Call for Abstract

23rd World Nursing and Healthcare Conference, will be organized around the theme “Current Challenges and Innovations in Nursing Education and Healthcare”

World Nursing 2017 is comprised of 17 tracks and 157 sessions designed to offer comprehensive sessions that address current issues in World Nursing 2017.

Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks. All related abstracts are accepted.

Register now for the conference by choosing an appropriate package suitable to you.

Nurse practitioners (NP) are advanced practice registered nurses (APRN) who are educated and trained to provide health promotion and maintenance through the diagnosis and treatment of acute illness and chronic condition. According to the International Council of Nurses, an NP/advanced practice registered nurse is "a registered nurse who has acquired the knowledge base, decision-making skills, and clinical competencies for expanded practice beyond that of an RN, the characteristics of which would be determined by the context in which he or she is credentialed to practice.

  • Track 1-1Licence practice nursing (LPN)
  • Track 1-2Evidence based partice in nursing
  • Track 1-3Certified nursing assistant
  • Track 1-4Nursing courses
  • Track 1-5Travel nurse
  • Track 1-6Technologies to Influence nursing

A health system, also sometimes referred to as health care system or healthcare system is the organization of people, institutions, and resources that deliver health care services to meet the health needs of target populations. Healthcare Management is a professional organization within the United Kingdom, for managers in the health and social care sectors. Its membership covers the National Health Service, independent health and social care providers, health care consultants, and the armed forces.

  • Track 2-1Primary healthcare
  • Track 2-2Health promotion/Disease prevention
  • Track 2-3Healthcare system
  • Track 2-4Healthcare management
  • Track 2-5Healthcare professionals
  • Track 2-6Healthcare research
  • Track 2-7Health information technology
  • Track 2-8Healthcare financing
  • Track 2-9Skin healthcare
  • Track 2-10Public health
  • Track 2-11Medicinal healthcare
  • Track 2-12Culturally-Diverse health practices

There are many types of nursing like Cancer Nursing, Heart & Cardiovascular Nursing, Paediatric Nursing, Surgical Nursing, Dental Care Nursing, Clinical Nursing, Critical Care & Emergency Nursing, Women Health Nursing, Adult Health Nursing, Community health nursing, Forensic nursing, Family Nursing, Gastroenterology nursing, Palliative care nursing, Nephrology nursing, Occupational health nursing, Oncology nursing, Perianesthesia nursing, Perinatal nursing, Perioperative nursing, Psychiatric and mental health nursing, Veterinary nursing, Rehabilitation nursing.

  • Track 3-1Community health nursing
  • Track 3-2Rehabilitation nursing
  • Track 3-3Veterinary nursing
  • Track 3-4Psychiatric and mental health nursing
  • Track 3-5Perioperative nursing
  • Track 3-6Perinatal nursing
  • Track 3-7Perianesthesia nursing
  • Track 3-8Oncology nursing
  • Track 3-9Occupational health nursing
  • Track 3-10Nephrology nursing
  • Track 3-11Palliative care nursing
  • Track 3-12Gastroenterology nursing
  • Track 3-13Geriatric nursing
  • Track 3-14Forensic nursing

Pregnancy, also known as gravidity or gestation, is the time during which one or more offspring develops inside a woman. A multiple pregnancy involves more than one offspring, such as with twins. Pregnancy can occur by sexual intercourse or assisted reproductive technology. It usually lasts around 40 weeks from the last menstrual period (LMP) and ends in childbirth.

