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November/December 2009 Vol. 4 No. 9

Continuing Education
When breathing is a burden: How to help patients with COPD
Features
Imagine a world without nurses
Pediatric ear assessment Guidelines for general-practice nurses
Dealing with the dangers of dog bites
Inside ANA
American Nurses Foundation: Worthy of support
Vaccines, antivirals are crucial aspects of influenza strategy
Hungry for better choices
Strictly Clinical
Prealbumin testing for early malnutrition detection
Stemming a lethal immunologic response
Practice Matters
How to improve your listening skills
On the power of one
2009 H1N1 Flu - Situation Update (11.20.09)
2009 H1N1 Flu - Situation Update (12.04.09)
2009 H1N1 Flu - Situation Update (12.11.09)
2009 H1N1 Flu - Situation Update (01.04.10)
2009 H1N1 Flu - Situation Update (01.08.10)
Career Sphere
Deal with professional disappointment like a pro
Mind Body Spirit
How to stay safe in a sometimes-scary world
Nurturing the tree of life
A nurse-poet writes what she knows
Caregiving for a family member can be difficult
Safety Quiz
Special Report
Get on board the technology express
Innovations in patient-monitoring systems
Pulse oximetry: An essential tool for the busy med-surg nurse
Why continuous pulse oximetry monitoring is a must in critical care
Improving how we use and respond to clinical alarms
How integrated information systems will change health care
Selected References
Pediatric ear assessment Guidelines for general-practice nurses references
When breathing is a burden: How to help patients with COPD references
Dealing with the dangers of dog bites references
Prealbumin testing for early malnutrition detection references
Stemming a lethal immunologic response references
On the power of one references
Pediatric ear assessment: Guidelines for general-practice nurses references
How to stay safe in a sometimes-scary world references
Innovations in patient-monitoring systems references
Pulse oximetry: An essential tool for the busy med-surg nurse references
Why continuous pulse oximetry monitoring is a must in critical care references
Improving how we use and respond to clinical alarms references
How integrated information systems will change health care references