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Search results on "HEALTHCARE":

Essay # 68989 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Improving Healthcare in a Healthcare Facility, 2006.
Describes a system for improving the patient incident reporting system in a typical tertiary healthcare facility.
2,249 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 16 sources, APA, £ 43.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the patient incident reporting system at a hospital and explains that the present system, which is designed to track patient incidents such as falls, patient abuse and medication errors, as well as provide a means of implementing corrective action, is highly labor-intensive and cumbersome. The paper then proceeds to identify and describe six different initiatives that would improve the efficiency and effectiveness of the current patient incident reporting system.

Table of Contents
Initiative No. 1. Use Existing Hospital Information
System for Patient Incident Reporting for JCAHO
Quality Assurance Tracking Purposes
Initiative No. 2. Installation of Hospital-Wide Patient
Records Database
Initiative No. 3. Use Existing IT Systems to Trend
Adverse Patient Incidents for Inclusion in Hospital-Wide
Quality Assurance Reports
Initiative No. 4. Applying Existing Information Systems
for Improved Inventory Control
Initiative No. 5. Implement Interactive Menu-Processing
System for Inpatients
Initiative No. 6. Improve Hospital and Grounds Security
by Using IT-Based Web Camera Applications

From the Paper
"The Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) has already mandated that all accredited healthcare facilities have in place a means of tracking patient incidents such as falls, patient abuse, and medication errors and to provide a means of implementing corrective action when deficiencies are identified (Bryan & O'Connell 23). Although our hospital does in fact have such a patient incident reporting system in place, it is a highly labor-intensive paper form-based approach that requires copying and hand-delivery to the Office of Quality Assurance; furthermore, this paper-based system is easily transferable to the existing hospital-wide information system intranet. In this regard, the proposed online replacement should replicate the existing patient incident reporting system as closely as possible to ensure staff acceptance of this alternative (Auerbach, Beckerman, Cohen, Goldstein, Quitkin & Rock 134)."
Essay # 105160 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Healthcare Communication, 2008.
This paper focuses on healthcare communication between the providers of healthcare and their patients.
1,454 words (approx. 5.8 pages), 8 sources, MLA, £ 30.95
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Abstract
In this article, the writer notes that the term healthcare communication can refer to all types of communications used in the healthcare industry, be it communication between and among healthcare agencies, healthcare providers, and healthcare clients. In this paper, however, the writer concentrates on the topic of healthcare communication between healthcare providers and their patients-clients. The paper emphasizes the importance of this communication and looks at the current movement in healthcare education to bring back the human touch into healthcare practice in order for medicine to regain its soul.

Outline:
What is Healthcare Communication?
Relevance of Healthcare Communication
Emergency Room Situations
Confidentiality
Dealing with Family Issues
Dealing with Sociocultural Issues
Communication in the Process of Healing
Principles of Therapeutic Communication in Healthcare Settings
Verbal communications
Verbal communications
Nonverbal communications

From the Paper
"Communication is an exchange, a two-way process. But sometimes this is forgotten in the healthcare setting when the patient-client becomes the passive, receiving end while the healthcare provider does all the talking and fails to listen. However, for healthcare delivery to be effective, there should be an exchange of information between the two parties.
"Healthcare providers have a 2-fold responsibility towards their patients who are basically their clients. First, they must have the technical skills, and second, they much have the ability to communicate and empathize. In other words, a healthcare professional does not only need the brain and skill to perform his/her work. He/she must also have his/her heart into it."
Essay # 112096 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Asian Healthcare Market, 2009.
Analyzes the growth and development of the healthcare market in Asia.
7,685 words (approx. 30.7 pages), 9 sources, APA, £ 105.95
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Abstract
This paper presents a literature review that examines the healthcare market in Asia to determine the state of regulatory issues and what actions must be taken in order to prepare for the predicted expansion and growth of this industry over the next two decades. The paper specifically relates healthcare issues and regulations in China, Japan, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines. The paper concludes that the majority of Asian Pacific countries are aware of the regulatory issues and are making progress toward resolution of these problems. Several tables are included with the paper.