  • Track 4-1Physical activity and diet during pregnancy
  • Track 4-2Common vaginal complaint
  • Track 4-3Polycystic ovarian syndrome
  • Track 4-4Abnormal uterine bleeding
  • Track 4-5Teratology
  • Track 4-6Modern technologies in pregnancy and child birth
  • Track 4-7Health problems and infection in pregnancy
  • Track 4-8Infertility
  • Track 4-9Influence of drugs and diseases during pregnancy
  • Track 4-10Complications during pregnancy
  • Track 4-11Urinary tract infection and condition

Clinical implications and cancer nursing based on the rates of pain and other symptoms documented in the literature, changes in clinical practice are needed to reduce the symptom burden of residents with cancer. However, evidence-based practice standards have yet to be defined for the specific population of residents with cancer. Primary care and cancer nursing is a care delivery system that supports professional nursing practice. Within Primary Nursing, a therapeutic relationship is established between a registered nurse and an individual patient and his or her family.

  • Track 5-1Breast cancer
  • Track 5-2Throat cancer
  • Track 5-3Thyroid cancer
  • Track 5-4Oral cancer
  • Track 5-5Liver cancer and colon cancer
  • Track 5-6Kidney cancer
  • Track 5-7Heart cancer and lung cancer
  • Track 5-8Gastric (Stomach) cancer
  • Track 5-9Cervical cancer and vaginal cancer
  • Track 5-10Brain cancer
  • Track 5-11Bone cancer
  • Track 5-12Skin cancer
  • Track 5-13Blood cancer
  • Track 5-14Anal cancer

The practice of nursing requires specialized knowledge, skill, and independent decision making. There are about 3908229 professionally active nurses in USA and about 20380000 register nurses all over the world according to 2015. Nurse education consists in the theatrical and practical training provided to nurses with the purpose to prepare them for their duties as nursing care professionals. This education is provided to nursing students by experienced nurses and other medical professionals who have qualified or experienced for educational tasks. Most countries offer nurse education courses that can be relevant to general nursing or to specialized areas including mental health nursing, paediatric nursing and post-operatory nursing. Nurse education also provides post-qualification courses in specialist subjects within nursing.

  • Track 6-1NCLEX
  • Track 6-2Registered nursing (RN)
  • Track 6-3Nursing Science, awareness and development
  • Track 6-4Nursing seminars
  • Track 6-5Nursing In Berlin
  • Track 6-6Nursing in Germany
  • Track 6-7Nursing research
  • Track 6-8Family nurse practitioner education
  • Track 6-9Neonatal nurse practitioner education
  • Track 6-10Psychiatric nurse practitioner Education
  • Track 6-11Nursing leadership
  • Track 6-12Clinical nursing and nursing theory
  • Track 6-13Adult-gerontological health nursing

Cardiac nursing is a nursing specialty that works with patients who suffer from various conditions of the cardiovascular system. Cardiac nurses help treat conditions such as unstable angina, cardiomyopathy, coronary artery disease, congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction and cardiac dysrhythmia under the direction of a cardiologist. Cardiac nurses work in many different environments, including coronary care units (CCU), cardiac catheterization, intensive care units (ICU), operating theatres, cardiac rehabilitation centres, clinical research, cardiac surgery wards, cardiovascular intensive care units (CVICU), and cardiac medical wards.

  • Track 7-1Heart attack/Heart failure
  • Track 7-2Cardiac arrest and cardiovascular issues
  • Track 7-3Intensive hemodialysis
  • Track 7-4Heart muscle disease (Cardiomyopathy)
  • Track 7-5Heart valve disease
  • Track 7-6Pericardial disease
  • Track 7-7Abnormal heart rhythms or arrhythmias
  • Track 7-8Coronary artery disease
  • Track 7-9Congenital heart disease
  • Track 7-10Importance of blood
  • Track 7-11Heart transplantation
  • Track 7-12Aorta disease and marfan syndrome

Childhood overweight and obesity is a condition where excess body fat negatively affects a child's health or well-being. As methods to determine body fat directly are difficult, the diagnosis of obesity is often based on BMI. Due to the rising prevalence of obesity in children and its many adverse health effects it is being recognized as a serious public health concern. Health issues with children and youth is the range of approaches to preventing, detecting or treating young people’s health and well. The term adolescent and young people are often used interchangeably, as are the terms Adolescent Health and Youth Health.

