Cholesterol: A Patient Conversation Name SC121 October 27‚ 2014 Hello Mr. Brown‚ My name is Jane and I am your PA today otherwise known as a Physician’s Assistant. The doctor had ordered some test for you and I am going to go over your results and explain to you what each of them mean. If you have any questions please feel free to stop me at any time. First we will start off with your Triglyceride level and it was 145 mg/dl. Your Triglycerides is fat in the blood and they are used to provide
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Taking a patient profile face-to-face was beneficial to me because I could ask her how she was taking the medication and what other medication she was on. It also enabled me to understand the patient’s condition better and if there was anything that could be done to improve medication adherence. Talking to the patient allowed me to understand how the patient feels about her medication and how it fits into her lifestyle. It is important to understand this‚ as it would highlight if she is experiencing
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Patient Centered Outcomes Nursing 300: Foundations of Professional Nursing By: Jayme Shulman‚ RN 0ctober 28‚ 2012 America’s health care system has become very complex with a rise in health costs‚ patients with complex medical issues‚ and Medicare cuts. Nurses must find a way to juggle the health care industry while maintaining positive patient outcomes. Patients will either have good or bad outcomes during or after their care based on the decisions of the nurse and the interdisciplinary
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Pain management comparison in orthopaedics- patient controlled analgesia vs. femoral nerve blocks Picot question In adult patients with total hip or knee replacements‚ how effective is patient controlled analgesia pain management compared to femoral nerve block in controlling post operative pain within the first 24 hours after surgery? Importance to the science of nursing Major knee or total hip surgery is associated with severe postoperative pain
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of Medical Coding Final Test Name: ____Anne Bratkiewicz__________________________________ Matching 1. ICD-9 2. CPT 3. HCPCS 4. V Codes 5. E Codes 6. Main Term 7. AMA 8. CMS 9. NCD 10. LCD _8____ Codes that explain the reason for the visit when patient is not ill. __10___ Local Coverage Policy such as WPS‚ BCBS _5____ Codes used to describe circumstances around an injury‚ burn/fall. __2___ Translates written documentation of office visit‚ procedures‚ lab
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during chair rest after open-heart surgery. Pain 112‚ 197-203. 7. Sendelbach SE‚ Halm MA‚ Doran KA‚ Miller EH & Gaillard P (2006) Effects of music therapy on physiological and psychological outcomes for patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Journal of cardiovascular Nursing 21‚ 194-200. 8. Nilsson U (2009) Soothing music can increase oxytonin levels during bed rest after open-heart surgery: a randomized control trial. Journal of clinical Nursing 18‚ 2153-2161. 9. MacCaffrey R & Locsin RC
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INDISPENSABLE 2 Empathy - An Indispensable Ingredient Is empathy a productive tool to develop effective patient provider communication? How does empathy influence active listening in therapeutic care settings? What role‚ if any‚ does empathy play in the delivery of cultural competent health care? This paper will examine the positive impact of empathy in establishing trusting patient-provider therapeutic relationships and the benefits of "putting oneself into another ’s shoes." While "empathy
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Patient Falls and Prevention in Health Care Patient falls are a significant representation of adverse events in health care organizations worldwide. There are several common risk factors intrinsic to patients‚ which include reduced vision‚ musculoskeletal disease‚ altered mental state‚ history of falls‚ and other chronic diseases. Health care organizations are expected to focus on those intrinsic factors as well as the extrinsic‚ which are those present in their patient’s environment. For example
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New employees have a very difficult time figuring out the steps of processing a patient. Although‚ you take notes it seems to be confusing trying to figure out how to organize the steps in the proper order. Everyone does it differently; therefore‚ there is not a per-say right way to process a patient. First‚ the patient arrives at the office and signs in on our sign-in sheet. The registration staff scans in their insurance and driver’s license photo. Registration obtains and enters the patient’s
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The Patient Safety Movement Florida Institute of Technology According to patientsafetymovement.org (2013)‚ over 200‚000 patients die each year due to preventable causes. This is more than the number of deaths from lung‚ breast and prostate cancer combined. With such a high number of patients at risk of preventable death‚ the idea of patient safety moved to the forefront of medical discussions in the early 1990’s with the release of the Institute of Medicine’s report To Err is Human. The
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