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Nursing Management 1999: Vol 30 Index PDF

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index to Volume 30, Numbers 1-12 (January-December 1999) This index is arranged in two sections: the Subject section and the been combined. Feature articles are shown in bold type. An abbrevia- Author section. Subject headings are those used in the Cumulative tion in parentheses after the title indicates a special series of features index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), supplemented or an editorial department (listed below). The month of issue and page by the language style of Nursing Management. Some subjects have number follow. i Abbreviations used in this index are: AON = Ask AONE’s Experts... Guest Editorial LQ= Leading Questions & Recruitment & CB= Communication Briefs Special Report: * Sensible Solutions Retention Report cc = Critical Care Section infection Control LU = Special Report: Legal Technology. Nursing CE= Continuing Education Questions and Update the System cs = Career Scope Answers from the NF = Notes from the Field Tried and True: Tips ED = Editorial JCAHO NMC = = Nursing Management from Your Peers FIN= Financial Management Law for the Nurse Congress Technology Update FF = Facts & Figures Manager RQA= =‘ Recruitment Q&A FK = Finders, Keepers (in Lifeline R&R Report) Documentation Post-Congress Report. (NMC) DEC: 31 A matter of geography. (FF) FEB: 18 Sigma Theta Tau rethinks nursing education. Medicare Increases Managed Care’s Choosing a Clinical Information System. (FF) JUN: 13 Accountability, Part 1. (FIN) JAN: 14-16 NOV: 51-55 taff Development: Educate staff in dementia Medicare Increases Managed Care’s Fax-ability. (CB) FEB: 6 care. (FF) SEP: 9 Accountability, Part 2. (FIN) FEB: 10-11 Forming Collaborative Relationships. AUG: Teach nurses effective ways to deal with inad- Merging hospitals raise prices. (FF) JUL: 13 38-39 equate staffing. (NF) DEC: 38 Needle-stick Prevention: Safe needles are Index. DEC: 42-47 20th Anniversary Nursing Management money in the bank. (FF) MAY: 12 Managers, take note! (TT) AUG: 17 Congress '99. (NMC) NOV: 29-32 New Risk Adjustment May Cut Medicare Putting it Together: A Clinical 20th Anniversary! Nursing Management Payments. (FIN) JUL: 10-11 Documentation System that Works. MAR: Congress '99 Preview. (NMC) OCT: 31-32 Nurses’ Basic Guide to Understanding the 4347 Two-way Talks. JUN: 56-58 Medicare PPS. (FIN) MAY: 14-15 Ready reference. (TT) OCT: 9 What You Need to Know about Latex Allergy. Ready to retire? (FIN) AUG: 14 Seal appeal. (TT) DEC: 8 (CE) AUG: 18, 20-26 When an employee leaves, how much does it Sound IT solutions: Partner with your nursing Work Sites: Guidelines, Free Medical cost? (FK) MAY: 28 informatics specialist. (CB) AUG: 44 Information, Women’s health. (FF) APR: 21 Where does your hospital keep its money? When a domestic violence victim reaches Work Sites: Visit the Mayo Clinic, the National (FF) FEB: 18 out...take her hand. (CC) OCT: 43-44, 46 Institutes of Health, and Johns Hopkins. (FF) A written report tool shrinks ED stays. (NF) MAY: 12 OCT: 47 Education Financial Add Genetics to Your Knowledge Base. NOV: Ask AONE’s Experts...About How to 56-58 Incorporate Case Managers’ Costs. (AON) Choose a Successful Clinical Information The cost of Staph. (FF) APR: 20 APR: 64 System. (TU) MAR: 65, 68 Cross-training in 3-D. NOV: 59-62 Denying Care Versus Denying Payment. (FIN) Choosing a Clinical Information System. Custom competencies: Developing a unit-spe- MAR: 10-11 NOV: 51-55 cific program. (NF) FEB: 62 Examining the Dollars and Cents of Care. Computerized Patient Record: How to begin? Dear Colleague. (ED) JAN: 6 (CE) MAR: 22-26 (FF) FEB: 18-19 Education News: Carolyn Williams to lead Exclusive Nurse Manager/Executive Salary Cyber-Savvy Recruitment. (RRR) FEB: 37-39 AACN in 2000. (FF) DEC: 10-11 Review. JUL: 21-23 Dear Me,. (TT) MAR: 20 Empowering Lifelong Learners. APR: 48-50 Financial fragments. (TT) FEB: 22 E-mail time-saver. (TT) FEB: 22 Expert advice. (TT) FEB: 22 Forging partnerships in care. (NF) MAR: 55 Hold a mini-conference. (TT) DEC: 8 Formula for Success: How to determine Fax-ability. (CB) FEB: 6 The Freedom to Roam. (TU) APR: 51, 54 How to Defuse a Walking Time Bomb. (CC) equipment costs. (FF) AUG: 16 MAR: 58, 60-61 Health care on the Hill. (FF) MAR: 12 From Enemies to Friends: Nurses and Management educator asks: “What do you Health care’s healthy profits. (FF) JUN: 12 Computers Unite. (GED) JAN: 4 want to learn?” (NF) JUL: 49 Health care to loosen purse strings. (FF) JAN: Get Patient Information Anytime, Anywhere. Navigating Specialty Certification. NOV: 28 20 (TEC) MAY: 19-20 New Ways to Evaluate Chemotherapy How to Develop a Unit Personnel Budget. Get the Buzz on Nurse Cail Systems. (TU) Competencies. NOV: 41-43 (FIN) JUN: 34-35 JUL: 43 Nursing demand still rising. (FF) APR: 20 How to Mobilize an Organization with Getting the message. (TT) FEB: 22 Photo opportunity. (TT) JUN: 16 Commitment, Not Cash. (FIN) DEC: 16-17 High Touch vs. High Tech: Rediscover the Poster Presentations with Style. (LQ) SEP: 15 Invisible Costs, Visible Savings. AUG: 28-32 Human