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از ساعت 7 صبح تا 10 شب
ویرایش: [200 ed.]
نویسندگان: US Army medical department
سری: US Army medical course
ناشر: US Army medical department
سال نشر: 2006
تعداد صفحات: [202]
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 2 Mb
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Health Care Ethics II MD0067 به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب اخلاق مراقبت سلامت II MD0067 نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
LESSON 1 Section I: PATIENT CONSENT AND DISCLOSURE 1-1. INTRODUCTION 1-2. INFORMED CONSENT 1-3. CONSENT REQUIREMENTS 1-4. THE PHYSICIAN OBTAINS CONSENT 1-5. NATURE OF CONSENT 1-6. IMPLIED CONSENT 1-7. EXPRESS CONSENT 1-8. PROCEDURES REQUIRING EXPRESS CONSENT FROM MILITARY FAMILYMEMBERS 1-9. CONSENT NOT REQUIRED TO TREAT SERVICE MEMBERS 1-10. CONSENT NO DEFENSE AGAINST NEGLIGENCE 1-11. ELEMENTS OF INFORMED CONSENT 1-12. PURPOSE AND FORM OF ROUTINE WRITTEN CONSENT 1-13. MODELS OF INFORMED CONSENT EXERCISES, SECTION I SOLUTIONS, SECTION I Section II: DISCLOSURE 1-14. DISCLOSURE STANDARDS FOR INFORMED CONSENT 1-15. ELEMENTS OF DISCLOSURE 1-16. PURPOSE OF DISCLOSURE EXERCISES, SECTION II SOLUTIONS, SECTION II Section III: EXCEPTIONS TO DISCLOSURE 1-17. INTENTIONAL NONDISCLOSURE 1-18. THERAPEUTIC PRIVILEGE 1-19. EMERGENCIES 1-20. PATIENT WAIVER AND PRIOR PATIENT KNOWLEDGE 1-21. CONSENT IS NOT REQUIRED IN SOME EMERGENCIES 1-22. CONSENT NOT REQUIRED FOR TESTS UNDER POLICE ORDER EXERCISES, SECTION III SOLUTIONS, SECTION III Section IV: DECISION MAKERS IN CONSENT SITUATIONS 1-23. CONSENT FOR ONESELF 1-24. INCOMPETENT ADULTS 1-25. CONSENT FOR/BY MINORS 1-26. CONSENT FROM OTHER THAN PATIENT EXERCISES, SECTION IV SOLUTIONS, SECTION IV NOTES LESSON 2 Section I: THE RIGHT TO REFUSE TREATMENT 2-1. THE RIGHT TO CONSENT IMPLIES THE RIGHT TO REFUSE 2-2. COMMON LAW-BODILY INTEGRITY 2-3. THE RIGHT TO PRIVACY 2-4. FREEDOM OF RELIGION 2-5. REFUSAL ON BEHALF OF A MINOR 2-6. REFUSAL FOR AN INCOMPETENT ADULT 2-7. CRITERIA TO CONSIDER FOR INCOMPETENT ADULTS 2-8. DO NOT RESUSCITATE ORDER 2-9. WITHDRAWAL OF LIFE SUPPORT 2-10. REFUSAL IN AN EMERGENCY EXERCISES, SECTION I SOLUTIONS, SECTION I Section II: LIMITS ON THE RIGHT TO REFUSE 2-11. STATE INTERESTS 2-12. THE SANCTITY OF LIFE: PATIENT AUTONOMY OVER STATE INTERESTS 2-13. PRESERVING THE SANCTITY OF ALL LIFE: PUBLIC SAFETY ANDWELFARE 2-14. PRESERVING THE SANCTITY OF ALL LIFE: MINORS AND INCOMPETENTADULTS 2-15. PROTECTING INNOCENT THIRD