norms at home‚ in school‚ in church‚ or in other social settings. Human rights: The basic rights and freedoms‚ to which all humans are entitled‚ often held to include the right to life and liberty‚ freedom of thought and expression‚ and equality before the law. I would like to talk to you about privacy and confidentiality. Privacy: the quality or condition of being secluded from the presence or view of others. (http://www.answers.com/topic ) Confidentiality: Containing information whose unauthorized
Premium Ethics Morality Philosophy
Unit three: Principles of managing information and producing documents Assessment You should use this file to complete your Assessment. • The first thing you need to do is save a copy of this document‚ either onto your computer or a disk • Then work through your Assessment‚ remembering to save your work regularly • When you’ve finished‚ print out a copy to keep for reference • Then‚ go to www.vision2learn.com and send your completed Assessment to your tutor via your My Study area – make
Premium Research Data Protection Act 1998 The Used
r boundariesAlexandra Akanel Assignment 4 Task 4 (2.1 and 2.3) Boundaries Boundaries ground our ethics and they are important to recognising our limitations and realising when change is needed. Obvious boundaries such as the appropriateness of the teacher/learner relationship are strong ethical issues. As teachers‚ we need to maintain and model a standard of morality and protect ourselves from intrusion into our personal life and space. This can prove quite difficult because we are
Premium Morality Ethics Psychology
Patient Confidentiality: Ethical Implications to Nursing Practice Patient Confidentiality: Ethical Implications to Nursing Practice Patient confidentiality is a fundamental practice in healthcare and it is integral part of healthcare ethical standards (Purtilo & Dougherty‚ 2010). According to the American Nurses Association (ANA) code of ethics “the nurse has a duty to maintain confidentiality of all patient information” (Nursing world‚ p.6). Also‚ when a patient confidentiality
Premium Ethics Health care
Management Information Systems (MIS) 2011/2012 Lecture … (6) 2. Organizational Dimensions of Information The Organizational Dimensions of Information includes information flows‚ information granularity‚ and what information describes. A. Information Flows Information in an organization flows in four directions: up‚ down‚ horizontally‚ and inward/outward. To consider these flows‚ let’s briefly review the structure of an organization. Most people view a traditional organization as a pyramid
Premium Knowledge management Management Management information system
HIM Principles in Health Information Exchange HIM Principles in Health Information Exchange (Practice Brief) Emerging health information exchange initiatives must focus on more than their IT model. They must make important early decisions on HIM issues that hard-wire data quality‚ privacy‚ and security into the network‚ ensuring that the ultimate goals of improved patient safety and quality of care are met. The value of electronic healthcare data exchange was demonstrated in the aftermath
Premium Health care Health informatics Medicine
estimated that a three year old child has 1‚000 trillion synapses‚ and since number of synapses decreases with age until it stabilises in adulthood it is estimated the average adult has between 100 and 500 trillion synapses.(Wikipedia contributors (2006). When looking at the brain in this context‚ you can appreciate the sheer complexity of it and that looking at the functioning of a single synapse is a mammoth achievement of science.
Premium Neuron Action potential
specific examples. How may this book be used to help shape a teacher ’s philosophy and effectiveness? The book Lives on the Boundary‚ written by Mike Rose‚ provides great insight to what the new teaching professional may anticipate in the classroom. This book may be used to inform a teacher ’s philosophy and may render the teacher more effective. Lives on the Boundary is a first person account composed of eight chapters each of which treat a different obstacle faced by Mike Rose in his years as
Free Education Teacher School
CONCEPT ANALYSIS 2. PROFESSIONAL BOUNDARIES Professional boundaries separate therapeutic behavior of the registered nurse from any behavior which‚ well intentioned or not‚ could lessen the benefit of care to clients‚ families‚ and communities. Merriam-Webster’s dictionary (11th ed.). (2005) defines “boundary” as some thing that indicates or fixes a limit. Being clear about professional boundaries ; nurses must maintain their professional boundaries and be aware of events or situations
Premium Nursing
If a client begins to make a disclosure of abuse it is important to ensure privacy and confidentiality. It is necessary to show that listening skills are employed and that I remain calm and receptive. I must listen without interruption and make it clear that I am taking their disclosure seriously. I must only ask questions of clarification if I am unclear as to what the vulnerable adult is saying. It is important that I acknowledge their courage in coming forward and tell them that they are not responsible
Premium