Archive for January 29th, 2021

Any topic (writer’s choice)

This week, we’re analyzing the story, Snow, Glass, Apples, by Neil Gaiman. Now, write out that analysis in three paragraphs: an introduction and two evidentiary paragraphs.

You can find the story in Files / Stories.

The paragraphs should follow a very precise form, using rhetorical patterns. Follow this form EXACTLY, sentence-for-sentence.

The first paragraph is an introduction. The introduction will do the following:

Introduce the story and make a specific assertion about the story’s theme.
In two (2) to (four) sentences, make references to how the story establishes the theme being discussed.
Make a specific assertion about how this analysis will prove a very specific reception.
Discuss how that reception will be established, by referencing two pieces of evidence.
After this, the essay will follow the usual steps for two paragraphs’ worth of analysis.

Both of the following patterns together form ONE paragraph. So you’ll need to use both patterns for both paragraphs.

This first pattern is the Paragraph Introductory Pattern. You should use this only once per paragraph.

Topic sentence — one (1) sentence. This should be a clear, unambiguous claim about what the paragraph is going to demonstrate. Resist introducing evidence in the topic sentence. Instead, focus on making a claim that requires proof.
Explicitly state now how you’re going to prove the topic sentence’s claim. This might require more than one (1) or two (2) sentences.
Next, we’ll again use the Textual Analysis Pattern for each of the two following paragraphs. But we’ll add a sentence to the top of the paragraph.

Then, introduce the scene you’re about to discuss. Do this with two (2) sentences:
The first sentence should somewhat broadly refer to the part of the story you’re going to cover.
The second sentence should focus on the particular detail(s) you’re about to address.
Now make the point you want to make by analyzing how the specific text you’re referring to demonstrates your claim. This will take four (4) or five (5) sentences.
The first sentence should establish how the text serves as an example of the point being made.
The next sentence should elaborate on the previous one by pointing to additional detail or establishing how the text relates to other excerpts from the piece. The main thing here is to elaborate — either get into more detail, or tie the excerpt to other, similar examples.
The next sentence or two (2) should tackle some kind of counterargument. In other words, how might a reader try to disagree with your claim? Try to resist that imagined disagreement by first establishing what it could be and then briefly claiming why it’s incorrect. Pointing to yet more details of the excerpt is desirable here.
Finally, wrap up your point by indicating how this point might lead to the next related idea.
Each paragraph should be from eight (8), minimum, to ten (10), maximum sentences long. When you’re finished, submit your finished work here as a link to a Google Doc.

Nature of Good

Robert Nozicks Experience Machine thought experiment asks you to consider the possibility of having your brain plugged into a machine that feeds you all the needed stimuli so as to perfectly recreate any situation you could possibly desire.  The simulations would be indistinguishable from what you are able to experience not plugged into the machine and, indeed, we could use the machine to simulate a perfect life, full of any and every experience you could desire.  And yet, he thinks, something would be wrong with “plugging in.”  In the end, Nozick seems to make the argument what is GOOD cannot be reduced to merely having certain types of experiences (most notably, experiences of happiness or satisfaction).  He seems to believe that there is something good or valuable about living a live that cannot be simulated.

For your initial post there are two points you need to address: first, do you agree with Nozick’s position?  And if so, what could this be and why think it is of value? If not, what argument can you offer against Nozick’s position?  Second, if Nozick’s argument works, what do you think this does as an argument against Hedonism?

Medical Technology

The use of health information technology (HIT) has increased dramatically over the past decade, resulting in the federal government enacting several pieces of legislation such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) of 1996 and the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act of 2009. Continuing to build on your proposal for a healthcare facility from Weeks 1 and 2, you are assigned to research and discuss the following:

Discuss the financial and health benefits that can be realized by implementing an electronic health record (EHR).
Research and explain the estimated cost of implementing an EHR and the estimated cost of managing an EHR over the long run.
Discuss current security concerns surrounding HIT and the EHR.
Discuss how electronic health records can be used for decision-making and problem-solving.
Choose 1 piece of federal legislation (e.g., HIPAA, HITECH Act, Meaningful Use), and discuss the requirements that legislation imposes on the use of HIT and the EHR.
Note: You must use at least 3 scholarly references.