Table of Contents:
Abstract
Purpose of Study
Significance of Study
Methodology
Literature Review
Industry Report - Asian Healthcare Markets and Regulatory Issues
Key Future Trends in Healthcare Markets in Asia
Key Regulatory Trends in Asia
Healthcare Issues and Regulatory Issues in China
Healthcare Issues and Regulatory Issues in Japan
Healthcare Issues and Regulatory Issues in Hong Kong
Healthcare Issues and Regulatory Issues in India
Healthcare Issues and Regulatory Issues in Indonesia
Healthcare Issues and Regulatory Issues in Malaysia
Healthcare Issues and Regulatory Issues in the Philippines
Findings and Conclusion

From the Paper
"Findings in this study include the fact that the standard of living in Asian countries is typically lower than the standard of living of those in the West; however, it is expected that this gap will be dramatically reduced over the next two decades and it is even expected that the per capita income will exceed that of the United States in some Asian countries by 2025. By the year 2020, it is expected that the GNP for Asia will reach approximately $13 trillion and more than 30% of the population in Asia will be under the age of 30."
Essay # 28379 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Healthcare in America, 2002.
This paper analyzes the current state of healthcare insurance and implies that the government should increase its level of healthcare.
1,488 words (approx. 6.0 pages), 8 sources, MLA, £ 31.95
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Abstract
This paper attempts to address the following statement: The government should institute a universal health care system to make preventive and medical health treatment available for all Americans, regardless of income. The paper begins with some basic information about the current status of uninsured Americans and then provides reasons why the government should provide this healthcare to its citizens.

Contents:
A Silent Crisis - Uninsured in America
Number of Uninsured
Economic Reasons That Contribute to Rise of Uninsured Americans
Contributory Reasons to Rise in Uninsured Americans
Road to Universal Healthcare
The Argument for Universal Healthcare
Obstacles to Universal Healthcare
Conclusion - Universal Healthcare is a Basic Right.

From the Paper
"The Census Bureau ascribes the rising number of uninsured people to the significant drop in employer-based coverage. This decrease occurred almost entirely in firms with less than 25 employees, since these smaller businesses were more vulnerable to economic downturns. Additionally, young adults between 18 and 24 years old were the least likely to have insurance in 2001, with only 28 percent of the group having health insurance (Brostoff). Given the soaring cost of health care and sagging corporate benefits, analysts believe that decline in the number of uninsured Americans will continue to rise."
Essay # 109811 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Healthcare for Every American, 2004.
An argument in favor of socialized healthcare in the United States.
2,133 words (approx. 8.5 pages), 6 sources, MLA, £ 41.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses the healthcare system in the United States. It looks at the positive aspects of healthcare in the US and then looks at the problems with the delivery of the services. From a defensive standpoint, the paper addresses the common misconceptions Americans have about socialized healthcare and highlights the advantages that such a system would afford Americans.

Table of Contents:
Common Misconceptions Concerning Universal Healthcare:
Universal Healthcare is Un-American
Universal Healthcare Would Be Too Bureaucratic
Universal Healthcare Would Be Too Expensive
Universal Healthcare Will Cause A Decline In The Quality of Care
The Conclusion

From the Paper
"It is painfully clear that the United States healthcare system is not serving its purpose, which is to keep everyone in America healthy and disease-free. Rising healthcare costs are forcing countless U.S. citizens to do without needed treatments and medicines. We cannot rely on the "invisible hand" of the market for our healthcare. Indeed, we cannot rely on the market at all. If we truly want to be secure in the knowledge that we will be cared for when we are ill, our healthcare system must respond to need, not greed. The rest of the civilized world has learned that healthcare is best distributed by the state, as the state is the only entity that can work in the interests of the society as a whole. Will America ever realize this? Or will we continue to sacrifice the good of the many for the good of the few?"
Essay # 110749 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Canadian Healthcare System, 2008.
An overview of the Canadian healthcare delivery system and its principle of universal healthcare.
1,472 words (approx. 5.9 pages), 6 sources, APA, £ 30.95
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Abstract
The paper lists the five conditions the Canadian Health Act imposed on individual provinces and territories to qualify for funding for healthcare services. The paper discusses how funding for the provision of public health services is derived and points out the advantages the Canadian system has over the US system. The paper then identifies the problems and controversies with the Canadian Medicare system, notably, the increase in health expenditures, depleting funds for healthcare and the resultant long waiting list for healthcare services. The paper concludes that only time will tell if Canada can withstand financial pressures and continue to deliver its promise of universal healthcare without discrimination to every Canadian citizen.