Element. (TEC) JUN: 33 42 Nursing Management/December 1999 bttp://www.nursingmanagement.com index to Volume 30, Numbers 1-12 (January-December 1999) This index is arranged in two sections: the Subject section and the been combined. Feature articles are shown in bold type. An abbrevia- Author section. Subject headings are those used in the Cumulative tion in parentheses after the title indicates a special series of features index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), supplemented or an editorial department (listed below). The month of issue and page by the language style of Nursing Management. Some subjects have number follow. i Abbreviations used in this index are: AON = Ask AONE’s Experts... Guest Editorial LQ= Leading Questions & Recruitment & CB= Communication Briefs Special Report: * Sensible Solutions Retention Report cc = Critical Care Section infection Control LU = Special Report: Legal Technology. Nursing CE= Continuing Education Questions and Update the System cs = Career Scope Answers from the NF = Notes from the Field Tried and True: Tips ED = Editorial JCAHO NMC = = Nursing Management from Your Peers FIN= Financial Management Law for the Nurse Congress Technology Update FF = Facts & Figures Manager RQA= =‘ Recruitment Q&A FK = Finders, Keepers (in Lifeline R&R Report) Documentation Post-Congress Report. (NMC) DEC: 31 A matter of geography. (FF) FEB: 18 Sigma Theta Tau rethinks nursing education. Medicare Increases Managed Care’s Choosing a Clinical Information System. (FF) JUN: 13 Accountability, Part 1. (FIN) JAN: 14-16 NOV: 51-55 taff Development: Educate staff in dementia Medicare Increases Managed Care’s Fax-ability. (CB) FEB: 6 care. (FF) SEP: 9 Accountability, Part 2. (FIN) FEB: 10-11 Forming Collaborative Relationships. AUG: Teach nurses effective ways to deal with inad- Merging hospitals raise prices. (FF) JUL: 13 38-39 equate staffing. (NF) DEC: 38 Needle-stick Prevention: Safe needles are Index. DEC: 42-47 20th Anniversary Nursing Management money in the bank. (FF) MAY: 12 Managers, take note! (TT) AUG: 17 Congress '99. (NMC) NOV: 29-32 New Risk Adjustment May Cut Medicare Putting it Together: A Clinical 20th Anniversary! Nursing Management Payments. (FIN) JUL: 10-11 Documentation System that Works. MAR: Congress '99 Preview. (NMC) OCT: 31-32 Nurses’ Basic Guide to Understanding the 4347 Two-way Talks. JUN: 56-58 Medicare PPS. (FIN) MAY: 14-15 Ready reference. (TT) OCT: 9 What You Need to Know about Latex Allergy. Ready to retire? (FIN) AUG: 14 Seal appeal. (TT) DEC: 8 (CE) AUG: 18, 20-26 When an employee leaves, how much does it Sound IT solutions: Partner with your nursing Work Sites: Guidelines, Free Medical cost? (FK) MAY: 28 informatics specialist. (CB) AUG: 44 Information, Women’s health. (FF) APR: 21 Where does your hospital keep its money? When a domestic violence victim reaches Work Sites: Visit the Mayo Clinic, the National (FF) FEB: 18 out...take her hand. (CC) OCT: 43-44, 46 Institutes of Health, and Johns Hopkins. (FF) A written report tool shrinks ED stays. (NF) MAY: 12 OCT: 47 Education Financial Add Genetics to Your Knowledge Base. NOV: Ask AONE’s Experts...About How to 56-58 Incorporate Case Managers’ Costs. (AON) Choose a Successful Clinical Information The cost of Staph. (FF) APR: 20 APR: 64 System. (TU) MAR: 65, 68 Cross-training in 3-D. NOV: 59-62 Denying Care Versus Denying Payment. (FIN) Choosing a Clinical Information System. Custom competencies: Developing a unit-spe- MAR: 10-11 NOV: 51-55 cific program. (NF) FEB: 62 Examining the Dollars and Cents of Care. Computerized Patient Record: How to begin? Dear Colleague. (ED) JAN: 6 (CE) MAR: 22-26 (FF) FEB: 18-19 Education News: Carolyn Williams to lead Exclusive Nurse Manager/Executive Salary Cyber-Savvy Recruitment. (RRR) FEB: 37-39 AACN in 2000. (FF) DEC: 10-11 Review. JUL: 21-23 Dear Me,. (TT) MAR: 20 Empowering Lifelong Learners. APR: 48-50 Financial fragments. (TT) FEB: 22 E-mail time-saver. (TT) FEB: 22 Expert advice. (TT) FEB: 22 Forging partnerships in care. (NF) MAR: 55 Hold a mini-conference. (TT) DEC: 8 Formula for Success: How to determine Fax-ability. (CB) FEB: 6 The Freedom to Roam. (TU) APR: 51, 54 How to Defuse a Walking Time Bomb. (CC) equipment costs. (FF) AUG: 16 MAR: 58, 60-61 Health care on the Hill. (FF) MAR: 12 From Enemies to Friends: Nurses and Management educator asks: “What do you Health care’s healthy profits. (FF) JUN: 12 Computers Unite. (GED) JAN: 4 want to learn?” (NF) JUL: 49 Health care to loosen purse strings. (FF) JAN: Get Patient Information Anytime, Anywhere. Navigating Specialty Certification. NOV: 28 20 (TEC) MAY: 19-20 New Ways to Evaluate Chemotherapy How to Develop a Unit Personnel Budget. Get the Buzz on Nurse Cail Systems. (TU) Competencies. NOV: 41-43 (FIN) JUN: 34-35 JUL: 43 Nursing demand still rising. (FF) APR: 20 How to Mobilize an Organization with Getting the message. (TT) FEB: 22 Photo opportunity. (TT) JUN: 16 Commitment, Not Cash. (FIN) DEC: 16-17 High Touch vs. High Tech: Rediscover the Poster Presentations with Style. (LQ) SEP: 15 Invisible Costs, Visible Savings. AUG: 28-32 Human Element. (TEC) JUN: 33 42 Nursing Management/December 1999 