  • Track 8-1General pediatrics
  • Track 8-2Health issues with children and youth
  • Track 8-3Childhood overweight and obestity
  • Track 8-4Pediatric mental health
  • Track 8-5Pediatric emergencies and trauma treatment
  • Track 8-6Pediatric cardiology and research
  • Track 8-7Pediatric haematology and oncology
  • Track 8-8Pediatric immunology and infectious diseases
  • Track 8-9Pediatric allergy and respiratory disorders
  • Track 8-10Preterm-birth complications and neonatal intensive care
  • Track 8-11Child and adolescent health

A surgical nurse is a nurse who specializes in perioperative care, meaning care provided to surgical patients before, during, and after surgery. There are a number of different kinds of surgical nurse, and surgical nursing as a career can be very demanding. Compensation in this field varies, depending on where a nurse works. Some surgical nurses make salaries which are comparable to those of doctors, while others struggle to get by on much less. Surgical nurses may practice in different types of surgery. General surgery, Vascular surgery, Colo-rectal surgery, Surgical Oncology, Orthopaedic surgery, Urological surgery.

  • Track 9-1General surgery and its specialities
  • Track 9-2Plastic surgery
  • Track 9-3Ophthalmic surgery
  • Track 9-4Oral sugery
  • Track 9-5Neurosurgery
  • Track 9-6Orthopaedic surgery
  • Track 9-7Obstetric and gynaecology surgery
  • Track 9-8Transplant surgery
  • Track 9-9Advancements in surgery

Practices in clinical nursing is an important component of the Bachelor of Science (Nursing) program and a requirement for registration with Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA). Clinical practice provides students with an opportunity to achieve competence in safe and effective work practice as well as develop the skills, knowledge, attitudes, values and abilities identified in the ANMC National Competency Standards for the Registered Nurse.

  • Track 10-1Skills and techniques in clinical nursing
  • Track 10-2Clinical evaluation
  • Track 10-3Practices in clinical nursing
  • Track 10-4Men in nursing
  • Track 10-5Promoting clinical outcomes

Critical care nursing is the field of nursing with a focus on the utmost care of the critically ill or unstable patients. Infection prevention and nursing care is the discipline concerned with preventing nosocomial or healthcare-associated infection, a practical (rather than academic) sub-discipline of epidemiology. New born babies who need intensive medical attention are often admitted into a special area of the hospital called the Neonatal intensive care and nursing care.

  • Track 11-1Acute kidney injury and hemofiltration
  • Track 11-2Acute respiratory failure and ventilation
  • Track 11-3Brain death, organ donation and transplantation
  • Track 11-4End of life care
  • Track 11-5Metabolism, endocrinology, liver failure and nutrition
  • Track 11-6Nursing care and physiotherapy
  • Track 11-7Trauma

Women have turned to midwives for support and assistance in childbirth. (Midwife means "with woman.") Today's certified nurse-midwives continue to provide this personal care, which represents a bridge between traditional birth practices and modern technology. Gynecologic malignancies and nursing care is a specialized field of medicine that focuses on cancers of the female reproductive system, including ovarian cancer, uterine cancer, vaginal cancer, cervical cancer, and vulvar cancer. As specialists, they have extensive training in the diagnosis and treatment of these cancers.

  • Track 12-1HIV/AIDS among women and treatment
  • Track 12-2Obstetric and Gynecologic malignancies
  • Track 12-3Women and cardiac diseases
  • Track 12-4Cancer and women health nursing
  • Track 12-5Obstetrical nursing
  • Track 12-6Orthopedic nursing
  • Track 12-7Nursing care during child birth and preterm birth prevention

Adult heart failure and nursing care treatment is based on the severity of the congenital heart disease. Some mild heart defects do not require any treatment. Others can be treated with medications, invasive procedures or surgery. Most adults with congenital heart disease should be monitored by a heart specialist and may need to take precautions to prevent endocarditis (an infection of the heart) throughout their life. End-of-life care refers to health care, not only of patients in the final hours or days of their lives, but more broadly care of all those with a terminal illness or terminal condition that has become advanced, progressive and incurable.

