This paper will be addressing a clinical case study from the writer's current experience that illustrates collaborative nursing practice. According to Schueller and Kimbrell (2003, p. 2), "When one refers to collaborative practice within a hospital setting, they are referring to healthcare personnel working together to care for patients and families". Collaboration is defined as "working together, especially in a joint intellectual effort to achieve a desired outcome; to cooperate" (American Heritage Dictionary, 2000).…
In the novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest by Ken Kesey, nurse Ratched takes away the patients freedom physically, mentally and emotionally. Nurse Ratched was known as the “big nurse” and was a former Army nurse who wasn’t treated great. It became her life to get revenge because of how she was treated and is referred to as a rat and readers are reminded that the rats in the Middle Ages carried the Black Plague. This description represents her well as she was a demonic and crazy person with all of the patients at the mental institution.…
In the novel One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, written by Ken Kesey, tells the story of a group of patients in a mental hospital. The patients in the hospital all live under the authority of one nurse, Nurse Ratched. Nurse Ratched’s military, totalitarian leadership of the mental hospital combined with the fact that she tries to keep the healable patients under her control makes her the villain in this novel.…
In Ken Kesey 's novel One Flew over the Cuckoo 's Nest, Nurse Ratched took away the freedom of the patients mentally, physically, and spiritually. One of the major themes in the novel is the Big Nurse, Nurse Ratchet’s subjugation of the patients. Subjugation means to take away freedom, to make submissive by gaining control of someone or something by use of manipulation or force (Subjugate). In the OFOCN, Nurse Ratchet emasculates the patients repeatedly, by her various control issues. Before McMurphy is committed to mental hospital, Nurse Ratchet ran a submissive ward and did not have much trouble from anyone. The patients had viewed her as an angel. This is…
This creates a misogynistic undertone within the text as women are not being portrayed as a nurturing figure, they are these terrifying people that the men are afraid of. Right away the image of the nurse is depicted as this huge monster like an image that punishes for any wrong doing. In the beginning of the novel the aides of the nurse are slacking from their job, and as the nurse sees them mumbling together in a group Chief Bromden indicates that she is going to “tear the black bastards limb from limb” and that she “blows up bigger and bigger, as big as a tractor” (5). The nurse is being portrayed as this beast like figure that takes on this hideous form whenever she is unhappy with people and their actions. Fundamentally, there is a misogynistic setting being set forth as the Chief is indicating that a women in power, such as the nurse, takes on these hideous qualities. Rather then being depicted as upset or annoyed with the aides, any nurturing and loving qualities are instantly stripped as she is described as a creature. In a sense women being terrifying figures is further evident as Harding, a patient in the ward, proclaims, “We are victims or matriarchy here, my friend, and that doctor is just as helpless as we are. He knows all Ratched has to do is pick up that phone you see sitting at her elbow and call the supervisor and mention, oh, say, that the…
Nurse Ratched, the all powerful is defeated though, despite all of her grand schemes and actions against a certain patient named Randal P. McMurphy. He is taken in by the institution and quickly picks up on Nurse Ratched's ways of overpowering the rest of the patients. He decides to then overpower her by tuning in to every weakness she may have and fights her totalitarian power in the institution. At the end of the novel he rips open Nurse Ratched's shirt to reveal the one feminine quality that she possesses. The only thing the men of the institution could relate her to as a woman, and she then loses and never regains the power she has taken so long to…
And as one of the patients said about the head nurse, nurse ratched/ the big nurse, “practice has steadied and strengthened her until now she wields a sure power that extends in all directions on hairline wires too small for anybody's eyes but mine.”( Kesey 28-29 ) The female nurses, specifically nurse ratched, have reasons to be as mean unlike the black male nurses, she was in a war and the reason she is so controlling to the men in the asylum is because she wants to get back at them for what men did during the war and the way that they carelessly killed innocent people. She takes her anger out on them because she has a chance to make them suffer like they made her so she takes all the chances that she can get. Nurse ratched is hurt and is holding a grudge on the men, but she isn’t that bad, she does want to help the patients but she doesn’t want them to get comfortable and try to turn on…
