Overview

The Journal of Nursing Research and Practice (ISSN 2632-251X) publishes nursing-related research. The goal of publishing original research is to encourage evidence-based practice and improve the quality of patient treatment. It publishes high-quality research papers on health-related topics that educate nurses and other healthcare professionals around the world. Journal of Nursing Research and Practice strives to support nursing and healthcare professionals in their growth for the overall benefit of quality healthcare services by tying policy, research, and development activities to clinical and academic excellence.

The aim of the Journal of Nursing Research and Practice is to publish cutting-edge international research and scholarship on nurse and midwifery education. As a result, the journal’s scope includes both education and clinical practice. In order to contribute to the evidence foundation of nurse and midwifery education in practice, we publish empirical studies and systematic reviews. This Journal is an essential journal in US nursing that has contributed significantly to the dissemination of knowledge that is directly relevant to the entire nursing community. Researchers have no reservations about submitting papers to the Journal of Nursing Research and Practices, demonstrating the journal’s value as a medium for disseminating research findings.

Journals Highlights

The Journal encompasses a vast spectrum of topics within this field including but not limited to;

  • Patient Health
  • Nursing Care Quality
  • Health care
  • Pediatric care
  • Physician implementation
  • Family Health Care Nursing
  • Community Health Systems
  • Physiological Nursing
  • Long-Term Care
  • Nurse Research Training and Clinical Training in Nursing.

Nursing Care Quality

Meeting client wants and expectations while adhering to appropriate Standards/requirements is an important part of providing quality nursing care. It refers to the extent to which healthcare services for individuals and populations improve. Are congruent with current professional knowledge and have a high likelihood of desired health outcomes.

Pediatric Care

Pediatric care is the specialized medical treatment for children who have a serious illness. Pediatric care focuses on children’s growth and development, nutrition, illness prevention, and treatment. The goal is to improve both the kid’s and the family’s quality of life. In a variety of capacities, a pediatric nurse is responsible for caring for children who are unwell or injured. Pediatric nurses, often known as children’s nurses, are members of a medical team that also includes doctors, healthcare assistants, health visitors, psychologists, and social workers.

Family Health Care Nursing

The Family Health Nursing Process is a systematic strategy to assist families in developing and strengthening their capacity to fulfill their health requirements and manage problems. The process of family health nursing is intertwined with the practice of community health nursing.

Physiological Nursing

Psychosocial nursing is the provision of psychological, social, and spiritual care in a culturally sensitive manner through therapeutic conversation. Effective psychosocial treatment, according to current evidence, improves patients’ health outcomes and quality of life. It is responsible for monitoring and caring for clients who have acute, chronic, or life-threatening physical health problems.

Long-Term Care

Long-term care (LTC) is a collection of services designed to address the medical and non-medical requirements of persons who are unable to care for themselves for an extended period of time due to a chronic illness or disability.

Nurse Research Training

Nurse Research Training conducts scientific research on a variety of health-related topics, such as illnesses, treatment plans, medications, and healthcare procedures, with the ultimate goal of enhancing healthcare services and patient outcomes. Management and organizational abilities, teaching and mentoring, communication, and information technology are all required of research nurses. Successful research requires collaboration and cooperation with other researchers and members of the multidisciplinary team.

Clinical Training in Nursing

Clinical training refers to a person’s experience and instruction in delivering direct patient care in a healthcare setting. Nurses with extensive knowledge and skill in a specific field of nursing practice, such as cardiology, oncology, or psychiatry, are eligible for this position. Assessing a patient’s condition, delivering medication, setting IVs, updating patient records, offering emotional support, and/or educating patients on how to manage their disease or injuries are some of the responsibilities.

Our mission is to promote excellence in nursing and health care by disseminating evidence-based, peer-reviewed clinical information and original research, discussing pertinent and contentious professional issues, adhering to journalistic integrity and excellence, and promoting nursing perspectives to the health care community and the general public.

Authors are invited to publish their findings and opinions in the form of research articles, review articles, short communications, case reports, letters to the editor, guidelines, and techniques. An author may submit their manuscripts through the journal’s online submission and tracking system which is located here.

Journal of Nursing and Research Submission