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Health Care Provider
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Health care providers sit at the center of how medical systems function, making them a frequent subject of study in nursing, public health, health administration, and allied health courses. The topic covers the full range of professionals, organizations, and institutions responsible for delivering patient care, and it raises pressing questions about quality, access, ethics, and strategy. Because health care operates at the intersection of science, policy, culture, and commerce, it offers students an unusually rich set of frameworks for academic analysis.

Papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Strategic management essays examine competitive environments and marketing decisions, asking how providers position their services and reach patients effectively. Policy analysis papers scrutinize legislation such as HIPAA, focusing on privacy, confidentiality, and regulatory compliance. Cultural competency essays explore how provider-patient dynamics shift across communities, with Mexican American patients and nurses serving as a concrete case for examining perception gaps. Other papers address faith-based considerations, such as Jehovah's Witness healthcare decisions, or clinical topics like ectopic pregnancy, connecting provider knowledge to diagnostic and therapeutic responsibilities.

A strong essay on health care providers begins with a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one angle — strategic, policy, cultural, or clinical — rather than attempting to survey the entire field. Evidence carries most weight when it connects organizational or systemic factors directly to patient outcomes or provider behavior. Drawing on peer-reviewed research, real case examples, or specific policy language strengthens credibility considerably. The most common pitfall is writing at too general a level, describing what health care providers do without analyzing why structures, decisions, or disparities exist and what consequences follow from them.

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Paper Undergraduate
Assisted suicide: legal and ethical perspectives
Ethical, Legal, And Business Considerations in Hospitals
Research Paper Doctorate
Novice Nurses and the Growing Nursing Shortage Crisis
One need only read the newspaper "Classified" ads to realize that employers are trying many clever marketing tactics to attract prospective nurses into their organizations. Many are offering sign-on bonuses, extra…
Paper Undergraduate
Marketing forces and diversification at Kaiser Permanente
Kaiser Permanente - Marketing Forces and Diversification Kaiser Permanente has the considerable geographical expanse, huge membership, a large employee force and financial wherewithal to mount an aggressive and widespread marketing plan. Marketing both nationally and regionally, Kaiser has: distinguished itself from other health care providers; embraced diversity in both its membership and employment force; established a national learning center in Washington, D.C.; started and maintained programs targeting obesity, walking for health and environmental concerns; offered free services in many communities; awarded grants and scholarships; and widely publicized all those activities through its News Center. Many of Kaiser's marketing activities are naturally connected with improving quality of care and financial viability. While it is difficult to assess the effectiveness of Kaiser's marketing plan in membership numbers or dollars and cents, its activities have certainly gained widespread recognition and awards for excellence, as well as considerable customer loyalty.
Paper Doctorate
Cystic fibrosis: pathophysiology, clinical manifestations, and treatment
Cystic Fibrosis (CF) is genetically inherited through a defective gene, which results in the body producing "abnormally thick and sticky fluid, called mucus. This mucus builds up in the breathing passages of the lungs and in the pancreas, the organ that helps to break down and absorb food." (PubMed Health, 2011)
Essay Undergraduate
Theoretical framework concepts and applications
This paper uses a theoretical framework of feminism to analyze the phenomenon of human trafficking. It is estimated that 80 percent of the victims of human trafficking are female. The paper also addresses some of the counter-arguments to using a feminist paradigm, such as the face that males are exploited, particularly in agricultural labor.
Research Paper Doctorate
Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities
The recent report of the Institute of Medicine, Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care (2002 Smedley et. al.), indicates that bias, stereotyping, and prejudice may often contribute…
Paper Doctorate
Nursing Case Study: Professional Misconduct and Ethical Violations
This paper discusses a case scenario of Nurse X. After discussion of the case, the paper talks about professional misconduct and why it was applied to the nurse. Different areas of nursing care are discussed and stressed upon. The duty of care that the nurse has also been discussed followed by the scope and standards of care in nursing.This paper discusses a case scenario of Nurse X. After discussion of the case, the paper talks about professional misconduct and why it was applied to the nurse. Different areas of nursing care are discussed and stressed upon. The duty of care that the nurse has also been discussed followed by the scope and standards of care in nursing.
Paper Undergraduate
Health Care -- Licensing, Accreditation and Certification
Health Care – Licensing, Accreditation and Certification – Case Assignment King/Drew Medical Center Accreditation by JCAHO is a formal "seal of approval" while certification by JCAHO is a "gold seal of approval" by a private arm of JCAHO. Both types of recognition have numerous benefits and a few disadvantages, some of which overlap. King/Drew Medical Center, traditionally serving the underserved population of South Los Angeles County, gained and then lost accreditation through multiple internal and external problems that combined to cripple and ultimately kill the Medical Center. Fortunately, a smaller, privately-run facility is set to take King/Drew's place in 2013.
Research Paper Doctorate
HIPAA the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 Training Program
On August 21, 1996 a new law was signed called the Health Insurance Portability and Accounting Act of 1996, which is abbreviated as HIPPA (HEP-C, 2003 & Regence, 2003). The law guarantees many things to American…
Paper Undergraduate
Safety issues and concerns in contemporary contexts
Medical Safety Issue: Lost Medical Record The security of medical records is a daily issue with significant impacts on the privacy, security and treatment of patients. Consequently, providers struggle to maintain the security, privacy and integrity of medical records, not only because those practices are mandated by Federal statutes but also because high quality patient care demands it. Unfortunately, as providers struggle to comply with Federal regulations and the medical profession's commitment to patient privacy, security and care, serious problems have been detected in existing electronic medical records systems. First, there are major potential security problems. Secondly, electronic medical records are often kept by third party computer servers and the third parties do not have the same HIPAA privacy restrictions that apply to health care providers. Third, many EMR systems are "local," being tailored for a specific health care provider in a specific area of the country. Fourth, there is a lack of standardization of electronic medical records across the country. Experts have suggested 5 steps that should be taken to ensure security, privacy, universality and standardization of electronic medical records systems, per HIPAA and the HITECH Act. First, the health care provider must secure all Protected Health Information (PHI) "in motion." Secondly, the health care provider must ensure the security of PHI "at rest." Third, the electronic medical records system must detect and report breaches in the system. Fourth, the electronic medical system must ensure that business associates are in compliance with HIPAA and the HITECH Act. Finally, the electronic medical records plan should create a core competence for the exchange of information. By employing an electronic medical records system with these safeguards, the nurse practitioner's office can fully comply with HIPAA and the HITECH Act and also ensure against the irretrievable loss of valuable medical information.