Erin Micale
Erin Micale
  • Видео 103
  • Просмотров 172 771
Basic EKG Interpretation for Nursing Students
This video reviews what an EKG is, how the measurements work, the steps to reading an EKG and what the basic abnormalities are. This includes:
- Sinus Rhythms
- Atrial Rhythms
- Heart Blocks
- Bundle Branch Blocks
- STEMIs
- Ventricular Rhythms
- Junctional Rhythms
- Flat lines
Просмотров: 29

Видео

Academic Writing: APA and Plagiarism
Просмотров 233Год назад
This video discusses the basics of academic and professional writing from the standpoint of emails, discussion boards, papers, presentations, and assignments. It discusses what plagiarism is and how to avoid it. Lastly, it reviews the basics of APA formatting and discusses a sample APA paper.
Critical Thinking
Просмотров 271Год назад
This video discusses what Critical Thinking is, the Nursing Clinical Judgement Model, and different tools that are useful in developing critical thinking skills. It specifically explains and exemplifies one critical thinking tool- the Mind Map.
Mental Health Mini #42: Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.2 года назад
This video discusses how to apply care to the Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders. This includes: Schizophrenia, Schizoaffective, Schizophreneform, Brief Psychotic Disorder, and Delusional Disorder.
Mental Health Mini #41: Panic Disorder
Просмотров 3402 года назад
This video discusses the basics of a panic attack and panic disorder and how to apply nursing care to the prevention and experience of a panic attack.
Mental Health Mini# 40: Somatic Symptom Disorders
Просмотров 2972 года назад
This video discusses care and treatment for patients with a somatic symptom disorder. Disorders highlighted include: Illness Anxiety Disorder, Conversion Disorder, and Fictitious Disorder. This video also briefly discusses different types of dissociation.
Mental Health Mini #39 Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
Просмотров 3852 года назад
This video reviews Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and how to apply nursing care to those with obsessive or compulsive related disorders.
Mental Health Mini #38: PTSD and Acute Stress Disorder
Просмотров 7482 года назад
This video discusses what Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Acute Stress Disorders are: The difference between the two, common symptoms and development, and how to apply nursing care to patients experiencing either disorder.
Mental Health Mini #37 Phobic Disorders
Просмотров 2272 года назад
This video discusses different types of phobias and how to apply nursing care to those experiencing phobias.
Mental Health Mini #36: Generalized Anxiety Disorder
Просмотров 3432 года назад
This lecture reviews the basics of anxiety and generalized anxiety disorder and how to apply the nursing process/ critical judgement process to caring for those with GAD.
Mental Health Mini #4: Mental Health and Nursing Theorist
Просмотров 7442 года назад
This video discusses the multitude of mental health and nursing theorists that are helpful in understanding mental health concepts.
Mental Health Mini #35: Bipolar Disorder
Просмотров 7882 года назад
This video will review the basics of bipolar disorder, the different forms, and how to apply the nursing process to a patient diagnosed with bipolar disorder.
Med-Surg Mini# 26: Respiratory Cancers- Lung and Laryngeal Cancer
Просмотров 5322 года назад
This video describes what lung and laryngeal cancer is and how to apply basic nursing care to patients with these diagnosis.
Med-Surg Mini#25: Cystic Fibrosis
Просмотров 622 года назад
This video briefly describes how to apply the nursing process to a patient diagnosed with Cystic Fibrosis.
Med-Surg Mini #24: COPD
Просмотров 962 года назад
This video discusses how to apply the nursing process to a patient experiencing COPD.
Med-Surg Mini# 23: Asthma
Просмотров 802 года назад
Med-Surg Mini# 23: Asthma
Med-Surg Mini# 22: Laryngitis
Просмотров 592 года назад
Med-Surg Mini# 22: Laryngitis
Med-Surg Mini #21: Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Просмотров 2332 года назад
Med-Surg Mini #21: Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Med-Surg Mini#20: Rhinitis and Rhinosinusitis
Просмотров 1052 года назад
Med-Surg Mini#20: Rhinitis and Rhinosinusitis
Med-Surg Mini #19: Tuberculosis
Просмотров 552 года назад
Med-Surg Mini #19: Tuberculosis
Med-Surg Mini #18: Pneumonia
Просмотров 592 года назад
Med-Surg Mini #18: Pneumonia
Med-Surg Mini #17: Influenza
Просмотров 462 года назад
Med-Surg Mini #17: Influenza
Med-Surg Mini #16: Airway Management
Просмотров 1172 года назад
Med-Surg Mini #16: Airway Management
Med-Surg Mini # 15: Respiratory System
Просмотров 682 года назад
Med-Surg Mini # 15: Respiratory System
Mental Health Mini #34: Crisis Intervention
Просмотров 4,9 тыс.2 года назад
Mental Health Mini #34: Crisis Intervention
Mental Health Mini #33 Suicidal Ideation and Treatment
Просмотров 3332 года назад
Mental Health Mini #33 Suicidal Ideation and Treatment
Pharm Mini #15: Antifungal Medications
Просмотров 772 года назад
Pharm Mini #15: Antifungal Medications
Pharm Mini #14: Antiviral Medications
Просмотров 542 года назад
Pharm Mini #14: Antiviral Medications
Pharm Mini# 13: Antibiotics
Просмотров 822 года назад
Pharm Mini# 13: Antibiotics
Pharm Mini #12: Immunosuppressants and Immunostimulants
Просмотров 632 года назад
Pharm Mini #12: Immunosuppressants and Immunostimulants

