organ can be collected. The nurse must also be prepared to discuss the
issues surrounding the organ procurement process to family members in their time of grief. This sometimes require an extensive and detailed knowledge not only of the technicalities of organ
procurement but also the ethics. The nurse that makes an ongoing effort to gain trust and respect of the patient and family is more likely to receive permission for
organ collection. Introduction Organ transplant is one of
the most promising medical fields in existence. Unfortunately, the exact role a nurse plays in that field is often undervalued by the medical profession as a whole. Nurses
themselves face a number of concerns in the performance of their jobs in organ transplant. This is particularly true in regard to nursing role in organ procurement, one of
the most critical roles in the transplant process. Without an organ to transplant lives can be lost. Cashion (2002) reports that as of December 2001:
"more than 79,000 individuals were awaiting solid organ transplants and approximately 3,000 people die each year while waiting"
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