Case study

By Published on October 3, 2025
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  • QUESTION

     Case study

    Your original post must address the topic below. The word count for your original post is 300-500 words ± 10%. Markers will stop reading at the maximum allowable word count

    Include your own perspective on the topic to develop the idea further

    Use a minimum of two relevant scholarly resources to support your original post

     

     Read the short case study below and:

    1. Identify two challenging situations.
    2. Discuss why you have chosen your two challenging situations and why you think they are challenging (include your thoughts and opinions on the case study)
    3. Describe how you would feel in this situation and what you would do as a registered nurse.
    4. Link your discussion to any previous experiences you have had either as a student or in your professional life
    5. Use a minimum of two scholarly evidenced-based resources to support your discussion points (journal articles)

     

    Please note any discussion of previous experiences need to remain anonymous and discussed in a professional manner. Linking to previous experience is to help provide real life experience examples to support the discussion.

    Case study

    You are a New graduate RN working on your second ward after graduating from university. The ward is short staffed, and you have been allocated as the team leader. There is an AIN and two Endorsed Enrolled nurses (EEN) also working with you. You are working on a mixed surgical ward and have been allocated patients 1-12.

    You are buddied with an experienced EEN who you really enjoy working with. Sarah always makes you feel like part of the team, and you know you can ask her anything. Sarah is funny and is always laughing. You start your shift, and everything is going well, but you notice Sarah looks tired and see her crying in the storeroom. When you ask if she is ok, she states nothing is wrong.

    When counting out an Endone tablet for your patient, the emergency buzzer rings for bed 6. There is only one other nurse on the ward as Tim the EEN went to the central storeroom to collect more intravenous pumps. Sarah tells you to go see quickly, and she will give the medication.

    Your run into bed 6 and the Mandy the AIN is performing CPR on your patient. You remember the doctor talking to the patient yesterday about end of life care and the patient clearly stated he did not want any life-saving interventions if he had a cardiac arrest. You tell the nurse, and she screams at you to do something useful. You quickly call the doctor, and the team arrives.

    The patient’s wife and the adult son arrive, and the son starts screaming for you to save their loved one. You distinctly remember the patient’s wife being present yesterday when the doctor discussed end of life care. There was no form in the notes as the doctor forgot to complete the documentation. You notice Mr Peters son roughly grabbing his mother by the arm and can see bruises which you think look like fingerprints on her other arm.

    There are several patients’ buzzers alarming and Tim comes to tell you theatre has called to take Mr King to theatre. Tim informs you none of the theatre preparations has been completed and he is unsure how to do this.

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Subject Nursing Pages 3 Style APA
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Answer

  1. Nursing              

    The scenario described in the case study occurs in an inpatient setting and concerns patient management, diagnosis and treatment. The two challenging situation pertains to the end of life decision and an understaffed ward. The decision by Mr. Peter (patient) to have their life terminated through withdrawal of critical care services poses dilemma between morality of the action and patient’s autonomy. The terminally ill Mr. Peterson had, on the previous day, agreed with his doctor and family members to have their life ended by halting critical care on his body. However, this agreement was neither formal nor finalized by the family. The decision to end Mr. Peter’s life qualifies as euthanasia which is a controversial ethical issue in nursing and religious perspective. Despite the patient is readiness to die, the ethics of nursing practice and moral dignity prevents the nurses and doctors from participating in euthanasia (Fontalis, Prousali & Kulkarni, 2018). This understanding undoubtedly terms the end of life decision as very challenging. 

                Another challenge emerging is that Mr. Peter requested his doctor to cut short his life but the details of the discussions were not documented as a requirement for such end of life procedures (Sjöstrand et al., 2013). Furthermore, the information was not communicated to all the nurses and doctors serving in the ward. The assistant nurse (AIN), unaware of the end of life discussions, performed Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) on Mr. Peter despite having given instructions to their doctor about such treatment. Only one nurse (the new RN nurse) overheard the end of life discussion and when she found that AIN was already performing resuscitation, she attempted to spot the process but the AIN shouted in protest, hence, causing confusion in the process. This situation was even more challenging because the AIN had no idea of the plan to end the Mr. Peter’s life and perhaps the AIN sticks to the moral and ethical values of life especially as pertains to patient treatment.

                Working in an understaffed ward poses critical challenges while trying to address a back log in patient management and treatment. Nurse fatigue may compromise the course of care (Peters, 2018). One patient is in urgent need of theater services but the theater is not prepared for admissions and the doctor is yet to arrive. The events occur at the exact time when Mr. Peter and several other patients in the ward require urgent treatment but there are no enough doctors and nurses to address the emerging critical issues in the inpatient department. Sarah is ever joyous but appears very tired on the very day of the scenario perhaps because of the numerous tasks she performs against the huge number of patients in the ward. As a registered nurse, I would continue the resuscitation process for Mr. Peter and request his family to stay calm and let the nurses completed the process. I would then take the family through counseling process to prepare them psychologically for whatever outcome in the process.