bttp://www.nursingmanagement.com Hold the Lab in the Palm of Your Hand. (TU) OCT: 8 ICU info. (TT) MAR: 20 MAY: 57-59 HMO Market: HMOs face IT challenges. (FF) “IN” bin insights. (TT) JAN: 19 How to Merge Telemedicine with Traditional MAR: 12 Internal consultants: Our expert peers. (CS) Clinical Practice. APR: 33-36 HMOs meet alternative care demand. (FF) JUN: 70-71 Infection Control: More Than a Matter of NOV: 22 It’s a Match! (CE) FEB: 25-30 Economics. (TU) JUN: 64-65 How to Lead Departments Outside Your It’s not what you say, but how you say it. Inviting voice mail. (TT) JAN: 19 Clinical Competence. DEC: 28-30 (RQA) APR: 60 IT Takes Lead Role in Outcomes Invisible Costs, Visible Savings. AUG: 28-32 JCAHO News: JCAHO approves Internationai Measurement. (TEC) AUG: 12-13 Joint Commission News: JCAHO restructures. Accreditation Services. (FF) FEB: 19 Keep Pace with ED Technologies. (TU) SEP: (FF) DEC: 10-11 Keep it simple. (TT) MAR: 20 37 Keep your eye on health care trends. (CS) Know where to stand. (TT) AUG: 17 Let’s Talk Telemetry. (TEC) FEB: 14-15 NOV: 70-71 Laughter Ligntens Our Load. (GED) SEP: 4 Listen for the beep. (TT) APR: 22 Lead the Way. (CE) NOV: 36-40 The Leader in You. JAN: 35-39 Make E-mail work for you. (TT) MAY: 22 Length of Stay: Childbirth patients stay Lead the Way. (CE) NOV: 36-40 Nursing’s Role in Y2K Planning. (TEC) APR: longer. (FF) SEP: 9 Long-distance brainstorming. (TT) NOV: 9 25-26 Managed Care’s Move to Rural Areas. (FM) Make conflict into consensus. (TT) OCT: 9 Pacemaker Interference. (TEC) MAR: 14 APR: 16-17 A meeting and a half. (TT) OCT: 9 Parameters for Vital Signs Monitors. (TU) FEB: Medicaid Participation: Medicaid managed- Merge Right: Market Forces and Antitrust. 65, 68 care market. (FF) DEC: 10-11 (LU) MAR: 38-42 Patient call system provides efficient delega- National survey shows how managed care Motivate! (CE) MAR: 27-30 tion. (NF) JAN: 50 affects patient care. (FF) OCT: 8 Negotiation Strategies for Men and Women. Pointed Strategies for Needlestick Prevention. New Managed-Care Glossary. (FIN) NOV: 16- (CE) JAN: 22-26 (TU) JAN: 57, 60 17, 19-20 New job ice-breaker. (TT) AUG: 17 Pump Primer: How to Choose the Right Poised for next-century politics? Dec: 25-27 Nurses Dance to a Different Tune. (GE) JUL: 5 Infusion Device. (TU) AUG: 49 Poll shows Medicare is a national priority. (FF) Nursing Convention: National League for Putting it Together: A Clinical OCT: 8 Nursing Focuses on leadership. (FF) MAY: 12 Documentation System that Works. MAR: Retain Staff Nurses with Room to Grow. Open-and-shut presentations. (TT) APR: 22 43-47 (RRR) NOV: 33, 35 Paper TRAF-fic. (TT) NOV: 9 R&D in the Mergers and Acquisitions Age. Timely Admits, Transfers, and Discharges. Planning calendar. (TT) FEB: 23 (TEC) DEC: 14-15 (CC) OCT: 40, 42 Poised for next-century politics? DEC: 25-27 Setting up a computerized patient record? Who understands what you do? (GEC’ AUG: 4 Post-Congress '98: Learning That Lasts for Experience talks. (TEC) JUL: 14-15 Work Sites: Long-term care. (FF) JUN: 12 Times That Change. (NMC) JAN: 21 Smoothing the Way for Y2K. (ED) DEC: 7 Posters spread the word. (TT) JUL: 8 Sound IT solutions: Partner with your nursing Premeeting timesaver. (TT) APR: 22 informatics specialist. (CB) AUG: 44 ANA News: David Hennage named ANA Recognize, Reward, Retain. FEB: 41-43 Step-by-step Guide to Selecting Mobile Executive Director. (FF) JAN: 20 Remember Where You Came From. (RRR) Wireless Devices. (TEC) NOV: 12-13 Ask AONE’s Experts...About Handing Over MAY: 29-30 Stop the Carts. JAN: 44-46 Medication Administration to PharmDs. (AON) Reminder with flare. (TT) OCT: 9 Technology Demands Quick-change Nursing AUG: 56 Retain Staff Nurses with Room to Grow. Roles. (GED) MAY: 7 Ask AONE’s Experts...About How to Plan a (RRR) NOV: 33, 35 Telemetry gets mobile. (TT) MAR: 20 Transition to a New Facility. (AON) JUN: 80 Return to sender. (TT) APR: 22 Transfers Reach Nurses and Their Patients. Become Architects of Your Future. FEB: 31-35 Set a calm example. (TT) AUG: 17 (TU) NOV: 73 Building a 21st Century Facility. JUL: 28-30, 32 Six pointers for addressing employee perfor- Vascular Access Devices: Lines to Live By. Build Institutional Commitment to Improving mance concerns. (CB) MAR: 56 (TU) DEC: 49, 52 Pain Management. (CE) JAN: 27-34 Smart Safeguards for the ED. MAY: 31-33 Wade through Wound Care’s Healing Calculating card trick. (TT) AUG: 17 Someday we'll laugh about this. (CS) AUG: Technologies. (TU) OCT: 49, 52 Celebrate Nurses with a Patchwork of 45-47 Want simple, superior resource manage- Excellence. (RRR) AUG: 33, 35 Sports Metaphors: What game does your ment? JAN: 40-41 Circle, shoot, and rebound. (TT) DEC: 8 team play? (CB) NOV: 76 Work Sites: Information at your fingertips. (FF) Connect with peers. (TT) MAR: 20 Stay in the hear and now. (TT) DEC: & MAR: 12-13 Descriptive resumés lead the pack. (RQA) Stick it to "em. (TT) FEB: 22 Work Sites: Internet resource links nurse DEC: 40 Sticks and stones. (CB) JUN: 73-75 managers. (FF) JAN: 20 Desk clutter. (TT) JUN: 16 Strategies for Reporting to a Nonnurse Vice- Y2K Compliance Countdown. JAN: 42-43 Do your nurses delegate effectively? (CE) President. APR: 