Essay Topic Hub

Healthcare
Essays

3,496+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

3,496 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
What is Healthcare?

Healthcare is a booming industry and predicted to continue growing for the foreseeable future. There are a variety of ways to enter the healthcare profession and many of them require their own specialized degrees. From acupuncturist to x-ray technician, whatever degree you are pursuing, we have the tools you need to simplify your study process. Our goal is not just to help you improve your grades, but also to help you improve your understanding of the subject and increase your chances for success as you move forward in your education. After all, good grades are just a stepping stone to a vibrant healthcare career.

Careers in healthcare can be broken down into two broad categories: patient care and administration. Patient care involves working directly with patients in the provision of healthcare. Of course, doctors and nurses are involved in patient care, but so are technicians, assistants, therapists, and other members of the patient care team. Administrative workers may have some interactions with patients, but they are not involved in hands-on patient care. Instead, administrative workers may work with medical billing, insurance, or scheduling; in other words, the administrative workers handle the behind-the-scenes business of a medical office. While both areas can be highly specialized, there are some courses that are considered core courses in both areas.

Regardless of your area of specialization, if you are involved in patient care, then an understanding of the human body is critical to your success. Biology and anatomy are standard courses in most patient-care centered medical programs. However, it is important to realize that a generalized strong background in science and math is also important to healthcare professionals. Chemistry, physics, and calculus are among the surprising prerequisites that some medical schools require. Other schools do not specify which courses an aspiring med student needs to have taken, but merely emphasize that students should have a strong background in math and science. Examining the curriculum requirements for nurses can help you get a good understanding of the types of courses that medical professionals need to have. In addition to hours of specialized nursing courses that focus on patient care, professional issues, and detailed medical knowledge, nurses need generalized knowledge in chemistry, anatomy, nutrition, physiology, statistics, microbiology, and developmental psychology.

If you are involved in medical administration, then your education will focus on the evolving world of the medical office. Medical billing and coding are complex issues, which change as the laws and healthcare providers change. Whether you are a billing and coding expert or working in another capacity in the administration of a medical office, you will need to have a basic understanding of current medical billing and coding, including how to bill for Medicare and Medicaid, the impact that the Affordable Care Act has had on medical billing, and how to comply with patient privacy regulations dictated by the Health Information Privacy and Accountability Act. In other words, you may have to be more familiar with the law than with medicine to be an effective medical administrator! [ Show Less ]

3,496 papers
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Health care reform policies and implementation
Healthcare Reform Initiatives in California
Research Paper Doctorate
Effects of Obesity in the Workforce
America has been built on the idea that thin is attractive and capable, while fat is ugly and lazy. Morbid obesity is a growing problem in the United States. News channels have done stories about the nation's problem…
Research Paper Doctorate
Female serial killers: patterns and criminal psychology
The notion of female serial killers often appears as the minority of cases in the history of serial murder and serial killers. It's as if there is a part of society that refuses to believe that women are just as capable…
Research Paper Doctorate
Immanuel Wallerstein Was Born in 1930. He
Immanuel Wallerstein was born in 1930. he received his BA from Columbia in 1951, his MA in 1954 and his PhD is 1959. He has also received honorary doctoral degrees from place like the university of Paris, The National…
Essay Doctorate
Finance: The Business Case Is a Living
This paper examines three business cases that provide different proposals on the need for a re-structure of health care services in Borlein region. The first two sections in the article examine the strengths and weaknesses of each business case and the merits and deficiencies of their proposals. The other two parts discuss the most suitable proposal that meets the health needs of the region and changes that could be made to the proposal to enhance its effectiveness.
Paper Doctorate
Constitutional Democracy Presidential or Parliamentary System
For the successful development of a democracy, two major factors come into play regarding the sources of said democracy. Of course, some of the factors are also indications of other regimes -- fascist and communist --…
Paper Masters
Cyberterrorism in healthcare systems
Healthcare and the Threat of Cyber-Terrorism
Paper Doctorate
Social Work the Research in This Study
The research in this study is exploratory and descriptive. The study begins with the declaration that this topic of study has been pursued in the past, yet the sampling methods used proved ineffective in defining or describing why less Asian Americans utilize healthcare services in the United States. This research seeks to describe the problem of little use of healthcare with their study. The research in this study classifies the phenomenon of lack of healthcare service use/participation by Asian Americans. The research problem is that Asian Americans are not using the healthcare services available to them for a variety of reasons. The paper critiques an article charting research in this area.
Paper Masters
Domestic policy overview and analysis
This paper looks at the recent domestic policy debate between President Barack Obama and presidential hopeful Mitt Romney. The first few paragraghs are a look at two of the issues, the economy and healthcarem that have been prominent in this campaign. Also discussed are how the moderator did, things left out by the candidates, and who won the debate.
Paper Undergraduate
Pending Piece of Legislation
The concept of providing basic healthcare services individuals in need has undergone an agonizing transition, from a luxury once only afforded by the affluent to a basic human right granted to citizens of every economic station, and the recently enacted Affordable Care Act (ACA) was designed to finalize this ethical evolution. Reflecting perhaps the bitter political enmity currently consuming the nation's once cherished democratic process, Republican legislatures in states throughout the union have bristled at the ACA's primary provisions, threatening all manner of procedural protestation as they attempt to delay and derail the bill's eventual implementation. One of the most intriguing aspects of the sprawling, thousand page law, however, has been the stipulation that individual states will be given a choice to either accept federal funding to expand their statewide Medicaid roster, or to forfeit all federal funding for that program in perpetuity. This Faustian bargain of sorts was crafted by federal lawmakers to provide resistant states with an offer that could not be refused, but in the wake of President Obama's reelection to a second term in the land's highest office, the willingness of Republican-ran states to fall on their proverbial sword appears to have been vastly underestimated.