YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Effects of Bioterrorism Upon Emergency Medical Technicians
Essays 31 - 60
you have a potentially volatile atmosphere" (Hughes, 2005). Kowalenko, Walters, Khare, and Compton (2005) surveyed 171 ED p...
This research paper, in an outline format, provides information on emergency law enforcement, communication and medical services, ...
In six pages this report considers medical ethics and the impact of 'do not resuscitate' orders upon patients, their families, the...
The statistics regarding coronary artery disease make it obvious that emergency medical services are critical in saving the lives ...
In the Metro Toronto area, over 5,350 homeless people try and fit into the limited homeless spaces available in the hostel system ...
The risk of transmission of the AIDS virus to emergency medical personnel is considered from a symptomatic, moral, and ethical per...
In six pages this paper discusses how emergency workers including medical personnel and employees can effectively manage the high ...
In five pages the incidences of drug abuse among EMS and EMT employees are examined. Four sources are cited in the bibliography....
In twenty pages designer drugs such as cocaine, marijuana, roofies, and Ecstasy are discussed in terms of their content, origin, h...
In a paper consisting fo 6 pages a hypothetical study of fatigue is discussed in terms of its impact upon emotions and assesses th...
In a paper consisting of six pages AIDS' causes and treatment are considered with particular emphasis upon the minimal risks to he...
Hepatitis and the dilemmas created for emergency health care workers are discussed. Infection control is also a part of the resear...
In eight pages EMS and its importance in the preservation of life is examined. Four sources are cited in the bibliography....
In five pages this paper considers family member inclusion or exclusion in various medical situations and the medical and ethical ...
plan should be properly developed, using Ashford University as a model. This paragraph helps the student give a brief overview o...
This paper argues that effective emergency response rests on the decisions that were made prior to the actual emergency ever occur...
intensive care unit (ICU) (Scholle and Mininni, 2006, p. 37). Bedside nurses are encouraged in many hospitals to make a MET call...
wrong way to think about it, instead, physicians should look at this "formality" as a way to communicate with the patient (Yale-Ne...
manner. This is an important time for AMH as the system can be rolled into other departments. 2. Current Issues and Opportunities...
to this devastated area were, at least at first, characterized more appropriately as a series of errors and delays than as an effi...
information necessary to the reconstruction effort. While addressing base emergency services problems will, hopefully, be...
which dopamine agonists and levodopa therapy works synergistically to provide physical benefits is both grand and far-reaching; th...
some schools do not receive funding if they hold religious classes for example or do not abide by affirmative action. Similarly, E...
between August 25 and August 30, 2005, was one of the worst hurricanes of history. Hurricane Katrina howled ashore destroying ent...
for tsunamis. In short, Puerto Rico, though considered an "island paradise" is rife for all kinds of natural disasters, pa...
among corporations large and small that the FMLA is enroachment on their territory (Hengst and Kleiner, 2002). In the sections bel...
that could otherwise not be expressed merely by literary methods; rather, photography helps the world understand more about itself...
quite a leap to effectively apply its principles to service industries, but TQM is as much at home in health care as it is in manu...
facility grew to over 1,000 beds and the addition of a many barracks-style buildings. The design for a new facility began in 1942 ...
ultrasound or even an abdominal x-ray (National Institute of Health, 2004). Such was the case with Baby Owens. After the ...