37-38 Y2K Countdown: Looking for last-minute Y2K MAY: 23-26 Strong Leaders Strengthen Retention. (RRR) advice? (FF) OCT: 8 Eight steps to help you put consumers first. MAY: 27-28 Y2K Countdown: Pharmaceutical stakehold- (NF) MAY: 63 SWORN in! (FF) JAN: 20 ers prepared for 2000. (FF) DEC: 10-114 11 easy ways to build rapport. (CB) JAN: 49 Tackle paper piles. (TT) JAN: 19 Y2K: What can you do in 3 months? (TEC) E-tiquette. (TT) JUN: 16 Take five. (TT) JUN: 16 SEP: £213 Eliminate most cover letters. (TT) OCT: 9 Take Teamwork to New Heights. (CE) APR: Y2K: Will devices work when the calendar Examining the Dollars and Cents of Care. 28-32 turns? (FF) AUG: 16 (CE) MAR: 22-26 Tangled up in “nots.” (CB) APR: 57 Y2K: What does IT have in store for nursing? Fit to lead. (TT) APR: 22 The termination process: Strategies for nurse (TEC) OCT: 14-15 FACTS about teamwork. (CB) FEB: 6 managers. (NF) APR: 58-59 File your schedule. (TT) MAY: 22 Time to try travel nurses? (RRR) FEB: 39-40 |C are Four habits of highly successful change- Unexpected visits. (TT) MAY: 22 Breathing Life into Customer Satisfaction. skilled people. (CS) NOV: 69-70 Want applicants? Try these unique tips. (FX) NOV: 64-68 Get your hands dirty. (TT) FEB: 23 NOV: 34 A Defining Time in Health Care. (GED) DEC: 4 How to Connect with an Uncooperative What are your plans for 2000? (ED) NOV: 7 Forging partnerships in care. (NF) MAR: 55 Medical Director. (LQ) MAR: 17 What makes nurses stay? (RRR) MAY: 27, 30 Health Maintenance Organizations: HMOs How to Merge Caregivers’ Corporate What to Do When Funtional and Legal lose money for second year in a row. (FF) Cultures. MAY: 34-36 Families Disagree. (CC) MAY: 54-56 bttp://www.nursingmanagement.com December 1999/Nursing Management 43 Where were you between 10:15 and 10:30? Families Disagree. (CC) MAY: 54-56 Ask AONE’s Experts...About Working Without (TT) NOV: 9 When Sexual Harassment Hits Home. (LAW) A Nursing Department. (AON) SEP: 48 Win-Win Consulting. JUN: 59-60 MAY: 16-18 Breathing Life into Customer Satisfaction. You've got interruptions. (TT) NOV: 9 When trouble knocks, CIRCLE the wagons. NOV: 64-68 Y2K Compliance Countdown. JAN: 42-43 MAR: (CB) 56-57 Case Management Nips Costs, Not Care. Y2K Countdown: Clearing the shelves. (FF) Who's liable in equipment cases? (LAW) APR: (JCA) OCT: 12 JUL: 13 12-13, 15 Follow Family-Focused Care Principles. FEB: You're being deposed? Remain calm. (CB) You're being deposed? Remain calm. (CB) 47-50 MAY: 65-66 Improve communication in a shared gover- nance system. (CS) MAR: 50, 54 Keep your eye on health care trends. (CS) Ask AONE’s Experts...About Counting Short- cute ic ic : Can your NOV: 70-71 Stay Census. (AON) MAY: 72 nurses defuse a time bomb? (CC) DEC: 32, “Knock-Your-Socks-Off” Service. (CE) JUL: Exclusive Nurse Manager/Executive Salary 34, 36 16-20 Review. JUL: 21-23 Anatomy of a Code. (CE) NOV: 44-50 The Leader in You. JAN: 35-39 Is a nursing shortage on the way? FEB: 54-55 Celebrate Emergency Nurses Day, October Meeting the Challenges of Unscheduled Nursing Research: ACCN sponsors new 13! (FF) SEP: 9 Outpatient Visits. FEB: 51-53 research grants (FF) DEC: 10-11 Certification Requirement: Certification The “New Team” Triad. FEB: 44-46 Post-Congress '98: Learning That Lasis for Boards, inc., halts plans for BSN require- Seven Steps to Shift from Tasks to Times That Change. (NMC) JAN: 21 ment. (FF) FEB: 18 Outcomes. JUL: 24-27 Salary Survey: We Need Your Input! APR: 9 Control Critically Ili Patients’ Acute Pain. Staying Power. (RRR) NOV: 33-34 Salary Survey: We Need Your Input! MAR: 9 (CC) AUG: 40-43 Tracking Patients, Tracking Costs. (CC) Follow Family-Focused Care Principles. FEB: JAN: 47-48 47-50 Home Care: Home visits have long-term Credentialing and Privileging Ensure impact. (FF) MAR: 12 Acute Thoracic Aortic Dissection: Can your Care. (JCA) AUG: 8 How to Merge Telemedicine with Traditional nurses defuse a time bomb? (CC) DEC: 32, File a complaint, face retaliation? (LAW) DEC: Clinical Practice. APR: 33-36 34, 36 12-13 is cross-training medical/surgical RNs to Add Genetics to Your Knowledge Base. NOV: Do No Harm: When Caregivers Violate Our ICU the answer? (CC) FEB: 58-60 56-58 Golden Rule, Part 1. (LAW) AUG: 10-11 Kid-friendly ED boosts patients and staff Alternative Medicine: Expert panel explores Do No Harm: When Caregivers Violate Our morale. (NF) JUN: 76 alternative cancer therapies. (FF) SEP: 9 Golden Rule, Part 2. (LAW) SEP: 10 Let's talk money. (CB) FEB: 6 Anatomy of a Code. (CE) NOV: 44-50 Ethics of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia. Linking the Physical Examination and Bacterial battle plan. (IC) JUN: 54 (LU) MAR: 31-33 Electrocardiography. (CC) MAY: 50, 52 Build institutional Commitment to Improving Greater Need for Background Checks. (LAW) Meeting the Challenges of Unscheduled Pain Management. (CE) JAN: 27-34 NOV: 26 Outpatient Visits. FEB: 51-53 Cardiac Surgery’s Calculated Risk. (CC) Guide to Nursing Organizations '99. MAY: Navigating Specialty Certification. NOV: 28 JUL: 34, 36, 38-40 46-48 New Ways to Evaluate Chemotherapy Control Critically tll Patients’ Acute Pain. House passes patients’ bill of