Replete with vital information, the second edition of this authoritative women’s health text provides graduate nursing students and nurse practitioners with the resources to deliver optimal health to women of all ages. Edited by a team of highly distinguished clinicians, scholars, and educators, chapters retain a distinctive sociocultural lens that gives a view of women’s health as it relates to women’s lives and identities. Eighteen new chapters address clinical primary care topics, genetics, environmental and occupational health promotion, health considerations for female caregivers, transgender care, urologic health concerns, dementia care, and more. An instructor’s toolkit includes multiple resources to enhance critical thinking, and case studies engage critical thinking skills to apply the multidimensional content in context. This uniquely comprehensive resource examines women’s health through a variety of clinical practice and theoretical frameworks such as feminism, feminist theory, and globalization. The second edition retains the important focus on prevention, managing symptoms, and health problems that are unique to women. Chapters address relevant legal issues, health throughout the life span, nutrition and exercise, sleep difficulties, mental health, LGBTQ health, fertility, substance abuse, violence against women, and dozens of specific health disorders. NEW TO THE SECOND EDITION: Updated to include the most current evidence-based, primary care management guidelines in women’s health Includes 18 new chapters addressing health promotion and symptom management Provides a robust instructor’s toolkit to foster critical thinking Organized to enhance easy retrieval of numerous clinical topics Includes theoretical frameworks for women’s health, health promotion and prevention, and women’s health management Presents brand-new information on genetics, transgender health, endocrine-related problems, health considerations for caregivers, and dementia care KEY FEATURES: Distills cutting-edge information on women’s health issues through a sociocultural framework Offers a comprehensive investigation of key topics in women’s health Edited by renowned scholar/educators for advanced practice nursing students
Women's Health Care in Advanced Practice Nursing
This text also covers current and pertinent health topics such as substance use and abuse, mental health, early pregnancy decision-making, and LGBTQ+ care, as well as abundant integrated information on care of transgender and nonbinary ...
Managing overweight and obesity in women. Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, 45, 1080–1088. Kral, J. G. (2004). Preventing and treating obesity in girls and young women to curb the epidemic. Obesity Research, 12(10), 1539–1546.
In G. A. Van Norman, S. Jackson, S. H. Rosenbaum, BL S. K. Palmer (Eds), Clinical ethics in anesthesiology: A case—based textbook (pp. 275e279). New York, NY: Cambridge University. Miles, S. H. (2013). The new military medical ethics: ...
An Interdisciplinary Approach Geraldine M. Collins-Bride, JoAnne M. Saxe. TABLE 12-1 Revisions to Medication Guide Medication Guide Antidepressant Medicines, Depression and Other Serious Mental Illnesses, and Suicidal Thoughts or ...
Nursing Ethics and Professional Responsibility in Advanced Practice, Third Edition focuses on the historical background, knowledge and leadership skills necessary to improve the quality of health for both individuals and society.
Position statement: Midwives are primary care providers and leaders of maternity care homes. ... Association of Women's Health, Obstetric, and Neonatal Nurses and National Association of Nurse Practitioners in Women's Health. (2014).
This book is designed to meet the needs of nurse practitioners, other advanced practice nurses, and allied health professionals working in women’s health, primary care, and other specialties.
"The book is a comprehensive review designed to help midwives and women's health nurse practitioners prepare for their certification exams"--
... are sometimes perceived as all-knowing and as having ultimate responsibility for patient care, whereas nurses may be viewed as nonintellectual, second-best substitutes for excellent health care (Fagin, 1992; Sands, Stafford, 8!