Unit 205 Introduction to duty of care in health‚ social care or children’s and young people’s settings Outcome 1 Understand the implications of duty of care 1.1) ‘Duty of care’ refers to the relationship between myself and a service user‚ within this professional relationship there is an obligation to take responsible care to avoid injury or harm to whom it can be reasonably foreseen. A duty of care exists to protect the individual from harm‚ to set guidelines‚ and promote safeguarding. Fail
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Action Potentials An action potential is the change in electrical potential associated with the passage of an impulse along the membrane of a muscle cell or nerve cell. An action potential occurs when a neuron sends information down an axon‚ away from the cell body. A threshold is the minimum amount of stimulation needed to start a neural impulse (you know‚ the electrical impulses that travel throughout your body carrying important information). Action potentials generated by neural impulses are
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The case study presents a moral dilemma based on potential harm to innocent people. By using Kohlberg’s moral development model and by examining major ethical systems‚ namely deontology and utilitarianism‚ a clear understanding of the factors influencing this type of decision-making can be gained. Specifically‚ utilitarianism‚ Kant’s categorical imperative and the doctrine of double effect address the decision from differing viewpoints‚ providing the decision maker with compelling evidence to support
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Ethical dilemma 2 Abstract Ethical dilemmas are prevalent in all areas of life. In each helping profession‚ ethical guidelines and codes require that professionals act morally and in the best interest of the client. As a prospective counseling psychologist‚ I would need keen judgment to recognize and professional skills to handle an ethical dilemma. This paper details my personal experience of an ethical dilemma while working as a case manger. My objective is to identify the setting of
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Water Potential Teacher: What is the formula for water? Student: H‚ I‚ J‚ K‚ L‚ M‚ N‚ O Teacher: That’s not what I taught you. Student: But you said the formula for water was...H to O. Prepared by Lower concentration of solute Water potential – the ability of water move out of the solution through osmosis. Solute molecule Equal concentration of solute Higher concentration of solute H2O Selectively permeable membrane Water molecule Solute molecule with cluster of water molecules Net flow
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Moral Dilemmas‚ Moral Strategies‚ and the Transformation of Gender Lessons from Two Generations of Work and Family Change Women seek personal development by caring for others and men care for others by sharing the rewards of independent achievement are the traditional social norm in the 20th century. In the 21st century‚ people started to question whether women and men should really be separated into two distinct‚ opposed and unchanging moral categories. Women and men now have conflicts and tensions
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bad and with moral duty and obligation. Therefore‚ making an ethical decision requires an individual to evaluate what is good or bad and the moral duty and obligation to society. The good and bad are defined by societal norms and one’s moral duty is based upon an agreed set of rules‚ which govern human behavior. However‚ making an ethical decision often requires a much more in depth analysis of the situation and the possible outcomes. In this paper‚ I will examine four dilemmas in which decisions
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promote society’s values. Important social skills needed in the work force and everyday life are learned at school‚ such as sharing‚ compromise‚ and the importance of teamwork. As a student‚ I want to encourage and help children to reach their full potential. I want students to realize that they are all different‚ and understand that diversity is a good thing. I believe that there are different types of intelligence‚ and creativity is just as important as logic. Teachers’ behavior should reflect values
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1) 2) 3) Natural resources and their role in the global economy: the mineral‚ energy‚ land‚ forest‚ water resources Human resources of the world economy and labor migration Scientific and technical resources and information resources 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) By Consumption and resilience: exhaustible non-renewable exhaustible renewable inexhaustible As belonging to the natural environment: Lithosphere resources: minerals land
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Running head: HEALTH CARE ISSUES: RIGHT OR PRIVILEGE Health Care Issue: Right of Privilege “America is the technological superpower‚ the wealthiest nation in the world‚ and spends significantly more of its gross national product‚ and spends more per person‚ than any other nation in the world on health care. So where‚ then‚ does America stand on health?” (Lerner & Loman‚ 2005‚ p. 1). The purpose of this essay is to discuss and explore whether
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