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Magazines : AJN: American Journal of NursingIn association with Amazon.comfrom: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins List Price: $84.00 Amazon.com's Price: $34.90 You Save: $49.10 (58%)Prices subject to change. Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 3 months
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Binding: MagazineFirst Issue Lead Time: 6-10 weeks Format: Magazine Subscription Issues Per Year: 12 Label: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Magazine Type: Trade magazine Manufacturer: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Number Of Issues: 12 Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Studio: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Subscription Length: 365 days Sales Rank: 385 Related Items:
Editorial Review: Product Description: Directed to qualified nurses practicing in all settings. Combines articles on clinical practice, issues, and trends with fast-paced broad news coverage. Amazon.com Review: The American Journal of Nursing is to its profession what the Journal of the American Medical Association is to physicians: the standard by which all related industry publications are measured. Published monthly, AJN is the official journal of the American Nurses Association and as such, harbors a high level of prestige not only among nurses, but medical professionals from all trades. Features are usually reserved for in-depth research studies or new nursing procedures. Readers also can receive continuing education credits through AJN publisher Lippincott Williams & Wilkins by taking and passing inserted mail-in tests related to such features. A news section addresses work-related issues such as adapting to new technologies, improving the workplace, trends, and new panel findings. Department articles delve into subspecialties such as infectious disease, pain control, and living with illness. AJN also keeps a classifieds section in the back of the book to help nurses seeking to relocate. As medical science advances, nursing positions become more specialized. AJN is the best way for registered nurses nationwide to receive the latest information and instruction vital to honing their skills. --Kristopher Kaiyala Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - Charged twiceThe AJN charged me twice for one subscription and then refused to give me a refund. The customer service reps were rude to deal with and I will never buy this product again. Rating: - A quality resourceI continue to be impressed with this journal and it's one of the very few that I read entirely. While I don't provide direct patient care today, it helps me stay current with the complex patient conditions and political issues facing nurses. "Politics " is not a 4-letter word - it's vital if nursing is to maintain its role in assuring patient/family safety and quality. As for resources like Nursing Made Incredibly Easy, they possibly have a role for the very basic novice or the layperson. But ... Read More Rating: - Professional nursing for all of usAs members of a complex profession with a range of specialties, it is easy for us to lose sight of our common core as registered professional nurses. This is the only journal covering the range of nursing practice at a professional level, incorporating original research, commentary and clinical applications. Reading it regularly provides me a regular overview of important issues facing nurses and nursing, beyond what I might seek out for my special interests in public health. A subscriber for 40+ ... Read More Rating: - 30 years of AJN and countingI have been reading AJN since I graduated from nursing school 30 years ago....it is timely, well written, ballanced, and provides me with the information that I need to stay in touch with current nursing practice. Thank you to Dr. Mason for an outstanding job. Rating: - great journalI am not sure what the "too political, too left" comments mean. The AJN is a pro-nursing publication. Of course there are political implications. Nurses cannot practice in a vacuum. Legislation and policy determine our ability to be patient advocates. As professionals, we must know what is happening in that arena. And we should all be involved. It is simply naive to believe you can take care of patients without being a nursing advocate in the process. I have also found the journal to be filled ... Read More Browse for similar items by category:
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