Pain Aggression and Fatigue in ER S Essay

Total Length: 1092 words ( 4 double-spaced pages)

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fuse the content of the third chapter from the class text and a selected article. The salient and primary point to be taken from the chapter reading is concept analysis and frameworks. The important point from the article that will be focused on is aggression in the emergency department. To be certain, the emergency department of any hospital or other medical institution is a place where the presence of aggression can emerge in some instances. While some may say that concept analysis and frameworks are just a lot of navel-gazing, this is far from the truth so long as the practice is taken serious and is done as needed.

As explained by the class text, it is important to have proper concept development and research because there is a common language that must exist. To use a simpler example, three widgets to one person should always be three widgets to another person. As another example, the sky is blue (usually) and anyone who is asked that question on a normal clear day should be able to say that. When dealing with the complexities and idiosyncrasies that exist in the medical field, keeping such a common language and lingo can be much more difficult. A common framework and guide to proper concept synthesis is noted on page 58 of the class text. Specifically, box 3-1 talks about the proper steps of concept analysis as postulated by Walker and Avant in 2011. The steps as they see them, in order, are the selection of a concept, a determination of the aims and purpose of the analysis, the identification of all the uses of the concept that are possible, a determination of the defining attributes, the identification of a model case, the identification of cases that are borderline or at least related, an identification of antecedents/consequences and the definition of empirical events.
When it comes to aggression in an emergency room setting, some common definitions and standards that would have to be agreed upon include the definition of aggression, the level of aggression (e.g. vocal, physical, etc.), the common and obvious precusors or aggression and how these instances of aggression would manifest from person to person and from situation to situation. Of course, one could and should include both practitioners/physicians and patients when engaging in this analysis unless one of the two groups is designed and intended to be the lone focal point. However, patients would obviously be the aggressor in many to most instances. Beyond that, one could focus on particular subsets of those two large groups including cancer patients, nurses and people in rehabilitation, just to name a few (McEwen & Wills, 2011).

When applying this to an article that discusses aggression in an emergency room setting, the lessons learned are easy to apply. While some may feel or think that aggression is not commonplace in an emergency room setting, it really is not ... but it most certainly happens. Whether it be an addict demanding a new "fix," a patient becoming angry due to pain levels not being managed and so on, aggression can certainly happen. To use the aforementioned principles of concept….....

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"Pain Aggression And Fatigue In ER S" (2016, January 31) Retrieved May 7, 2024, from
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"Pain Aggression And Fatigue In ER S" 31 January 2016. Web.7 May. 2024. <
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Latest Chicago Format (16th edition)

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"Pain Aggression And Fatigue In ER S", 31 January 2016, Accessed.7 May. 2024,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/pain-aggression-fatigue-er-s-2155338