Understand employment responsibilities and rights in health‚ social care or children and young people’s settings. 1.1. The main aspects of employment covered by law include: • Minimum wage • Hours worked • Discrimination • Health and safety • Holiday entitlements • Redundancy and dismissal • Training • Disciplinary procedures • Sick pay
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safety conditions of workplace Employees work rights b) List three main features of current employment legislation (3 marks) Contracts and conditions of your employment The national minimum wage Time off due to sickness Aiii) Briefly outline why employment laws exists (3 marks) To make sure employers provide and oversee a safe and fair working environment‚ to make sure there are cost benefits to the company‚ to set out employer responsibilities and duties to the employees. Task B) Your
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Civil Rights and Responsibilities HIS/301 The Bill of Rights was added to the Constitution shortly after its ratification. These amendments guarantee certain political‚ procedural‚ and property rights against infringement by the national government (Patterson‚ 2009). “A bill of rights is what the people are entitled to against every government on earth‚ general or particular‚ and what no just government should refuse‚ or rest on influence (Thomas Jefferson). The First Amendment provides
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Employment Responsibilities and Rights Outcome 1: 1. Some of the main aspects covered by law in employment: * Equal Payment 1970 * Race Relations Act 1976 * Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 * Employment Rights Act 1995 * Human Rights Act 1998 * National Minimum Wage 1998 * Employment and Equality Act 2010 2. Main features of current employment legislation The Health and Safety at Work Act requires a safe working environment for everyone in the work setting. There is usually a Health
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including: Handling and storage of information Equal opportunities Grievance procedures Health and safety Holiday entitlements Maternity/paternity pay Minimum wage Sickness absence and pay Working time limits Redundancy and retirement 1.2 Employment rights Equality and discrimination Health and Safety Data Protection 1.3 Legislation in relation to employment was created in order to prevent employers from abusing or taking advantage of workers‚ and provide minimum requirements in areas such as:
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Task 1 A contract is put in place between an employer and an employee. This is so that both people are covered if either decides to make different decisions. For example.. If the employer decides that they no longer want the employee‚ they have to give so many days/weeks’ notice for them to have time to find another job. This works the other way so if an employee wants to leave then the employer has time to fill the job vacancy. It also states how much pay you’re earning so that the employee can’t
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meeting and any issues should be put in writing. 2.4 All relevant information relevant to my job should be kept up to date‚ this includes telephone number‚ address‚ also any medical changes and illnesses. 3.1 My role is to ensure that the needs and rights of each individual I care for is meet. My duties also include ensuring all paperwork is correctly filled out‚ and maintaining tha same level of care for each individual. 3.2 It is my role to assist the individual to maintain/gain as much independence
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ethical rights and responsibilities of both the patient (or in this case‚ the patient’s son) and the physician in terms of autonomy? Patients have the autonomy to make decisions regarding their own bodies and medical treatments. Professionals are accorded autonomy in their practice of medicine on the basis of their expertise and the trust of their patients. These two senses of autonomy must be balanced for optimal physician-patient relationships. In this case I believe that the ethical rights and responsibilities
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I agree with you‚ Sue violated the patient privacy rights when she viewed and downloaded patient information for her educational use without obtaining permission from the patient. While Sue is working in the COPD clinic‚ she is only permitted to view the portion of a patient’s medical record that would be necessary for her to do her job. According to Calloway & Venegas‚ any information that is not needed by the provider to administer care to the patient is protected by The Health Insurance Portability
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for their patients. This paternalistic view has gradually been supplanted by one promoting patient autonomy‚ whereby patients and doctors share the decision-making responsibility. Consequently doctor-patient relationships are very different now than they were just a few decades ago. However‚ conflicts still abound as the medical community and those it serves struggle to define their respective roles. Consent Consent‚ particularly informed consent‚ is the cornerstone of patients’ rights. Consent
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