Britannia Hospital Essays

  • Analysis Of O Lucky Man

    692 Words  | 2 Pages

    The very first film I would watch is also one of the greatest British movies ever made. Lindsay Anderson's 1973 mammoth allegory "O Lucky Man!" is a masterly blend of the funny, the lewd, the depressing and the surreal. What's even more amazing is that this immensely ambitious work is only the director's third feature film, the others being the appreciated 1963 film starring a young Richard Harris entitled "This Sporting Life, and the other, more prolific title being the subversive, anti authoritarian

  • An Evaluation of the Construction of Britannia Bridge

    1488 Words  | 3 Pages

    Stephenson, London, H.M.S.O. Patrick Robertson, Menai Heritage Experience — History of the Britannia Bridge. Available at: http://www.prosiectmenai.co.uk/bbhistory.php [Accessed October 28, 2011]. Warren Kovach, Menai Strait Bridges. Menai Strait Bridges. Available at: http://www.anglesey-history.co.uk/places/bridges/ [Accessed October 25, 2011]. Patrick Robertson, Menai Heritage Experience — History of the Britannia Bridge. Available at: http://www.prosiectmenai.co.uk/bbhistory.php [Accessed October

  • Swot Analysis Of Thomson Tour Operations

    2060 Words  | 5 Pages

    organization (initially named Thomson Tour Operations (TTO), and renamed in 1997) was established as a component of the Thomson Travel Group in 1965 taking after the securing of four tour drivers, Skytours, Riviera, Gaytours and Luxitours and the carrier Britannia Airways by Roy Thomson. Serious rivalry proceeded among the four gained drivers that permitted the opponent Clarksons Travel Group to turn into the leading player in the new and quickly extending UK bundle occasion business sector, while Thomson

  • Physician Associate: A Personal Statement

    814 Words  | 2 Pages

    life. As a young woman coming from an Indian background, I am the first from my family to have studied at a Masters level; thus it has been a breakthrough for my family and I. My motivation to become a physician associate arose while working at Britannia pharmacy. The relationship and the connections

  • Senior Capstone

    1437 Words  | 3 Pages

    Observations I visited the Ronald McDonald House on September 15, to meet a family that was staying there because they had a very ill child. I was there to interview Mr. and Mrs. Davis who’s had their five-year-old son, John was at Children’s Mercy Hospital. The Davis family was there because John has leukemia and needed chemotherapy. When I first met John, I was at a loss for words. I saw a five-year-old boy that didn’t have any hair (like me) and was thin like a cable wire. I thought it was great

  • coma

    2235 Words  | 5 Pages

    Memorial Hospital because she is having an extra heavy period. After being examined, she is going to have an operation in OR room 8. Something happens during the operation, and Nancy becomes brain dead. Susan Wheeler, a medical student, is waking up for her first day in the field after two years of studying to become a medical doctor. She is very attractive with blond hair. She has blue, brown, and flecks of green in her eyes. When she and five other medical students go the Boston Memorial Hospital, all

  • Personal Narrative- Career Goals

    761 Words  | 2 Pages

    Personal Narrative- Career Goals My parents often remind me of how difficult it is for minorities like us to earn respect from the community and enough money to raise a family. They encourage me to strive for the best by being selfish and competitive against my peers rather than enjoy what I like which is to interact with people. My mother wanted me to become a doctor because it is a well paying job and my father wanted me to become an entrepreneur because I would have been able to gain

  • The Benefits of Electronic Patient Charts

    1430 Words  | 3 Pages

    When walking into a hospital, nursing home, or physician’s office, electronic devices are used everywhere.  The doctors have pagers, drugs are released from an apparatus similar to vending machines, and the patients are connected to intravenous pumps and monitors, while they lay on beds that move with the touch of a button.  Everything seems to be electronic, except for patient charts.  A new system, called eHealth, was devised that would make these patient charts electronic.  The goal for electronic

  • Doctor-Assisted Suicide and the Hospitals' Bottom Line

    1217 Words  | 3 Pages

    Euthanasia and the Hospitals' Bottom Line An important factor in debates over health care and treatment strategies is the issue of cost. It is tremendously expensive to provide the state-of-the-art care that the modern hospital offers. Concerns about where the money will come from to care for elderly citizens appear to be making the case for "mercy killing" even more compelling. Under financial pressure, hospitals are exercising their right to deny such expensive healthcare to the aged or seriously

  • Providing Quality Patient Care

    1528 Words  | 4 Pages

    & Kautz, D. (2011). Preventing sentinel events caused by family members. Dimensions of Critical Care Nursing, 30(1), 25-27. doi: 10.1097/DCC.0b013e3181fd02a0 The Joint Commission. (2013). Sentinel events. Comprehensive Accreditation Manual for Hospitals, Retrieved from http://www.jointcommission.org/assets/1/6/CAMH_2012_Update2_24_SE.pdf