     

Reference

  • Ahmetoglu, G., Furnham, A., & Fagan, P. (2014). Pricing practices: A critical review of    their effects on consumer perceptions and behaviour. Journal of Retailing and         Consumer Services21(5), 696-707.

    Deepak, R. K. A., & Jeyakumar, S. (2019). Marketing management. Educreation Publishing.

    Gillpatrick, T. (2019). The Digital Transformation of Marketing: Impact on Marketing Practice & Markets. Economics7(2), 139-156.

    Minkoff, S., & Mann, C. (2020). The Effect of Billboards on Turnout in 4 States: A Randomized Experiment.

    Olbrich, R., Jansen, H. C., & Hundt, M. (2017). Effects of pricing strategies and product quality on private label and national brand performance. Journal of Retailing and Consumer Services34, 294-301.

    Qazi, T. Y., Ohtaki, S., & Munir, M. (2017). Social Network Advertisements and Purchase Intentions: a Case of Mobile Facebook Users in Pakistan. Academic Research International8(01), 60-69.

    Rundh, B. (2016). The role of packaging within marketing and value creation. British Food Journal.

    Vassileva, B. (2017). Marketing 4.0: How technologies transform marketing organization. Óbuda university e-Bulletin7(1), 47.

    Verhoef, P. C., Kannan, P. K., & Inman, J. J. (2015). From multi-channel retailing to        omni-channel retailing: introduction to the special issue on multi-channel   retailing. Journal of retailing91(2), 174-181.

    Zhou, L., & Gupta, S. M. (2019). Marketing research and life cycle pricing strategies for new and remanufactured products. Journal of Remanufacturing9(1), 29-50.

     

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  • QUESTIONWeek 4 Discusssion 
    This is a discussion question that I need answered. I need the second portion of the questioned answered thoroughly, both bullet points. I have highlighted it in yellow to show that it is what I need answered. I need this r returned to me completed without any grammatical or punctual errors. The company that I want this question written about is Nissan Motor Corporation.
      Choose ONE of the following discussion question options to respond to: Using Adverse Conditions to a Company's Advantage
    • Chakravorti (2010) discusses four methods that corporate innovators use to turn adverse conditions to their advantage. Examine an organization of your choice and briefly discuss how the organization might use one of these methods.
    -OR- Assessing Risk and Reward
    • Using the company of your choice, identify an important and difficult decision that they faced. What were the most important risks and the most important rewards of the decision?
    • What data, analysis or perspective would you have used to help Sr. Management decide if the rewards outweighed the risks?
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Subject Business Pages 4 Style APA
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Answer

 

Al Gore’s “An Inconvenient Truth” Movie Analysis

            While delivering a speech, persuasion is essential in convincing the audience to listen to their ideas in their address. In An Inconvenient Truth, former US Vice President Al – Gore speaks on global warming as an encroaching crisis affecting its atmosphere and the environment as his central message. Al- Gore effectively persuades the audience into joining his cause against global warming by using persuasive communication strategies, a solid introduction, rhetoric strategies, oral citations, proper speech delivery, and presentation aids to evoke the audience in supporting his cause.

            Al- Gore’s successfully incorporates a solid speech introduction to attract the audience’s attention. He begins the introduction with a joke alluding to him being the “former future president of the United States.” The use of such a satirical comment evokes the audience wondering who would be bold enough to stand on stage after losing a race, such as the presidential election. This captures the audience to be more involving in his speech and sit for a better listening into the matters at hand. Later on, he introduces his speech topic by focusing on his central message, outlining his whole address's main points. Finally, it eases the audience by showing a mangrove parchment indicated to involve the audience in relating to a preserved environment before expounding on his speech. The audience is engaged after this as he gets into his central message and further engaging in his speech.

Al-Gore's excellently persuades the audience by using ethos as a rhetorical strategy throughout the speech.  Ethos employs a sense of trustworthiness and competence that enables the audience to believe in the speaker's credibility. He shows ethos by acknowledging his commitment to the earth as an environmental activist. Al- Gore's speech is based on expansive research that helps the audience trust his competence in speaking on the issue. Al- Gore's possesses charisma and positive energy that attracts the audience to remain rooted in listening to his appeal towards addressing global warming. As characteristics of applying ethos in a speech, the combination of dynamism and competence draws the crowd to become trustworthy with his presentation and remains attentive throughout the address.