From the Paper
"Since the 1940s, Canada has succeeded in giving universal healthcare to all Canadians. Everyone, regardless of race, income, age or gender, or preexisting condition, is qualified for healthcare coverage. The Canadian healthcare system was promulgated province per province. In 1947, Sasketchewan was the first province to institute a publicly financed healthcare plan (Chua and Fellow, 2006). Ten years later, the Canadian government passed the Hospital Insurance and Diagnostic Service Act to share the cost of these expenses (Clement, 2007). By January 1971, all ten provinces and two territories have had public health insurance plans for all citizens. The Canadian healthcare system, also called Medicare, aims to guarantee all Canadians to receive necessary medical and hospital services, free of charge."
Essay # 64806 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
A National Healthcare System, 2005.
This paper discusses the ethics of a national healthcare system in the U.S..
6,360 words (approx. 25.4 pages), 37 sources, APA, £ 93.95
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Abstract
This paper asserts that the U.S., being such a rich nation with so many
uninsured individuals, makes national healthcare and national health insurance a major ethical issue: National health insurance is a political idea which must be resolved. The author points out that the proponents of national healthcare tend to emphasize, in different shades of reasoning according to the cost proposed, the argument that the right to free or affordable healthcare is inalienable; whereas, people in opposition state that the current healthcare system barely works; moreover, it worked better before the current move toward affordable healthcare systems such as Medicaid, Medicare and HMOs became widespread. The paper suggests that the present managed care system will most likely be expanded, but there still will be application-based and ethical imperatives about government controlled healthcare programs as supplementary services and their position in a dynamic healthcare economy, which is becoming increasingly privatized.

Table of Contents
Introduction
Pros and Cons of National Healthcare
Socio-Economic and Ethical Issues
Recommendations
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Another way of simplifying the current system which confuses so many with its complexities is to look at the ways in which we as a society define health. Health may be conceptualized either as a state of being free from disease or as a constant striving for physiological, psychological, and spiritual wellness. The former approach is a relatively
narrow one and has as its counterpart in ontology, whereby disease is a specific thing external to the individual which must be warded off. There are approaches that are more holistic in addressing the needs of the whole person. Among other things, rather than seeing disease as the negation of health, this simplified point of view envisions the possibility of living a healthy lifestyle even with a chronic condition like diabetes, high blood pressure, or HIV."
Essay # 108575 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Healthcare Costs, 2008.
A discussion on how consumers can get better value and reduced healthcare costs that are now out of control.
762 words (approx. 3.0 pages), 1 source, APA, £ 17.95
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Abstract
This paper presents a plan for reducing the high costs of healthcare in the US. The writer makes the argument that we as consumers bear the primary responsibility to control healthcare costs. Specifically, the writer contends that if we pay our own insurance premiums, and a significant part of our healthcare expenses, we will help bring down the costs of healthcare. The writer then expounds on this contention and explains why it would work. The writer concludes that if we were to play a more active role in choosing our insurance provider and our healthcare providers we would help lower costs and improve the quality of our healthcare services.

Outline:
Introduction
The Cost of Healthcare is too High
We as Consumers Bear the Primary Responsibility to Control Costs
If We Pay for More of Our Healthcare, We Can Lower Costs
Conclusion

From the Paper
"I recently accompanied my brother to the emergency room of a local hospital for a broken arm. While I was pleased with the overall care he received, the bill for setting his arm and an overnight stay for observation topped $2,000! Medical professionals may argue that the amount paid reflects their need to cover the costs of overhead and the indigent, but no medical professional can defend $10 for an over-the-counter pain pill or $800 for the use of a room overnight."
Essay # 93224 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Healthcare Clinics, 2007.
A review of the issues of strategic management in a primary healthcare provider clinic.
4,829 words (approx. 19.3 pages), 22 sources, MLA, £ 77.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the quality improvement processes in a primary provider healthcare clinic. It describes organizational excellence, defines and applies the concepts of quality care in healthcare organizations and determines the individual healthcare facility's performance. Further, this work utilizes current technologies in healthcare settings and identifies organizational behaviors that enhance and detract from quality healthcare. It then reviews the issues of strategic management in an organization and identifies specific examples of each from existing healthcare operations.