rights. (FF) Competencies. NOV: 41-43 (CC) AUG: 40-43 NOV: 22 Nurses Gain More Time with Patients. SEP: End Long Waits for Pain Relief. (LQ) JUL: 12 How do we withhold or withdraw life-sustain- 35-36 Ethics of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia. ing therapy? (CE) OCT: 20-26 Nurses Take Therapeutic Change into Their (LU) MAR: 31-33 How to Cover All the Bases on Informed Own Hands. JUN: 61-63 Float notes. (TT) MAR: 20 Consent. (JCA) SEP: 14 Rebuilding the ED. SEP: 18-22 Guide to Nursing Organizations ‘99. MAY: Informed Consent: What Health Care Sick-Child Daycare Promotes Healing and 46-48 Professionals Need to Know, Part 1. (LAW) Staffing. APR: 46-47 Help the Health Care Team Release Its Hold JUN: 89 Smart Safeguards for the ED. MAY: 31-33 on Restraint. (CE) DEC: 19-24 Informed Consent: What Health Care Timely Admits, Transfers, and Discharges. Infection Control: A new silver bullet? (FF) Professionals Need to Know, Part 2. (LAW) (CC) OCT: 40, 42 NOV: 22 JUL: 6-7 Tracking Patients, Tracking Costs. (CC) Infection Control: CDC study shows rise in Legislation: California governor signs first hos- JAN: 47-48 penicillin-resistant Streptococcus pneumoniae. pital staffing bill. (FF) NOV: 22 You Can have a Dedicated Pediatric Unit. (FF) OCT: 8 Merge Right: Market Forces and Antitrust. MAY: 41-43 It's in the cards. (TT) DEC: 8 (LU) MAR: 38-42 A Written Report Tool Shrinks ED Stays. (NF) Let's talk money. (CB) FEB: 6 No Dumping: ED Transfer Risk. (LAW) JAN: 10-11 OCT: 47 Linking the Physical Examination and Nursing Malpractice: Cause for Consideration. Electrocardiography. (CC) MAY: 50, 52 LAW) FEB: 12-13 Managing Pain by the Book. (JCA) JUL: 9 Promote health care’s humane environment. Advocate for Your Nurses—and Your Patients. Managing Pressure Ulcers: A Multisite CQI (NF) SEP: 41 (LQ) NOV: 14 Challenge. OCT: 27-30 Protection from Negligence Lawsuits. (CE) Anatomy of a Disease Management Mortality Rates: Infant mortality higher for SEP: 23-28 Program. APR: 41-45 nonwhites. (FF) NOV: 22 Risky Rides. SEP: 29-31 Ask AONE’s Experts...About Evidence-based Navigate a Clinical Pathway for Tech Talk on Multistate Licensure. (TEC) JAN: Nursing Practice. (AON) OCT: 56 Uncomplicated Mi Patients. OCT: 33-35 12-13 Ask AONE’s Experts...About Getting the New study finds no link between CJD and Testing the Limits: Shift Rotation and the Community Involved in Care Management. infected blood. (IC) JUN: 54 ADA. (LU) MAR: 35-37 (AON) FEB: 72 Occupational Exposure. (CB) DEC: 40 What do legai allegations cost long-term care Ask AONE’s Experts...About Implementing a Patient Assessment by the Book. (JCA) MAR: 18 facilities? (FF) JUN: 12 Case Management Program. (AON) JAN: 64 Saved by the bell. (TT) MAR: 20 What principles guide research with human Ask AONE’s Experts...About Starting a Shield Staff from Occupational Exposure. participants? (JCA) NOV: 24 Program to Reduce Medication Errors. (AON) (IC) JUN: 53-55 What to Do When Functional! and legal NOV: 80 Six Stepping Stones to Better Management. 44 Nursing Management/December 1999 bttp://www.nursingmanagement.com APR: 39-40 More new NPs-but they're already taken. (FK) JUN: 37-40 Stop the Carts. JAN: 44-46 NOV: 34 Drawing New Nurses: A drawn-out task. (FF) Study sharpens understanding of HCV expo- The Most Significant Rewards Aren't Always MAY: 12 sure. (IC) JUN: 54 Monetary. (LQ) FEB: 16 How to Allocate the Right Staff Mix Across Taking on Germs of the Future. (GED) JUN: 7 Motivate! (CE) MAR: 27-30 Shifts, Part 1. (FIN) SEP: 16-17 VRE and MRSA: Putting Bad Bugs Out of National Labor Entity: Broad changes at the How to Allocate the Right Staff Mix Across Business. (IC, CE) JUN: 42-47, 49-50 ANA. (FF) AUG: 16 Shifts, Part 2. (FIN) OCT: 16-18 What You Need to Know about Latex Allergy. Negotiation Strategies for Men and Women. Is a nursing shortage on the way? FEB: 54-55 (CE) AUG: 18, 20-26 (CE) JAN: 22-26 Is cross-training medicai/surgical RNs to When a domestic violence victim reaches Networking get-together. (TT) JUN: 16 ICU the answer? (CC) FEB: 58-60 out...take her hand. (CC) OCT: 43-44, 46 Nominate a top-rate nurse! (FF) JUN: 12 The “New Team” Triad. FEB: 44-46 Nursing Directors Keep in Touch (LQ) AUG: 9 Nursing Shortage: Coalition pursues grads Personnel Occupational Exposure. (CB) DEC: 40 with ads. (FF) DEC: 10-11 Accentuate the positive. (TT) OCT: 9 Pass on the compliment. (TT) APR: 22 Patient call system provides efficient delega- Ask AONE’s Experts...About How to Negotiate Positive feedback—in triplicate! (TT) JUL: 8 tion. (NF) JAN: 50 Your Position After a Merger. (AON) MAR: 72 Promote health care’s humane environment. Recruiters Get Y2K-ready. (RRR) AUG: 33-34 Become Architects of Your Future. FEB: 31-35 (NF) SEP: 41 Salaries offered to top-recruited nurses. (FK) Birtndays and such. (TT) JAN: 19 Realtime role play. (TT) JAN: 19 AUG: 34 Caring Side-by-Side with Acute Care Nurse Recognize, Reward, Retain. FEB: 41-43 Take the plunge: Expanding the float pool to Practitioners. SEP: 32, 34 Remember Where You Came From. (RRR} “closed” units. (CS) JAN: 51-55 Celebrate National Nurses Week! (FF) MAY: MAY: 29-30 Teach nurses effective ways to deal with inad- 12 Retention-getter. (TT) NOV: 