APPENDICITIS Case study Patient name: J.K Sex: Male Race: Fijian Age: 47 Personal History Mr. J.K is married with four children. He describes himself as a socialable person likes to explore new things. Occupation: He works at the Nasinu Town Council as a Carpenter Family History: -his father is a known diabetic patient and his grandmother died of leukemia -his paternal uncle had died from septicemia. Social History: Cigarettes 1 pack per week x 12years now; he stopped smoking
Premium Vermiform appendix Inflammation
ENDEAVOUR PATIENT BILLING SOFTWARE SOFTWARE REQUIREMENT SPECIFICATION COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING Revision History Date 27.12.2010 Version 1.0 29.12.2010 2.0 Description Patient Billing Software Patient Billing Software Author Endeavour Endeavour Table of Contents Description 1.0 Introduction 1.1 Purpose 1.2 Scope 1.3 Definition‚ Acronyms‚ and Abbreviations 1.4 References 1.5 Technologies to be used 1.6 Tools used 1.7 Overview 2.0 Overall Description 2.1 Product Perspective 2
Premium World Wide Web HTML Web server
Nurses play a vital role in achieving the safety and quality of patient care and reducing adverse outcomes. Patient safety is one the most important component of our health care system and is essential to quality health care. The QSEN defines safety for nurses as “minimize(ing) risk of harm to patients and providers through both system effectiveness and individual performance”. Patients’ safety is a one of the most challenging matter for the reason that errors and mistakes can and do happen. In
Premium Nursing Health care Patient
16‚ 2013 Confidentiality Rules Upon arriving at a new physician’s office a patient is given a clipboard with several papers on it‚ and is told to fill it out and return to receptionist when finished. What are all these papers‚ and why do they need to be filled out? These are actually very important to the care that the patient will receive. Every time a patient is seen by health care professional important information is gathered. This information is only to be shared
Premium Law Patient Medicine
in the nurse-patient relationship. Nurses have the abilities to develop a therapeutic relationship that focuses on the needs of the patients. The best way to achieve effective nurse-patient relationship is through communication. Communication barriers have been one of the major causes of poor patient care. And if these communication barriers were lifted‚ it can help the nurse earn the patients’ trust while also creating some boundaries. I believe that the focus of nursing is patient-centered care
Premium Nursing Patient Nurse
article is highly relevant and useful in adequately understanding the legal and ethical requirements of a patient’s comprehension of informed consent. As Health professionals‚ our professional guidelines require us to act in the best interest of the patient and to seek‚ obtain‚ and understand the importance of informed consent (HPC 2008a‚b) Standard 2.2 of the nurse practioner standards for practice (Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia [NMBA]‚ 2014) highlights an individuals rights in making an
Premium University Citation Typography
Patient Confidentiality‚ a Case Study Inna Gerenshteyn Empire State College Patient Confidentiality‚ A Case Study Advances in technology‚ including computerized medical databases‚ the Internet‚ and telehealth‚ have opened the door to potential‚ unintentional breaches of private/confidential health information. Protection of privacy/confidentiality is essential to the trusting relationship between health care providers and patients. Quality patient care requires the communication of
Premium Nursing Health care Ethics
therapeutic relationship and why developing this with patients is important. Firstly‚ Communication is verbal and non-verbal. It is‚ therefore‚ defined as an act of conversing with people‚ to pass information‚ to consort‚ to express thoughts‚ to send a message across and being understood. However‚ it is a process that involves both patient and nurse actively. Consequently‚ nurses need to create a positive emotional atmosphere for the patient to relax and happy to communicate. Additionally‚ Nursing
Premium Nursing Patient Health care
According to McCormick (2013)‚ the patient has the right of autonomy‚ nonmaleficence‚ beneficence‚ and justice. Patient autonomy allows the patient to “act intentionally‚ with understanding‚ and without controlling influences that would mitigate against a free and voluntary act” (McCormick‚ 2013). The patient was given autonomy through discussion with the midwife‚ neonatologist‚ and perinatologist assigned to her care and the patient was then allowed to decide the course of action to be taken. Nonmaleficence
Premium
has focused on measuring and reporting hospitals’ adoption of evidence based practices to improve patient safety. Through annual surveys‚ the program measures whether hospitals have adopted these practices and make the data publicly available on the Leapfrog Group Web site (http://www.leapfroggroup.org). One goal of the program is to direct consumers to hospitals that have adopted Leapfrog’s patient safety practices. Overall‚ I think it is useful for the public to have this information available
Premium Health care Patient Health economics