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Browse Cancer Nursing Practice by volume
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Articles, booklets & guides
Author guidelines
Burnout - a spiritual crisis
Cultural and spiritual awareness: a guide
Childhood obesity and lifestyle (Kellogg's Family Health Study)
Genetics
Healthcare assistants
Sharing the care
Bound to care
Registered post
Pay: mixed blessings for HCAs
How I gained more respect for HCAs
Credit where it's due
Mental health needs of older people (Let's respect)
MRSA
Nursing and Midwifery Council - Code of Professional Conduct
Patient information cards
Patient Pictures
Breast cancer
Gastroenterology
Gynaecological oncology
Prostatic disease & treatments
Primary healthcare essential guide
Quick reference guides
Research article guidelines
Self help guides
Self help: looking back at anger
Self help: express yourself
Self help: fear of trying
Self help: stop and think
Smoking cessation
Volume indexes for Nursing Standard printed journal
Vulnerable adults
Book reviews
Courses and careers
Courses
Career skills
Acquiring communication skills
Planning your career
Interview techniques
Developing nursing skills
Exploiting new opportunities
Specialisation
Aims and goals
Law and Policy
Volume 20
Learning by doing
A cut above
Jill of all trades
All things being equal
Positive spin
Nursing in a war zone
Anxious moments
Wake up and learn
On the road to recovery
Memories are made for this
Be brave, admit ignorance
Ringing the changes
Writing on the wire
Hotline to health
Improve your wobbling skills
Headed the right way
Too posh to floss?
Hang on in there
Confidence boost
Be ready for your 15 minutes
Beyond the emergency
Face up to responsibility
Movers and shakers
Having it all
Practice potential
Worth the effort
Volume 21
Do your patients rate you?
Pioneers of independence
Star performance
First step on career ladder
Dealing with differences
Carry on nursing
Battle stations
Blowing the whistle
On the doorstep
Nursing in New Delhi
Agencies offer choice and variety
The healing personality
What makes a good nurse?
Power of effective communication
Where there's smoke…
Information explosion
When disaster strikes
Time out for latecomers
Solid grounding
Recruitment in freefall
Talking up the treatment
Understanding learning
Are you just the job?
Intent on success
Put value in evaluation
New Zealand, new life
A gentle art
Drive for success
Finding something to smile about
No barriers to nursing
Education in overdrive
Finding something to smile about
Broader horizons
See beyond the illness
Remember and learn
Sight savers on wheels
Shipshape to nurse
Learn to play hardball
A big adventure
Battlefield
Connecting with children
See the client not the addiction
Make your choices ‘green'
Learning to assist
Emergency medicine
The good portfolio
Raising a research profile
My turning point
Practical support for Africa
Honing interprofessional links
Keeping to the same old pathways
Crossing the divide
Freedom to learn
Nurses need the law
Expanding professional horizons
Try some variety
In the land of ‘cash and ‘carry' health care
Take direct action
Pride and prejudice
An essential debriefing
The nurse is not for burning
Can you tell write from wrong?
Safe in our hands
Highly prized
Designed for life
Building for health
Change of direction
Listen and learn
Eat, drink and be renewed
Finnish school
It will go swimmingly
Model for delivery
Don't take it personally
How IT is shaping up
Timeless nursing values
Working together, learning together
Loss of experience
Prison placement
Sounds of silence
Defining moment
Alternative nursing
Shifting priorities
To Russia with care
Pulling power
Here to help
Not always greener
Plotting your pathway
How healthy is mental health?
A hard day's night
All together now
Aide to recovery
There for the taking
Humbling experience
Lead by example
No problem too small
Of pharoahs and sphinxes
Volume 22
Formative years
At your service
Interview tactics
Take a look at tomorrow
Guiding lights
Out of our comfort zone
Get a career boost
Finding your way in the early days
Volunteering can be a career investment
Not living comfortably
Crisis can give you a better Christmas
Get things in perspective
Happy to stay in Lebanon
No Students for me
Nightingale’s work lives on
Difficult conversations
The art of empathy
Train to retain
Enterprising moves
Rules of engagement
Calm and collected
Root and branch review of education
Stress busters
Leaders at liverpool
All in a day's work
Young minds
Power of the team
Lean and simple
Winning is a BIG boost
Developing intelligent feelings
Research power
Just a minute
Opportunity knocks
Up to the Challenge?
