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The essential guides and resources in this section have been developed to offer guidance and practical assistance for nurses in clinical practice. Most are also frequently used as a teaching appliance. Some include video clips of patients, a summary of a larger guide or policy, and patient or client input. All are easy to read, have a practical use and will help nurses to update themselves clinically and improve patient care and outcomes.
It is essential for healthcare professionals to share good practice and information with those who use health and social care services.
This guide has been written by Deborah Sturdy, independent nurse consultant; Hazel Heath, independent nurse consultant for older people; Professor Clive Ballard, director of research at the Alzheimer's Society; Professor Alistair Burns, national clinical director for dementia and professor of old age psychiatry at the University of Manchester.
The Autism Act 2009: developing specialist skills in autism practice
Stress is undoubtedly closely associated with burnout, the latter being presumed to flow from an extreme experience of the other.
At a time when the care of older people in homes and hospitals has been under scrutiny, new guidelines have been published to support and guide the practice of individual nurses working in acute settings.
NHS continuing healthcare (CHC) is a major issue. It is relevant to all adult client groups and all settings in England. During the year 2010-2011, some 50,000 people in England received NHS CHC (DH 2011). Registered nurses (RNs) are central in implementing NHS CHC and NHS-funded nursing, including supporting their primary care trusts (PCTs).
Given the immense diversity between different cultures and religions, this guide offers general useful advice for the following communities/religons:
The purpose of this guide is to address some of the key issues regarding the delegation of tasks to health care assistants (HCAs), and to offer practical guidance on a number of topics, including: Training, Supervision, Liability, accountability and responsibility.
Going into hospital offers an opportunity for people to receive the care they need in crisis situations and for acute illness to be treated.
At any one time, older people occupy up to two thirds of NHS beds. As many as 60 per cent of them will have mental health needs - mainly dementia, delirium and depression (RCP 2005).
Living well with Dementia: A National Dementia Strategy(Department of Health (DH) 2009a), published by the DH (England) in February 2009, provides a strategic framework within which local services can:
Nutrition has made headlines in the national media and the nursing press in recent years.
Oral care is recognised as a neglected area of practice (Miegel and Wachtel 2009) and regarded as a key aspect of nursing in Essence of Care 2010: Benchmarks for Personal Hygiene (Department of Health (DH) 2010), which provides effective guidance on developing good practice.
Urinary Incontinence is common in older people and, while it does not directly cause death, it does impair a person's quality of life and can have a major impact on where and how that life is led.
In recent years the media has put child abuse under the spotlight, with high-profile cases of neglect by carers and catastrophic system failure producing harrowing accounts of children's suffering. It is an issue that evokes great public concern. We hear less about the abuse of vulnerable adults and, as a society, are not comfortable with acknowledging that it exists...