My wife get's irritated when I answer these. She says that you are lazy and you should research it yourself since it's part of your nursing program. Don't start taking shortcuts, it's a bad habit to get into.
Here's your answer; read it.
http://www.oesweb.com/pdf/monographs/CellTherapeutics2346.pdf#search='nursing%20considerations%20multiple%20myeloma'
2006-08-17 20:30:19
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answer #1
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answered by GVD 5
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Now that I've read a few of these I realize you probably not a MM patient or a family member of someone with MM, but most likely a nursing student doing homework. Is that so?
This bums me out that you can just post this on Yahoo! Answers and someone will do your work for you. I did things the old fashioned way and worked my tail off.
2006-08-18 21:04:10
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answer #2
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answered by BabyRN 5
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Wherever the nurse works (or nurses' aides, or health care techs, or doctors for that matter), there is already set in place the "Policies and Procedures" for what the duties and responsibilities of the staff are. Each care facility is different, for example, Trauma Level I, Trauma Level II, Skilled Nursing Facility, etc.
Check with the crisis management nurse/head.
2006-08-17 19:48:35
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answer #3
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answered by D 4
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I think your best source of information would be a nursing textbook. You can find sites on Google that sell nursing textbooks new and used.
2006-08-17 19:44:26
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answer #4
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answered by parachute 3
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HI,
MM is a very complicated cancer - each patient is different and has differnt symptoms and problems
bone breakage is huge, so is anemia and infection form surpressed white count.
there is a lot of information for caregivers at
www.myeloma.org
good luck
jewells
30 months and still here
2006-08-18 05:08:49
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answer #5
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answered by jewells_40 4
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