Комментарии

  • @ClarissaSigrid-u9f
    @ClarissaSigrid-u9f Месяц назад

    Thompson Elizabeth Lee John Miller Michael

  • @sandral.8693
    @sandral.8693 2 месяца назад

    Very good presentation,easy to understand,thank you so much!

  • @justa_fan0fKG
    @justa_fan0fKG 4 месяца назад

    Please post more videos i am really trying to prepare myself for college even tho i still have 2 years left before going to college and your videos are very very helpful i love it.

  • @Stella-ct6ci
    @Stella-ct6ci 4 месяца назад

    Thank you.

  • @AvoidantNomad
    @AvoidantNomad 5 месяцев назад

    Erotomanic delusions are delusions where someone believes that someone else, usually of higher status, is in love with them

  • @MrsBossSwagg100
    @MrsBossSwagg100 5 месяцев назад

    🎉

  • @SureshiMunasinghe
    @SureshiMunasinghe 10 месяцев назад

    Thank u for most valuable vedio.

  • @TFreemanJohnson
    @TFreemanJohnson Год назад

    Wow! Encyclopedic! Great quick overview. Thanks for the refresher.

  • @MaribelGarcia-pg7sv
    @MaribelGarcia-pg7sv Год назад

    Thank you for your very helpful and informative video! I am not in nursing but I had to do a similar assignment where we were instructed to critique a quantitative article in education, and your thorough checklist was incredibly helpful. Thank you for putting this out there. I hope more people in other fields find this as useful as I did. The bottom line is that quantitative studies all need to abide by these principles regardless of the subject or discipline.

  • @CharisaDavis-v3g
    @CharisaDavis-v3g Год назад

    Admittedly, I am watching this AFTER the fact, and I should not have been. This is a very helpful video and I can see myself referring to it later. There was so much information here that I had no familiarity with regarding APA. Thank you!

  • @theskyisthelimitincanada3447

    Thanks a lot . I am a new grad mental health nurse 👩‍⚕️

  • @lindasantini5618
    @lindasantini5618 Год назад

    Very sad. There is zero attempt to cure psych patients. Nurses and doctors just give them symptom-suppressing drugs until the patients eventually die. Like any illness on the planet, to cure a mental illness you have to know its cause. Scientists do know what these causes are. Some of them work for drug companies. For example, the NIH says 21% of all cases of schizophrenia are caused by Toxoplasmosis gondii. Do psychiatrists test for this? No. They just match up all their patients to psych drugs, turning them into lifelong customers of psychiatric goods (drugs) and services (talk therapy). Psychiatrists COULD give their patients a trial of artemisinin because it's known to cure some cases of T. gondii but, of course, that would be admitting schizophrenia has a biological basis. And T. gondii is just one of the proven, physical causes of mental illness.

  • @jacobjacob5191
    @jacobjacob5191 Год назад

    Also provide introduction to nursing research

  • @jacobjacob5191
    @jacobjacob5191 Год назад

    Mental health disorders and management in detail Thankyou Very nice

  • @jacobjacob5191
    @jacobjacob5191 Год назад

    Need more lectures on mental health nursing in detail More over on psychobiology nuerlogy.

