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Showing 1461 - 1470 of 1999 for Education & Learning

True Grit: Promoting Student Resiliency Through Interprofessional Education (IPE)

Health professional students must learn how to be resilient.  Today’s global society is increasingly diverse and complex requiring resiliency to successfully navigate challenges in the workplace.  Healthcare students learn core knowledge, skills, attitudes and values and are asked to quickly apply learning to a clinical or functional setting.  Their ability to move from receiving direct instruction to clinical practice is facilitated through supervised interprofessional training in simulation, experiential opportunities, and co-curricular settings that develop practitioner re

The Silent Treatment: Why Safety Tools and Checklists Aren’t Enough to Save Lives

 

Silence Kills was conducted immediately before AACN’s national standards for healthy work environments were released. It identified seven concerns that often go undiscussed and contribute to avoidable medical errors. It linked the ability of health professionals to discuss emotionally and politically risky topics in a healthcare setting to key results like patient safety, quality of care, and nursing turnover, among others.

The Impact of a Multidisciplinary, Student-Run, Free Clinic on Health Professional Students’ Attitudes Towards the Underserved and Interprofessionalism

To determine the impact of a multidisciplinary, student-run, free clinic on health professional students’ attitudes towards the underserved and interprofessionalism attitudes and skills. We hypothesize that these students will show better attitudes and skills than those students not volunteering in the clinic. Many health professional schools find it challenging to teach interprofessionalism in a way that is both valued by students and impactful on the outcome of changing the attitudes and behaviors towards students from other professions.

Brian Sick - May 26, 2015

The American Society of Clinical Laboratory Science Code of ethics

The Code of Ethics of the American Society for Clinical Laboratory Science sets forth the principles and standards by which clinical laboratory professionals practice their profession.

The American Public Health Association Code of ethics

A code of ethics for public health can clarify the distinctive elements of public health and the ethical principles that follow from or respond to those elements. It can make clear to populations and communities the ideals of the public health institutions that serve them, ideals for which the institutions can be held accountable.

The American Nurses Association- Code of Ethics for Nurses

The Code of Ethics for Nurses establishes the ethical standard for the professional and provides a guide for nurses to use in ethical analysis and decision making.

The American Medical Association Code of ethics

The medical profession has long subscribed to a body of ethical statements developed primarily for the benefit of the patient. As a member of this profession, a physician must recognize responsibility to patients first and foremost, as well as to society, to other health professionals, and to self. The following Principles adopted by the American Medical Association are not laws, but standards of conduct which define the essentials of honorable behavior for the physician.

The American Dental Hygienists Association Code of ethics

The purpose of a professional code of ethics is to achieve high levels of ethical consciousness, decision making, and practice by the members of the profession. Specific objectives of the Dental Hygiene Code of Ethics are:

  • to increase our professional and ethical consciousness and sense of ethical responsibility.

  • to lead us to recognize ethical issues and choices and to guide us in making more informed ethical decisions.

  • to establish a standard for professional judgment and conduct.

The American Dental Association Code of ethics and professional conduct

The ADA Code is, in effect, a written expression of the obligations arising from the implied contract between the dental profession and society.

Members of the ADA voluntarily agree to abide by the ADA Code as a condition of membership in the Association. They recognize that continued public trust in the dental profession is based on the commitment of individual dentists to high ethical standards of conduct.

The ADA Code has three main components: The Principles of Ethics, the Code of Professional Conduct and the Advisory Opinions.

Technologies for interprofessional education: the interprofessional education-distributed "e-Classroom-of-the-Future

Communications strategies are central to the planning and execution of interprofessional education (IPE) programs. The diversity of telecommunications-based tools and platforms available for IPE is rapidly expanding. Each tool and platform has a potentially important role to play. The selection, testing, and embedding of tools, such as social networking platforms, within education programs can be very challenging.

Ronald Weinstein - May 26, 2015