9 equate staffing. (NF) DEC: 38 Celebrate Nurses with a Patchwork of Selling a small town. (RQA) NOV: 35 Testing the Limits: Shift Rotation and the Excellence. (RRR) AUG: 33, 35 Sick-Child Daycare Promotes Healing and ADA. (LU) MAR: 35-37 Closed-Unit Staffing Speaks Volumes. (CE) Staffing. APR: 46-47 Time to try travel nurses? (RRR) FEB: 39-40 JUN: 37-40 Six pointers for addressing employee perfor- Vacancies mean more than open beds. (FK) Coming to Grips with a Peer’s Domestic mance concerns. (CB) MAR: 56 FEB: 38-39 Abuse. (LQ) MAY: 24 Someday we’ll laugh about this. (CS) AUG: Want simple, superior resource manage- Cross-training in 3-D. NOV: 59-62 45-47 ment? JAN: 40-41 Custom competencies: Developing a unit-spe- Sports Metaphors: What game does your What’s the most critical priority in nurse cific program. (NF) FEB: 62 team play? (CB) NOV: 76 staffing? (FF) AUG: 16 Cyber-Savvy Recruitment. (RRR) FEB: 37-39 Staying Power. (RRR) NOV: 33-34 Who makes the best reference? (RQA) MAY: 30 Daily employee recognition. (TT) FEB: 22 Sticks and stones. (CB) JUN: 73-75 Dear Colleague. (ED) JAN: 6 Strategies for Reporting to a Nonnurse Vice- Do your nurses delegate effectively? (CE) President. APR: 37-38 Anatomy of a Disease Management MAY: 23-26 Strong Leaders Strengthen Retention. (RRR) Program. APR: 41-45 11 easy ways to build rapport. (CB) JAN: 49 MAY: 27-28 Ask AONE’s Experts...About Increased Empioyee mission statements. (TT) APR: 22 Tackle turnover. (FK) FEB: 39 Nursing Accountability. (AON) JUL: 56 Empoweiing Lifelong Learners. APR: 48-50 Take Teamwork to New Heights. (CE) APR: Building a 21st Century Facility. JUL: 28-30, 32 ENA calls for nominations. (FF) APR: 20-21 28-32 Caring Side-by-Side with Acute Care Nurse Excuses, excuses. (TT) JUN: 16 Take the plunge: Expanding the float poo! to Practitioners. SEP: 32, 34 FACTS about teamwork. (CB) FEB: 6 “closed” units. (CS) JAN: 51-55 “Closet” Incidents. MAR: 48-49 Formula for Success: Turnover rates. (FF) JUL: 13 Tangled up in “nots.” (CB) APR: 57 Community Setting Challenges Best Four habits of highly successful change- The termination process: Strategies for nurse Practices. (GED) OCT: 4 skilled people. (CS) NOV: 69-70 managers. (NF) APR: 58-59 Consumer Poll: Consumer confidence rooted Glads for grads. (TT) MAY: 22 Thorough assessment required. (RQA) JUL: 41 in high health care standards. (FF) JUL: 13 Help the Health Care Team Release Its Hold Two-way Talks. JUN: 56-58 Eight steps to help you put consumers first. on Restraint. (CE) DEC: 19-24 Visible accomplishments. (TT) FEB: 23 (NF) MAY: 63 Hiring official loses top candidates. (RQA) What affects employee satisfaction? (FK) Expect Truly Unannounced Surveys (and FEB: 63 MAY: 29 more) from the Joint Commission. OCT: 36- How do we withhold or withdraw life-sustaii- What makes an ideal employer? (FK) FEB: 38 38 ing therapy? (CE) OCT: 20-26 What makes nurses stay? (RRR) MAY: 27, 30 Forming Collaborative Relationships. AUG: How to Lead Departments Outside Your What’s new? (TT) NOV: 9 38-39 Clinical Competence. DEC: 28-30 When trouble knocks, CIRCLE the wagons. Formula for ari Effective Acuity Systern. (LQ) How to Merge Caregivers’ Corporate MAR: (CB) 56-57 JUN: 14 Cultures. MAY: 34-36 Who's that baby? (TT) FEB: 22 Hallmarks of quality care. (FF) JUN: 12 Improve communication in a shared gover- Who's the future manager in your unit? (FK) Keep Up with Changing Performance nance system. (CS) MAR: 50, 54 AUG: 34 Improvement Standards. (JCA) MAY: 10 Internal consultants: Our expert peers. (CS) Win-Win Consulting. JUN: 59-60 “Knock-Your-Socks-Off” Service. (CE) JUL: JUN: 70-71 With two more units to manage, how can 16-20 It’s a Match! (CE) FEB: 25-30 communication survive? (LQ) JAN: 18 Listen and learn. (TT) JUN: 16 Keep agency nurses up-to-date. (TT) JUL: 8 Workers pledge their loyalty. (FK) NOV: 34 Managing Pressure Ulcers: A Muitisite CQ! Kid-friendly ED boosts patients and staff Challenge. OCT: 27-30 Personnel Staffing and morale. (NF) JUN: 76 Navigate a Clinical Pathway for Kudos! (TT) FEB: 22 Scheduling Uncomplicated Mi Patients. OCT: 33-35 Make Certification a Consumer Concern. Applicants respond to customer service. (FK) Nurses Gain More Time with Patients. SEP: (GED) APR: 7 MAY: 28 35-36 Making the Case for Nursing. (GED) MAR: 7 Appropriate Staffing: Our Right, Our Nurses Take Therapeutic Change into Their Management educator asks: “What do you Responsibility. (GED) FEB: 4 Own Hands. JUN: 61-63 want to learn?” (NF) JUL: 49 Ask AONE,,,About How to Reduce Overtime Oversight organizations unite to strengthen Manage Moonlighting. (LQ) APR: 18 and Use of Per Diem Staff. (AON) DEC: 56 performance measurement. (FF) APR: 20 Mergers no, union yes? (FF) JUN: 13 Closed-Unit Staffing Speaks Volumes. (CE) Personal belongings boxes. (TT) APR: 22 bttp://www.nursingmanagement.com December 1999/Nursing Management 45 Polish your exit interview skills. (FK) AUG: 34 Booher, Dianna, APR: 57 Hulsey, Kelly, OCT: 40, 42 Rebuilding the ED. SEP: 18-22 Boren, Denise M., OCT: 33-35 Hunt, Pamela, DEC: 28-30 Recognize Risk Factors to Prevent Patient Borozny, Helene, FEB: 44-46 Jagger, Janine, JUN: 53-55 Falls. MAY: 37-40 