The Body:
An AIDS and HIV Information Resource (www.thebody.com)
is a comprehensive site for people with HIV or AIDS and the nurses
who work with them.
More than
250 HIV/AIDS topics are included under categories that define
AIDS, list demographic data, offer information on HIV testing
and suggest steps to take after diagnosis.
Medical dictionaries
and databases that relate to HIV are included on the site. You
can access the latest information on treatment strategies and
specific treatment issues, such as those pertaining to women,
pregnancy and newborns, or pediatrics.
Research and
experimental drugs and alternative and holistic treatments also
are covered. A bulletin board is available for HIV patients who
want to connect with one another.
Posted on
the site is an interactive question and answer forum hosted by
leading experts in the field of HIV/AIDS.
How kids
cope
Band-aides & Blackboards (www.faculty.fairfield.edu/fleitas)
was developed by Joan Fleitas, Ed.D., RN, associate professor
of nursing at Fairfield (Conn.) University to help people understand
what it's like for children with chronic illness and medical problems
to attend school.
Colorful and
easy to navigate, this site is divided into "frog ponds."
Stories written by children give insight into how they deal with
chronic illness on a day-to-day basis. In one section, children
give advice to the nurses.
The site is
divided into categories designed for children, teens, adults,
parents, health care providers and siblings.
Critical
thinking
This site (nursing.umaryland.edu/students)
[Click "~jkohl" then scroll down to "A Case Scenario
for Critical Care"] presents a critical care scenario that
allows visiting nurses to practice critical-thinking skills.
Participants
in this exercise read the scenario and must triage the needs of
multiple patients.
For example,
do you take care of the patient with chest pain or shortness of
breath first?
A series of
screens provides information and then asks the reader to perform
various tasks and provide opinions as to what should happen next.
The case is taken through assessment, diagnosis, management and
follow-up of a clinically based problem.
The reader
makes decisions based on patient assessment and receives immediate
feedback as to the appropriateness of the treatment and differential
diagnosis.
Life-support
update
This Advanced Cardiac Life Support Unofficial Guide (www.acls2000.org)
provides an update of the latest in ACLS, cardiac resuscitations
and emergency cardiology. It features a quick summary of all ACLS
updates.
A link to
the official version of the new guidelines is included. Lectures
covering topics associated with the ACLS protocols can be printed.
Six code cases are available, based on real codes run by Paul
Lee, a cardiologist who developed the site.
As you work
through the scenarios, they become increasingly complicated.
Nursing
programs list
A listing of nursing programs throughout the country is available
at www.nursinghands.com.
Under the
CE and Education option, select Education Resources and then click
on Nursing School Programs.
Choose from
six types of nursing programs-associate, baccalaureate, baccalaureate
for nurses who already have an RN license, diploma, master's and
doctorate programs. Check out the programs available in different
states.
After clicking
on a particular program you will find the name of the college
or university, a contact person, a link to the local Web site,
information on student enrollment for previous years and residential
and nonresidential tuition.