  • @Totoholdthelinee
    @Totoholdthelinee Год назад

    I love your videos! They are so educational and they are helping me tremendously!

  • @rhudinehenry7845
    @rhudinehenry7845 Год назад

    What is P M S BENZTROPINE used for

  • @hazratbilal6896
    @hazratbilal6896 Год назад

    Any one how recommend da books name da mama will will lecture books name

  • @hazratbilal6896
    @hazratbilal6896 Год назад

    Please recommend da books name

  • @maryskitchenandgarden9447
    @maryskitchenandgarden9447 Год назад

    Hi …. Which country?

  • @cadmantheaviator
    @cadmantheaviator Год назад

    adverse outcomes in group analytic therapy....www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3330596/

  • @cadmantheaviator
    @cadmantheaviator Год назад

    It's really dangerous when people aren't given enough information to understand the aim/purpose of a group and the role of a therapist. People need information to be able to make informed consent. Too often there is a lack of this. I've read that group therapists can have a "utopian" view of groups and fail to recognise when the experience is resulting in deterioration and harm. My experience is of 13 months of feeling pressured to continue attending a group analytic therapy. Everything the therapist said confused and disturbed me. Any attempts to communicate that I was unhappy in the therapy and didn't have faith in the process was met with silence. The effect can feel like being stuck with worsening mental health, while trapped in an almost cult like pressure to continue. I especially think the role of a conductor should be explained, so that a patient can decide whether or not they are willing to enter a group. For many group therapy will be unproductive and fruitless. For 5-15% it will be harmful. I believe analytic therapists are the most likely to view wishes to leave as resistance and risk undermining autonomy and confidence in patients. Too much of the literature focuses on the therapists perceptions and experiences of running groups (their ambivalence and fear that the therapy isn't helping) and almost never on actual patient experiences. Another description of a group therapy might be "an artifical grouping of people in a situation faced with professional and institutional power where they are alone in understanding the purpose behind their membership and where any expression of distrust might be interpreted through ideaology and dogma."

  • @DariTrinidad
    @DariTrinidad Год назад

    Thank you for this ! I’m a new grad psych nurse and this is very helpful! Please post more content :)

  • @reddbendd
    @reddbendd Год назад

    Neurotransmitters are released as a result of internal or external stimuli, & your brain can’t tell the difference between the two.. biological reductionism doesn’t apply to depression unfortunately it’s not that simple

  • @saramaria-
    @saramaria- Год назад

    thank you

  • @favourscreation4802
    @favourscreation4802 Год назад

  • @theaccountwashackedbycriminals

    Psychiatric hospital is not a place where criminals can get a normal to rape or filth getaway get that basic. No individual can be taken to hospital, if a criminal thinks that he or she should escape and tell others as insane too or the whole lot of criminals should escape by abusing raping or intimidating on might be child too.... Because criminals can appear decent might be doctors too. Do you know why religious asylums were shut, because such terrible criminals existed there atrocities were happing by criminals power driven that had power... when the education had more truths and sanity, people opted facts and science to have truths more, where criminals with religion power cannot get near normal people that are sane good ..if that type criminals alone get here with a different paint "educated" where will normal good get justice too..normal should never be got near by any painted criminals..Let it be educated or religious ..people are better than power driven criminals powerful criminal core a good human alone is needed for earth "one good too.... "no child abuse too should be left as parents rather seen where the real criminals were and criminals real destroyed.

  • @shinbads
    @shinbads Год назад

    Such informative thanks!

  • @lucian4467
    @lucian4467 Год назад

    Thank you!!

