商品簡介
This book is part of the Transforming Nursing Practice series, written specifically to support nursing students on the new degree programmes.
Correct medicines management and calculations is a crucial skill that children's nursing students must develop in order to provide safe care. This book specifically supports pre-registration students in meeting the required competencies for medicines management needed to pass formal assessment and qualify as a children's nurse. It is clearly structured around the NMC Essential Skills Clusters for medicine management, covering medicines calculations, legal and ethical issues, holistic care, introductory pharmacology, storage and ordering of medicines, medicines administration, partnership working and keeping up-to-date with the evidence-base. The book is written in user-friendly language and uses patient scenarios to explain concepts and apply theory to practice.
Key Features:
Linked to the latest NMC Standards and Essential Skills Clusters; Scenarios from children's nursing show how to apply theory to practice;
Plenty of activities help to build confidence and independent learning skills;
Clear explanations and practice tests for children's nursing calculations.
Transforming Nursing Practice is the first series of books designed to help students meet the requirements of the NMC Standards and Essential Skills Clusters for the new degree programmes. Each book addresses a core topic, and together they cover the generic knowledge required for all fields of practice. Accessible and challenging, Transforming Nursing Practice helps nursing students prepare for the demands of future healthcare delivery.
The series editor is Dr Shirley Bach who is Head of the School of Nursing and Midwifery at the University of Brighton.
作者簡介
Karen Blair was a Senior Lecturer in Children's Nursing at Canterbury Christ Church University whilst writing this book. She has remained an honorary lecturer at Canterbury since taking up her present post as a nurse practitioner in General Practice in Norwich. She has worked in a wide range of children's services since 1987, in both acute and community, the latter as a health visitor, nurse prescriber and nurse practitioner. She has an MSc in Advanced Paediatric Ambulatory Care, and worked in the UK's first Children's Walk-in-Centre in Liverpool before becoming a lecturer at Canterbury.