  • Free Health Care Clinics are Effective for The Uninsured

    1026 Words  | 3 Pages

    Health has become an expensive affair to most people especially those that suffer from long term diseases such as diabetes. Most of the uninsured people in the neighborhood do not get the relevant healthcare service and hence they need a source of better services such as free clinics that can deal with the major issues affecting health (Huntington, 2012). The mobilization of these free clinics comes with a price as they affect the community both positively and negatively. Free clinics can either

  • McDonalization of Healthcare

    1426 Words  | 3 Pages

    fancy restaurant, the more times they can turn over a table during a shift, the more money made. Hospitals use beds instead tables. Healthcare has been broken down into small parts, like an assembly line of care” (NP oddessy.com). We can see how healthcare is transitioning into a Beaucratic organization by looking at four components: Calculability, Efficiency, Predictability and Control. In the hospital setting calculability is quite clear. According to the article What is McD... ... middle of paper

  • Persuading the CEO of Change

    1924 Words  | 4 Pages

    in order to gain the results desired. As the demands of the hospital continue to rise, we must perform more work with less staff leaving an unwanted gap. By utilizing a workflow complementary to the operational aspect, employee buy-in is essential. Staff throughout the hospital drives the organization. By retaining these individuals, significant cost-savings occur within the hospital. Robinson, senior editor, (2012) suggests “Hospitals aren’t like other businesses. Reducing price isn’t a possibility-not

  • Workplace Violence and Hospital Safety

    1476 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hospital Safety Workplace violence is a serious issue in all workplace settings in the United States, health care included. It is unfortunate that places that offer services to help better people’s health and lives are also places that experience terrifying life-threatening situations, but this is sadly the case. Between the years of 2000 and 2011, there were 154 documented, hospital-related shooting events in 148 hospitals across the nation that affected 253 victims (Kelen, Catlett, Kubut, & Hsieh

  • Scottish Patient Safety Programme and the Early Detection of the Deteriorating Patient

    1921 Words  | 4 Pages

    Scottish Patient Safety Programme and the Early Detection of the Deteriorating Patient The aim of this reflection is to discuss patient safety in an acute setting according to the Scottish Patient Safety Programme. I will be using a model of reflection, Gibbs Reflective Cycle to structure my essay (Gibbs 1988 cited in Paterson and Chapman, 2013). In accordance with the Nursing and Midwifery Council identifiable information will not be written, maintaining confidentiality (NMC, 2010a). Description

  • Healthcare Associated Infections

    1139 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nosocomial infections also known as healthcare associated infections (HAI’s) are infections that patients get while receiving treatment for another condition in a healthcare facility. In 2011, there were an estimated 722,000 HAIs in U.S acute care hospitals and of those about 75,000 died (CDC, 2014).The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) estimates the financial burden attributable to HAIs to be between $28 billion to $33 billion each year. The thousands of people who die yearly and

  • Policies and Procedures in Nursing Practice

    1148 Words  | 3 Pages

    specific methods employed to express policies in action in day to day operations. Policies and procedures are made for the users easily understandable, well organized, and easily accessible (Policies and procedures - Definition, 2012). Nowadays, most hospitals and clinics maintain their nursing policies and procedure manuals on campus intranet/public drives and also on the units. This writer as a nurse leader has access to use these resources. Evidence based policy has been defined as an approach that

  • A Career as a Plastic Surgeon

    1033 Words  | 3 Pages

    There are many different surgeons in the world, but being a Plastic Surgeon can be a life changing career. It offers you a vast knowledge of beauty and medical field. Plastic Surgeons are medical doctors that deal with defects on people’s body. Many people are proud that Plastic Surgeons exist, because it makes them look better and gives them a lot of confidence. Being a Plastic Surgeon can be a challenging profession because it can help change people’s lives, it can offer a wealthy future, and it

  • The First Computerized Trauma Registry

    1005 Words  | 3 Pages

    information contained in this registry includes hospital-based trauma information and patient data from other health care providers which includes pre-hospital care and rehabilitation if applicable (Zenati). The first computerized trauma registry was created in 1969 by the Cook County Hospital in Chicago which became the model for the state of Illinois Trauma Registry. This registry commenced to accumulate information from fifty chosen trauma center hospitals in the state in 1971. The early registries

  • Surgery: Unintended Retained Foreign Objects

    1708 Words  | 4 Pages

    infection, obstruction of blood vessels, and even death (Mathias, 2013, p. 2) According to the OR Manager, the effects of a retained surgical item can lead to patients having a increased mortality rate by 2.14%, an increased hospital stay by 2.08 days, and increased hospital costs by $13,315 (Mathias, 2013, p.1). In response to this, NoThing Left Behind was created. NoThing Left Behind is a national surgical safety project that was created as a system wide policy to help prevent the event of a retained