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Health Information
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Health information sits at the intersection of clinical practice, public policy, technology, and ethics, making it a subject that appears across nursing, public health, health administration, and pre-medical curricula. The field concerns how medical data is collected, stored, shared, and applied to improve patient outcomes and guide decision-making at both individual and systemic levels. Topics such as electronic health records, privacy protections, healthcare ethics, and the role of information technology in evidence-based practice give the subject genuine academic weight, since choices about data management directly affect care quality, efficiency, and patient rights.

Student papers on this topic approach health information from several directions. Some examine how technology enhances clinical practice, particularly the adoption of electronic health records and their relationship to evidence-based care. Others focus on policy and regulatory dimensions, exploring healthcare reform, health law, and the ethical issues that advances in information technology have created around confidentiality. A smaller set of papers takes an organizational or systems lens, analyzing how hospitals and healthcare delivery structures evolve in response to changing information demands, while others address cultural competency and its connection to effective health communication.

A strong essay on health information needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of the field. Evidence drawn from policy documents, clinical research, and concrete case examples carries more weight than general claims about technology being beneficial. Writers should connect their chosen angle — whether privacy, efficiency, or equity — to specific outcomes for patients or providers. The most common pitfall is conflating description with analysis; simply explaining what electronic health records do, for instance, is far less persuasive than evaluating whether they achieve measurable improvements in care quality.

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Paper Doctorate
Patients and Their Doctors Research
Research into the dynamics that are part of the patient-doctor relationship has been an ongoing theme for many years. In this paper the way in which the patient-doctor relationship has evolved will be reviewed.
Paper Undergraduate
Universal health care systems and implementation
The Pros and Cons of Universal Healthcare
Paper Doctorate
Ethical Legal Dilemma in Advanced Practice Nursing Case Study
Nurses often deal with ethical and legal dilemmas in the clinical field. The case study discussed in this paper illustrates an ethical-legal dilemma nurses encounter when caring and treating patients in Emergency department because of severe medical situation. A 30-year-old Hispanic male placed in the emergency department in serious condition after sustaining serious injuries following a car accident. The patient showed signs and symptoms of internal bleeding and nurses recommended immediate surgery in an effort to save his life. The patient declined any surgery performed on him based on his religious belief, and requests for Euthanasia. The ethical-legal dilemma in this case is whether to respect the patient's decision and ignore standards of care or disrespect the patient's independence in an effort to save his life. This paper presents a clinical case study, identifies the ethical-legal dilemma, and discusses the ethical principle that applies in this case.
Essay Undergraduate
Hhe 595 Workshop in Comprehensive School Health Education
Dr. Lloyd Kolbe lines up the expectations of a school health education. These are: increased understanding about the science of individual and societal health; increased competency to make decisions about personal…
Paper Doctorate
U.S. Government and Ethical Issues of Outsourcing
USA is at present one of the fastest growing countries as a target for outsourcing. Of late outsourcing which was once the buzzword of corporate America has been looked down upon in recent years because of growing concerns of ethics involved in outsourcing the same. Majority lament the outsourcing of jobs to low-wage economies like Asia, Philippines and elsewhere. In a slowing economy with unemployment figures hovering around 10%, outsourcing jobs is viewed as extremely undesirable. However some experts are of the opinion that outsourcing per se is not bad as it helps business to lower costs to remain in business, particularly during periods of recession. When outsourcing permits a company to cut down on costs and make production at less cost, it augurs well for the company in the long run. After all it is the bedrock of comparative advantage. But the ethical concerns far outweigh the benefits that companies gain. By outsourcing, individual privacy is compromised, the cost of educating an American student is wasted when his job is outsourced to a different country thereby destabilizing the wage economics of America and in turn harming the economy in the long-term.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Code of Ethics Breakdowns Which
¶ … code of ethics breakdowns which occurred in the Tenet Hospital Group, and how they have addressed these ethical lapses with their current ethics statements. It then addresses questions of ethics formulation and…
Paper Undergraduate
Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities overview
The Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF) is an independent, nonprofit organization that reviews and grants accreditation requests for facilities or programs providing rehabilitative services…
Essay Doctorate
Multidisciplinary team investigation of computerized hospital management system implementation
Order # A2058622 Abstract Computerized Hospital Management Systems The paper is about the benefits and costs of a computerized hospital management system from a nurse's perspective. The author is placed in the position of a nurse of a small 100 bed-community hospital who is the only nurse in a team of doctors to participate in the hospital management's decision on whether to buy such management system. In answering six specific questions related to the benefits and economic costs of computerized hospital management systems, the paper shows – among others - that improved health care and increase in personnel and work efficiency will well outweigh the financial burden imposed on the hospital when buying two specific managements systems: ELECTRA and Microsoft Dynamics GP. In addition, the paper outlines the security standards of data and patient confidentiality, including the need for data storage integrity and data backup and recovery and how the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) requirements impact the use of computerized hospital management systems.
Essay Doctorate
Information security in healthcare systems
The recent advances in technology -- databases that store personal medical records and information -- are bringing tools to patients, doctors and other healthcare professionals that were simply not available just a few…
Paper Undergraduate
1996, the Federal Government Passed
¶ … 1996, the Federal government passed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), which enacted new rules with respect to health care administration. In particular, HIPAA laid out specific…