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Volume 1
Issue 2 JULY– DECEMBER 2025
Research Articles Volume 1 (Issue 2) JULY– DECEMBER 2025
Critical Conversations on Trans Youth’s Marginalization in Current Health Care Writing
Vol.1(2); Pages:1-8. Published on July-2025
Abstract
It examines the way young transgender people are excluded from discussions in present-day healthcare literature. In reviewing major texts in this field, it is clear that significant narratives about trans youth often make them underrepresented, unacknowledged or considered as something not normal. It is observed in the analysis that trans identities are frequently viewed as disorders, that cisnormative ways of development receive special attention and that pro-affirming approaches for patients are frequently put aside. Because of these dialogues, institutional obstacles are created that can harm the welfare and sense of self of trans youth. The article recommends that healthcare literature move towards being inclusive, intersectional and focused on youth which all recognize and value range of gender identities.
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Determinants of Effective Adoption of IoT Technologies in Healthcare: A Qualitative Exploration
Vol.1(2); Pages:9-15. Published on October-2025
Abstract
The incorporation of the Internet of Things (IoT) into healthcare has attracted a lot of interest because of the fact that it can lead to better patient outcomes, better clinical workflow, and better real-time monitoring. Nevertheless, the process of the successful implementation of the IoT-based solutions in the healthcare sector is still complicated, and various technological, organizational, and human factors influence the process. The current qualitative research examines the factors that affect successful IoT implementation in healthcare contexts such as infrastructure preparedness, data protection, interoperability, stakeholder involvement, regulatory adherence, and healthcare practitioners adoption. Based on an extensive thematic analysis, the paper identifies essential enablers and obstacles that affect the implementation of IoT in health systems. The results offer practical implications to policymakers, healthcare administrators, and technology developers to develop strategies that encourage sustainable and secure integration of IoT as a technologic system, eventually leading to digital transformation of health services.
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Nursing Predictive Technologies for Timely Patient Drop Detection in Hospital Environments
Vol.1(2); Pages:16-23. Published on October-2025
Abstract
Early warning of clinical worsening among hospitalized adults is important in enhancing patient outcomes as well as improving morbidity and mortality. Recent technological advances in the healthcare sector have allowed nurses to take advantage of predictive technologies that help in detecting minor physiological and behavioral changes before they become serious complications. In this scoping review, the scope of technological solutions used in clinical environments to assist nurses in predicting patient deterioration is investigated, such as early warning score systems, machine learning algorithms, wearable monitoring devices, and electronic health record-integrated alert systems. The review brings into context the effectiveness, issues of implementation and the possibilities of integrating these tools into normal nursing practice. The evidence shows that even though predictive technologies have the potential to improve clinical decision-making and prompt interventions, their successful use relies on usability, personnel training, and workflow process alignment. The review highlights the necessity of continuous studies to maximize these technologies and their safe, effective, and equitable applications in the care of the hospital.
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Using Modern Technology to Accurately Track ICU Nurses’ Stress Levels
Vol.1(2); Pages:24-30. Published on October-2025
Abstract
The presence of the intensive care units (ICUs) with high stress levels creates a lot of problems to nursing personnel and affects not only well-being but also patient care results. The conventional ways of measuring stress, including counting on self-reported questionnaires and periodic observations tend to miss the real-time stresses and subtle physiological changes. This paper demonstrates a new solution involving the use of wearable sensors, biometric monitoring and digital analytics to obtain high-fidelity observation of stress in the ICU nurses. The system offers objective, continuous data on stress patterns during clinical shifts by incorporating heart rate variability, galvanic skin response and motion tracking. First results support the idea that real-time monitoring will be able to detect the point of maximum stress, the risk of burnout, and the relationship between workload, environmental factors, and physiological measures. This technology contribution to the existing knowledge of occupational stress in critical care environments does not only supplement the existing information but also provides practical insights on interventions, optimization of schedules, and staff support courses. This is the disruptive move to evidence-based stress management in nursing to promote employee health and patient safety.
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Comparison of Retrospective Data for Hospitalized COVID Patients with and Despite Cerebral Problems
Vol.1(2); Pages:31-37. Published on October-2025
Abstract
The incorporation of the Internet of Things (IoT) into healthcare has attracted a lot of interest because of the Long-term outcomes of SARS-CoV-2 infection amongst hospitalized patients are a topic of clinical interest, specifically among neurological involvement. The current longitudinal study is used to assess the outcome of patients admitted with COVID-19 after three years of follow-up of patients with and without a neurological complication. The functional status, cognitive performance, quality of life and post-acute sequelae incidence were gathered within 36 months of the study. Patients who had neurological manifestations showed a greater prevalence of profound cognitive impairment, lower physical functioning, and more reliance in daily activities than those who had not manifested with neurological involvement. On the other hand, patients who did not develop any neurological complication tended to recover slowly and record improved quality of life indices with time. These results highlight the dire need of early diagnosis and prolonged management interventions of neurological complications in COVID-19 patients. The knowledge of these differential trajectories may be used to inform rehabilitation interventions, assist the allocation of resources, and to guide specific interventions to enhance patient outcomes in the long-term.
