Haethcare 19092211

 

1. Define and describe a coalition.

2. Select at least one coalition active in your own community.

3. How does your selected coalition operate?

4. How is the coalition governed?

5. What impact do you believe this coalition has on your community?

6. Utilized two quality references (current – within 5 years),

7. Accurate spelling and grammar, correct APA formatting(Bold and center criteria)

 
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Haethcare 19097789

 

Family Selection and Factors Impacting Health and Wellness

In this first assignment for the Project,  provide an outline of your approach to planning, health screening, and health prevention/promotion for your family and describe the determinants (bio-psycho-social-cultural, and lifestyle factors) that impact this family’s health and wellness. Identify if you think this family has a health disparity and/or may be at risk and describe why.

 Scoring Rubric: Family Selection and Factors Impacting Health and Wellness. 

1.  Outline of plan – description of your selected family, 

including each person in family name (initials), age, gender…,  

2. Description of factors affecting your family and their impact on health and wellness (economics, health, education, resources, age, access, support, family relationships,….) 

3.  Identification of health disparity related to your family

4. Accurate spelling and grammar, correct APA formatting (bold and center criteria) 

 
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Haethcare 19114867

 In an APA format paper, approximately 3-5 pages in length, address the following questions.  Locate two different quantitative studies in professional resources related to your PICOT topic of interest.  “Does handwashing among healthcare workers reduce hospital acquired infection?”      

Label each section using the template. Submit copies of studies in PDF format!

Template:

Give an overview and summary and then answer these three questions:      

Quantitative Study One – the first study what is about?

Overview; what is the overview of the study?

Study design : what kind of study is it? Is it experimental, quasi-experimental, or non-experimental

Internal validity of the study and External Validity of the study  What threats to internal and external validity were noted? Are there others you think might be present that the author(s) did not describe? Define each of these terms  

Applicability:  . Do you think this study will be applicable to your PICOT population? Why or why not? 

Quantitative Study Two

Overview

Study Design experimental, quasi-experimental, or non-experimental

Internal and External Validity

Applicability

References   in APA format you must include intext citation. cite every source of information. You must upload the study article you are referring to. The study must be peer reviewed scholarly articles between 2014  and 2019 . please upload 2 different kinds of studies addressing the PICO question above.                                                

 
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Haethcare 19117793

  

In an APA format paper, approximately 3-5 pages in length, address the following questions.  Locate two different qualitative studies in professional resources related to your PICOT topic of interest.  “Does handwashing among healthcare workers reduce hospital acquired infection?”      

Give an overview and summary and then answer these three questions:      

1)Give an overview of the study and findings

2)What type pf qualitative study was it (i.e. phenomenology, ethnography, etc.)?

3) How did the authors establish trustworthiness (specifically discuss credibility, confirm ability, dependability, and transfer ability)?

4)Do you think this study will be applicable to your population? Why or why not?

Label each section using the template. Submit copies of studies in PDF format!

Template:

Quantitative Study One – the first study what is about?

Overview; what is the overview of the study?

Study design : what kind of study is it? Is it experimental, quasi-experimental, or non-experimental

Internal validity of the study and External Validity of the study  What threats to internal and external validity were noted? Are there others you think might be present that the author(s) did not describe? Define each of these terms

Applicability:  . Do you think this study will be applicable to your PICOT population? Why or why not? 

Qualitative Study Two

Overview

Study Design experimental, quasi-experimental, or non-experimental

Internal and External Validity

Applicability

References   in APA format you must include intext citation. cite every source of information. You must upload the study article you are referring to. The study must be peer reviewed scholarly articles between 2014  and 2019 . please upload 2 different kinds of studies addressing the PICO question above.                                                

 
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Haethcare

 Healthcare is a fast-paced environment where the nurse is constantly faced with juggling multiple priorities. This can lead to “cutting corners” behaviors that may lead to unsafe practices. In 2-3 pages, describe examples of unsafe practices that you have observed in your career and explain how these practices can be avoided. Include a discussion of the nurse’s responsibility when he or she observes unsafe practices of others. APA format with references

 
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Happiness

Define happiness 150 words only

 
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Hat Spiritual Issues Surrounding A Disaster Can Arise For Individuals Communities And Health Care Providers

 What spiritual issues surrounding a disaster can arise for individuals, communities, and health care providers? Explain your answer in the context of a natural or manmade disaster. How can a community health nurse assist in the spiritual care of the individual, community, self, and colleagues? 

