...Healthcare for all Thirty-three million people in the United States (10.4% of the US population) did not have health insurance in 2014 according to the US Census Bureau. Healthcare is a medical insurance for people to keep them healthy and it is a basic thing for most people to have. 71% of americans live off of $10 everyday and it should be considered as a basic human right to ensure that everyone is covered by equal healthcare, no matter what age, gender, or their income. America has a strict, specific rule on healthcare and many people have discussed this as a popular argument in this time period. Even though it is seen as an effective healthcare system, the question is why can’t all americans have the right to be entitled to have healthcare?...
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...population demographic of United States is changing at a fast pace as every year people from different cultural and ethnic background are immigrating to the United States. By 2020, the number of ethnic minority in the United States will grow up to 35%. Immigration is an ongoing process and has brought a variety of culture and knowledge to the United States. The diversity of population is affecting the healthcare delivery system in the country. Nurses play a major role in the delivery of healthcare. Nurses are the direct caregivers to patients and spend maximum time with the patients and their family. “As the demographic composition of Western industrialized countries continues to diversify, the need for nurses to practice with cultural competence becomes essential” (Canales & Barbara, 2001, p. 103). Culturally Competent care Culturally competent care values diversity and respect individual differences regardless of one’s own race, beliefs, and cultural background. Culture can be defined as beliefs, values, customs and lifeway of a group of people that influence their choices in choosing health care practices. These behaviors are primarily learned in the family and are transmitted in the family. Culture is mostly unconscious and has strong influence on health practices. Subcultures, ethnic groups differ from the dominant culture and may have different values and beliefs. People from a given racial group may not necessarily share the same culture. Healthcare providers must recognize...
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...Human Resource Management In Healthcare Kimberly Hughes Ethical and Critical Thinking Professor Gronholz Research Paper Abstract This research paper addresses the importance of human resource managers within the healthcare world. Human resource managers oversee the employee administrative system of any organization. In healthcare, they are responsible for employment placement, healthcare systems, and taking care of patients. After reading this paper, you will understand how important human resource managers are within the healthcare world physically and mentally. In conclusion, you will learn how this profession is obtained and how vital it is to keep this profession growing across the world. Proposal Human Resource Management Definition: Human Resource Management is the management of an organizations workforce, or human resources. It is responsible for attraction, selection, training, assessment, and rewarding of employees, while also overseeing organizational leadership and culture and ensuring compliance with employment. The Importance of Human Resource Management in Healthcare Human Resource Management is vital to any healthcare system and how it can improve healthcare. My goal is to prove that overall we as Human Resource Managers are essential to delivery of healthcare and patient services. Though being a Human Resource Manager within healthcare is challenging, but they are needed to fill various positions in the healthcare systems. Though they are faced...
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...individual behaviour, and biology and genetics. Interventions made on these factors determine the state of health condition. Federal, State, and local policies affect population health either positively or negatively. Tightening policies on the consumption of certain products like tobacco exert a positive impact on health by reducing the level of consumption of such products. Social factors such as a place of birth, work, play, and age determine an individual’s health status. A good distribution of such factors positively determines population health. Access to and quality of health services determines population health. Sufficient access and standardised quality health services exert a positive impact on population health and the reverse is the case (“Determinants of Health,” 2012). Individual behaviour determines population health. Drug and substance abuse, and poor eating habits results to poor heath condition whereas positive changes in individual behaviour positively determine health status (Truman, et al, 2011, p. 1). Biology and genetics determine population health, whereby aged individuals are prone to poor health as opposed to young population. Additionally, poor genes carried by parents are transferred to children resulting to poor health (“Determinants of Health,” 2012). America is one of the countries in which healthcare costs are ranked high. Key contributors in high healthcare costs include changes in lifestyle and demographic choices, escalating administrative costs...
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...Childhood Obesity’s Impact on Healthcare The current epidemic of childhood obesity spans the globe affecting the majority of the industrialized world (Trasande & Elbel, 2012). In the United States, this epidemic will have an increased negative impact on the healthcare delivery system if not addressed at every level of the community. The importance of understanding this issue and working towards solutions will make for healthier American children and ensure decreased health problems as our children grow into adults. This type of effort will ensure a reduction in unnecessary health problems and fiscal cost for every citizen that utilizes the U.S. healthcare delivery system. Healthcare managers throughout the nation must educate themselves on this issue and be a vital part of the solution. When is a Child Considered Obese? The most accurate way to determine obesity is through the Body Mass Index (BMI) and actual measuring of the body mass composition (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). Utilizing a height for weight and age chart doctors is capable of defining a child’s body mass index for his or her age (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). The recommended BMI for a child’s age will determine if they are at a proper weight, overweight, or obese. Many families are unaware of this index and fail to understand where their child may be in accordance with medical guidelines. When discussing the standards for children age two to twenty, the average BMI...
