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Develop an emergency management financial plan for your organization

 
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financial plans : Develop an emergency management financial plan for your organization. Provide baseline information about your organization detailing the population and general budget information. Give examples or case study information about grants or historical declaration funding that supports your financial plan. If you do not work for a a government agency, research a county or local government with a population of at least 100,000 citizens. Assignment Guidelines Complete the following: Address the following in 900�1,200 words: Include normal, emergency, and recovery funding sources that are identified within your organization. Include state or federal grants for which you would apply. Include the requirements or restrictions that are associated with these grants. Identify the critical resources that your agency cannot provide and would receive through mutual aid or nongovernmental organizations. Discuss emergency funding needs and procedures. Including 3 vendors or suppliers with whom you would establish a memorandum of agreement to lock in pricing and availability. Outline your continuity of operations for financial responsibility to ensure that an event will be mitigated. Assume that your employees who execute the purchasing activities are compromised during an event. Be sure to reference all of your sources using APA style.
Criminology : Undergraduate : Essay : English (U.S.) :4 pages/1200 words :APA 2 sources due in 4 hours from now

Policy Implications of Patient Safety Standards and Practices

 
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Discussion Board: Minimum 250 words, APA Style, Time New Roman, Font 12,
(3 references- in text citations) not older than (2012-2017). No Plagiarism please.
Discussion Topic 1: Policy Implications of Patient Safety Standards and Practices
Read the case study number one, Moving to a Common Core Interprofessional Patient Safety Curriculum on page 254 in Health Policy and Politics: A Nurse’s Guide, by Milstead. Why is it important that health professionals share a common understanding of patient safety standards and practices? What are the policy implications from accepting that “mistakes are normal and all human err”? How would you approach health care systems leaders or employers about changing employment policies related to punitive actions when errors occur?
chapter 9 interprofessional practice, education, and research

1. All health professionals and administrators have a duty to prevent avoidable injury and harm to all patients who receive health care in the United States. “Declare the past, diagnose the present, foretell the future; practice these acts. As to diseases, make a habit of two things—to help, or at leastp.254

2. to do no harm” (Hippocrates, Epidemics , Bk. 1, Sect. XI).p.254

3. Students of the health professions need to understand the science of safety and the translation of new discoveries for safer care delivery into practice. Patient harm secondary to errors and mishaps results from system problems and failures. Systems have both technical and human components. Understanding this interface necessitates work-ing together as health professionals to achieve systems improvement and reduce harm and injury. Current health professions education rarely delivers common core content about the science and applica-tion of safety principles.Creighton University presently offers one of the most comprehen-sive interdisciplinary patient safety courses in the country, entitled Interprofessional Education 410: Foundations in Patient Safety. The course has been offered since 2005 and has reached more than 500 students in training (Abbott, Fuji, Galt, & Paschal, 2012; Fuji, Paschal, Galt, & Abbott, 2010; Galt et al., 2006); however, not all students and faculty are being reached through this elective approach. Patient Safety Day was organized to reach all pre-health professions and health professions–related students on campus with a core exposure to the science of safety. The daylong event is built on the elective interprofessional core curriculum course and is offered once in each of the spring and fall semesters. The objective is to provide students and faculty with training in the science of safety simultaneous with an introduction to basic patient safety science principles in an interprofessional educational delivery framework. Content was designed to illustrate how safety impacts both the over-all healthcare system and the individual, and to apply lessons learned in a case-based interprofessional set of exercises. Three hundred fifty students participated in the first offeringp.255

4. of our Patient Safety Day, including 70 from medicine, 95 from nursing, 35 from occupational therapy, 85 from pharmacy, 57 from physical therapy, and 8 from social work. Speakers, panelists, and faculty facilitators participated from Creighton University, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, state government, and the local community.“Today you made a difference” was the theme for this Patient Safety Day, and the focus was on the most personal and often tragicp.255