 
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Have A Project Need Help With

I have overall problem ( Heart disease )  and I want 2 specific problems see attachment for details  I need to do just A

 
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Having A Conversation

Pretend you are going to meet an expert on methods in teaching freshman composition.  Her name is Sandie Friedman, and she has a lot to say about the use of popular culture (among other subjects) in the freshman composition classroom.  Friedman has invited you to her house because she wants to share her ideas with you and hear your thoughts about this subject.  The first thing you should do before you sit down with an expert on any subject is to be clear where you stand on the matter! 

How do you do that?  How does that translate into preparing for a research paper?

You gather your thoughts about a subject by writing about it before you dig too far into the research; thus, before you go to meet Friedman (in other words, before you read what she has written), you need to write down your own opinions so that you’ll have a point of reference.  This will also give you material to draw on as you talk to (interact with) Friedman.  For instance, when she raises a point that you disagree with, you might draw on your notes to explain why you disagree.

Let’s practice this important first step.  Please type the following in a document and save it, along with the other parts of Assignment #2.

Step One:  Your Initial Thoughts

For five minutes, write your responses to the following questions.  What do you think of teachers using popular culture in freshman writing classes?  For instance, do you think it’s all right for students to write papers about television shows like True Blood?  Do you support teachers incorporating current events into the writing classroom?  Should teachers allow students to write about Donald Trump or Lady Gaga?  Why?  Why not?  Do you agree with the view that the only thing students should be studying and writing about in freshman composition is writing itself? In other words, do you agree that the only legitimate topic for writing classes is language and grammar?

Step Two:  Listening To Your Source

Friedman welcomes you to her home, invites you to sit down, and then tells you that she’d like to explain her ideas to you.  She says the following:

In first-year writing programs such as ours at George Washington University, instructors from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds teach seminars with topics of interest to first-year students. The course themes range from: a seminar on the Holocaust, in which students do research at the national Holocaust Memorial Museum; to service learning courses, in which students volunteer for local nonprofits and write for these organizations; to a course on video games; to my own on classic Hollywood films. In their syllabi, instructors must justify their choice of topic as appropriate for a writing course, and they must follow the guidelines in a course template.

Aside from these guidelines, instructors have considerable freedom to choose topics, as one goal of the program administrators is to appeal to a broad spectrum of student tastes. Like many faculty members in our program, I share Harris’s (2006) conception of the work of FYC as introducing students to intellectual writing: the kind of writing about texts and ideas that might appear in The New Yorker, Harper’s, or The Atlantic (p. 10). We don’t have a course specifically on vampires right now, but we have had courses on horror movies. An outstanding student in one of my courses wrote a paper on the history of zombie films—it’s probably only a matter of time before vampires make an appearance.

Should we banish vampires from FYC classes? What should be our response, as writing teachers and program administrators, to “challenging times?” (Friedman 79)

Friedman finishes talking, and you take a moment to digest what she has said.  Before responding with any critique (agreement or disagreement), you should briefly summarize what she has said so that you can be sure you understood her correctly as she spoke; thus, step two is to write a brief summary of Friedman’s statement above (include it as Step Two of Assignment #2).

You gathered your own thoughts.  You listened carefully to Friedman’s.  You summarized her ideas.  Now, you are ready for the next step in effectively interacting with a source:  responding.

responding.png

Step Three:  Responding to a Source

The next thing to do is to respond to your source.  In this stage of your notetaking, you should express your opinion of the ideas covered in the source.  What do you think of Friedman’s thoughts on writing classes?  Point out any connections between what she said and what you wrote in your preliminary notes (these might be disagreements or agreements).  Answer the questions she poses at the end:  “Should we banish vampires from FYC classes? What should be our response, as writing teachers and program administrators, to “challenging times?” (Friedman 79)

Challenge yourself to write for five minutes. 

Include this as Step Three of Assignment #2.

Friedman took in every word you said.  She made a few notes as you were talking; now, she replies, and it’s time for the next step in effectively interacting with a source:  listening again!

listening.jpg

Step Four:  Listening Some More!

Do you see a pattern developing?  I like the conversation metaphor as a guide for interacting with a source because it models the give-and-take that should happen when you read.  Figuratively, we are listening and responding, listening some more and responding some more; LITERALLY, we are reading, taking notes, expressing our reactions in writing, reading some more, taking more notes, expressing more reactions in writing.  Rinse, lather, and repeat!