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...Comparative Analysis of the Health Care Systems Offered in the United States and Mexico Comparative Analysis of the Health Care Systems Offered in the United States and Mexico Healthcare Comparison of United States and Mexico The objective of this report is to give a comparative analysis between the United States healthcare system and Mexico's. Its key focal point will be centered on the countries policies, how their various systems are financed, who provides healthcare, the costs of the programs and availability of access. While some factors of these two countries are similar there are varying differences among them, especially cost and access. All of the components of the two countries healthcare systems will be discussed in depth in a non-biased manner, it is our goal to simply establish how they are similar and what differences there are among them. For starters a comparison of the overall health of the people of the two countries will form a baseline as to the quality of care being provided in each of the countries and give us an insight into the effectiveness of its preventative services. The mortality rate of citizens of Mexico is 4.86 per 1,000, whereas the U.S. has 8.38 per 1,000(CIA, 2001) This is due in large part to the number of citizens the U.S. has over 65 years of age, 13.1% of the U.S. population is over 65, Mexico's is half that with 6.6%. While the baby boomer generation is a large reason why this number is high, a correlation between the quality...
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...The nursing profession is the largest section of the country’s healthcare labor force employing over three million workers. Multiple obstacles stop nurses from responding effectively to the quickly changing healthcare system. Nurses must overcome these barriers; only then will they be able to lead change and begin a new era in healthcare. On October 5, 2010, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) released its advice on nursing in the United State in the scholarly article “The Future of Nursing: Leading Change, Advancing Health.” IOM is a non-governmental, non- profit organization created in 1970, under the congressional charter of the National Academy of Science. IOM provides leaders counsel on the topics of biomedical science, medicine, and health. Different states provide different stances regarding what a nurse can actually do. Multiple states allow nurse practitioners and certified nurse midwives to prescribe medication without a physician’s direction and partnership. There is widespread agreement in the United States that healthcare must become more patient-centric. Primary care and prevention must have a greater function compared to specialty care. Reports shows that states with a greater proportion of primary care providers receive better outcomes and drops in mortality rates. Nurses with differing degrees of education participate in vital jobs in primary care. Education and evaluation are crucial components of primary care. RNs, advanced...
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...2008, Barack Obama was elected as president of the United States of America making him the first non-Caucasian president in United States history. Barack Obama ended an era that spanned over 200 years taking what has been called the largest step on the road to true equality in the United States of America but what it also started was the most heated topic in recent memory by proposing universal healthcare. This issue has affected practicing doctors nationwide as well as the students working to become a doctor. Doctor K. N. is an AMA (American Medical Association) board certified urologist that graduated from the University of Texas Medical School in Houston. He opened his practice in 1989 and continues to practice in the Greater Houston Area with four separate practices that employ the nation’s leading healthcare professionals in every medical specialty. With “Obamacare” on the horizon, Dr. N. explains the impact it would have on practicing physicians (which includes himself), those who own or run any type of medical facility, and the positive and negative aspects when it came to how it would affect the general population. This past year over 50 % of doctors are employed by the government. As healthcare becomes a regulated industry, most doctors that are currently self-employed will no longer be able to effectively run a practice. Large insurance companies will be able to assert even more control of the nation’s healthcare industry. The confusing issue is if the government regulates...
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...Ethics in Healthcare is a crucial component in many diverse areas of the Healthcare Industry. The definition of ethics is hard to narrow down and is usually different with no particular individual’s opinion being wrong. Ethics in general to some can be defined as respect of their personal religious beliefs. Ethics can also be defined as merely following what the law requires of us in respect of others in all areas such as professional differences, ethnic differences, as well as an overall feeling to be non-judgmental towards others. Ethics can also pertain to a patient’s right to reject treatment such as blood transfusions, chemotherapy, or any medical treatment they choose. Ethics in Healthcare branches out into many important aspects such...
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...Mental illness is defined as “conditions that affect cognition, emotion, and behavior.”1 This simple definition sheds light on the importance of maintaining mental well-being. Mental well-being positively influences all other aspects of health as well, including physical health and social health.1 One type of mental illness is peripartum depression, depression that occurs during pregnancy or after childbirth.2 This debilitating form of depression is different from the term “baby blues.” The baby blues refer to short-term depressive symptoms that are not debilitating and, thus, do not interfere significantly with a woman’s quality of life.2 Although the exact prevalence of peripartum depression per state is uncertain (due to a lack of a standardized assessment scale), it is still on the rise—anywhere from 5% to 25%.3 The baby blues typically do not need immediate attention by healthcare providers nor do they need immediate treatment with medication, as they resolve within a couple days following childbirth. The symptoms include:...
