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care plans
... of the patient. The ultimate purpose of the care plan is to guide all who are involved in the care of this person to provide the appropriate treatment it needs accordingly to its physical, intellectual, social and emotional requirements. A ...
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care practice and provision
... be those who are not paid e.g. families who look after ill relatives.
They will then use the information collected by the local population demographics, determined through categories such as age, disability, unemployment, single parent, elderly or youth related needs E.g. ...
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Careers after studying Biology.
... methods for isolating, identifying, and studying function, morphology, and pathology of obscure or difficult-to-identify cells, tissues, and connecting fibers. May also conduct autopsies to select tissue specimens for study. May also engage in research to develop techniques for diagnosing and ...
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Case Study
... this, smoking costs governments millions of pounds ever year due to the large number of people who need treatment in hospitals for smoking related problems. If there was a ban, more people would want to quit smoking, therefore improving health ...
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Case Study - Simbec Research Limited specialize in drug development, clinical pharmacology and the development of bio-analytical methods for drugs
... introduced us to Philip R. Robinson, the manager of the bio-analytical unit. He explained Simbec's position as a CRO who carry out trials and analysis into drugs, to help fast track their development. By now it was time to take ...
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Case Study NHS
... staff and members of the general public. NHS Ambulance Trusts are the local organisations responsible for responding to 999 calls; transporting patients; and increasingly for providing out-of-hours care. Emergency and urgent care is someone who needs emergency or urgent care. ...
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Certificate in Foundation Studies Health and Welfare - Digestive function/dysfunction
... peritoneal folds, on the other side with the anterior abdominal wall by the crescent-shaped ligament. The liver is reddish brown in colour and consists of two lobes, the right and the left, both of which are made up of thousands ...
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Child Development
... growth varies. At birth a babies head is out of proportion with the rest of its body. The child's growth is monitored by the health visitor and plot on the centile chart.
Gross motor skills - use of muscles to control ...
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Childcare - Observations
... inside
4 Years Old
Develop a good sense of balance - may be able to walk along a line
Walked along a beam and fell of once but then re-tried and completed without falling off
Stand, walk and run on tiptoe
Catch, kick, throw and ...
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Cholera
... excreted in faeces. If the bacterium comes in contact with drinking water, then it can infect people. If you do not wash your hands after you have been to the toilet then you can also pass the bacteria onto food; ...
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Choose an area that you have studied. Explain the legal and ethical issues it raises and analyse whether or not the law deals with these adequately. Are there any improvements you would suggest?
... way of doing this, especially if other ethical considerations, such as religion, are ignored? Finally the term child will also need to be looked at, for while it may be simple to quote a legal definition to determine who is ...
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Choose three complementary therapies- acupuncture, aromatherapy, hypnotherapy, homeopathy, osteopathy or reflexology. Describe the therapies chosen, together with their origins, philosophy and contraindications.
... body to release endorphins and encephalins (which are
natural pain relievers and mood enhancers).
There are many contraindications to reflexology; the following are
reasons why people should not undergo the treatment;
¨ Without the permission of the their doctor, if ...
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choosing health
... England today. Every year it kills an estimated 86,500 people in England (one fifth of all death).
Reducing the numbers of people who smoke as this leads to heart disease, strokes, cancer etc because the majority of people felt this ...
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choosing health
... worn once entering Chester Zoo, and not outside or on the way in to the zoo. Their uniform must look immaculate at all times and worn correctly. They should have a neat haircut and tied up if long enough to ...
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Christopher Reeve began to use the international interest in his situation to increase public awareness about spinal cord injury and to raise money for research into a cure.
... a dangerous condition involving blood pressure known as autonomic disreflexia--all of which Reeve would experience in the coming years.
Even while at Kessler, Christopher Reeve began to use the international interest in his situation to increase public awareness about spinal ...
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Citizenship Coursework
... organization skills.
* To show good research skills.
* To work independently.
* To look after my own health and safety.
* To be able to follow and set instructions.
* To be able to work in a team.
Planning and preparation
We had to ...
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Class inequalities in health start at birth, continue in childhood, and persist through life
... in working class and muddle and upper class districts. There is considerable evidence that superior doctors are more likely to seek employment in middle and upper class areas owing to better equipment and working environments. In addition, working class areas ...
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Clenbuterol
... attempt to promote weight gain and to increase muscle to lipid mass. Adverse effects typical of sympathomimetic activity have been attributed to such misuse both in farmers perpetrating such acts and in innocent persons consuming meat products from affected animals. ...
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Clinical learning outcome - a reflective account.
... Radiotherapy department.
She reported meeting with her Breast Care nurse and had benefited
from a support meeting. She had also made contact with the
Chaplain listed in the information leaflet and had found him easy to
talk to, however she ...
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Cloning
... Scientists believe that they may be able to treat heart attack victims by cloning their healthy heart cells and injecting them into the areas of the heart that have been damaged. We may learn to grow nerves or the spinal ...
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Cloning—right or wrong
... create people that wouldn't have been created by nature. Humans are not supposed to play God and control the evolution process. With the techniques of cloning, human can someday live as long as they want. A person could renew his ...
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Cognitive and Behavioural Psychotherapy for Distressing Thoughts in Work.
... a shoe store in town. Along with seven other people Ellen had been dismissed from her previous job as an assistant in a well-known national store for allegedly stealing sweets. This occurred two years ago and the incident actually made ...
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Cognitive Behavioural Therapy and Family Interventions for Psychosis.
... recognised as a significant aspect in the treatment of schizophrenia. This approach marked a paradigmatic shift in the way family members were viewed by clinicians and has led to efforts to improve communication between clinicians and carers. Recent years have ...
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Combined with an education programme about healthy lifestyles, evidence suggests that physical activity can make a substantial difference to patient prognosis, perhaps reducing mortality by as much as 20%-25%, over three years to cardiac patients.
... pressure.
Cholesterol:
Physical activity decreases low-density lipids - bad cholesterol - and triglyceride levels, and increases high-density lipids - good cholesterol - levels.
Osteoporosis:
Many women, especially after menopause, suffer from brittle bones (osteoporosis). Regular weight bearing physical activity - like walking ...
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Common Obsessions
... give you an idea of what symptoms these individuals have:
Common Obsessions Common Compulsions
1. Contamination fears of germs, dirt, ECT. Washing
2. Imagining having harmed self or others Repeating
3. Imagining losing control of aggressive urges Checking
4. Intrusive sexual thoughts or urges Touching
5. Excessive religious or moral doubt Counting
6. ...