During one of the Group Meetings before McMurphy arrives, Nurse Ratched is using her tricks to make the patients admit how they feel and say what they had done. She says, “‘Am I to take it that there’s not a man among you that has committed some act that he has never admitted?’ She reached for the log book. ‘Must we go over past history?’”(45). After using the tactic of fear, all of the patients start talking about everything they had done. At this point in the book, Nurse Ratched holds all the power within the ward. She can make the patients do almost anything she wants them to do. Chief has always seen Nurse Ratched the same; he sees her as a scary, powerful nurse who has control over his life. The first mentioning of Nurse Ratched is at the very beginning of the book. Chief hears her coming and thinks, “I know it’s the Big Nurse”(4). It is not the context of the quotation or what happens in the quotation that matters. It is what Chief calls the Nurse. Because she is the one in charge of the entire ward and holds the most power, at that moment, she is known as the “Big Nurse.” Not only does she literally have the word “Big” in her name, but it is capitalized, which adds onto her repeated motif of size. Unfortunately for her, Chief is able to change his perception of her “almighty”…
Ken Kesey conveys his theme by vividly explaining the “pecking party”. As one of the treatments, Nurse Ratched…
One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest has been criticized for its treatment of race and gender because the style of writing can often times been seen as racy. Due to many different themes in the story, such criticism is deserved because of its blatant misuse of imagery that depicted woman and black men in the story. The nurse, Nurse Ratched, is seen as a powerful mother figure. Nurse Ratched is the lady that many people refer to as a machine, she is a nurse in the Institute and everybody hates her. Nurse Ratched controls everyone and everything in the Institute. Every patient on the ward is scared of her. Most often, Nurse Ratched is telling someone what to do, or reminding the patients of something. She most often says stop doing this or stop doing that or behave this way or behave that way. For the most part she is a mother figure, but later on in the novel there are sexual undertones. Mostly with McMurphy, especially during the scene when his towel falls and all he is wearing are boxers.…
Importance: “This widely read and respected journal features peer-reviewed, thought-provoking articles representing research by some of the world’s leading nurse researchers. Reaching health professionals, faculty and students in 90 countries, the Journal of Nursing Scholarship is focused on the health of people throughout the world. It reflects the society’s dedication to providing the tools necessary to improve nursing care around the world” (Hegyvary, 2011).…
The purpose of the essay is to critique the research article “Mixed-Methods Exploration of Parents ' Health Information Understanding” by Carlee Lehna and Jack McNeil. Gaining knowledge and methods of critiquing an article through the contents and resources provided in this course. The function of literature review, problem statement, purpose statement and target population differences will be explored.…
Nursing theories can help create and promote a healthy professional environment for patients and members of the healthcare team. They assist as building blocks and guide assessment, interventions, and evaluation of nursing care. They also assist nurses in describing, explaining, and predicting everyday experiences. Nursing theory improves nursing practice by strengthening the nursing focus of care and facilitates the nursing discipline in analyzing goals, values, and beliefs. It improves the health and quality of life of the patient, their families, and the community.…
In my opinion Nurse Ratched, your way of treating the patients in the mental disability home is unjustified and cruel. Treating them like their not human beings just because you have total control over them is not right. Just because they have something mentally wrong with them doesn't mean you should take advantage of them or have other people do your dirty work. Some people that you think can be "fixed" are better off being how they were then make them worse like you do. Shock therapy is not the right way to "fix" people it just makes them worse or even forget about everything that happened in their life if taken to that extent In the treatment you use.The other treatment that you use that i think is cruel and unjustified is taking the front part of their brain out. If you do it right it works but it is proven that the patients that you have used this procedures on have became incapable to speak or move.You turned them into "vegetables" and their is no punishment for you, You just manipulate people to the point where they don't have the courage or power to stand up to you and if they do stand against you, You send them to one of your cruel treatments. If people outside the institution knew what you were doing to these people you would be arrested and charged with many crimes. What you do to these people with mental illnesses is inhumane. You should treat your patients like human beings and not lab rats, You have control and find people to help you with your sick treatments that also manipulate the patients. When a patient walks in yoursupposed to make them feel comfortable and not have huge african american human beings that are filled with hate sexually assault them. One day the society are going to find out when the patients have the courage to stand up to you and actually go through with…
The barriers around the nursing profession must be fully understood. Historically and practically were developed as professional identity, because fictitious characterization of nursing is unfortunately what sticks in the minds of people. Nurses were seen poorly educated women, incarcerated criminals, or housekeepers untrained; therefore, nursing was women’ profession. Charles Dickens wrote a book Martin Chuzzlewit in 1896, the image of nurses was portrayed in the character “Sairy Gamp” who was physically abused, neglected, and stole from patients (Berman, Snyder, Kozier & Erb, 2008, p.8).…