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Emergency Room
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The emergency room sits at one of the most demanding intersections in modern healthcare, making it a central subject across nursing programs, healthcare administration courses, public health curricula, and clinical studies. It draws academic attention because it concentrates urgent, high-stakes decision-making alongside systemic pressures such as staffing, cost, and patient throughput. Students writing about this topic are often exploring how individual clinical encounters reflect broader structural challenges, from resource allocation to care coordination, and how frontline providers navigate both.

The papers archived here take several distinct approaches. Case studies examine specific patient scenarios, including elderly and Medicare and Medicaid populations, to analyze clinical and administrative decision-making in depth. Policy and persuasive writing engages with the high cost of healthcare and barriers to effective communication. Nursing-focused papers use qualitative research and firsthand interviews with registered nurses to capture the lived realities of ER work. Other papers address systemic issues such as patient boarding, EHR system challenges, interdisciplinary relationships, substance abuse, and reducing thirty-day hospital readmissions through implementation planning.

A strong essay on the emergency room needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad overview of the setting. Evidence drawn from clinical data, patient outcomes, staff perspectives, or policy analysis tends to carry more weight than general observations. Whether the essay is a case study, a research critique, or a policy argument, grounding claims in specific conditions, processes, or patient populations sharpens the analysis considerably. The most common pitfall is treating the emergency room as a backdrop rather than engaging directly with the particular problem, population, or care process the essay is meant to examine.

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Research Paper Masters
Multisystem Failure in a Geriatric Patient
. Baker is a geriatric patient who is very alert and communication when she arrives in the hospital. It is, therefore, very essential for the nurses to acquire as much information from her that would necessitate effective treatment. She is suffering from dyspneic and tachycardic, and administering oxygen is essential when she is in ER, in additional to other treatments. From the case study, nurses encounter difficult moments when treating geriatric patients because of their unwillingness to respond to questions
Essay Doctorate
Affordable Care Act of 2010 Brief History
Affordable Care Act of 2010 Brief History of this Legislation – How it Became Law When the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was signed into law by President Barack Obama in March, 2010, the legislative process was saturated with tension and heated rhetoric. After a bitter, chaotic period in which legislators attempted to hold "town hall" meetings to explain the benefits of the play – and organized disruptions at those meetings set a nasty tone – it squeaked through the U.S. Congress with hardly a vote to spare. It received no votes from Republican members of the House of Representatives and barely made it through the House (219-212), with all 178 Republicans voting "no." Not one Republican in the U.S. Senate supported the ACA; the vote was 60 Democrats to 39 Republicans. Why was this healthcare legislation so unpopular with conservatives? The answer to that question is many-faceted, and likely boils down to the fact that Obama was the one pushing the legislation ("Obamacare"); anything Obama proposed throughout the first three years of his administration was attacked and rejected by Republicans, the Tea Party, and independent conservatives. Moreover, this was – according to the opposing forces – a "government take-over" that would create "death panels" to decide if grandma should live or die. Unfortunately, the ACA became law in a toxic political environment – an environment made even more antagonistic by the daily drumbeat of smears and vicious assaults from right wing talk radio hosts – and today while 32,500,000 Medicare recipients have received free preventative screening services, and 54,000,000 Americans have coverage for preventative services (White House), the bill awaits the Supreme Court decision on ACA's constitutionality.
Paper Undergraduate
State Health Department Proposal
The scope of the project would be that of reducing the numbers of parents who smoke in the presence of their asthmatic children. This problem is increasing in the context in which more children are diagnosed with this…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Arguments against high healthcare costs
How can we as consumers get better value and reduce costs?
Essay Doctorate
Electronic medical records implementation: organizational change assessment and planning
A critical aspect of healthcare management is proper maintenance of information technology systems. The use of Electronic Medical Records has become a preferred way of addressing these concerns. The present discussion evaluates the primary causes for implementation at a fictional healthcare firm and details the factors influencing the decision on how best to pursue implementation.
Research Paper Undergraduate
CPR procedures and family presence during resuscitation
Recent trends in intensive care have lead to a change in the way that medical personnel see the presence of family members during episodes of medical treatment, even in crisis and intervention settings.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Difficulty With Do Not Resuscitate
Difficulty with do not resuscitate orders (DNRs), advanced directives and medical power of attorney are not unheard of and decisions regarding these issues are often left to the nurse to make, as a great deal of…
Essay Doctorate
Patient\'s History the Expanding Roles That Nurses
Introduction The expanding roles that nurses play in the healthcare field include taking the health history of patients. There are many important components to the task of taking patient histories, and this paper reviews those important aspects and components that are published in the Nursing Standard article by Lloyd H. Craig. Summary of The Article Craig says taking the history of patients is "…arguably the most important aspect of patient assessment" (Craig, 2007, p. 42). The reason it is so vital to the practitioner (or doctor) is that every healthcare issue or concern that the patient has encountered in his or her past – recent or not – may have implications for how the patient is to be treated. Nurses do not always see the patient in a doctor's office or a hospital patient room. The nurse might encounter patients in the following environments, according to Craig: a) in an accident scene or an emergency room; b) in a general hospital ward; c) in "department areas"; d) in "primary care centres"; e) in healthcare clinics; and f) in the patient's home (Craig, 42).
Paper Masters
Poor Morale in Emergency Room (ER) Nurses
¶ … poor morale in emergency room (ER) nurses and identify an empirical approach and research question involving factors that can improve morale in ER nurses. Interestingly enough, the United States "has the most…
Paper Undergraduate
Research paper review and analysis methods
This paper contains a complete CARS table. A CARS table consists of a breakdown of the credibility, accuracy, reasonableness, and support of every source in an academic paper. This CARS table scrutinizes and explains that sources in this nursing paper and verifies their validity and expertise as professionals in their field.