Table of Contents:
Abstract
Introduction
Eight Characteristics Of Excellent Organizations
Business Excellence Theoretical Framework
Comformance To Standards Unreliable For Excellence
Climate For Change And Collaborative Culture Creation
Technological Considerations Geared Toward Excellence
Necessary Leadership Skills In Healthcare
Patient Safety Considerations
FMEA: Failure Moded And Effects Analysis
Terms Used In The Fmea Risk Assessment Model
The Importance Of A Hazard Analysis
Severity Rating Scales For Failure Mode Effects
Severity Rating Scales For Failure Mode Effects
Failure Mode And Probability Rating
Root Cause Of Critical Failures
Evaluation Of Effect Of Redesign Of Process
FMEA Implementation Timeframe
Organizational Overview
Fmea Process Worksheet
Promoting Healthcare Workplace Excellence - The Georgia Dialogue
Problem Statement/Improvement Project
Analysis Of Problem
Proposed Solution And Anticipated Outcomes
Proposed Solution And Anticipated Outcomes

From the Paper
"One method of assessing and correcting process failure is the method referred to as FMEA or 'Failure Mode and Effects Analysis' is an unfamiliar concept to the majority of health care providers currently. However, it is a vital tool due to the reduction of risk that it has within its potential if implemented correctly, which will identify and prevent process problems before their occurrence in a systematic approach. This is to make identification of the ways that failure can occur within processes and for the identification of why failure might occur and how the process can be ensured to be safer."
Essay # 112100 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Healthcare and Diversity, 2009.
This paper examines diversity within the healthcare industry and how to improve diversity within healthcare organizations.
2,732 words (approx. 10.9 pages), 9 sources, APA, £ 51.95
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Abstract
The paper looks at diversity among management and their employees in the healthcare sector and discusses the needs of consumers who come from a low socio-economic status, racial minorities and women. The paper looks at effective approaches to diversity and shows how greater workforce diversity may lead to improved public health.

Outline:
The Role of Managers
Minorities: Lack of Proper Healthcare
Diversity and Women in Healthcare
Managing Diversity: Best Practices
Progress in Reform
Conclusions/Analysis

From the Paper
"Healthcare Managers play a vital role in the development and implementation of their organization's diversity programs. They need to develop short-term, as well as, long-term diversity initiatives, such as improved internal structures/culture, reward systems and performance feedback. Gathering information about best practices is a good place to start. Ultimately, you'll need to identify what programs will be successful in your organization and how you will be able to measure that success.
"The need for diversity is important when it comes to healthcare management, says Rupert Evans, president and CEO of the Institute for Diversity in Health Management. "We need more minorities at the executive level," he says. While the percentage of minorities in management positions is still not large, "we have seen over the last five years that [diversity in management] is on the radar screen," he says."
Essay # 108925 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
American Healthcare and the American Government, 2008.
This paper looks at the American healthcare system and the American government healthcare agenda.
1,024 words (approx. 4.1 pages), 6 sources, APA, £ 22.95
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Abstract
In this article, the writer notes that in generations gone by, medical treatment in America was little else than a local doctor, while small, regional hospitals existed to take care of surgeries and major medical issues, but in both cases, the options for treatment were limited, and in many cases, patients did not fare well. Luckily, as technology has advanced, so too has the American medical system to the point where many consider the American medical system to be among the best in the world. The writer discusses that this progress has come with a heavy financial burden, however, turning American medicine into an industry, and like most industries, the federal government has taken up a role. In this paper, the federal healthcare agenda is discussed and explored from several points of view in an effort to better understand the many facets of the topic. The writer concludes that American healthcare has in some respects been the barometer of social and economic change in the nation.

Outline:
Introduction
Healthcare Becomes Part of the Federal Agenda
Proposed Alternatives to Address the Issue
Successful and Potentially Successful Alternatives/Who Developed the Alternatives?
Concessions in Developing the Alternatives
Conclusion

From the Paper
" Introducing this paper, the assertion was made that American healthcare has become an industry and part of the federal agenda. Better understanding of how this came about requires an explanation of the evolution of the American healthcare "industry", and to look at that requires a glimpse into post Civil-War America, of the late 1860s. In that period, two very important events took place-one in America itself and another in Europe- which set the pace for the birth of the American healthcare industry. Domestically, America entered into a period of economic and commercial advancement that would in retrospect become known as the Industrial Revolution, attracting millions of people from rural areas to urban areas in search of work, which led to the demand for organized healthcare in the cities where industrial accidents and the disease associated with large numbers of people living in cramped areas became commonplace. In Europe, scientific discoveries into the nature of germs helped to develop more medicines which could be offered to the sick- at a price, of course."
Essay # 68770 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Healthcare, 2005.
A discussion on the type of prepayment system for healthcare and its effect on the costs and quality of healthcare.
1,600 words (approx. 6.4 pages), 2 sources, MLA, £ 33.95
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Abstract
This paper expands on the relationship that exists inextricably between the length of the patient stay in hospital or other medical institution and the type of insurance held by the individual patient. It discusses an idea for an effective prepayment system for healthcare. It also reviews literature about the conflict of the interaction between the business, management and financial realm within the institution affected by the diagnostic-related groups and the professional medical staff. The author offers a personal opinion on the importance of the balance of the interrelation of the financial paradigm and healthcare giver in order to create a successful result for the patient.

