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Prinsip dan Praktik Keperawatan Kesehatan Jiwa Stuart, 2nd Edition

Author :
By Gail Wiscarz Stuart, PhD, RN, FAAN, Budi Keliat and Jesika Pasaribu
Using the latest clinical research and diagnoses, Principles and Practice of Psychiatric Nursing, 11th Edition provides a holistic, biopsychosocial approach to psychiatric nursing care. It follows the popular Stuart stress-adaptation framew ...view more
Using the latest clinical research and diagnoses, Principles and Practice of Psychiatric Nursing, 11th Edition provides a holistic, biopsychosocial approach to psychiatric nursing care. It follows the popular Stuart stress-adaptation framework and includes comprehensive coverage to simplify important nursing and medical concepts, promote quality and safety in care, and address psychobiology and psychopharmacology topics integral to today’s psychiatry. New to this edition is a chapter on the latest on health care reform, prescription abuse, and obesity issues. Written by psychiatric nursing expert Gail W. Stuart, this market-leading text makes it easy to apply classroom theory to clinical practice.
ISBN :
9789814865951
Publication Date :
01-07-2022
Using the latest clinical research and diagnoses, Principles and Practice of Psychiatric Nursing, 11th Edition provides a holistic, biopsychosocial approach to psychiatric nursing care. It follows the popular Stuart stress-adaptation framework and includes comprehensive coverage to simplify important nursing and medical concepts, promote quality and safety in care, and address psychobiology and psychopharmacology topics integral to today’s psychiatry. New to this edition is a chapter on the latest on health care reform, prescription abuse, and obesity issues. Written by psychiatric nursing expert Gail W. Stuart, this market-leading text makes it easy to apply classroom theory to clinical practice.

New to this edition
• Remove all NANDA content and replace with local national standards in nursing diagnosis (SDKI Standar Diagnosis Keperawatan Indonesia)
• Update with NIC 7e and NOC 6e for intervention and implementasi, evaluation
• Update DSM-V if updates are available


Key Features
  • An easy-to-follow writing style makes it easy to understand both simple and complex topics.
  • A well-rounded, collaborative approach provides coverage of all major psychiatric disorders from nursing and medical perspectives.
  • The Stuart Stress Adaptation Model of health and wellness provides a consistent nursing-oriented framework, with clear explanations of biological, psychological, sociocultural, environmental, and legal-ethical components.
  • An evidence-based practice approach bridges the gap between clinical research and everyday practice.
  • Learning from a Clinical Case boxes begin disorders chapters with thought-provoking questions and end chapters with answers and feedback.
  • Summarizing the Evidence boxes in the disorders chapters examine the research and findings that support psychiatric nursing care.
  • A family focus and discussions of outpatient care reflect current trends in psychiatric nursing.
  • A Patient Speaks and A Family Speaks boxes present short vignettes with the patient’s and family’s perspectives of the caregiving process.
  • Competent Caring: A Clinical Exemplar of a Psychiatric Nurse boxes feature the experiences and personal insights of practicing psychiatric nurses.
  • Nursing Treatment Plan Summary tables present care plans including patient goals with nursing interventions and rationales.
  • Patient Education Plan and Family Education Plan tables include key information that you need to share with the patient and his or her family to facilitate shorter hospital stays and more outpatient care.
  • Therapeutic Dialogue boxes offer examples of nurse-patient interactions.
  • Clinical examples include selected nursing diagnoses.
  • Focus Points provide a comprehensive, point-by-point review of the important information in each chapter.

Author Information
By Gail Wiscarz Stuart, PhD, RN, FAAN, Dean and Professor, College of Nursing, Professor, College of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC; Budi Keliat and Jesika Pasaribu