Article
Although both nursing and medical practice challenges are focused on the patient and aim for favorable patient outcomes, there are significant distinctions in their methods to solving the problems. While medical practice problems are concerned with a patient’s disease pathology, nursing practice problems include issues identified with patients who are ill starting with the nursing assessment and continuing through nursing care, as well as problems discovered through insight or intuition that will necessitate nursing interventions (Helbig, 2018). Patients’ reactions to sickness, presenting signs and symptoms, deterioration in activities of daily life, and many other issues plague nursing practice. Nursing interventions for such patients’ difficulties are holistic in nature, focusing on their care, needs, and support both during and after treatment.
Article
Although both nursing and medical practice difficulties are centered on the patient and aim for positive patient outcomes, their approaches to overcoming problems differ significantly. Nursing practice challenges include concerns found with sick patients beginning with the nursing assessment and continuing during nursing care, as well as problems discovered through insight or intuition that will demand nursing interventions (Helbig, 2018). Nursing work is plagued by a variety of challenges, including patients’ reactions to illness, presenting signs and symptoms, deterioration in everyday tasks, and many more. Nursing treatments for such patients are holistic, focusing on their care, needs, and support both during and after therapy.