A reflective account (II) During my role as health care assistant in the care home setting where I work I spent a considerable amount of time on a one to one basis as a key worker with a particular resident. For the purpose of this reflective account the resident shall be referred to as Mrs S. Mrs S had vascular dementia as her dementia progressed her challenging behaviours increased. Mrs S spent a great deal of her day walking around the care home. On good days this was not an issue. However
Premium Memory Long-term memory Causality
In this section I will demonstrate: the implications of duty of care. understanding the support available for addressing dilemmas that may arise. the knowledge to respond to complaints. The implications of duty of care. A duty of care is a legal obligation imposed on an individual requiring that they adhere to a standard of reasonable care while performing any acts that could foreseeable harm others. A definition from Wikipedia Examples how we do this in my setting.Within our
Premium Risk Complaint Pleading
nurseries‚ schools‚ hospitals and private homes to help with the non-clinical care of young children and babies. Nursery nurses offer care for children until the child has reached the age of five. A nursery nurse includes taking care of a child’s learning‚ education‚ play and social development. Daily Tasks: The work of nursery nurses normally includes the following: he/she need to provide physical‚ emotional and spiritual care for the children; he/she need maintain the environment in a child friendly
Premium College Education Learning
A1. Country Comparison The health care system in the United States is quite complex. It is made up of different types of payment system including Medicare‚ Medicaid‚ Private insurance and independent payers. Medicare is a federally funded health insurance program for the disabled persons with end-stage renal disease‚ and persons 65 years of age and older who qualify for Social Security benefits (Cherry‚ Jacob 2014). Medicaid is similar to Medicare as it is a jointly sponsored state and federal program
Premium Health insurance Medicine Health care
Epidemiology Paper Mazurah Smith University of Phoenix According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics‚ "[By 1993] death certificates listed diabetes as the fifth leading cause of death for Blacks aged 45 to 64‚ and the third leading cause of death for those aged 65 and older in 1990.” (Bailey‚ 2007). These statistics show how serious the problem of diabetes has become in the black community. Epidemiological studies can focus the efforts
Premium Epidemiology Obesity
Ashford University 4: (Week Three Assignment) Financial Statement Analysis Jeanette M. Rogers Acc 281: Accounting Concepts for Health Care Professionals Instructor Alan Wells November 16‚ 2010 There are three types of financial statement analysis; for example‚ (1) Horizontal Analysis‚ (2) Vertical Analysis‚ and (3) Ratio Analysis. First‚ the horizontal analysis is also known as trend analysis‚ which views the behavior of an individual financial statement items over several accounting‚ which
Premium Health care Balance sheet Income statement
RUNNING HEADER: Health Care Systems in the U.S. Health Care Systems in the U.S. By Terry Scott University of Phoenix HCS/531 – Health Care Organizations and Delivery Systems Kenneth Feldman November 7‚ 2011 This paper will review the U.S. Health Care System and evaluate what a health care system is‚ implications of beliefs and values on a health care system‚ provide examples of various models of health care used in American and explain how the health care system applies to models
Premium Health care Medicine Health economics
Discuss their health care system’s essential features Dominican Republic VS United States Vanessa Fantauzzi Student St. Petersburg College Research supported by http://www.globalsurance.com/resources/dominican-republic/ The Dominican Republic shares the Caribbean island of Hispaniola with Haiti. The island was reached
Premium Health care Health economics Medicine
Primary delinquency prevention measures. The prevention of juvenile delinquency is an essential part of crime prevention in society. By engaging in lawful‚ socially useful activities and adopting a humanistic orientation towards society and outlook on life‚ young persons can develop non-criminogenic attitudes. The successful prevention of juvenile delinquency requires efforts on the part of the entire society to ensure the harmonious development of adolescents‚ with respect for and promotion
Free Childhood Crime Criminology
“Stroke: Strategies for Primary Prevention” This article educates both patients and health care providers alike about preventing strokes before it becomes too late. Strokes are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in North America. If the population becomes educated about the prevention of strokes‚ one day it will no longer be a major cause of death in the United States. Primary prevention involves a program of activities directed at improving general well-being while also involving specific
Premium Stroke Myocardial infarction