Bozell, Jeanna, FEB: 63; APR: 60; MAY: 30; Johnson, Cynthia G., JUL: 16-20 Recruiters Get Y2K-ready. (RRR) AUG: 33-34 JUL: 41; NOV: 35; DEC: 40 Josey, Paula, APR: 33-36 Seven Steps to Shift from Tasks to Brinley Altimier, Leslie, NOV: 59-62 Kanaskie, Mary Louise, NOV: 41-43 Outcomes. JUL: 24-27 Briones, Robin, OCT: 27-30 Kasan, Nita, DEC: 16-17 Six Stepping Stones to Better Management. Brown, Bonnie, JAN: 6; MAR: 17; APR: 18; Keeling, Bette, SEP: 16-17; OCT: 16-18 APR: 33-40 JUN: 14; JUN: 34-35 Kennedy Franklin, Ruth, AUG: 33, 35 Staff Representatives Keep Meetings Buerhaus, Peter |., FEB: 54-55 Kercher, Lois L., FEB: 4 Covered. (LQ) OCT: 6 Buitendijk, Hans, SEP: 12, 13 Kernicki, Jeanette, AUG: 33, 35 Uniform Patient Care: One level or two? (JCA) Bultema, Janice K., JUL: 28-30, 32 Kirksey, Kenn, AUG: 33, 35 FEB: 9 Burchill, Christian, APR: 28-32 Klein, Dahlia, AUG: 38-39 Nnat new standards are in store for 2000? Burt, Sharon, AUG: 18, 20-26 Klein, Sharon R., SEP: 12-13 JCA) DEC: 9 Cabello, Charlotte C., APR: 39-40 Knapp, Mary T., MAY: 14-15 What strategies can help us sensibly manage Cepero, Karen, MAY: 65 Kobs, Ann, MAR: 48-49 patient information? (JCA) JAN: 8 Chang, Judy J., MAR: 38-42 Koppa, Debra, APR: 46-47 You Can Have a Dedicated Pediatric Unit. Cheever, Kerry H., AUG: 40-43 Krupa, Judith A., MAR: 10-11 MAY: 41-43 Citarella, Barbara, DEC: 40 LaDuke, Sharon, SEP: 29-31 Cloutier, Anne, FEB: 51-53 Lamb, Karen V., DEC: 19-24 Risk Management Cocking, Kathleen, AUG: 9 LaMonica, Susan D., OCT: 47 AHCPR News: Fewer nurses, greater risk. (FF) Creamer, Julie, JUL: 28-30, 32 Ledbetter, Lee, SEP: 12-13 MAR: 13 Crellin, Kim, JAN: 49 Lefever, Gaile, AUG: 28-32 California phiebotomist puts patients at risk. Cullen, Kathy, MAY: 27-28 Leftridge. Deloris W., MAR: 50, 54 IC) JUN: 52 Dennis, Robert S., FEB: 44-46 Leibold Sieloff, Christina, NOV: 33-34 Cardiac Surgery’s Calculated Risk. (CC) Devanney, Joseph J., MAR: 35-37 Leipzig, Rosanne, DEC: 19-24 JUL: 34, 36, 38-40 Dever, Rosemary, MAY: 54-56 Lewis, Susi K., MAR: 50, 54 “Closet” Incidents. MAR: 48-49 Dextrom, Nancy L., APR: 37-38 Lyons, Theresa, MAY: 63 Defend your facility against nosocomial infec- Drury, Thomas, MAR: 58, 60-61 Maffeo, Richard, MAR: 56-57; JUL: 1415 tion. (IC) JUN: 54 Edwards, Debra Joyce, MAR: 55 Maisenbacher Roth, Rebecca, FEB: 47-50 Duties and Direction for Managing Contract Enrico-Bailey, Shirley, MAR: 50, 54 Marks, Linda, FEB: 44-46 Nurses. (JCA) APR: 24 Ferrone, Karen, FEB: 44-46 Martin, Kathleen, MAY: 65-66 Expect Truly Unannounced Surveys (and Fidellow, Judith A., OCT: 33-35 Mason, Shelly, MAR: 43-47 more) from the Joint Commission. OCT: 36-38 Fiesta, Janine, JAN: 10-11; FEB: 12-13; APR: Massaro, Terri, FEB: 51-53 Hot line: Help for sentinel events. (FF) JAN: 20 12-13, 15; MAY: 16-18; JUN: 8-9; JUL: 67; Matlack, Ross, JUN: 37-40 How to Defuse a Walking Time Bomb. (CC) AUG: 10-11; SEP: 10; OCT: 10; NOV: 26; McCaffery, Margo, JAN: 27-34 MAR: 58, 60- 61 DEC:12-13 McClarren-Curry, Cheri, DEC: 32-36 Infection sites. (IC) JUN: 52 Filipovich, Christine C., DEC: 38 McConnell, Edwina A., JAN: 57, 60; FEB: 65, Know Your Boundaries in Sexual Assault Fisher, Marie, MAY: 23-26 68; MAR: 65, 68; APR: 51, 54; MAY: 57-59; Litigation. (LAW) OCT: 10 Fleming, Constance, AUG: 38-39 JUN: 64-65; JUL: 43; AUG: 49, 52; SEP: 37; Partners Keep Hospitals Safe. (JCA) JUN: 10-11 Fox, Rebecca, MAR: 50, 54 OCT: 49, 52; NOV: 73; DEC: 49, 52 Protection from Negligence Lawsuits. (CE) Gatson Grindel, Cecelia, JUL: 34, 36, 38-40 McCoy, Janice M., FEB: 41-43 SEP: 23-28 Gattuso, Michele C., SEP: 35-36 McGoldrick, Terry, NOV: 51-55 Recognize Risk Factors to Prevent Patient Gaynor, Sandra, JUL: 28-30, 32 McKinsey, Karen T., OCT: 33-35 Falis. MAY: 37-40 Geier, Wendy, SEP: 32, 34 Mee, Cheryl L., JAN: 18; FES: 16 Risky Rides. SEP: 29-31 Gill, Barbara A., APR: 7 Meskimen, Karen, JAN: 51-55 Safety Legislation: House takes on Safe Gonzales, Rachel, MAY: 54-56 Miller, Kathleen H., JUL: 34, 36, 38-40 Needle Act. (FF) JUL: 13 Gordon, Debra B., JAN: 27-34 Miller, Robin, JAN: 44-46 Sentinel stats from the JCAHO. (FF) JUN: 13 Grimaldi, Paul L., JAN: 14-16; FEB: 10-11; Minnick, Ann, DEC: 19-24 Shield Staff from Occupational Exposure. APR: 16-17; JUL: 10-11; NOV: 16-17, 19-20 Mion, Lorraine C., DEC: 19-24 (IC) JUN: 53-55 Gropper, Elise |., OCT: 36-38; NOV: 6468 Miracle, Vickie A., SEP: 15 VRE and MRSA: Putting Bad Bugs Out of Gustke, Susan, APR: 33-36 Mitchell, Patricia A., NOV: 70-71 Business. (IC, CE) JUN: 42-47, 49-50 Haeberle, Sandy, AUG: 33-34 Mlekoday, Jacquelyn, SEP: 18-22 Hagenow, Norma R., FEB: 31-35; MAR: 22-26 Moore, Rinda, OCT: 27-30 Hanna, Louise Ann, NOV: 36-40 Moss, Maurice, MAY: 34-36 Authors Hannigan, Michael A., OCT: 43-44, 46 Mueller, Cynthia J., DEC: 40 Ainess Boily, Cindy, NOV: 64-68 Hansten, Ruth, JUL: 24-27 Munroe, Donita, FEB: 51-53 Anderson, Gwen, NOV: 56-58 Hardin, Sonya, APR: 58-59 Murdoch Perra, Barbara, JAN: 35-39 Angelucci, Patricia, NOV: 14 Hardy, Brenda, JAN: 51-55 Murphy, Erin , AUG: 14; AUG: 44 Antonik, Greta, OCT: 47 Hart, Karen A., AUG: 33-34 Myers, Michelle, JUN: 76 Appler Crompton, Donna, FEB: 47-50 Haydel, Julianne, MAY: 34-36 Nadzan, Lori, JUN: 37-40 Ariotto, Pam