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Nurse
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For other uses of the term, see
Nurse (disambiguation).
A nurse is a
health care professional who is engaged in the practice of
nursing. Nurses are men and women who are responsible (along
with other health care professionals) for the treatment,
safety and recovery of acutely or chronically ill or injured
people, health maintenance of the healthy, and treatment of
life-threatening emergencies in a wide range of health care
settings. Nurses may also be involved in medical and nursing
research and perform a wide range of non-clinical functions
necessary to the delivery of health care.
Overview
Nurses develop
a plan of care, sometimes working collaboratively with
physicians, therapists, the patient, the patient's family
and other team members. In the U.S. (and increasingly the
United Kingdom), advanced practice nurses, such as clinical
nurse specialists and nurse practitioners, diagnose health
problems and prescribe medications and other therapies.
Nurses may help coordinate the patient care performed by
other members of a health care team such as therapists,
medical practitioners, dietitians, etc. Nurses provide care
both interdependently, for example, with physicians, and
independently as nursing professionals.
According to
the US Department of Labor's revised Occupational Outlook
Handbook (2000), "Registered nurses (R.N.s) work to promote
health, prevent disease, and help patients cope with
illness. They are advocates and health educators for
patients, families, and communities. When providing direct
patient care, they observe, assess, and record symptoms,
responses, and progress; assist physicians during treatments
and examinations; administer medications; and assist in
convalescence and rehabilitation. R.N.s also develop and
manage nursing care plans; instruct patients and their
families in proper care; and help individuals and groups
take steps to improve or maintain their health."
The nursing
career structure varies considerably throughout the world.
Typically there are several distinct levels of nursing
practitioner, distinguished by increasing education,
responsibility and skills. The major distinction is between
task-based nursing and professional nursing.
In various
parts of the world, the educational background for nurses
varies widely. In some parts of eastern Europe, nurses are
high school graduates with twelve to eighteen months of
training. In contrast, Chile requires any Registered Nurse
to have at least a bachelor's degree.
At the top of
the educational ladder is the doctoral-prepared nurse.
Nurses may gain the PhD or another doctoral degree such as
Doctor of Nursing Science (DNSc) or Doctor of Nursing
Practice (DNP), specializing in research, clinical nursing,
etc. These nurses practice nursing, teach nursing and carry
out nursing research. As the science of nursing has
advanced, so has the demand for doctoral-prepared nurses.
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