5. experiences of harm and injury of passionate leaders who conduct research, teach, implement research findings into practice, or use research findings to affect policy in patient safety. The keynote speaker, Evelyn McKnight, AuD, cofounder of HonorReform, pre-sented the story of the hepatitis C outbreak in Fremont, Nebraska, and what needs to be done in practice and policy to prevent this “never event” from ever happening again. Content areas presented throughout the day included human factors, systems approaches to safety, and interprofessional teamwork .Students were asked to reflect on the content presented during the Patient Safety Day and to complete a postevent questionnaire. This questionnaire solicited information about the value students placed on the day in the context of their professional learning and development. Descriptive analysis was conducted for quantita-tive responses, and thematic analysis was conducted for qualitative open-ended responses. Most students believed the material taught was essential core knowledge across the professions (78.6 percent). Similarly, students believed that the content should be required for all health professions students (77.4 percent). Students varied on the format they believed was best for learning: 40 percent would have preferred a full interprofessional course, 39 percent preferred the day-long program, and 21 percent indicated they would like to have it integrated with other content in their own disciplinary curriculums.Students were asked to describe briefly what the most meaningful lessons were from the day. Three themes emerged, as follows, with a brief description and illustrative quote for each: Theme 1: Errors can and do happen. Students were exposed to a variety of real-life stories shared by speakers. There was surprise and shockp.256

6. about the occurrence of harm-inducing errors. As one participant described, “It is heartbreaking that most of these are preventable and happened because of lapses at many different levels.” Theme 2: Mistakes are normal. Students came to the realization that mistakes and errors will happen regardless of a person’s experi-ence. They recognized that it is important to be vigilant and proac-tive on an individual level, and improve systems on anp.256

7. organizational level. As one student learned, “Being human we are all susceptible to error. It’s inescapable.” Theme 3: Preventing errors is the responsibility of both individuals and teams. Students gained an understanding of the different expertise areas and roles of their health professions colleagues related to patient care. They recognized the need to speak up on an individual level and work together with other health professions to provide safe patient care. A few notable quotes from students were:  “Communication is key! And we really need to check our attitude at the door.”  “We need to have the courage to speak up and advocate for our patient when we have concerns about care.”  “I don’t want to get lost in the technical details and forget that I’m helping a real person.”Implications from the findings are that patient safety education is valued by most health professions students when they are exposed to this important content area. More important is the notion that the students had strong beliefs that learning about patient safety in an interprofessional manner, whether as a common day or as course-work, is essential. Students recognize the need for interprofessional dialogue and collaboration while learning about patient safety and prefer to learn the content in an interdisciplinary model. These obser-vations present evidence of the need to develop an interdisciplinary mechanism for delivery of patient safety content to health professions students.Since the first course implementation in 2005 and the subsequent addition of Patient Safety Days on campus, there have been national policy-level changes in organizations devoted to improving safe, quality health care. The various health professions accrediting bod-ies have standards for health programs accreditation. Many of these have adopted explicit training standards related to healthcare safety. The Institute for Healthcare Improvement launched the Open School in 2008 to provide students of nursing, medicine, public health, pharmacy, health administration, dentistry, and other allied healthp.257

8. professions with core content learning online on the topics of patient safety and improvement at no charge to participants (Institute for Healthcare Improvement, n.d.). This powerful approach can facili-tate academic institutions in the incorporation of safety content, although it does not offer educational strategy and techniques at the local level to enhance interprofessional learning. Local-level educa-tion still must be designed and facilitated through educators within the higher education professional programs.p.25