PARTIES (DEPENDENTS) 2-16. IRRATIONAL SELF-DESTRUCTION 2-17. THE ETHICAL INTEGRITY OF THE HEALTH CARE PROFESSION EXERCISES, SECTION II SOLUTIONS, SECTION II NOTES LESSON 3 Section I: THE PHYSICAL RECORDS 3-1. MEDICAL RECORD DEFINED 3-2. THE PURPOSE OF A MEDICAL RECORD 3-3. CHARACTERISTICS OF A MEDICAL RECORD 3-4. COMPONENTS OF A MEDICAL RECORD EXERCISES, SECTION I SOLUTIONS, SECTION I Section II: PRIVACY AND CONFIDENTIALITY 3-5. THE PATIENT'S PRIVACY IN THE HOSPITAL 3-6. THE RIGHT OF PRIVACY 3-7. DEATH ENDS THE RIGHT TO PRIVACY, BUT NOT CONFIDENTIALITY 3-8. CONFIDENTIALITY 3-9. CONFIDENTIALITY VS INTRAHOSPITAL ACCESS TO INFORMATION 3-10. CONFIDENTIAL AND PRIVILEGED COMMUNICATION 3-11. CONFIDENTIALITY: FACTS AND FICTION EXERCISES, SECTION II SOLUTIONS, SECTION II Section III: CONFIDENTIALITY AND THE LAW 3-12. LEGAL RECOGNITION OF CONFIDENTIALITY 3-13. ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF CONFIDENTIALITY 3-14. LIMITATIONS ON CONFIDENTIALITY EXERCISES, SECTION III SOLUTIONS, SECTION III Section IV: ACCESS TO MEDICAL RECORDS 3-15. OWNERSHIP OF MEDICAL RECORDS 3-16. AVAILABILITY AND RELEASE OF MEDICAL RECORDS 3-17. MEDICAL RECORDS IN THE RADIOLOGY DEPARTMENT 3-18. DOCUMENTATION EXERCISES, SECTION IV SOLUTIONS TO EXERCISES, SECTION IV NOTES LESSON 4 Section I: TECHNICAL KNOWLEDGE REQUIRED 4-1. INTRODUCTION 4-2. REQUIRED KNOWLEDGE BASE 4-3. BASIC CURRICULUM EXERCISES, SECTION I SOLUTIONS, SECTION I Section II: PUTTING YOUR KNOWLEDGE BASE INTO PRACTICE 4-4. THE PRACTICE: PRACTICAL APPLICATION 4-5. SCOPE OF PRACTICE EXERCISES, SECTION II SOLUTIONS , SECTION II Section III: DUTIES BY SKILL LEVEL 4-6. SKILL LEVEL 1: 91P10 (E-1 THROUGH E-4) 4-7. SKILL LEVEL 2: 91P20 (E-5) 4-8. SKILL LEVEL 3: 91P30(E-6) 4-9. SKILL LEVEL 4, 91P40 (E-7) 4-10. SKILL LEVEL 5, 91P50 (E-8) EXERCISES, SECTION III SOLUTIONS, SECTION III Section IV: SITUATIONS WHICH MAY GIVE RISE TO ACTIONS FORLIABILITY FOR NEGLIGENCE 4-11. THE RADIOLOGIST 4-12. ON RADIOLOGY PERSONNEL TO KEEP ABREAST IN A RAPIDLYCHANGING FIELD 4-13. A CLOSER LOOK AT THE X-RAY TECHNOLOGIST 4-14. MISSED DIAGNOSES AND COMPLICATIONS 4-15. FAILURE TO X-RAY 4-16. RADIATION THERAPY INJURIES 4-17. SLIP-AND-FALL INJURIES 4-18. PREGNANCY 4-19. NEWER IMAGING MODALITIES 4-20. OVERSTEPPING ONE'S BOUNDS 4-21. FALLING SHORT OF THE SCOPE OF ONE'S DUTIES 4-22. AN OUNCE OF PREVENTION EXERCISES, SECTION IV SOLUTIONS, SECTION IV NOTES APPENDIX A APPENDIX B APPENDIX C GLOSSARY A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z