a doctor or the matron
Nonsense!!! Doctors are never in charge of nurses in a hospital. Nurses and Doctors are two completely separate teams that run paralell to each other and also work with each other. Doctors enter the ward as visiting staff, there is always a ward manager in charge of a ward and he/she is a Band 7 registered nurse. In Most hospitals a nurse manager will manage all of the nurses within the hospital.
TV shows such as Holby and Casualty always show a doctor telling a nurse to go for their tea break etc and giving them rows. THis would never happen in real life and if a doctor attempted to do this to a nurse, there would be sparks flying!!
In the US, the Director of Nurses (or Chief Nursing Officer or similar designation) heads the Nursing Department. She is responsible for the overall functioning of the department and answers to the Chief Executive Officer (who may or may not be a doctor, but who is responsible for the entire hospital.) She does not answer to the Chief Medical Officer (who is responsible for the medical staff). Hospitals may variously have shift nursing supervisors (sometimes called house supervisors) who oversee the day to day running of units on a shift basis and coordinate between them, as well unit nursing supervisors (sometimes called clinical supervisors, used to be called head nurses), who frequently have 24 hour responsibility for their unit. Charge nurses take on some of the oversight functions on a shift basis in individual units (these used to be called assistant head nurses) doing things like patient assignments, phone calls, trouble shooting and generally supporting the bedside nurses. A nurse may be permanently a charge nurse, or the role may shift between team members on a daily or other basis. All of these people are RNs (Registered Nurse), some with advanced practice licenses and/or specialty certifications. Physicians are not in charge of nurses. Haven't been for at least the 35 years I've been in. Good thing, too. They really don't know a thing about nursing. Not even when we take breaks.
In nursing there are many different positions including: Certified Nursing Assistant (CNA), Licensed Practical Nurse (LPN), Registered Nurse (RN), Nurse Practioner and so on. Each of these positions perform different responsibilities under a Charge Nurse. The Charge Nurse oversees the nurses and patients on her staff in a particular department.
an spectator
The matron
Institutions such as nursing homes or hospitals
Each hospital maternity ward is different. Generally speaking, every unit has a ward clerk, several or more nurses, possibly one or two LPNs (or any mixture of LPNs with RNs) and whichever physicians have hospital privileges or are on call. Some hospitals use Nursing Assistants; other hospitals use LPNs instead of NAs. In addition, all hospitals have cleaning staff (housekeeping), lab staff, and maintenance, any of whom may be on the unit.
Usually the staff of the nursing home refers to them by their given names. If speaking in general terms they are most often referred to as "residents."
There are not many differences between residential and nursing homes. They both offer accommodation, meals and personal care. The only difference is with the staff on duty. At a nursing home, they will always have at least one nurse on hand if not more. A residential home will call a medical staff in from an outside agency for medical needs.
Most hospitals do NOT have an emergency dentist on staff to deal with urgent dental issues. Urgent dental care is normally handled through your regular dentist. Most dental practices have an "after hours" line so that if you require emergency dental care outside of regular office hours, someone will be available to answer your call and schedule a quick appointment for you.
Gerontological nursing is a nursing specialty which revolves around the care of older adults. It is sometimes called "geriatric nursing". These nurse specialists attend nursing school to qualify as nurses then take additional courses to qualify as gerontological nurses.
Call some faciltiesas in nursing homes they may train for free but any where else will charge. www.cnatrainingcourseonlineeducationprogram.com were offering some free training program for the nursing assistant by searching got the answer and it may helps you
line
Answer Sanitary staff, Cleaners, Scavengers
nurse
To find a travel nursing job online, one may call local hospitals or nursing homes to ask for information about job openings, or for websites of companies who hire travel nurses. American Traveler has a wonderful, informative website that caters to anyone seeking a job as a travel nurse - their site offers information about benefits, sample assignments, and lists available travel nursing jobs in many different states.
You call the nursing home and ask what the owners name is..