Al- Gore’s effectively employs persuasive communication strategies that include positive motivation, negative motivation, cognitive dissonance, non-verbal communication, and appeals to self-esteem in his speech. Positive and negative motivations are essential in persuading the audience to venture into addressing global warming to achieve positive outcomes in the environment. Consequently, Al-Gore uses negative motivation to convince the audience that failure to look into measures of curbing global warming and climate change, the earth might end up like the few places he depicts in his comparison photographs and videos. Cognitive dissonance helps change one's perspective to something by discomforting norms and beliefs to persuade an audience towards change. At the start of the documentary, Al-Gore introduces a short video of a beautiful mangrove parchment that would stay in the back of the audience's mind on what should be safeguarded.  To destabilize the audience, he shows pictorials of areas devastated by global warming, evoking fear and panic for the world that has become dormant in addressing this issue. Intertwined, with his central idea, Al- Gore persuades the audience in a bleak and disheartened tone to fight for preserving the environment.

            In addition, Al-Gore’s effectually uses non-verbal communication in his body language is established through a dejected worrying tone for identifying with the audience on the prevailing situation. Al- Gore’s body movement showed confidence in his walk and constant interactiveness with the audience. Al – Gore also has a confiden, genuine smile appearing as a well- groomed and dressed man in delivering his speech. In the documentary, Al-Gore's clear expression of displeasure with people who negated around global warming instead of addressing is clear.  Al-Gore aimed to show concern for the issue. Al –Gore's self-esteem pushes his central message across the audience by focusing on positivity and the audience's contributions to curb global warming. His articulation of each point across helps in building confidence with the audience. His confidence in his speech persuades the audience to be on board the matter.

            Oral citations are well used in An Inconvenient Truth to capture the audience's attention. Al- Gore uses oral citations effectively to show reliability, credibility, and validity of information conveyed in his speech address. Denoting empirical evidence from videos, charts, and maps allude the audience into believing that Al- Gore critically researched the issue and came up with a profound speech to convince the audience to join his cause to remove fallacies on wrong information presented in his speech. Virtually, his research pays off as he captures the audience in his factual interactions on the matter.

Al – Gore excellently uses presentation aids like projected images, comparison photographs, short videos, satirical cartoons, and info graphs like maps and charts to help persuade his audience to come to his plea in preserving the environment by combating global warming. Projected images show areas adversely affected by global warming, including flooded areas. The short videos as well show people injured due to flooding. The graphs and maps show empirical evidence of the effects of global warming in areas. A comparison of videos and pictures shows how some places were before global warming and its impact after years. All these visual aids serve as areas involving the audience's concern and worry over the deteriorating ecosystem around us. Al-Gore was not shy off, including videos of politicians passing over the global warming issue through satirical cartoons while also poking at renowned scientists worldwide who showed the existence of climate change. As much as Al-Gore is a politician, he intended for the audience to understand that his concern was for the environment and endeavors towards combating global warming rather than politically-driven shows with aspirations of a political seat.

Lastly, Al- Gore successfully uses ethos, pathos, and logos strategies to capture the audience's attention in his speech. Ethos employs a sense of trustworthiness and competence that enables the audience to believe in the speaker's credibility. He shows ethos by acknowledging his commitment to the earth as an environmental activist. The documentary shows the incorporation of logos through his presentation of scientific facts that support his claims to global warming as an issue of concern. Lastly, his attributes to incorporate his son's demise into comparing it to his commitment to the environment show pathos as a rhetoric strategy.  Successful integration of photographs and videos of areas affected by global warming helped provoke the audience to support his cause towards alleviating global warming.

In conclusion, Al – Gore effectively incorporates persuasive communication strategies, a solid introduction, rhetoric strategies, oral citations, proper speech delivery, and presentation aids to evoke the audience in supporting his fight against global warming.  Using all these techniques successfully convinces the audience to have a concern about the deteriorating ecosystem. Having watched the documentary, I am persuaded to carry on the legacy of conserving our environment as an environmental ambassador.         

 

.

References

Fontalis, A., Prousali, E., & Kulkarni, K. (2018). Euthanasia and assisted dying: what is the

            current position and what are the key arguments informing the debate?. Journal of the

            Royal Society of Medicine111(11), 407-413.

Peters, E. (2018). Compassion fatigue in nursing: A concept analysis. In Nursing

            forum (Vol. 53, No. 4, pp. 466-480). 

Sjöstrand, M., Helgesson, G., Eriksson, S., & Juth, N. (2015). Autonomy-based arguments

            against physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia: a critique. Medicine, Health Care and

            Philosophy16(2), 225-230.

  •  

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