Of course you can study
Extension of powers
Safety in numbers
Help is just a phone call away
Leading the way
The business of community spirit
Pass on the advice
World's best practice
Expertise in hand
Cool, calm and collected
Practise makes perfect
Next rung of the ladder
Professional backup
Birth of a French love affair
Smile therapy
Keeping fit for practice
An end to indifference
Tailored applications
Parental guidance
In the right direction
Past inheritance
Governing bodies
From the source
High and dry
Right tools for the job
Feeling the squeeze
Positive partnerships
Get ahead
People and places
Demand and supply
Aim for the higher ground
Protect yourself
Less lonely at the top
One step ahead of an error
Crossing the aid hurdles
A leader on the patient journey
Shock treatment
Volume 23
Inner confidence
Point of reference
Knowledge swap
Greater flexibility for learning
Teaching a good death
Crossing continents
Atlantic crossing
Caught on camera
The never-ending shift
Freedom to influence
An appreciation of culture
Discounts
Book club
Supplies and equipment
Events and listings
Links
Network
Student life
Dealing with your first death
The calmness and dignity of the last offices ritual impressed me
Participating in a patient's end-of-life care was humbling
Patient's Frank talk about death made me feel uncomfortable
A staff nurse showed me how to respect patients who have died
Helping parents to grieve was a privilege I will never forget
I was shocked by My inability to support a grieving relative
Patients were reassured when I expressed my distress at death
My sister's loss taught me the hardest lesson of all
The death of a child takes an adult nursing student by surprise
Working with tsunami survivors taught me to listen to patients
Dealing with your first death
A patient's thanks gave student Victoria Snowdin confidence
End of life care was exemplary
At last, I found a way to connect with a lonely hospice patient
How I learned to be calm and unafraid in the face of death
I was deeply moved by the trust a dying patient showed in me
Honour of carrying out last offices helped calm my nerves
Life on the wards
It was easy to misinterpret a loving wife's brusque manner
I cannot forget the patient who was turned away
Needless communication error compromised a patient's care
I learned to set aside my own feelings on abortion
Families benefit from getting involved with personal care
Simple encouragement was all a client needed to get moving
I gained personal experience of the impact of arthritis
Clients assessed my care-giving skills in a placement interview
Try to understand the patient's feelings about being looked at
A gentle art
I lacked confidence to speak up for my patient's best interests
An orthopaedic placement helped heal my fear of cancer
Learn to play hardball
Tube feeding excludes patients from some basic social rituals
Blood sugar spiked when drugs were given at the wrong time
A non-accidental injury threw light on postnatal depression
A family death highlights the importance of communication
I felt guilty when I could not help a client hearing voices
I wish I had felt more confident to use my life-saving skills
Insensitive nursing marred a patient's last hours of life
If you feel uncomfortable about a task, trust your instincts
‘They were not bad nurses, but the patient was overlooked'
Shamiso Simango found a simple solution to a patient's anxiety
Take time to preserve patient dignity
Sharing information about a patient's past can be useful
In self-defence
Efficient case conference felt a bit like child abuse
When truth hurts
Reluctance to interfere should not get in the way of good care
Being with a patient as he or she dies is a unique experience
A language barrier isolates patients and can be harmful
In the dock
Hospital can be a comfort zone too
A mature approach
Pure theatre for nursing students
Fighting back
Health in relation to lifestyle and health promotion
Keeping patient's informed
Clear communication
Nursing can be a rollercoaster ride
Exposure to an IV drug abuser's blood
Edward Davies realised he knew a patient in his care
From breast cancer diagnosis to an Advanced Diploma
An experience I will never forget
Scared and shaken but proud
Informed consent
Individualistic approach to care
Katie Hillier learned that all nursing can involve palliative care
The value of building relationships
A first encounter
Visiting a terminally ill patient
Building communication and interpersonal skills
Support for family members
A nurse's therapeutic relationship
Perceptions of mental health nursing
A patient's right to know?
Losing sight of patients as people
An ethical dilemma
Learning professionalism and responsibility
Person-centred care
Was I really cut out for nursing?
A patient's choice must be respected
Taking time to talk
An enlightening experience
Highs and lows
Student Steven Edmunds helped a patient through a painful procedure
Student Maureen Taiwo Alabi comforts a woman in pain
Find positive learning from negative experiences of care
Painful lesson in how to deal with patients’ aggression
Assisting with births helped me to empathise with mothers
I had to lie to a patient and it ruined our relationship
My outburst upset colleagues, but I expect high standards
Relatives can appear uncaring but they still need our support
A close shave brings home the importance of identity checks
Starting out
I saw a patient die in pain after it took too long to get his drugs
The day I learned to be wary of leaving dad holding the baby
I learned that dignity is about listening to the patient
It is only natural to show your emotions and cry sometimes
Assisting in the delivery room can be tense and emotional
Self-medicating patient taught me always to ask questions
A love of learning
Walking back to happiness
Sometimes nurses may have to act against their own instincts
My own diagnosis has given me insight into how patients feel
Positive reflections
I stopped blaming the patient for the problems in her life
Silence is not golden
Two-way treatment
In a tangle over being mistaken as a mental health patient
A comforting presence
Making the best of your placements
Picnic mishap gave me a lesson in preparing for the unexpected