W., JAN: 42-43 Hegyi-Gioia, Donna M., JUN: 59-60 Nead, M. James, SEP: 41 Arnold, Elizabeth, NOV: 41-43 Herman, Rachel E., APR: 46-47 Nelson, Liz, NOV: 12-13 Badros, Karen K., Herringer, John M., APR: 24 Nethersole-Chong, Denise, FEB: 58-60 Banks, Noel, JAN Higgins, Lauri, MAR: 56 Newland, Michelle, NOV: 24 Barile, Linda, NOV Hiller, Gloria, MAY: 50, 52 Niemi, Karen, JAN: 47-48 Barrett, Ann, FEB: 62 Hoag-Apel, Christine M., MAY: 31-33 Oermann, Marilyn H., JUN: 56-58 Batsie, Catherine, JAN: 50 Hodan, Margaret, MAY: 41-43 Olmsted, Russell, JUN: 7 Beyers, Marnorie, JAN: 64; FEB: 72; MAR: 72; Hoffner, Karen, MAY: 10 Palmer, Robert, DEC: 19-24 APR: 64; MAY: 72; JUN: 80; JUL: 56; AUG: Holt Ashley, Mary, AUG: 33, 35 Pasero, Chris, JAN: 27-34 56; SEP: 48; OCT: 56; NOV: 80; DEC: 56 Holy, Carolyn, JUN: 37-40 Patrick, Martha, OCT: 27-30 Blickensderfer, Laura, AUG: 45-47 Howell, Susan B., FEB: 25-30 Patsdaughter, Carol A., JUL: 34, 36, 38-40 46 Nursing Management/December 1999 http://www.nursingmanagement.com Patterson, Carole, JUN: 10-11; DEC 18 Payne, Debra E., AUG: 8 Payne, Jodene, OCT: 6 Perry, Jane, JUN: 53-55 Perry, Kevin, FEB: 39-40 Phillips, Celeste R., FEB: 47-50 Nursing2000__ Pierce, Carolyn, NOV: 70-71 Poniatowski, Larry, MAR: 18 Porter-O’Grady, Tim, JAN: 4; MAR: 7; MAY: 7; JUL: 5; SEP: 4; DEC: 4 Reed, Margaret K., APR: 48-50 OVMpPOSiuM Reeder, Linda, APR: 41-45 Rennick Breisch, Linda, MAR: 27-30 Richardson, Lorraine, JUN: 61-63 Rieth, Katherine A., OCT: 20-26 Ruflin, Patricia, JUN: 37-40 Sachs, Paul R., JUN: 73-75 Salvatore-Magalhaes, Judith, MAY: 29-30 Sammann, Carolyn, NOV: 33, 35 ARenewing Ideals, Inspiring Excellence Sanders, John Michael, NOV: 59-62 Sawyer-Silva, Sandra, FEB: 62 Schulmeister, Lisa, MAR: 14 Selden, Thomas, JUN: 37-40 Shaughnessy, Kathleen, DEC: 32-36 March 29-April 1, 2000 Shaw Murchison, Rhonda, MAY: 19-20 Sheehan Berlinger, June, MAY: 21 Sheff, Barbara, JUN: 42-47, 49-50 Hyatt Orlando, Orlando, Florida Sherlock, Mike, DEC: 7 Sherwood, Thomas A., AUG: 4 Shirkman, Nancy, FEB: 51-53 sence mao > Shkrab, Sue, DEC: 16-17 Conference Highlights Showers, Jennifer Lee, SEP: 23-28 Simpson, Roy L., JAN: 12-13; FEB: 14-15; -Full-day Preconference: Review Course for Medical Surgical Nursing Certification (AMSN) APR: 25-26; JUN: 33; AUG: 12-13; OCT: 14- -Two half-day Preconferences: Professional Growth and EKG Interpretation 15; DEC: 14-15 Singleton, Kathleen A., MAY: 54-56 -Keynote Address by Tim Porter-0’Grady, RN, EdD, PhD, FAAN Skuteris, Lucille R., JAN: 8 -Topics include » heart failure « documentation * breast & ovarian cancer Smith, Mary Lou, JUN: 70-71; JUL: 49 ° physical assessment * médication errors * unstable coronary syndrome Snyder, Joanne, FEB: 58-60 Sorbello, Susan, JUN: 37-40 ¢ IV complications « legal and ethical issues « brain attack * PICCs and midlines Spann, Karen, NOV: 76 ' type | and {I diabetes * pain management * wound care * ostomies & drains Stahl, Duicelina, DEC: 25-27 * vascular access devices « falls & restraints « HIV latex allergy Staten, Patricia A., FEB: 9; SEP: 14 ° geriatric emergencies * asthma management « infection control * hepatitis Steltzer, Theresa M., NOV: 7 ° death & dying * emergencies in the field * leadership * personal growth Stephens, Sheila A., MAR: 43-47 f. conscious sedation * epidural PCA « complementary therapies * delegation Sullivan, Molly, MAR: 31-33 Sullivan, Paula, APR: 46-47 ¢ enteral nutrition : Sullivan, Ruth P., MAY: 37-40 -Nationally known experts include * Lynda Amold * Winifred Carson Tandy, Sonya, JAN: 40-41 Tittle, Mary, FEB: 51-53 * Melodie Chenevert » Michael Cohen * Sharon Cox Caroline Denest Toppy, Suzanne C., FEB: 37-39 * Phyllis Dubendorf * Charles Fetrow Janine Fiesta * Joan Furman » Lynn Hadaway Tremblay, Marilyn, SEP: 12-13 * Donna Ignatavicius * Marguerite Jackson * Carol Kohn Keeth « Chris. Kessler Turjanica, Mary Ann, NOV: 44-50 * Vicki Lachman « Gail Lenehen « Margo McCaffery » Kathy McCauley Urden, Linda D., MAY: 27, 30 ¢ Donna McMullen « Vickie Miracle * Chris Pasero » Julia Balzer Riley * Darnell Roth- Valentine, Nancy M., OCT: 4 ¢ Sally Russell * Gail Sansivero « Gloria Sonnesso ° Peter Ungvarski Verdin, Jo Ann, JUL: 28-30, 32 Waddell-Schultz, Gwen, MAR: 50, 54 ¢ Billie Ann Wilson and others! Warsaw, Janette E., MAR: 50, 54 NS -Up to 28.8 ANCC/AACN contact hours Washburn, Marilynn, JUL: 24-27 Werrbach, Karen, SEP: 35-36 Wheelan, Susan A., APR: 28-32 Whittington, Kathy, OCT: 27-30 Now Endorsed By: Wight, Deb, OCT: 27-30 * Academy of Medical-Surgical Nurses » Florida Nurses Association Williams-Lee, Pamela, JUL: 9; OCT: 12 * National Nurses Society on Addictions * Association of Nurses in AIDS Care Wilson, Carol, AUG: 38-39 » American Society of Ophthalmic Registered Nurses — Wilson, Wanda, OCT: 27-30 * Association of Pediatric Oncology Nurses : Wolf, Patricia, MAY: 46-48 et Wolgin, Francie, JUN: 7 Get on the mailing list now! 7 Wroblewski, Mary, SEP: 35-36 Wyatt, Deborah, JAN: 22-26 Call: 1-888-499-6566, or e-mail: N2000@aj. York Eppley, Gloria, FEB: 47-50 Zoeliner-Hunter, Judy, JUL: 12 bttp://www.nursingmanagement.com December 1999/Nursing Management 47

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