YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :An Emergency Medical Perspective on AIDS
Essays 31 - 60
In five pages this paper considers family member inclusion or exclusion in various medical situations and the medical and ethical ...
16). However, in the 1970s, the public began to demand different kinds of services from local fire departments. Communities began ...
In eight pages EMS and its importance in the preservation of life is examined. Four sources are cited in the bibliography....
In six pages EMT training methods are examined in a discussion of duties and procedures regarding safety. Five sources are cited ...
In five pages the incidences of drug abuse among EMS and EMT employees are examined. Four sources are cited in the bibliography....
Hepatitis and the dilemmas created for emergency health care workers are discussed. Infection control is also a part of the resear...
information necessary to the reconstruction effort. While addressing base emergency services problems will, hopefully, be...
Building on the work of William Farr, Jacques Bertillon, the chief statistician for the city of Paris, devised a revised classific...
combination of these drugs is prescribed although there are some drugs that are combinations within themselves, such as Combivir, ...
noted that cases of a rare lung infection, pneumocystis carinni pneumonia, had occurred in Los Angeles and also that three young m...
a mystery. The fact that one knows where they acquire the disease is comforting as it is reasoned that if one is monogamous or cel...
In six pages the relationship between substance abuse, particularly heroin, and AIDS is discussed and AIDS' effects on intravenous...
Afghanistan has received a large amount of international aid, but the use of aid has been ineffective. This three page paper is a ...
an AIDS sufferer can speak to the weight loss, weakness, and increasing helplessness that the disease engenders. What was it and h...
This paper argues that effective emergency response rests on the decisions that were made prior to the actual emergency ever occur...
plan should be properly developed, using Ashford University as a model. This paragraph helps the student give a brief overview o...
In this paper consisting of five pages the argument that teen AIDS awareness is being presented incorrectly is posed with proper h...
department said last summer that they felt betrayed that Lamson, a four-year veteran of their unit, may have exposed them to the d...
In five pages the issue of HIV disclosure is examined from the perspective of medical ethics in a consideration of the perspective...
to this devastated area were, at least at first, characterized more appropriately as a series of errors and delays than as an effi...
wrong way to think about it, instead, physicians should look at this "formality" as a way to communicate with the patient (Yale-Ne...
for tsunamis. In short, Puerto Rico, though considered an "island paradise" is rife for all kinds of natural disasters, pa...
holds that terms such as "good" and "right" are defined on the basis of which behavior provides the greatest benefit to the larges...
In a paper consisting of ten pages the inhumanity of denying marijuana for medical use in cancer, AIDS and paraplegic patients is ...
In this paper of six pages the financial, medical, and social impacts of AIDS are assessed. There are nine bibliographic sources ...
This paper consists of five pages and argues that sexually transmitted diseases have been all but lost in the primary medical focu...
In ten pages this paper argues in favor of a medical need for marijuana to be legally used citing the similar character properties...
of Health Margaret Johnston reported that an effective vaccine likely will be available within the next decade (Researchers Say Th...
to undertake shortcuts. Factors such as the urgent care required by ED patients and the fact that many patients are unable to comm...
quite a leap to effectively apply its principles to service industries, but TQM is as much at home in health care as it is in manu...