"Explain the importance of the following principles in the use of medication consent" Essays and Research Papers

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    HSC 3047 Support use of medication in social care settings 1.1 Identify legislation that governs the use of medication in social care settings The Medicines Act 1968 Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 COSHH The Mental Capacity Act 2005 The Misuse of Drugs Safe Custody Regulations The Data Protection Act 1998 plus equality legislation The Access to Health Records Act 1990 1.2 Outline the legal classification system for medication The classification system relates to The

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    Medication

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    Vitamin Description An organic chemical compound (or related set of compounds) is called a vitamin when it cannot be synthesized in sufficient quantities by an organism‚ and must be obtained from the diet. Thus‚ the term is conditional both on the circumstances and on the particular organism. For example‚ ascorbic acid (vitamin C) is a vitamin for humans‚ but not for most other animals‚ and biotin and vitamin D are required in the human diet only in certain circumstances. By convention‚ the term vitamin does

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    Informed Consent

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    Paper Informed Consent in Industrial/Psychological Research July 31‚ 2011 Foundations of Industrial/Organizational Psychology Abstract There are certain conditions where reasonable exceptions that APA ethical standards and federal guidelines insure in research that human participation will be ethical due to informed consent. In federal guidelines the preferred mechanism is informed consent in order to protect the human participants (APA‚ 1992). Informed Consent Informed

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    Task 01 1.1 explain the principles of project management Project: A project is a finalized set of activities and actions by a "project team" under the responsibility of a project manager in order to meet a defined need within fixed deadlines and within the limits of allocated budget. Examples of famous projects include the "Manhattan Project"‚ etc. Project Management: Project Management is the dynamic process that utilizes the acceptable resources of the organization in a controlled and structured

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    The Defects of Consent

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    Defects of Consent A defect of consent is a situation where a party’s declaration does not reflect his actual intent. This difference between declaration and intent may be caused by other parties‚in order to make someone to form a contract with themselves. Fraud and Duress are this kind of defects. Roughly‚fraud is deceiving someone by hiding certain facts or giving them a wrong impression/information in order to make them form a contract and duress is scaring or threatening someone to make

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    Oapa and Consent

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    equipment from his work as he left at the end of his day. However‚ because he was borrowing the equipment without his employer’s permission Tom was not able to sterilise the equipment prior to taking it. Robert has had extensive training on the importance of properly sterilising equipment prior to using it in order to minimise the risk of transmitting blood-borne diseases. Robert completes Tom’s tattoo and returns the borrowed equipment to his employer the next day. He is later shocked to learn that

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    fossil fuel reserves and more than 60 percent of the world’s fuel reserves. Not only that‚ but the United States has about 275 billion tons of recoverable coal‚ which could last us more than 250 years if we continue using coal at the same rate as we use it today. So here is the question. Why would you want to get rid of coal fired power plants that give people jobs‚ is easy to mine and is plentiful and inexpensive for the alternative which is inconsistent and

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    informed consent

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    New York’s Law on Informed Consent Kimberly Smith July 6‚ 2015 Instructor: Lynn Beideck CJHS/430 Informed Consent The idea of cognizant permission has continuously remained protuberant in social work. Constant with social workers’ long-lasting grip of the code of consumer autonomy‚ cognizant permission processes call for social workers to attain consumers’ go-ahead before discharging private info to third parties; permitting consumers to be photo ’d‚ videoed‚ or audiotaped

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    unit44 medication

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    Unit 44 Administer medication to individuals and monitor the effects Learning outcome 1 Understand legislation‚ policy and procedures relevant to administration of medication 1.1. Identify current legislation‚ guidelines policies and protocols relevant to the administration of medication There are many acts and regulation around the care and control of medication. The two most important and relevant ones are The Medicines Act 1968 and The Misuse of Drugs Act 1972. The Medicines Act outlines the

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    Administering of Medications/Drugs Objectives: 1. Describe how medications are stored and supplied in healthcare facilities. • Most healthcare facilities have a “med room” or separate area for medications. • The facility may store medications in locked movable carts that allow nurses to prepare medications in close proximity to client’s room. • Some medications require refrigeration to preserve their chemical properties. • Most acute care facilities use some sort of computerized dispensing

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