Speculate on the most damaging consequences of a malpractice case on a physician practice.

Use Internet and / or Strayer Learning Resource Center to research articles (no older than five [5] years) on using technology to prevent medical malpractices. Next, discuss the overall manner in which using technology can help prevent malpractices. Speculate on the most damaging consequences of a malpractice case on a physician practice. Support your rationale. Imagine that you are the manager of a multi-specialty medical practice that is opening a new office and that you are involved in planning the layout and design of the new office. Determine three (3) functional areas that you think should be given priority with regard to the amount of space needed for efficient operations and patient flow in the new office. Justify your response.

Utilize the patient friendly health education materials available and disseminate take-home materials

You are the newly hired Director of Performance Improvement at the Brownville Memorial Hospital. You were hired to improve the hospital’s compliance with federal, state, and local regulations. Additionally you are responsible to ensure that all standards related to quality assurance, patient protections, infection control, safety, risk management, and staff education are followed. You report directly to the hospital Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and you oversee the Quality Assurance and Performance Improvement (QAPI) staff.
The CEO wants the hospital to upgrade to a higher patient centered medical home (PCMH) recognition level in 18 months. He has given you your first project which is to improve patient and family ratings on the hospital satisfaction survey. As you review previous Press Ganey Satisfaction Surveys you note that patients and families consistently rated the hospital staff poorly on providing information that made it easy to understand and improve their health. Many survey comments stated that patients “found the health information they were given confusing and did not know how to act on it.”
Brownville is a 500 bed hospital situated in a large metropolitan area with more than 750,000 residents, many of whom are Black, Asian, and Hispanic. 35% of the residents are foreign-born and speak a language other than English at home. The median household income is $35,000 per year and more than 30% of residents did not graduate from high school. The hospital provides primary care, specialty care, and support services to area residents with a large direct patient care staff (including physicians, nurses, physician assistants, medical assistants, nursing assistants, social workers, therapists, technologists, technicians, phlebotomists, and pharmacists).
To begin your first project, you have decided to develop and implement a long-term staff education program that will focus on “health literacy.” You and your staff will be rolling out this program to all hospital staff members. The first activity will be a workshop for all existing and new staff. You will deliver the workshop in person to small groups (40 staff members) over the next 2 months.
Your key areas of concern are that all staff (address 2 key areas for assignment):
● communicate clearly with patients
● utilize the patient friendly health education materials available and disseminate take-home materials
● address language and cultural differences (with support from translation services available through telephone)
● help patients to remember how and when to take their medicines
● encourage patients to ask questions
Therefore, you will develop a 20-minute (maximum) workshop presentation that clearly explains health literacy, key communication principles, and addresses 2 of your key areas of concern. You have decided to give the CEO a preview of your workshop at your next meeting so that he knows that you are dedicated to performance improvement.

Write an incident report to Harry Vincent of the Environmental Protection Agency.

You are an engineering technologist employed in the local branch of H. L. Winman and Associates. Currently you are supervising installation work at a remote construction project at Cormorant Dam.
The day before you left for the construction site, your branch man- ager (Vern Rogers) called you into his office. “I’d like you to meet Harry Vincent,” he said, and introduced you to a tall, gray-haired man. “Harry is with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and he wants you to take some air pollution readings while you’re at Cormorant Dam.” Mr. Vincent opened a wooden box about 14 × 10 × 10 inches, with a leather shoulder strap attached to it. In the box, embedded in foam rubber, you could see a battery-powered instrument. “It’s a Vancourt MK 7 Air Sampler,” he explained, “and it’s very delicate. Don’t check it with your luggage when you fly to Cormorant Dam. Always carry it with you.”
For the next hour Mr. Vincent demonstrated how to use the air sam- pler, and made you practice with it until he was confident you could take the twice-daily measurements he wanted.
Now it is 10 days later and you have just finished taking the late- afternoon air sample measurements. You are standing on a small plat- form halfway up some construction framework at Cormorant Dam, and are replacing the air sampler in its box.
Suddenly there is a shout from above, followed immediately by two sharp blows, one on your hardhat and the other on your shoulder. You glimpse a 3-foot length of 4-inches square construction lumber tumble past you followed by the air sampler box, which has been knocked out of your hand. The box turns end over end until it crashes to the ground. When you retrieve it the box is misshapen and splintered and the air sampler inside it is twisted. Also, your arm is throbbing badly and you cannot grip anything. An examination at the medical center shows you have a dislocated shoulder, and now your arm is supported by a sling. (Fortunately, it is not your writing hand.)
Part 1
Write an incident report to Harry Vincent of the Environmental Protection Agency. Tell him
-what has happened,
-that you have shipped the damaged air sampler to him on Remick Airlines Flight 751, for him to pick up at your city’s airport (you enclose the airline’s receipt with your report), and
-that if he wants you to continue taking air pollution measurements, he will have to send you another air sampler.
Harry Vincent’s title is Regional Inspector and his address is Environmental Protection Agency, Suite 306, 444 Waltham Avenue of your city.

Describe the patient’s personal and medical history, drug therapy and treatments, and follow-up care. Then, explain how the patient’s gender might have impacted or influenced her care

Journal 1 Entry
Reflect on a patient who is beyond 20 weeks gestation and presented with a health problem that commonly arises during pregnancy. Describe the patient’s personal and medical history, drug therapy and treatments, and follow-up care. Then, explain the implications of the patient’s health problem. If you did not have an opportunity to evaluate a patient with this background during the last eight weeks, you may select a related case study from a reputable source or reflect on previous clinical experiences.
(Health Problem: Alcohol Consumption)
Journal 2 Entry
Reflect on a patient who presented with postpartum depression during your Practicum Experience. Describe the patient’s personal and medical history, drug therapy and treatments, and follow-up care. Then, explain the implications of the patient’s postpartum depression, including how this might impact the entire family unit. If you did not have an opportunity to evaluate a patient with this background during the last nine weeks, you may select a related case study from a reputable source or reflect on previous clinical experiences.
Journal 3 Entry
Reflect on a patient who presented with a cardiovascular, neurologic, respiratory, or gastrointestinal disorder during your Practicum Experience. Describe the patient’s personal and medical history, drug therapy and treatments, and follow-up care. Then, explain how the patient’s gender might have impacted or influenced her care. If you did not have an opportunity to evaluate a patient with this background during the last 10 weeks, you may select a related case study from a reputable source or reflect on previous clinical experiences.