Complete Summary: Chapters 1-6
Chapter 1: Nursing and The Health Care System
Nursing has a rich history that shaped modern healthcare. Florence Nightingale was a pioneer who believed in humane patient care and continuing education for nurses. In North America, nurses like Dorothea Dix, Clara Barton, and Lillian Wald expanded nursing into the community, providing care during wartime and to underserved populations. Throughout the 20th century, nursing evolved to include midwifery, prenatal care, and community health services.
Today, nursing is based on common goals of providing quality, evidence-based care. The nursing process is the foundation of nursing practice, and nurses work in various settings including hospitals, clinics, long-term care facilities, and home health. There are multiple educational pathways: practical nursing (LPN/LVN), registered nursing (RN), and advanced-practice nursing. Nursing care is delivered through different methods: functional nursing, team nursing, total patient care, and primary nursing.
The modern healthcare system includes different levels of care (preventive, acute, rehabilitative, long-term), and various types of insurance organizations like HMOs (Health Maintenance Organizations) and PPOs (Preferred Provider Organizations) that manage how patients receive care
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