  • Track 13-1Schizophrenia
  • Track 13-2Anxiety and sleep disorders
  • Track 13-3Electroconvulsive therapy & effects
  • Track 13-4Fall prevention
  • Track 13-5Adult care

Telemedicine is the use of telecommunication and information technologies in order to provide clinical health care at a distance. It helps eliminate distance barriers and can improve access to medical services that would often not be consistently available in distant rural communities. It is also used to save lives in critical care and emergency situations. Although there were distant precursors to telemedicine, it is essentially a product of 20th century telecommunication and information technologies.

  • Track 14-1Clinical applications of telemedicine
  • Track 14-2Preventive e-health Systems
  • Track 14-3Applied health informatics
  • Track 14-4Telenursing, telehealth, telemedicine and telerehabilitation
  • Track 14-5e-health: Cyber medicine
  • Track 14-6Big data and cloud computing in healthcare and international standards
  • Track 14-7Emergency medicine

Nutrition is the science that interprets the interaction of nutrients and other substances in food (e.g. phytonutrients, anthocyanins, tannins, etc.) in relation to maintenance, growth, reproduction, health and disease of an organism. It includes food intake, absorption, assimilation, biosynthesis, catabolism and excretion. Health is the level of functional or metabolic efficiency of a living organism. In humans it is the ability of individuals or communities to adapt and self-manage when facing physical, mental or social challenges.

  • Track 15-1Public health nutrition
  • Track 15-2Pediatric nutrition
  • Track 15-3Malnutrition and its effects
  • Track 15-4Food processing and technical methods
  • Track 15-5Nutritional assessment and basic requirements
  • Track 15-6Nutritional deficiency and disorders
  • Track 15-7Overweight & obesity
  • Track 15-8Fitness management

Legal Nursing is the implications of nursing practice are tied to licensure, state and federal laws, scope of practice and a public expectation that nurses practice at a high professional standard. The nurse’s education, license and nursing standard provide the framework by which nurses are expected to practice. Ethical issues in legal nursing are mainly six ethical principles that arise frequently for the nurse who works in the correctional setting  Respect for persons (autonomy and self-determination) 2. Beneficence (doing good) Nonmaleficence (avoiding harm)  Justice (fairness, equitability, truthfulness),  Veracity (telling the truth)  Fidelity (remaining faithful to one’s commitment).

  • Track 16-1Healthcare law
  • Track 16-2Ethical issues in legal nursing
  • Track 16-3Medical practice and linked life insurance
  • Track 16-4Role of legal nursing
  • Track 16-5Legal nurse in end-of-life care
  • Track 16-6The affordable care act and it
  • Track 16-7How can nurses get involved in changing health policy ?

Oral cancer or mouth cancer is a type of head and neck cancer is any cancerous tissue growth located in the oral cavity. It may arise as a primary lesion originating in any of the tissues in the mouth, by metastasis from a distant site of origin, or by extension from a neighbouring anatomic structure, such as the nasal cavity. Alternatively, the oral cancers may originate in any of the tissues of the mouth, and may be of varied histologic types: Teratoma, adenocarcinoma derived from a major or minor salivary gland, lymphoma from tonsillar or other lymphoid tissue, or melanoma from the pigment-producing cells of the oral mucosa

  • Track 17-1Basic dentistry
  • Track 17-2Pediatric dentistry
  • Track 17-3Cosmetic dentistry
  • Track 17-4Oral & maxillofacial surgery
  • Track 17-5Oral & dental Health
  • Track 17-6Orthodontics & prosthodontics
  • Track 17-7Forensic dentistry or odontology
  • Track 17-8Future trends in dentistry
  • Track 17-9Future trends in dentistry