YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Hospitals and Multicultural Diversity
Essays 781 - 810
nurse seeks to preserve any culture-specific aspect of the patients life everywhere possible. When some culturally-linked aspect ...
it comes to orders, medications, tests, transfers and so on. Another problem for both physicians and nurses is identifying all p...
to transfer data recorded by the monitors by telephone to the clinic. Nurses orchestrate this data transfer and conduct an initia...
interfaces with the a new computerized patient order entry system. Therapists use tablets at the patient bedside, which enhances m...
reassuring people that if they come to the hospital, they will get the best care possible, with the latest technology, and be retu...
Indeed, it is more advantageous to allow the hospitals to stay open, and if they do not meet expectations, then they will just fai...
of outcomes of care - Source of unnecessary - and high - costs - Fragmented state to state - Based on varied data * The problem ha...
a part of the normal flora of human beings and colonizes the anterior nares (Nicolle, 2006). However, it is also a significant pat...
Statement, 2006). It is also a goal of HHC to "join with other health workers and with communities in a partnership" (Mission Sta...
the rate of such hospital mergers. One of these trends was the "phenomenon of Columbia/HCA," a for-profit hospital system that man...
of health care is in and remains in flux as we seek systems that not only work in the present but also are sustainable over time. ...
and simply "more territory to cover overall" (McConnell, 2005, p. 177). In response to this downsizing trend, the best defense tha...
by 2010 (About Healthy People, n.d.). It has survived four presidents and several changes in congressional leadership based on pa...
Empirical research ahs consistently reported that when communication between the two professions is good, which includes doctors ...
where employees are important stakeholders as seen with the "Live for Life" employee health program initiated in 1976, which was ...
This 14 page paper looks at the issue of iatrogenic infection and how a hospital may undertake an innovation to reduce the occurre...
The NYSNA representative agrees, suggesting that closing hospitals is not a good way to deal with the health care crisis ("Prevent...
interests and values considered and respected in the decision-making process" (Fly and Johnstone, 2002). This rationale is undoubt...
some determining the study was inconclusive, others saying certain interventions should be made universal and still others stating...
into other industries. Medicine and health care is one of the industries that have begun adopting the CRM process. In fact, the In...
you have a potentially volatile atmosphere" (Hughes, 2005). Kowalenko, Walters, Khare, and Compton (2005) surveyed 171 ED p...
caring; 2. every human culture has lay (generic, folk or indigenous) care knowledge and practices and usually some professional ca...
a transition where parental involvement in hospitalization has changed. In the past, parents had been expected to leave the hospi...
eliminate the risk of non compliance and simply use new equipment each time. With mass production techniques it was possible to pr...
to wash their hands both before and after attending each patient. However, one physician-investigators asserts in reference to doc...
quality of the customer service. The measures here will be against the expected levels from past visitors as well as the levels co...
and a domiciliary residence for homeless veterans (Mountain Home VA Medical Center, n.d.); the Knoxville CBOC frequently sends its...
as such this will also lead to patient satisfaction. The cost per patient or per visit may be measured in financial terms; this ...
of that knowledge and create cost savings with the way it is implemented, such as new procedures, or new ways of managing old proc...
numbers and then as a percentage on yearly basis. The measure in the first year for reference only, in the second year the numbe...