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  • Book
    Lynda Juall Carpenito, RN, MSN, CRNP Family Nurse Practitioner, ChesPenn Health Services, Chester, Pennsylvania, Nursing Consultant, Mullica Hill, New Jersey.
    Summary: Carpenito's "Handbook of Nursing Diagnosis" is the ideal quick reference for Nursing Diagnosis information. This handbook offers practical guidance on nursing diagnoses and associated care. Compared to Carpenito's textbook, the handbook is a quick-reference type scope of content, easy for students to use while in clinical, in the classroom or simulation lab. From goals to specific interventions, Handbook of Nursing Diagnosis focuses on nursing. It provides a condensed, organized outline of clinical nursing practice designed to communicate creative clinical nursing. It is not meant to replace nursing textbooks, but rather to provide nurses who work in a variety of settings with the information they need without requiring a time-consuming review of the literature. It will assist students in transferring their theoretical knowledge to clinical practice. This title is intended for nursing students to use through their curriculum. -- Provided by publisher. The 15th edition is organized in three sections. Section 1 provides an alphabetical reference to nursing diagnoses, including NANDA-I definition and Section 2 focuses organizes all the health promotion/wellness nursing diagnoses for individuals. Lastly, section 3 covers Diagnostic Clusters, which presents medical conditions with associated collaborative problems and nursing diagnoses, designed for easy reference in the clinical setting. The handbook differs from the main textbook because it doesn't go into the foundation for understanding nursing diagnoses, including care planning and concept mapping. The handbook only covers the NANDA-I diagnoses and collaborative problems. -- Provided by publisher.

    Contents:
    Nursing diagnoses
    Health-promotion nursing diagnoses
    Manual of collaborative problems
    Diagnostic clusters.
    Digital Access Ovid 2017
  • Article
    Björnsson S, Preisler H, Henderson ES.
    Med Pediatr Oncol. 1977;3(4):379-85.
    Neutropenic cancer patients were given carbenicillin, cephalothin, and gentamicin (CCG) during 51 evaluable episodes of fever of unknown origin. Patients in whom fever persisted despite these antibiotics and in whom infection had not been documented were randomized after 3 days either to discontinue antibiotics or to add chloramphenicol or clindamycin to CCG. During 19 episodes (37%) an infection was documented during the first 3 days, and during an additional 12 episodes (24%) there was a response in 3 days without a focus of infection or an identifiable organism. Two patients died within 3 days, and one developed renal failure. Seventeen febrile episodes (33%) were unresponsive to CCG after 3 days and were randomized. Klebsiella was cultured in 4 of 6 patients randomized to stop antibiotics within a week of cessation, and 3 of these patients died. Of 11 episodes randomized to continue antibiotics, all patients were alive at 2 weeks after randomization and 9 after 4 weeks. This study, albeit small, demonstrates no advantage to withholding treatment in unremitting fever of unknown etiology and indeed strongly suggests that in this clinical setting, antibiotics once started should be continued until bone marrow recovery.
    Digital Access Access Options