Holistic Care: Are we treating the Patient or the condition?
Title: Holistic Care: Are we treating the Patient or the condition?
Category: Literature / English | Words: 2296 | Pages: 9.8 (approximately 235 words/page)
Holistic Care: Are we treating the Patient or the condition?
In today's fast-paced world where technology rules, the medical profession is also
advancing. In 1991, 2,900 liver transplants were performed in the United States while there
were 30,000 canidates for the procedure in the United States alone (Heffron, T. G., 1993).
Due to shortages of available organs for donation/transplantation, specifically livers, once again
science has come to the rescue.
Although the procedure is fairly new in the United States, the concept of living organ
donation is fast growing.
showed first 75 words of 2296 total
You are viewing only a small portion of the paper. Please login or register to access the full copy.
|
|
showed last 75 words of 2296 total
R. W., & Ong, T. H.. (1992). Reduced-size liver transplantation
in children. Transplantation Reviews, 6 (89), 115-128.
Singer, P. A., Siegler, M., Whitington, P. F., Lantos, J. D., Emond, J. C., Thistlewaite,
J. R., & Broelsch, C. E.. (1989). Ethics of liver transplantation with living donors. The New
England Journal of Medicine, 321 (9), 620-621.
Smith, S. L. . (1993). The cutting edge in organ transplantation. Critical Care Nurse,
supp. June, 10-30.
Wise, B. V. . (1994). Advances in pediatric solid organ transplantation. Nursing Clinics
of North America, 29 (4), 615-629.
Need a custom written paper?