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Issue 1 JANUARY- JUNE 2025
Research Articles Volume 1(Issue 1) JANUARY- JUNE 2025
Examining the Phenomenology of Husserl as a Basis for Nursing Research Investigation
Vol.1(1); Pages:1-9. Published on April-2025
Abstract
The discussion paper evaluates the application of Edmund Husserl’s phenomenological philosophy to nursing research while demonstrating its powerful potential to discover patient and practitioner subjective experiences. Qualitative methodologies and specifically phenomenological inquiry in nursing benefit from Husserl’s teaching about intentionality alongside consciousness and the essential nature of experiences. The practice of bracketing preconceptions combined with experiencing the subjective world helps nurse researchers find better understanding of human conditions as well as illness and care and healing processes. The paper studies methodological approaches together with an exploration of phenomenological reduction in directing care approaches that demonstrate patient empathy. The use of Husserlian phenomenology leads to improvements in both holistic and reflective nursing science research.
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Unfinished Nursing Care in Nursing Education: Consequences for Patient Safety and Student Readiness
Vol.1(1); Pages:10-19. Published on April-2025
Abstract
The practice of requiring essential nursing care but either postponing or leaving it incomplete proves to be a crucial health care issue both for patient results and understaffing situations. Research investigations predominantly examine unfinished care practice in professional registered nurses yet rising attention exists about students’ unfinished care experiences in their clinical placements. This paper looks at unfinished nursing care as nursing students experience it while discussing why time pressures together with skill deficits and shortage of clinical skills and inadequate supervisory support account for it. The research presents evidence about future professional growth problems as well as safety concerns for patients. Academic institutions together with clinical settings can create better safety measures for efficient all-encompassing patient care by implementing targeted interventions that address the root causes.
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Exploring the Impact of Burnout on the Quality of Nursing Care: A Conceptual Framework
Vol.1(1); Pages:20-26. Published on April-2025
Abstract
Professional nurse burnout functions as a major institutional issue that severely impacts both nursing staff and service delivery results. This study examines burnout within nursing practice along with all its direct and indirect effects on healthcare delivery quality. The manuscript integrates available literature and theoretical constructs to create an conceptual model showing the pathway between nursing occupational stress and employee exhaustion and reduced client care quality. The study examines workforce demands alongside emotional caregiving requirements as well as organizational backing alongside coping techniques to establish their combined influence during burnout events. The document presents core strategies which promote nurse resilience together with measures to enhance care quality in nursing practice environments. The developed framework establishes basic groundwork that researchers and policy developers can use for future studies about healthcare burnout reduction and service quality enhancement.
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Exploring the Interplay Between Public Image, Self-Concept, and Professional Identity in Nursing
Vol.1(1); Pages:27-33. Published on April-2025
Abstract
Global healthcare depends heavily on nursing professionals who face ongoing difficulties related to their public image as well as nurse self-identity and the development of a unified professional identity. The discussion paper analyzes the complex relationships between public understanding of nursing and nurse self-identities that determine professional nurse identity development. Healthcare professionals receive lower value than nurses in historical representations by the media which together with gender stereotypes have created widespread misconceptions that harm both nursing staff retention and recruitment efforts and work motivation. Nurses develop enhanced decision skills and professional dedication due to the way they understand their nursing responsibilities and personal worth along with their professional competence. A well-developed unified professional identity serves as a fundamental requirement to empower nurses who must work together with other healthcare staff and deliver better patient results. The analysis presented in this paper merges scholarly concepts with recent nursing research to study the interconnected and impact-generating relationships between public image and self-concept and professional identity. The paper emphasizes the need for strategic actions across nursing education together with leadership development and policy creation since these domains should support both public reputation transformation and nurse confidence growth as well as career development throughout educational and clinical advancement. The proposed multidimensional strategy seeks to protect nursing professionalism in our fastchanging healthcare system.
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Developments in Pharmaceutical Supply Chains: Using Technology and Strategic Management to Increase Access and Efficiency
Vol.1(1); Pages:34-42. Published on April-2025
Abstract
Medical drug delivery systems depend on supply chains for their timely operation because supply chain management innovations help improve performance alongside cost reduction and treatment effectiveness. Modern supply chain operations experience a transformation through recent technological achievements which include blockchain together with artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning technologies as well as automation features that improve transparency and optimize inventory control and strengthen decision-making capabilities. Cold chain innovations remain essential to maintain the effectiveness of products that need proper temperature maintenance. Global pharmaceutical companies now reduce supply chain disruption risks through their expansion of international product procurement efforts and their use of nearby sourcing operations along with various collaborative partnerships. The research analyzes innovative transformations which affect pharmaceutical supply chains through digital advancement and strategic management that are reshaping worldwide pharmaceutical distribution processes.
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