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Clinical Practice
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Clinical practice sits at the intersection of theoretical knowledge and direct patient care, making it a central subject in nursing, medicine, allied health, and health policy programs. Students write about it to examine how care is delivered, evaluated, and improved in real-world settings. The topic carries academic weight because it demands engagement with competing frameworks—from Orem's theory of self-care deficit to the AACN Synergy Care model—and requires writers to assess how abstract principles translate into treatment decisions affecting actual patients.

The papers archived under this topic take several distinct approaches. Policy-oriented essays analyze healthcare legislation and institutional guidelines through the lens of evidence-based practice. Critique-based papers evaluate published research articles, often performing critical appraisals to judge the quality of clinical evidence. Comparative work appears as well, with writers setting models like the Joanna Briggs Institute alongside other frameworks to weigh their practical advantages, disadvantages, and feasibility. Reflective and case-focused essays examine specific clinical encounters, pain management contexts such as nociceptive pain in end-of-life care, and leadership challenges at various professional levels.

A strong essay on clinical practice requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of the field. Evidence drawn from peer-reviewed journals and established clinical guidelines carries the most weight, and writers should demonstrate they can critically appraise sources rather than simply summarize them. The most common pitfall is conflating description with analysis—explaining what a care model says without evaluating how effectively it addresses specific patient outcomes or practice gaps. Grounding every claim in credible, current research keeps the argument both precise and persuasive.

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Paper Doctorate
Approaches to Family Counseling
Psychoanalytic theory was the dominant psychological paradigm that influenced counseling and psychotherapy in the first part of the twentieth century (Hall, Lindzey, & Campbell, 1998); however, it was replaced first by behaviorism and later by cognitively-oriented paradigms. Nonetheless, psychoanalytic thought has persisted into the twenty-first century and is enjoying a bit of a comeback beginning in the last part of the 1990's (Hall et al., 1998).
Essay Doctorate
Clinical Assessment of Learners Clinical Assessment Involves
Extensive clinical assessment tools are available for evaluating clinical knowledge and skills (Murray, et al., 2000). What are less available, likely because the difficulty of measurement is greater, are tools that assess professional behaviors and attitudes such as cross-cultural competency, scholarship, multidisciplinary teamwork, integrity, responsibility, honesty, empathy, altruism, confidentiality, ethics, and respect for colleagues and patients. It is important for a mentor with clinical assessment responsibilities to be aware of these deficiencies. Since assessment will drive the learning of students, there will be very little effort put forth to develop these broader competencies and outcomes that are desired by the larger society and the discipline unless assessment tools are developed and used as part of the clinical assessment process.
Paper Doctorate
E-Iatrogenesis: Human-Machine Interface E-Iatrogenesis: Chapters
Congress has mandated the implementation electronic medical records through the HITECH Act of 2009 by providing financial assistance to defray the costs associated with implementation and penalties for non-compliant providers seeking reimbursement under Medicare and Medicaid. This capstone project proposes and conducts a research study into EHR system usability as a way to better understand how these systems should be designed to minimize the risk of medical errors.
Paper Undergraduate
Therapeutic hypothermia: clinical applications and outcomes review
Lucero, Catherine (2010) Therapeutic Hypothermia. Clinical Correlations. Retrieved from: http://www.clinicalcorrelations.org/?p=2032
Paper Undergraduate
Safe Use of Thromboembolic Disease
Anti-embolisms stocking is an effective medical tool to prevent and manage the Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT). Despite the benefits associated with anti-embolisms stocking, its safe use is very important since there is a contraindications with the use of anti-embolisms stocking that could affect its safe use. The report collects data to investigate the safe use of thromboembolic disease stockings (TEDs). The report recommends that there is a need for further research on the safety use of TEDs stockings.
Paper Undergraduate
Offender Re-Entry Program Assessing Adequacy
this paper examines the effectiveness of offender reentry programs in addressing the mounting population of recidivists when they integrate with the community. It presents an evaluation of the Second Chance Act, a Controlling Violent Offenders Program, a Returning Home Program and a set of 32 programs with varying results. It also presents relevant statistics on current recidivism incidence.
Essay Doctorate
Tuskegee Syphilis Study: Medical Ethics and Disclosure
Conflict between Medical Research & Ethics: Case of Tuskegee Syphilis Introduction Each day medical providers and researchers make decisions about what information is necessary to disclose to patients and under what circumstances they should make disclosures. In the clinical setting, the negative implications of a poorly considered disclosure decision can involve simple problems such as a patient being unaware that a medication may cause nausea. However, some disclosure decisions can have more serious consequences such as a patient undergoing intensive treatment without sufficient knowledge of their poor prognosis. ( L. Carroll, 2001) In the research setting, the result of nondisclosure can range from a subject not understanding their time commitment of trial participation to more extreme consequences--such as a subject participating in research without being aware of life-threatening risks.( James H. Jones, 1993)
Thesis Doctorate
Routine Shaving of the Surgical Site Select
The procedure selected for discussion in this paper is the use of cameras in the operation room. Cameras are used in the operation room when there are students observing the surgical procedure. The cameras are not used for all operations but are used in situations where it is necessary for demonstration purposes. This allows personnel outside the operation room to view the procedure too. In some cases, the cameras are also installed to provide documentary evidence in case of litigation brought against the hospital by the patient. The cameras are installed along with the surgical lights so that the proceedings can be recorded clearly and accurately.
Research Paper Doctorate
Family Theory Application the Purpose
The purpose of this work is to select one of the theoretical frameworks that is applicable to family treatment and of which has been chosen specifically the 'ecology theory'. Addressed will be the essential features of…
Paper Undergraduate
Lateral Violence in Healthcare: Policy, Duty, and Risk Prevention
The proposed study looks at lateral violence in U.S. healthcare institutions, through the scope of policy formation as it pertains to medical malpractice and organizational behavior in healthcare institutions.