Abstract
Objective
Introduction
Length of Inpatient Stays Found Influenced by Insurance Type
Business Management versus Medical Profession
Clustering of Patients in Industrialized Healthcare
Financial Schemes and Endeavors
From Medical Economics to Health Economics
Discussion
Summarization
Importance of this Study
References

From the Paper
"The DRGs were an attempt by the medical professionals in an effort of standardization of medical practice. DRGs would allow the hospital to operate on a productive basis and yet the DRGs were not a commodity that could be traded and was not a product that could be stickered with a price tag. The result was the clustering of patients into groupings in order to utilize the hospital's resources more effectively and efficiently. The presumption of industrial engineers did not take into consideration that patients were consumers and had choices they could make between and among the products, services, and healthcare. The intention of the DRGs was not for a market that was administered in healthcare or for the purpose of price competition buildup between different providers of healthcare. However the understanding is that DRGs are a mechanism for fostering competitive forces in a quasi-market for healthcare."
Essay # 89579 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Economics of Healthcare, 2006.
Discusses the healthcare budgeting process and its impact on the broader healthcare industry.
2,025 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 4 sources, £ 50.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses healthcare budgeting process as it impacts the economics of the industry relevant to the government rules and regulations that define the overall process. Of particular importance are the Medicaid and Medicare programs and how recent changes in policies and the regulatory environment have impacted the healthcare industry. Overall, the regulatory environment of the Medicare and Medicaid government programs has made healthcare budgeting and economics a much more problematic endeavor.

From the Paper
"While most administration officials view the economics of healthcare budgeting to be nothing more than a specialized version of the normal business budgeting process, in the healthcare industry, this viewpoint can be problematic. The core activities of the healthcare budgeting process are fairly straightforward and can be largely automated through specialized industry software. But the economic impact on the wider community that this process engenders is an extremely important consideration because the budgeting process determines pricing for services, taking into consideration insurance and government restrictions, and this process impacts affordability. Within this process are such line items as staffing requirements, workload activities, as well as a host of variables."
Essay # 64635 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Marketing Audit for a Healthcare Facility, 2004.
Explores a SWOT analysis of a fictitious healthcare facility and the 4 Ps (product, price, place, promotion) of marketing and how they apply to the healthcare industry.
3,859 words (approx. 15.4 pages), 3 sources, APA, £ 66.95
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Abstract
This paper presents a marketing audit that assesses, analyzes and measures marketing effectiveness of a fictitious healthcare system's current marketing plan in relation to the demographic and economic changes happening in the healthcare arena, while highlighting the immediately serviced areas. In addition, the marketing audit also considers current trends in healthcare, local competitors and the need to maintain and expand market-share within the community and surrounding areas.

Table of Contents
Executive Summary
SWOT Analysis
Environmental Analysis
Marketing Objectives, Strategies and Tactics
Organization
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Founded in 1954, XYZ Health System is the leading health-care provider for Cannon County located in Southern Georgia. XYZ Health System is comprised of XYZ Medical Center, a 202-bed acute inpatient hospital located in Cannonton, Georgia. XYZ Medical Center provides a wide range of both inpatient and outpatient services, including a state-or-the-art obstetrics (OB) unit, same-day surgery center, open and closed magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) center and 24-hour emergency services staffed by board-certified Emergency Medicine physicians. Other medical services include a dedicated women's center, a state-of-the-art cancer center, and occupational health services. XYZ Medical Center has recently completed an impressive four level parking deck and construction is under-say for a new Intensive Care Unit and Trauma Center. XYZ Villa Rica is a brand new facility under the XYZ Health System umbrella, opening in October of 2003. It features a beautiful birthing center and an expanded imaging department that includes MRI technology along with high speed CT and PET scanning."
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Papers [1-14] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 8]
Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 —>