INTRODUCTION TO FUNDAMENTALS OF NURSING
| Institution | University |
| Course | BACHELOR OF SCIENCE... |
| Year | 1st Year |
| Semester | Unknown |
| Posted By | stephen oyake rabilo |
| File Type | |
| Pages | 60 Pages |
| File Size | 803.05 KB |
| Views | 1466 |
| Downloads | 0 |
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Description
The word nursing is defined from a Greek word nutricia which means to nurture or nourish. Virginia Henderson in 1966 defined Nursing as an art of assisting an individual sick or well, in the performance of those activities contributing to health or its recovery (or to peaceful death) that he/she would
perform unaided if he/she had the necessary strength, will and knowledge. Nursing may also be described as use of clinical judgment in the provision of care to enable people to improve, maintain or recover health, to cope with health problems, and to achieve the best possible quality of life, whatever their disease or disability, until death (Royal college of Nursing, 2003).
EVOLUTION OF NURSING. To understand the current status of nursing it is necessary to have a base of the historical knowledge about the profession. By learning from historical role models, nurses can enhance their abilities
to create positive change in the present and the future. They can also appreciate the advancements of the profession. The
historical background of nursing may be divided into four main phases.
Below is the document preview.
FIRST EXAMINATION OF THE NEW BORN BABY
A newborn baby's first examination is a physical assessment that evaluates the baby's health and looks for any congenital abnormalities or disease. The exam is performed by a doctor or specialist midwife within the first 72 hours of birth
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MIDWIFERY
External genitalia (vulva)
Consists of:
Labia majora
Labia minora
Clitoris
Vaginal orifice
Vestibule
Hymen
Vestibular glands
36 Pages
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FETAL SKULL
Although the skull appears to be 1 large bone, there are actually several major bones that are connected together. The major bones that compose the skull of a newborn include the following:
2 frontal bones
2 parietal bones
1 occipital bone
These bony plates cover the brain and are held together by fibrous material called sutures.
Sutures allow the bones to move during the birth process. They act like an expansion joint. This allows the bone to enlarge evenly as the brain grows and the skull expands. The result is a symmetrically shaped head. Some sutures extend to the forehead, while others extend to the sides and back of the skull. One suture in the middle of the skull extends from the front of the head to the back.
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Female Genital Mutilation (FGM):
Female Genital Mutilation (FGM): Comprises all procedures involving partial or total removal of
the female genitalia or any other injury to the female genital organs or any harmful procedure to the female genitalia, for non-medical reasons and includes clitoridectomy, excision and infibulations but does not include a sexual reassignment or a medical procedure that has a genuine therapeutic purpose.(NATIONAL ADOLESCENT SEXUAL AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH POLICY 2015 )
• Comprises all procedures involving partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injury tothe female genital organs whether for cultural or other non-therapeutic reasons.(WHO)
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FLUID AND HYDRATION STATUS ASSESSEMENT IN CHILDREN
Body fluids contain water and solutes, the solutes are electrolytes e.g. Na+, K+, Cl- and non electrolytes e.g. glucose and urea.
Osmolality is the concentration of solutes (electrolytes and proteins) per liter. Fluid homeostasis is present when fluid and electrolyte balance is maintained despite variation in dietary intake, metabolic rate and renal function.
41 Pages
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PEDIATRIC NURSING ASTHMA AND STATUS ASTHMATICUS
Asthma is a chronic respiratory condition where airways become inflamed
thus they narrow, swell and produce extra mucus causing difficulty in breathing, recurring episodes of wheezing , chest tightness and coughing.
27 Pages
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RIGHTS OF DRUG ADMINISTRATION
Is an act of giving a treatment, such as drug, to a patient. It includes
the way it given, the dose or how often it is given. Drugs can be administered orally as liquids, capsules tablets or chewable. Understanding the rights of drug administration can help a nurse to
provide effective and appropriate medication to a patient without any medication errors, ignoring these rights may lead to severe pain, sufferings and even death to the patients. Nurses, who primarily involved in the administration of drugs “medication”, benefit from this simplified memory aid to help them to administer medications safely with high quality.
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Notes on Human Resource Management
This document discusses various methods for performance appraisal in organizations. It describes traditional methods like confidential reports, ranking, and graphical rating scales. It also outlines modern methods such as management by objectives, assessment centers, and behaviorally anchored rating scales. The key steps in performance appraisal are establishing standards, communicating standards, measuring actual performance, comparing performance to standards, and taking corrective actions if needed. Performance appraisal aims to systematically evaluate employee performance and potential for development.
118 Pages
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SICKLE CELL
This is name given collectively to a group of Haemoglobin S abnormalities.
• The haemoglobin S is recessive and can only be inherited from both parents, symptoms manifest in those with homozygous [HbSS], normal haemoglobin trait is [HbA]
• This is a condition arising from a mutation in the haemoglobin [HbS] leading to the red blood cells being sickle shaped and decreasing the oxygen carrying capacity. This is also hereditary, parents with the sickle cell trait have a 25% of having a child with sickle cell disease
27 Pages
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PAEDIATIC NURSING
A burn is an injury to the skin or any other organ tissue, primarily caused by exposure to heat, radiation, electricity, excess friction and contact with chemicals.
• Young children especially those less than 5 years of age are at a high risk for burns and have the highest mortality rate among the paediatric population (burns are the leading cause of death from unintentional injury among children, 1- 4 years).
• Most burn related injuries in children result in death; extensive burns, however, can result in serious body deformation and disfigurement
• Carbon monoxide poisoning often occurs in conjunction with burns, children and infants being at a greater risk as compared to adults.
40 Pages
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