YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Hospital and Home Nursing
Essays 931 - 960
to improving standards of public health, noting that the infant mortality rate was reduced significantly between 1980 and 1993, an...
The paper explores the benefits of the Electronic Medical Record system, or EMR, that several hospitals have begun to adopt. There...
Focuses on how Duke Children's Hospital relied on the balanced scorecard system for improvement. There is 1 source listed in the b...
in that the structure of an organization will either facilitate or inhibit that organizations ability to effectively pursue its or...
care. The idea of reducing the costs associated with oxygen while not having a direct impact on staffing levels of quality of care...
This research paper offers brief discussion of 3 issues pertaining to managed care, which are the advantages and disadvantages of ...
an assessed internal rate of return of 4.46%. This assessment was made using the accounting convention of conservatism. However,...
the use of Open Systems Interconnection (OSI) technology within the structure of a complex organization. Because the hospital is a...
demographic; for this reason, it is imperative that the organization takes great care in the integration of database management an...
isnt being seen - and read - by unauthorized personnel (such as the cleaning crew or perhaps the cleaning crews friends). The like...
costs to the tune of more than $10,000 dollars and also have to stay in the hospital an average of 3 to 4 days longer than they wo...
also provides a valuable example of the economics of health care in general as obesity has been associated in recent literature wi...
and will be made up of a number of different departments divided by areas of specialty, such as accident and emergency, maternity,...
all be traced, making the site one that not only documents history, but puts it in a meaningful context for the resident and visit...
is the worlds leading medical facility. Associated with Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, the hospital has seen the bir...
a change within a health organization to reduce the costs associated with the provision of an essential resource; oxygen, without ...
justify its relevance to health care. The severity of infant abductions from hospitals should not be gauged by the frequency of oc...
ineffective - organizational structure on the organizations ability to function at optimal levels has been known literally for dec...
litigious society where health care workers and institutions are open and easy targets, this dearth of lawsuits reported in The Ne...
occur in an EMS vehicle in the summer months (McElroy, 2002). Such degradation can occur with no visible changes to the medicatio...
100 percent and also to create a neighborhood health and daycare facility. Another proposal is the creation of a preventative diag...
its founding in the late 18th century, the United States has opened its borders to people from a variety of countries and cultures...
a serious or highly unusual medical problem, a hospital devoted to the care of patients with similar conditions may be preferred. ...
instruments not trustworthy? This is just another meaningless slogan, a cousin of zero defects" (Deming, 1986; p. 66). The...
HMOs now are listed as the responsible parties for 97 percent of all Americans who have insurance coverage and are not covered thr...
processed, but also in terms of the culture where employees feel appreciated. They are paid more than the average wage, on top of ...
All of the results of this reengineering, however, were not as positive. The process had not taken into consideration the fact th...
to the fact that it placed requirements on HMOs that were not in place on indemnity carriers, it actually served to reduce the abi...
employers are increasing employees portion of premium payments or ceasing to contribute anything at all. Many employers have ceas...
of the market (Christensen, Bohmer and Kenagy, 2000). The area of disruptive technology is the same one through which personal co...