  • @sundariallen6861
    @sundariallen6861 Год назад

    Thank you ❤

  • @sundariallen6861
    @sundariallen6861 Год назад

    Thank you ❤

  • @sundariallen6861
    @sundariallen6861 Год назад

    Thank you ❤

  • @sundariallen6861
    @sundariallen6861 Год назад

    Thank you ❤️

  • @danielamendoza9249
    @danielamendoza9249 Год назад

    You have amazing content! thank you

  • @sundariallen6861
    @sundariallen6861 Год назад

    Thank you ❤

  • @reyyanson83
    @reyyanson83 Год назад

    Great lecture

  • @themindsetphoenix
    @themindsetphoenix Год назад

    Keep up doing them, I really enjoy your videos

  • @kathleengivant-taylor2277
    @kathleengivant-taylor2277 Год назад

    What about treatment of life threatening eating disorders such as anorexia? I was hospitalized years ago for my eating disorder cause it became life threatening as I weighed 75 pounds at 5’7 inches tall . When admitted they strip searched me with two female staff members they checked body cavities and mouth and checked for marks or cuts or other type of things. They searched all my belongings and I was not allowed to keep very much of my stuff at all. It was a involuntary admission and they said because I was a risk to myself they watched me 24/7 including bathroom and showers. Also they force fed me in the sense I was given like 15 minutes to eat my meals voluntarily or if I did not eat enough they would give liquid supplements that tasted like chocolate or vanilla chalky liquid, gross. If I did not drink required liquid in like 10 minutes they would restrain me and tube feed me thur nasal gastric tube and it was traumatic and painful. The hospitalization lasted around 5 months and Thur force feeding they put 20 pounds or so on me. Too say the hospitalization did not help is a under statement. I was attacked twice by other mentally unstable and dangerous patients that I should not have been in the same unit as them. The attacks were completely unprovoked as I stayed to myself except one patient I liked and would hang around and play board games and watch tv and go outside with when they allowed me too. This hospitalization has completely removed any trust I had in the mental health care in the US . I hope u can tell me that treatment of eating disorder patients has improved along with other patients with other conditions. Thank you for any reply. This quite frankly has angered me for years

    • @dianecleary1054
      @dianecleary1054 Год назад

      Hell poor you . People who work in psyc wards become desensitised to all the horror and suffering. In a way they are also a victim of this environment and everyone becomes a little dehumanised . But this is all there is at present . No doubt you were on the brink of death . As a desperate last option its better you are traumatised and alive than you being left to die. It's brutal but I trust they had no option . You can't change the past . Look forward and take care of your self . I'm also a mental health patient .

    • @kathleengivant-taylor2277
      @kathleengivant-taylor2277 Год назад

      @@dianecleary1054 good points made . Well taken. Yes I was very close to dying because of my eating disorder so it temporarily saved my life but only temporary. It’s a very good thing I found a dr and dietitian and support group I could work with and trust to recover but it still took years too fully recover.

    • @dianecleary1054
      @dianecleary1054 Год назад

      @@kathleengivant-taylor2277 so glad you found the help you needed. Thanks for replying.

  • @dianacazaubon7680
    @dianacazaubon7680 Год назад

    Thank you

  • @gigi08ed
    @gigi08ed Год назад

    thank you for your videos they are really helping me !

  • @beharadinmeshalla
    @beharadinmeshalla Год назад

    This an amazing lecture..... Thank you so much

  • @tracywo
    @tracywo Год назад

    Awesome lecture.. immediately subscribed.. new to psych nursing after years in med-surg! Recommending to all new grads.. coming to work with me! Keep up the Great videos! ✨ ✨

  • @kateroisin3296
    @kateroisin3296 Год назад

    Hi, great video. I just want to say though that as a self-recovering bulimic for 3 years AFTER receiving treatment, bulimia is a very difficult illness to be able to NOT fall into relapse. Relapse happens more in bulimic patients. Bulimia is very comparable to an addiction, like alcoholism, in that it has hormone-releasing effects that encourage the cycle.

  • @sab1992.9
    @sab1992.9 Год назад

    very informative and helpful video! please keep posting

  • @pamelakane8126
    @pamelakane8126 Год назад

    Awesome lecture ❤

  • @yvetteayim1973
    @yvetteayim1973 Год назад

    This is very helpful. Thank you

  • @melaniehall4542
    @melaniehall4542 Год назад

    Thank you so much:)

  • @mrsrudydavis8050
    @mrsrudydavis8050 Год назад

    Where have you been this whole semester omgggg I’m going through it with Psych……. Thank you 🙏🏾

  • @khadijasani7053
    @khadijasani7053 2 года назад

    Estaba deprimido cuando sufría de fibromialgia. Pensé que todo había terminado hasta que conocí al Dr. OBEHi Herbal home en RUclips. Ahora estoy curado después de aplicar sus hierbas naturales.