BMA791 SERVICES MARKETING Semester 1‚ 2013 THIS UNIT IS OFFERED IN: Hobart Teaching Team: Dr Rob Hecker Marcus Bai Xuesong CRICOS Provider Code: 00586B Contact Details Unit Coordinator & lecturer: Dr Rob Hecker Campus: Hobart Room Number: 307 Email: Rob.Hecker@utas.edu.au Phone: +61 3 6226 1774 Fax: +61 3 6226 2170 Consultation Time: By appointment 2 Contents Contact Details ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Page 2
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The last 50 years has seen a major shift in how care is delivered to service users particularly those who suffer with Mental Illness. It was as recent as the 1960’s the concept of community care as opposed to institutionalisation was first considered and asylums began closing. Strains on resources and works such as those documented by Goffman and referred to by Miller 1996highlighted how institutions didn’t aid services users back to health but made them dependent on the system and incapable of making
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regarding its use in treatment and what it brings to healthcare providers (Medical Marijuana) At the highest level of law in the United States‚ marijuana is deemed as having no medical value. However‚ in the last two decades science has begun to reveal unbiased facts indicating the drug is an effective treatment of some illnesses. In light of new scientific evidence and public support some states have passed laws legalizing medical marijuana despite federal law. In 1997‚ due to some states blatantly
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Rhetorical Velocity and Delivery” by Jim Ridolfo and Danielle Nicole Devoss‚ express the ideology of rhetorical delivery and rhetorical velocity digging deeper into the values of the terms in modern society. The authors define rhetorical delivery as a “remix culture” (Ridolfo and Devoss 516). That in today’s society‚ rhetorical delivery has gone further than just an oral side but has entered into an ethical and political aspect. The authors are trying to convey that rhetorical delivery has to grasp and
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Medical Tourism: Beneficence or Commerce? Danielle Evans February 15‚ 2013 Contemporary Perspectives‚ Spring 2013 Professor Philip J. Gibbon Psychology/ Occupational Therapy Major Medical Tourism is a health care trend that has recently greatly increased and is expected to continue increasing in the future. Medical Tourism is defined by tourist travel for the purpose of receiving medical treatment or improving health fitness (Medical Tourism‚ 1). The skyrocketing cost of health care
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development of medical services in many regions in Indonesia has not been developing evenly. In the city region‚ medical facilities such as hospitals‚ pharmacies‚ and clinics can be found easily. It is different compared to rural areas where medical facilities are limited and cannot be reached in villages. Few villages only have limited medical facilities such as Puskesmas and small pharmacy. There are villages that only have few doctors who open private medical practice. The diversity of medical services
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Assessment number. Please note that this Assessment document has 13 pages and is made up of 5 Sections. Name: Section 1 – Understand methods of communication with customers 1a) Use the table below to outline at least two different customer service situations and the different methods of communication that would be needed in these situations. |Situation |Methods of communication |
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MEDICAL ERRORS By: Sara Unger While identifying reasons why medical errors occur and constructing models of how to manage them has proved relatively straightforward‚ implementing and meaningfully evaluating solutions in ’real-world’ settings has proven considerably more difficult. From an information systems (IS) perspective‚ although the promise of technology remains powerful. Using medical handover as a field-site‚ this research-in-progress paper presents an adaptation of James Reason’s ’Swiss
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Introduction Medical textiles‚ also known as biomedical textiles‚ are textile products and constructions for medical and biological uses‚ e.g.‚ first aid‚ clinical‚ or hygienic purposes. (SASMIRA‚ 2007) The term medical textile literally means textile used for medical purposes. Textile apart from being a vital part human life is long since been used in medical field‚ though the term has been coined very recently. Textile materials have wide range properties such as flexibility‚ elasticity‚ strength
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are taught to categorize individuals according to social groups so that patients may be accurately stereotyped along health relevant domains (Moskowitz‚ Stone‚ & Childs‚ 2012). For example‚ the idea that African American’s might be more likely for a stroke than White Americans. This can be a problem in the medical field when physicians are misattributing diseases with a race. When these stereotypes are brought to play‚ it can lead to erroneous attitudes toward the social group and can influence
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