Be confident in your skills and speak up for your patients
Listen to your conscience when you work under supervision
Dealing with differences
Blowing the whistle
Talking about his family life calms a patient with dementia
Time out for latecomers
Keep your chin up, work hard, tell the truth and enjoy it all
Placement visits revealed the realities of the sex trade
Emergency medicine
Let's stop apologising and be proud of our student status
Honing interprofessional links
Learning to survive the world outside of my comfort zone
Try some variety
Take direct action
Starting out
Keep in touch
Lessons in how to get the best from a methodical assessment
Be persistent in the search for dementia patients' identity
I was deeply affected by a dying patient who put on a brave face
Really listening to a patient can make all the difference
Nurses have a right to make moral judgements at work
Students on placements must never forget they are guests
We must always challenge bad practice, even from a consultant
Be the nurse you want to be by refusing to kowtow to bullies
A GP showed me how to deal with a violent and aggressive patient
I learned about the importance of balancing ethical principles
Good communication can start with an offer of a cup of tea
A hospice placement gave me experience of ‘real nursing'
Happy to be a softie if it means remaining true to my values
Diagnosis without explanation can cause needless anxiety
Last hours
Patients and staff benefit from ‘human touch' nursing care
A poor hospital referral puts patient's welfare in jeopardy
Good communication takes account of patient's abilities
A day centre placement showed me a different side to nursing
Don't overlook the importance of communication with patients
Witnessing ‘barbaric' seclusion provided impetus for reflection
Discussing a patient's fear of falling could prove helpful
Feeling valued
Some people may prefer not to be reminded of the ‘old days'
There is so much to learn, but it is sinking in – gradually
People told me I could never be a nurse, but they were wrong
Becoming a person again
How one simple sentence gave my patient false hope
I learned to see a person behind the mental illness
Second nature
Off target
Good practice
The mother load
The end is in sight
Real life is not like holby city, but i realise that I did my best
Tips for success
Finding time to talk to a patient can help reduce their anxiety
An appreciative patient showed me the importance of trust
Happy returns
Getting to know each other starts with exchanging names
Feeling the squeeze
No time for staff tiffs when patients need our care
Make a link
Do mental health patients get the services they deserve?
Learn side by side
Added value?
First–time nerves
We are all responsible
When it all goes wrong
Student Michelle Dunn learned to keep an open mind
Culture shock
Joanne Hardy learned that sometimes the patient just wants a hug
Student Evie Jackson learned from a difficult patient encounter
Student Ian Simpson's eyes were opened in the community
Placement prejudice
Spread your wings
My first placement taught me
Good placement guide
A bank nurse showed me how to trust my own judgement
The final placement
In india, I saw how patients are cared for by their entire family
Handing over responsibility
Prison placement taught me to see all patients as individuals
Nurse advocates brought relief to patient in terrible pain
Unaccustomed as I am…
A world of difference
Seeing a dead body helped me deal with my mother’s illness
A tale of two placements – from pariah to valued team member
My attempt to advocate for a vulnerable patient was in vain
A patient taught me about cognitive ability after stroke
My first job is at a hospice
When your patience is stretched to breaking point, ask for help
I missed an opportunity to try cardiopulmonary resuscitation
I learned a more professional approach to observations
Learning to change
I learnt that communication is vital in stressful situations
Community relations
Showing real empathy helped my patient on a difficult day
I was motivated to challenge the uncaring attitudes of staff
Mentoring
I am thankful that healthcare assistants are there to help
A good mentor has helped me to realise my potential as a nurse
Mentor's poor example made me examine my own attitudes
I should have had the confidence to speak for unconscious patient
Straight talk cleared the air with mentor
Loss of confidence
Key to learning
Mutual benefit
No obstacle to success
Mind your mentoring
Study skills
Recruitment in freefall
Understanding learning
Are you just the job?
Put value in evaluation
Education in overdrive
Remember and learn
Can you tell write from wrong?
Using the internet as a learning tool
Testing time
How to ask an intelligent question
Word perfect
The cost of reading
On course for success
Crunch the numbers
A test of fitness
Quote of many colours
Clinical knowledge to hand
Why be a nurse?
At your service
The healing personality
What makes a good nurse?
No barriers to nursing
See beyond the illness
Swift response to suspected diabetes helped save my sister
A big adventure
See the client not the addiction
My turning point
I refused to let Scoliosis stop me from following my dream
Battling a stomach bug gives me an idea of how patients feel
Why be a nurse?
Student Julie Meredith learned to question her own beliefs
Transfer made easier
The truth about failure
When I came face to face with the ‘too posh to wash' nurses
Caring for dad helped me to realise I was ready to nurse
Exclusion from the clique left me scared and demoralised
Nursing the planet
Older and wiser
Make a difference
Steps toward recovery
Sticks and stones
Actions that benefit patients are not an abuse of power
Conveyor belt care
The rewards of caring for the patient, not just the condition
Out of harm's way
Getting to know the importance of introductions to patients
Stand up for specialists
International recognition
Work/life balance
Make your choices ‘green'
The ride of your life
An essential debriefing
ABC of time planning
Financial tips
Survival guide
Unsocial behaviour
Balancing act
Rights of access to all
Application required
Knowledge in hand
Time to branch out
Price worth paying
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