Accessing an intravenous site and delivering fluids and medicine can be a difficult and frightening experience for students. IV Med Notes alleviates students' fears by providing up-to-date information needed to safely administer medications by IV, in a user-friendly scrub pocket guide.
OB Peds Women's Health Notes - Nurse's Clinical Pocket Guide
OB/Peds Women's Health Notes provides students and clinicians quick access to key clinical information for the nurse or nursing student caring for obstetric, gynecological, and pediatric clients. With comprehensive yet concise coverage of women's heath as well as child health topics from birth through adolescence, it will help not only with situations for which there has been no preparation but also as a quick review for newly learned patient care information.
This innovative, easy-to-access, pocket guide of essential assessment and treatment information is the ideal patient-side tool for students and rehabilitation clinicians. It chocked full of critical information that you are unlikely to memorize, but always need close at hand when treating patients.
This handy pocket guide gives you the essential orthopedic information you need in class, clinical, and practice. "Screening Notes" is a quick and user-friendly source for clinical implementation that is appropriate for all healthcare providers, regardless of practice setting. It empowers students and clinicians with the skills needed to thoroughly screen for medical conditions that may be outside their scope of practice. This handy mini-manual also helps them to be more cognizant of the signs and symptoms of pathology that may influence their future interventions with their own clients.
Joseph Conrad was a Polish novelist who lived most of his life in Britain and didn't learn English until age 21. The young Conrad lived an adventurous life involving gunrunning and political conspiracy, and apparently had a disastrous love affair that plunged him into despair. He served 16 years in the merchant navy.In 1894, at age 36, Conrad reluctantly gave up the sea, partly because of poor health and partly because he had decided on a literary career.