YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :The New York Hospital Closure Controversy
Essays 1561 - 1590
In ten pages this position paper discusses challenging the tax exempt status of a California nonprofit hospital in terms of legali...
In five pages this essay considers the anarchist art of Ed Kienholz in terms of the artist's attitudes and style of composition wi...
In two pages this paper examines how hospital administrators and staff nurses share medical liability in a definition of the term ...
for medium and even smaller individual hospitals. Hospital administrators must both understand and communicate the fact that the ...
In two pages a research study is summarized as it involves CUF and UUF patterns of hospital staffing, how cost effective they are,...
In two pages this paper discusses how nurses can deal with the stress of their jobs with a 'hardy' personality as described in thi...
emotional, physical and mental care. Dogs establish a fierce loyalty to their human families in a very short amount of time; bond...
In six pages this nurse's job loss is examined in terms of the reasons behind it after her failure to save a terminally ill patien...
In ten pages this paper examines the increasing health care industry practice of hospital mergers and the problems with them and s...
In eight pages the moral dilemmas several Catholic hospitals struggle with in terms of such medical issues as euthanasia and abort...
In six pages this research paper considers the early history of modern medicine as presented in Medicine at the Paris Hospital, 17...
In six pages this paper examines the increasing U.S. practice of merging hospitals in an overview of the pros and cons of this pra...
In five pages the TQM management strategy is applied to a scenario for transforming doctors into managers with a community hospita...
Managed care has caused an upheaval in the way medical services are delivered in this country. This paper discusses the largest su...
wrong leg amputated. Ben Kolb was eight years old when he died during "minor" surgery due to a drug mix-up. These horrific cases t...
to improving standards of public health, noting that the infant mortality rate was reduced significantly between 1980 and 1993, an...
(Fawcett, 1995). Application of either model rests in large part on the appropriateness and completeness of nurse documentation (...
jobs. The evidence appears to indicate that the survivors will also suffer. There is a range of literature that outlines responses...
these issues(LaBar, 1997). While OSHA as an organization is necessary, it perhaps oversteps its bounds and makes arbitrary rules, ...
parameters of his perspective and goals, and, specifically, refers to the unique orientation of nursing. "Nurses encounter patient...
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...
completing the ranges of study required to attain the licensing level each holds. Aides are not licensed individuals and may or m...
therefore, highly desirable to have a variety of types of LTC settings. Furthermore, alternatives to institutionalized care can o...
environment. That open system "interacts with internal and external stressors and is in a state of constant change, moving toward...
a serious or highly unusual medical problem, a hospital devoted to the care of patients with similar conditions may be preferred. ...
In five pages this paper considers an evaluation of HMOs and how integrated systems and hospitals can go about becoming more aggre...
In a paper consisting of seven pages the system of automated medication dispensing in a hospital setting is examined in terms of i...
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...