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...Assignment 1: Implications of Health Economic Concepts for Healthcare HSA 510 Health Economics Introduction What is health economics? Health economics is one of the many branches in economic. Most of the concepts surrounding this branch are both the micro and macroeconomics placed in the context of efficiently and effectiveness in the production and services delivery in the health sector industries. The concept of health economics can be explained in layman language as the study of economical functioning of the health care system in an economy. It involves matters affecting the health of individuals in a society (Cromwell, 2011) Assess the value of healthcare professionals and decision makers understanding the discipline of health economics. Building on their longtime leadership in identifying standards of care, professional medical organizations already have played a role in shaping the value. It is critical that individual physicians and other health professionals also understand the goals of health care and engage as partners in implementing its principles. Healthcare professionals and decision makers are more disciplines of the health economics. The value of healthcare can be mentioned as the microeconomics. The reason for that being said is the evaluation of their treatment level and providing care in all segments relates to cost and effectiveness. The demand for health care has an impact or influence many different areas such as education, hazards, income and...
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...forces, which have affected the development of the health care system in the United States, are economics, technology and legal. The functioning of the health care system in economic development has become an influential issue. Health care is a predominant industry in the United States and is expected to develop further. Health care performance influences the economic growth in several rural communities. The health care system could be an influential organization and supplier of economic development or unimportant segment of the local economic model (Shinberger, 2005). As medical technology evolves, understanding how and when to adopt or invest in it is critically important. Move too early, and the infrastructure needed to support the innovation may not yet be in place; wait too long, and the time to gain competitive advantage may have passed. The economics affects the competition, which exists with the development of technology. The improvement in health care reports economic tasks: capital for the advance change and considering the parties responsible for the cost, and expenses for the product or service it yields. One difficulty is the time-consuming speculation period necessary for different medications or therapies, which needs the food and drug administration approval. Economics, Technology and Legal The health care segment is an essential factor of the United States economy. The United States doesn’t supply health care for the nation using methods supporting the technologically...
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...Country: Austria Topic: The Right of Indigenous People ------------------------------------------------- Committee: United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) The past decades have seen an increase in the awareness of human rights; one of the proofs of this is the formation of the United Nations Human Rights Council in 2006. Among the problems that this council currently faces are the rights of indigenous people. Indigenous peoples are a community/group of people which was born in and inhabits a particular territory, with cultural or historical distinctiveness from other populations before being conquered by any colonial societies. They are also responsible for playing a role in protecting and conserving the territory they inhabit. In the past these people were vulnerable to exploitation and oppression from groups of colonists that form a nation state and politically dominant ethnic groups. It has been estimated that the total current population of indigenous peoples are 220 million to 350 million. With such a large population, these people deserve the rights to protect them from threats risen from western development such as the killing of animal species for economic interests, deforestation, mining, oil exploration, carbon emitting industries, persistent organic pollutants and the insatiable consumption patterns of western industries. Indigenous rights are rights that exist in recognition of the specific conditions of the indigenous peoples, which includes not only...
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...is a progressive and rapid changing entity. Since the 1970s, America has seen many different types of programs and funds created to help solve the issue of the cost of health care. Many of these programs are on the brink of bankruptcy and have not done far enough to make it more affordable and assessable. Actually America has the most expensive healthcare system in the world and not only is it the most expensive, but in many areas such as quality of care, America is no where near the top among developed countries (Davis, Stremikis, Squires, & Schoen, 2014). The purpose of this paper is to show how democratic leadership along with power-coercive and empirical-rational can help implement this new healthcare law. This paper will also discuss the importance of committees and economics on this new law. Democratic Leadership To enact such a massive law as the affordable care act one must be willing to work and listen to others to get the best information on this topic. In this type of leadership it is of the utmost importance for the leader to have participation from the group. There are major political differences in the United States right now. Using this type of leadership would bring representatives from both sides of the aisle together. This type of leadership uses open discussion and questions to help come to a conclusion. Many people do not like to be told what to do just because someone says to do it. This type of leadership would not only help people work together for...
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...known as (HIPPA). This law has impacted the healthcare industry and the way in which healthcare workers conduct themselves with patients, their families, and with one another. In nursing the importance of confidentiality has always been the forefront of patient care. The current Code of Ethics for Nurses (ANA,2001) is clear in its intent and meaning as it relates to the nurses primary role in promoting and advocating patient’s rights relating to privacy and confidentiality. Every nurse has always understood the need for patient confidentiality even before (HIPPA) was law. Truth being with advanced technology, new demands in healthcare, and recent developments in the world at large has made it more difficult to keep this promise. But keep it they must. As healthcare workers on any given day we hear and see private and confidential information, it is our duty to protect it. On occasion we do become comfortable with patient’s medical information that it can be easy to forget that as healthcare workers how important it is to keep information secure and private. Thus, a recommended solution to this issue is to recap the -privacy section of the “Health Insurance Portability Act” and refer to it as a guide to fully be able to protect patient confidentiality. The article is written to provide healthcare professionals information about the importance of keeping patient’s medical information secure and private. Reminding nurses and healthcare workers the main purpose of HIPPA and reviewing...
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