Bruce Ballenger, who wrote a remarkable book called The Curious Researcher, calls this process “writing in the middle” (101).  In other words, if you follow this process, you are already writing your paper as you do the research for it.  So many writers procrastinate and miss the opportunity to dig into their sources.  That missed opportunity leads to shallow interactions with sources, but seizing that opportunity leads to a deeper conversation with sources.  

Back to our metaphorical conversation.  Friedman listened to you, and now she responds:

As a choice of course theme, pop culture is double-edged. On one hand, students are drawn to courses that feature vampires, Harry Potter, Mad Men, and video games. On the other hand, such courses may seem less than serious, to both colleagues and students. Our program directors have occasionally wondered whether pop culture themes lead students to give courses low ratings for “intellectual challenge” on course evaluations. But I believe that teaching writing through pop culture can have the same intellectual rigor as courses that “sound serious,” courses with themes grounded in philosophy, science, or for that matter, writing studies. It depends on the pedagogical goals and how we approach those goals. I would argue that vampires can offer just as much material for intellectual inquiry as, for instance, Beaufort’s (2012) proposed course, “Locating Self in Landscape” (p. 5). (Friedman 81)

Briefly summarize Friedman’s ideas expressed above.  Include the summary as Step Four in Assignment #2.

Step Five:  Informed Response

You are deep into the process now, and that means your responses should become more pointed.  Take five minutes to respond to Friedman’s remarks from Step Four (I’ll include them here for easier access):

As a choice of course theme, pop culture is double-edged. On one hand, students are drawn to courses that feature vampires, Harry Potter, Mad Men, and video games. On the other hand, such courses may seem less than serious, to both colleagues and students. Our program directors have occasionally wondered whether pop culture themes lead students to give courses low ratings for “intellectual challenge” on course evaluations. But I believe that teaching writing through pop culture can have the same intellectual rigor as courses that “sound serious,” courses with themes grounded in philosophy, science, or for that matter, writing studies. It depends on the pedagogical goals and how we approach those goals. I would argue that vampires can offer just as much material for intellectual inquiry as, for instance, Beaufort’s (2012) proposed course, “Locating Self in Landscape” (p. 5). (Friedman 81)

As you respond, try to incorporate the summaries and responses you’ve already written in previous steps.

Ladies and gentleman, this is how you deal with sources for a research paper!  We will stop after five steps, but obviously you would repeat this with an actual source as many times as it might take to fully understand the source and its relation to your paper.

Again, compile all five steps into one document and label it Assignment #2. 

You’ve talked to Sandi Friedman; you’ve listened and summarized; you’ve responded to and questioned her.  It’s important that you now clearly differentiate your opinion of her article from the article itself.  In other words, you should–after reading and interacting with any source–take the time to objectively summarize it.  This will help you when you write about the source in your paper.  Your readers might not have read Friedman, for instance, so they deserve an objective account of Friedman’s ideas BEFORE you analyze her ideas.  It also clarifies you own thinking.  You want to be certain you correctly understand Friedman’s ideas (or any source) before you begin analyzing them.  What if you misunderstood and ended up agreeing with a view you actually disagree with?  What if you criticized someone for an idea that is nowhere in his or her writing?

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Thus, the next step in Assignment #2, which is all about effective interaction with a source, is to summarize Sandi Friedman’s “This Way for Vampires:  Teaching First-Year Composition in ‘Challenging Times.'” Please include this summary in the same document as Steps One – Five.  The following information and video will help you write your summary.

The best (and ONLY, in my opinion) way to summarize an article is to outline it.  You must identify the author’s thesis, and then you must trace the author’s steps in defending that thesis.  Once you have carefully outlined the article, you must turn the outline into a narrative, which means you must write a paragraph (or two or three or …).  The summary must be accurate and objective.  You save your reaction to it for another time.  I am going to include the outline and summary I wrote for Friedman’s article later, but please watch this video first.  In it, Nicole Wesley, a teacher from Asheboro, North Carolina, provides practical advice for writing a summary.

 
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Hazard Associated With Older People Working In Chemical Industry 19172697

Choose a hazard or a process associated with an occupation in a chemical industry and discuss the implications for older workers and managers. Use an occupational health hazard management framework to structure your answer.  Word length: about 500 words (no more than 700) You can cite references (perhaps 1-3).

Introduction

Describe Occupation 

Hazards associated with occupation

Solution or suggestion

Conclusion

 
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