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Patient Care
Essays

1,218+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,218 papers
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UG & Grad levels
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About This Topic

Patient care sits at the center of health sciences education, making it a foundational topic across nursing programs, healthcare administration courses, public health curricula, and medical ethics seminars. The subject is academically rich because it sits at the intersection of clinical practice, institutional policy, finance, and human rights. Students are asked to examine not only how care is delivered at the bedside but also the organizational structures, legal frameworks, and ethical principles that shape every patient interaction. Its breadth means the topic invites rigorous analysis from multiple disciplinary angles simultaneously.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a policy and quality-improvement angle, examining how hospitals and nursing environments can improve safety standards and care outcomes. Others adopt a case-study format, focusing on specific institutions, professions such as nursing home administrators or registered radiology assistants, or tools like the SBAR reporting framework in nursing practice. Additional papers engage with ethical and legal dimensions of care, healthcare finance and capital planning, and the particular needs of specific patient populations, including indigenous Australian patients. Reflective models and administrative strategy also appear as organizing frameworks.

A strong essay on patient care requires a clearly scoped thesis that links a specific problem — such as documentation gaps, discharge planning failures, or quality management shortfalls — to concrete, evidence-based solutions. Clinical research, institutional policy documents, and professional guidelines carry the most weight as evidence. The most common pitfall is treating "patient care" as too broad a subject without anchoring the argument in a defined setting, population, or measurable outcome, which leaves the essay unfocused and difficult to evaluate.

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Paper Undergraduate
Empirical research in contemporary academic contexts
¶ … managed care is used in modern medical practice as a variety of fiscal techniques used in a supposed dual role -- to reduce the cost of providing health benefits and to improve the quality of health care.
Essay Doctorate
Electronic Health Records the Advent of Technology
Abstract The advent of technology has had an impact on almost every facet of our lives. Today, thanks to technology, the maintenance of patient records is becoming increasingly easy and efficient. In this text, I will concern myself with electronic health records (EHR). In so doing, I will amongst other things take into consideration the effect of EHRs on health care and the implications of adopting this technology from a privacy and security perspective. Further, I will highlight HIPAA privacy and security rules and how they relate to EHRs.
Thesis Undergraduate
Testable Hypothesis. That Residents Spend Less Time
That residents spend less time teaching ever since promulgation of Duty-Hour Restrictions (DHR) and that this impacts their well-being and perception of patient-care.
Thesis Undergraduate
Costs of Denial in the Death and Dying Process
Death manifests attitudes of denial or of escape. It is a natural reaction of humans to deny the serious illness, sudden or gradual, and the proximity of death. Death is a part of living and dying is a process which generates an experience that engages the patient, family, health staff and society in general. (Yalom, 2008) Many diseases during its progression reach an incurable stage, with devastating physical, psychological and social impacts on an individual/family. Traditionally little importance has been given to the health care of patients with end-stage diseases, which has led to the emergence of palliative medicine as a specialty dedicated to improving the quality of life these patients (Kastenbaum, 2008).
Essay Doctorate
Leadership Theories Applied to Hospital Supervision
This paper discusses Lewin's different classifications of leadership (authoritarian, democratic, and 'hands off') and their application to a hospital setting. It discusses a specific example of the leadership style of a supervisor (authoritarian) and demonstrates how a participative approach might be more valuable. It concludes with a discussion of how path-goal theory or situational leadership enables a leader to break out of the false dichotomies inherent in the Lewin model.
Research Paper Doctorate
Risk Management: Improving Communication Amongst
Communication is one of the keys to risk management, particularly in a hospital setting. The 2004 JCAHO National Patient Safety Goal Number Two clearly states that to improve the effectiveness of communication among…
Research Paper Doctorate
Critical Thinking Professional Nursing Issue
Nursing work environment and its importance is introduced in this paper. Issues relating to professional nursing work environment are outlined. Further changes required in nursing work environments to achieve primary…
Essay Doctorate
Improving Local Health Care: Quality Health Care
This article examines improving local health care beginning with recommendation for incorporating unapplied telecommunications concepts in the local health care facility. The second part discusses two recommendations for applying various process improvement frameworks that could be applied to the management of the IM/IT department. The final part provides a description of the benefit of a robust configuration management database to the local health services provider.
Paper Undergraduate
Physician Reimbursement Models and Payment Incentives
Major types of physician reimbursement: Physician incentives
Paper Undergraduate
Professional responsibility concepts and practices
PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY and CODES of CONDUCT