Library Research Assignment

Library Research Assignment

Technology in health care has made it possible for patients to use devices to access their medical information, monitor vital signs, take tests at home, and carry out a plethora of other tasks that could only previously be conducted inside the doctors office (Topol, 2013). This enhanced technology is one of the many reasons that there has been a shift from inpatient to outpatient care. Although patients have benefited greatly from health care technology, there are also downsides to technology, such as how it has affected the cost of care. For this Discussion Board assignment, you should complete the following:

Provide a definition of outpatient care.
Discuss 23 ways in which technological innovations have impacted, or will impact, the delivery of care in the United States.
Discuss 23 ways in which technology has had, or is expected to have, a detrimental impact on the delivery of care.
The use of at least 2 scholarly references is required.

Request for Proposal and Compilation of Implementation Plan

Part 1: 3 pages,
Part 2: 1 -page RFP

Draft Implementation Plan and Request for Proposal (RFP)

This week, you have 2 deliverables. You will compile your plan for selection and implementation of a new EHR system based on the work that you have done in Weeks 13. You will also create a Request for Proposal (RFP) using a standard template. Continue to utilize the scenario to assist you with your plan completion.

Part 1 Task: Implementation Plan for Replacement of the EHR System

Compile the information from the IP assignments in weeks 13 into your draft plan. Remember to incorporate the following:

Introduction paragraph: What is this plan all about, what are you discussing, and why is this necessary
Components of the plan: Here you incorporate your findings from weeks 13 into 1 document
Address the readiness assessment, benefits, and potential implementation issues
The overall project plan, including organization, migration path, plan for communication to stakeholders, and change management
Recommendation of vendors
Considerations in selecting a vendor
Which vendors were researched
Which vendor was selected, and why
Part 2 Task: Request for Proposal

Now that you have selected a vendor to supply a replacement EHR system to the clinic, you must submit a request for proposal (RFP). The RFP is a valuable tool that is used to provide detailed requirements to potential vendors and gives guidelines to those vendors to follow during the bidding contract. The RFP is a solicitation to a vendor to provide information that helps you make a decision on which vendor to choose for the new EHR.

The first part of the RFP includes a cover letter to the vendor and a general description of what is being requested and what needs to be included. This is the part of the RFP that you will prepare. The second part covers the proposal that the vendor would fill out and complete to cover the following (Wager, Lee, & Glaser, 2005):

Vendor qualifications: General background of vendor, experience, number of installations, financial stability, and so forth
Proposed solutions: How the vendor believes its product meets organizational goals
General contractual requirements: Warranties, payment schedule, penalties for failure to meet schedule specified in the contract, and so forth
Pricing and support: Quote on cost of system, utilization of standardized forms, and so forth
Clinical decision and administrative support: Discuss the advantages of Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSS) and a Management Information Systems (MIS) on the health care information systems, especially with the EHR
Complete the first part of the RFP, which will list numerous items that Yorkshire Clinic requires for its new EHR system, such as the following:

Information about the clinic
What functionality is desired
Product description
Patient accounting and reimbursement
Utilize the format provided in the document at this link to assist you in your proposal. Use the RFP template for health information technology. This document provides information on how to write your RFP. Note: You only need to write the RFP. This template contains numerous pages after the proposal description that would be used by the potential vendor of the EHR system to whom you send the RFP. Do not complete or submit the Vendor Profile because this is what a vendor would complete and return to you for consideration.

References

HealthIT.gov. (2018). Request for proposal (RFP) template for health information technology. Retrieved from https://www.healthit.gov/resource/request-proposal-rfp-template-health-information-technology

Wagner, K. A., Lee, F., W., & Glaser, J. P. (2017). Managing health care information systems: A practical approach for healthcare executives. San Francisco, CA: Jossey Bass.

cover letter

Primary Task Response: For this assignment, create a draft cover letter for your Request for Proposal (RFP) that you will develop in this weeks Individual Project assignment. The 1-page cover letter is what is sent along with the RFP to potential vendors of information systems. If you need help with writing a business letter, go to the Learning Center in the classroom, and choose the Writing Support Center. Then, click on the Writing Types tab, select Workplace Writing Types from the column on the left, and then choose Letter.

Assignment 1: Video/ Essay: The New Heroes – ‘Dreams Of Sanctuary’ (January 26, due January 29) (5%) Dreams of Sanctuary features social entrepreneurs working to address a social problem. Who are those social entrepreneurs? What social problems are they

Assignment 1: Video/ Essay: The New Heroes – ‘Dreams Of Sanctuary’ (January 26, due January 29) (5%)

Dreams of Sanctuary features social entrepreneurs working to address a social problem. Who are those social entrepreneurs?
What social problems are they trying to solve? How?