work to create a WebQuest

 
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** Original No Plagiarism **
Overview of Assignment
Please take a moment to watch this Assignment Introduction, or read the presentation transcript.
Directions
Within your group, you will work to create a WebQuest. A WebQuest is an inquiry-oriented assignment. Look at sample WebQuests (search online) to see how creative you can be. The format is divided into sections or independent pages. Think of each section as a section on a paper.
For your WebQuest presentation, you will choose a problem that is a public policy issue. (Nursing Shortage) You will define the health care problem.
You may be working in a certain clinical area and may see a need for more research or alternatives to treatment options. The problem may be a professional problem that you as an advance practice nurse are encountering in terms of autonomy or reimbursement for your services. It could be a workplace safety issue or a management issue. It could be a general societal problem that needs to be brought to the attention of the legislators.
Your WebQuest Presentation:
Most of the information for your WebQuest will come from the Web. However, you are expected to use the Library to supplement the information that you find on the Web.
You must also use a minimum of three graphics or images to illustrate your points. The graphics can go on any of the pages in the WebQuest and you can use more if you like. The graphics do not substitute for the text that is to explain each section.
You are expected to use analysis in each of the sections and provide details and explanations in each area. The Web resources are to validate what your position or argument is.
You will use this WebQuest PowerPoint template to build your WebQuest. Before you begin your work however, watch this video to learn how to edit the template to create your unique WebQuest.
Movenote Presentation
In one section of your WebQuest, you will include a link to a Movenote presentation that you create. Movenote is an online tool that allows you to combine slides (e.g., PowerPoint, Google Slides, or Prezi slides) and video, displayed as an inset. The video will be of you, on camera, as you narrate. In this way, you can combine the two, presenting your ideas in video as you display your slides. Be sure to review How to Use Movenote for Your Assignment Presentation before you begin.
In your Movenote presentation, you will give a 5-minute talk with slides, as if you were speaking at a press conference delivering your message to a politician or to the community as a whole about what you have identified as the problem. Your presentation should explain why your identified problem needs to be addressed.
The following should be incorporated in your WebQuest:
The health care problem/public policy issue
A link to your Movenote presentation
A transcript of the Movenote presentation
What the government’s response to this problem has been previously (i.e., what has been done in terms of laws, rules, regulations, or programs; if the issue has never been addressed, you will discuss what needs to be done)
Your assessment of the legislative and policy-making strategies that influence health care services
Your proposed bill, either on the state or federal level, advancing your proposed change
Why these changes are important and a discussion of what opportunities nurses have to become involved in the design of this program
Your advice on how the program can be implemented
A summary of the Project
The credits page
To view the Grading Rubric for this Assignment, please visit the Grading Rubrics section of the Course Resources.
Assignment Requirements:
Before finalizing your work, you should:
be sure to read the Assignment description carefully (as displayed above);
consult the Grading Rubric (under the Course Resources) to make sure you have included everything necessary; and
utilize spelling and grammar check to minimize errors.

Choose a patient-care situation in which the RN should intervene and advocate for the patient.  

Nursing homework help

Choose a patient-care situation in which the RN should intervene and advocate for the patient.  An example of such a situation might be when a patient has not been given complete informed consent.
Include the following in your paper:

  • Describe the clinical situation concisely and descriptively. It can be an actual situation or a hypothetical one.
  • Apply the Bioethical Decision Making Model to the specific clinical ethical situation that you choose. Address each section of the model in your paper.
  • Conclude with a discussion of nursing advocacy in the clinical setting and the nurse’s role as a patient advocate.

Your paper should be 4-5 pages.
You must reference and cite 1-2 scholarly sources other than your text. Include a title page and a reference page to cite your text and adhere to APA formatting.
Bioethical Decision Making Model 1. Define the dilemma: Use your own words to describe the problem. State it in a way that others can quickly understand your dilemma. Review 2. Identify the medical facts: Describe the facts that are relevant to the dilemma. 3. Remember that the diagnosis and prognosis are medical facts. 4. Identify the non-medical facts (patient and family, external influences): a. Patient and family facts such as culture, religion, social, economic, the existence of an Advance Healthcare Directive, verbal preferences made by the patient, how the patient lived his/her life. b. Those that you discuss should be relevant to the situation. 5. External influences include: organizational policies, federal and state laws, practice acts, code of ethics. These should be relevant to the situation. 6. For both step 2 or 3, separate the facts from the assumptions: Sometimes all healthcare professionals allow assumptions to guide their decision-making. These must be identified so that these assumptions do not interfere with the process. 7. Identify items that need clarification. Your paper should identify facts that you need to clarify. When initially discussing an ethical situation, it is not unusual to not have all of the answers. 8. Identify the decision makers: Is the patient an adult competent to make their own choices? Is the patient a child who is old enough to have a say in the decision. If the patient cannot make their own decision, who is the decision maker? How was this person selected? 9. Review the underlying ethical principles: Review which ones and why they apply t this particular case: beneficence, nonmaleficience, veracity, fidelity, autonomy and justice. 10. Define alternatives: One-Way to proceed may be apparent at this point. However, sometimes there are different choices. They should be addressed identifying the benefits and burdens for doing one thing versus the other. 11. Follow-up: Define the process to be used with the chosen alternative. Reference Source: Levine-Ariff, J. & Groh, D.H. (1990). Creating an Ethical Environment. Nurse m