Analysis of a Healthcare Organization

Submit an 8- to 10-page analysis of a hospital or other healthcare-related organization.
1)Identify and describe a hospital or other healthcare-related organization that has either failed or drastically changed their strategic vision within the last five (5) years.
2)Provide a brief history of the organization.
3)What was the cause of the failure of the healthcare organization? Provide details from cited, reputable sources. Address the following parameters as appropriate:
Government
Healthcare philosophy
The Affordable Care Act
The “bottom line”
Partnerships
Restructuring
Bankrupty
Other
4)What strategies, if any, did the organization use that did not work and why?
5)What business strategies would you have implemented to save this organization and why?
Identify and describe at least three (3) strategies, referencing your prior learning experiences.
Explain and defend why you chose those three strategies.
Identify implications/areas of concern that may arise with your strategies.
6)Use a minimum of 5 peer-reviewed sources,
7)Your paper must be 810 pages in length and follow current APA formatting and citation.

Ethical Humanitarian Issues in Emergency Service Management

Write a paper, no less than 1500 words, discussing the ethical treatment of socially vulnerable people during emergency situations. This paper requires a two-prong approach. First review chapter 3 of your textbook (page 35 to 48 and evaluate your organizations communications plan. Second, explore topics that help us understand and address societal challenges such as homelessness, the elderly, citizens who speak a second language, race relations, attitude formation, behavior change, aggression, prejudice, violations of human and civil rights, violence, abuse. You only need to pick one or two of these vulnerable groups and how you would communicate with them in an emergency.
The paper is to be in APA format and word count does not include, your title, abstract or reference pages. Also, you will find several handouts posted in the main page of your 3-unit class that you can use to prepare for this assignment. These handouts provide instructions for formatting academic papers pursuant to APA guidelines. The handouts are located in the content section under course resources (materials), which are listed below week 8. You are required to do your own research and use one outside references in your final paper.
Please review the directions for the reference page to assist you with this assignment.  Remember to include your abstract and your reference page as part of your final paper.

MANAGMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM

Final:

Pick a profession you imagine yourself working in:

Choose 3 MIS systems that you think will be useful in your chosen field.  Describe the system 2 pages. 

No more than 7 total pages.

Zoho CRM, ADP, ABACUS.COM

Please focus on how these systems can be valuable in the field settings

Nuclear Reactor – Understanding how it works | Physics Elearnin

video link = https://youtu.be/1U6Nzcv9Vws

Watch the short  video on nuclear reactors.  Submit 1) an outline of the video presentation and 2) show two balanced nuclear equations which occur in the nuclear fission reactor.  This assignment is worth 100 points.

How to write an outline

An outline presents a picture of the main ideas and the subsidiary ideas of a subject. Some typical uses of outlining might be an essay, a term paper, a book review, or a speech. For any of these, an outline will show a basic overview and important details. It’s a good idea to make an outline for yourself even if it isn’t required by your professor, as the process can help put your ideas in order.

Some professors will have specific requirements, like requiring the outline to be in sentence form or have a “Discussion” section. A students first responsibility, of course, is to follow the requirements of the particular assignment. What follows illustrates only the basics of outlining.

Basic outline form
The main ideas take Roman numerals (I, II, …) and should be in all-caps. Sub-points under each main idea take capital letters (A, B, …) and are indented. Sub-points under the capital letters, if any, take Arabic numerals (1, 2, …) and are further indented. Sub-points under the numerals, if any, take lowercase letters (a, b, …) and are even further indented.

MAIN IDEA
Subsidiary idea or supporting idea to I
Subsidiary idea or supporting idea to I
Subsidiary idea to B
Subsidiary idea to B
Subsidiary idea to 2
Subsidiary idea to 2
MAIN IDEA
Subsidiary or supporting idea to II
Subsidiary idea to II
Subsidiary idea to II
MAIN IDEA

It is up to the writer to decide on how many main ideas and supporting ideas adequately describe the subject. However, traditional form dictates that if there is a I in the outline, there has to be a II; if there is an A, there has to be a B; and so forth.

Outline example
Suppose you are outlining a speech about gerrymandering, and these are some of the ideas you feel should be included: voter discrimination, “majority-minority” districts, the history of the term, and several Supreme Court cases.

To put these ideas into outline form, decide first on the main encompassing ideas. These might be: I. History of the term, II. Redistricting process, III. Racial aspects, IV. Current events.

Next, decide where the rest of the important ideas fit in. Are they part of the redistricting process, or do they belong under racial aspects? The complete outline might look like this:

Gerrymandering in the U.S.

HISTORY OF THE TERM
REDISTRICTING PROCESS
Responsibility of state legislatures
Census data
Preclearance
Partisan approaches
RACIAL ASPECTS
Gomillion v. Lightfoot (1960)
Civil rights
Voter discrimination
Voting Rights Act (1965)
Majority-minority districts
CURRENT EVENTS
Effects of gerrymandering in 2012 and 2016 elections
Gill v. Whitford Supreme Court Case

It is only possible to make an outline if you have familiarity with the subject. As you do research, you may find it necessary to add, subtract or change the position of various ideas. If you change your outline, ensure that logical relationship among ideas is preserved.

Further reading
Tardiff, E., and Brizee, A. (2013). Developing an outline. In Purdue OWL. Look at all three sections. The third includes an example.

Lester, J.D., and Lester, Jr., J.D. (2010). Writing research papers: A complete guide (13th ed.). New York: Longman. Includes several models, including for a general-purpose academic paper.

Turabian, K.L. (2013). A Manual for Writers of Research Papers, Theses, and Dissertations. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.