The documentary is on Blackboard and available here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5xJOGDfEPaU

HS210 Unit 6 Discussion Board

Topic 1: Release of Medical Records

Barbara Jones and her daughter, Patricia has been a patient of Dr. Young for many years. Patricia is currently in college and is in need of her medical records. Patricia has asked her mom, Barbara to pick up a copy of her medical records. Is it acceptable for Dr. Youngs medical practice to release a copy Patricias medical records to her mom? If so, why?  If not, why?

SS238 Unit 5 Discussion Board

Topic: Public Policy Analysis: Understanding the Concern

We stand now where two roads diverge. But unlike the roads in Robert Frosts familiar poem, they are not equally fair. The road we have long been traveling is deceptively easy. A smooth superhighway on which we progress with great speed, but at is end lies disaster. The other fork of the road – the one less traveled by – offers out last, our only chance to reach a destination that assures the preservation of the earth
–Rachel Carson

Policy analysis is the study of public policy concern and the development of possible solutions to the public policy concern. Public policy analysis borrows from rational decision making. According to Michael Kraft, in rational decision making, one defines a problem, indicates the goals and objectives to be sought, considers a range of alternative solutions, evaluate each of the alternatives to clarify their consequences, and then recommends or chooses the alternative with the greatest potential for solving the problem (Kraft, 2018).

According to Kraft, Public policy analysis contains five steps:

Step 1: Define and analyze the problem.
Who, what, when, where, and why is there a public policy concern?

Step 2: Construct policy alternatives.
What are the possible, public policy options?

Step 3: Choose evaluative criteria.
How do we evaluate the possible, public policy options?

Step 4: Assess the alternatives.
Which alternatives are better?

Step 5: Draw conclusions.
Which public policy option will you choose?

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has an excellent resource on how the institution practices policy analysis.

A key component of public policy analysis is defining and understanding public policy concern. One must first identify the problem before one can offer possible public policy solutions.

Rachel Carsons environmental activism is an example of understanding a public policy concern.

On September 27, 1962, Rachel Carson, a former U.S. Bureau of Fisheries employee, naturalist, and author, wrote the international bestseller Silent Spring, an environmental book that documented how synthetic chemical pesticides damage the environment, wildlife, and humans (Carson, 1962). Carsons book was a synthesis of four years of scientific research: government reports, congressional testimony, and academic case studies (Lear, n.d.).

Rachel Carson starts Silent Spring with A Fable for Tomorrow. In this short story, Carson illustrates a small town beset by a strange blight.

According to Frank Graham, Jr., author of Since Silent Spring, Carson said her purpose in writing this book was the first to inform the public about the downside of pesticides and to spur the government to take necessary action (Graham Jr., 1970). The publication of Silent Spring, coupled with the ensuring media furor, chemical industry pushback, and Carsons congressional testimony, ignited environmental, public policy debate.

For more information on Rachel Carsons impact on environmental, public policy, please watch PBSs documentary, Rachel Carson.

Directions: Using the required, academic readings, and supplemental academic research, please address the following while adhering to the Discussion Board Rubric:

Select a specific example of public policy from one of the following fields:
Economic policy
An example of economic policy is U.S. budget deficit spending.
Education policy
An example of education policy is the implementation of national education standards.
Environmental policy
An example of environmental policy is the Clean Air Act.
Foreign policy
An example of foreign policy is how we conduct trade with other countries.
Healthcare policy
An example of healthcare policy is the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare)
Welfare policy
An example of welfare policy is Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF).
Using the rational decision-making model:
What is the chosen, public policy concerning issue?
Where is the chosen, public policy concerning issue?
Why is the chosen, public policy concerning issue?
How did the chosen, public policy concerning issue begin?
Did previous, public policies cause this concerning issue?
How can one better frame the concerning issue in terms of voter engagement?
How does your chosen, public policy concern benefit from public policy analysis?
References:

Carson, R. (1962). Silent spring. London: Penguin Books, in association with Hamish Hamilton.

Graham, F. (1970). Since silent spring. London: Hamilton.

Lear, L. (n.d.). Rachel Carson, The Life and Legacy. Retrieved from http://www.rachelcarson.org/

M3D1: Psychological First Aid for Disaster Survivors Classmate Responses

Please respond to the following:
The #1 will be a general response to what a classmate posted in regards to the initial posting. Please provide thoughts and/or question to Karina. The #2 and #3 are responses from classmate and professor asking questions pertaining to my initial posting.