Lack of teamwork clinical problem

Lack of teamwork clinical problem

Type of service:  Academic Writing

Work type:          Research paper

Format:      APA

Pages:        2 pages ( 550 words, Double spaced

Academic level:  Master’s

Discipline:  Nursing

Title: Writer’s choice

Number of sources:     3

Paper instructions:     

The purpose of this assignment is to identify a clinical problem/issue in your practice setting (ICU) that can compromise patient safety. You will use this problem/issue for Written Assignments 1, 2, and 3 in this course. Examples of a clinical problem/issue include lack of teamwork, problems or issues related to staffing, patient safety, failure to meet practice standards, communication, medication errors, and so on.

Avoid using any identifiers such as agency, employee, and/or patient names.

Write a 500- to 825-word scholarly paper (2 to 3 pages, not including the title and reference pages) that contains the following:

Introduction: Provide a brief introduction including a description of the clinical problem/issue that you have identified.

Literature Review to Support Your Introduction: Use a NJ State Library search interface such as OVID, ProQuest, or EBSCOhost to identify at least two articles to support your description of the problem. Apply the information from the sources to your identified issue/problem. What is the cause? What is the prevalence? Who does it affect? What is the cost? Discuss the impact on patient outcomes when this issue/problem exists.

Conclusion: Conclude your paper and summarize your clinical problem/issue and related literature review.

historical topic or event 1880-present day – African Americans, woman, the social effects of a military conflict, slavery and/or indentured servitude, colonization, Manifest Destiny, the Red Scares, labor and unions

historical topic or event 1880-present day – African Americans, woman, the social effects of a military conflict, slavery and/or indentured servitude, colonization, Manifest Destiny, the Red Scares, labor and unions

 Course Research Paper Guidelines

Subject:

          The Subject of this paper is to be over an event, a group of people,or a topic that pertains to this course.I end up getting a brief blow by blow of the war that does not qualify as a historical research paper. The student can choose any other topic that interested them as long as it is within the time frame we cover in class. The point of this paper is to make you somewhat of an entry level expert on this particular topic. Some examples of subjects could be African Americans, woman, the social effects of a military conflict, slavery and/or indentured servitude, colonization, Manifest Destiny, the Red Scares, labor and unions, the west etc.

Required Text and Sources:

          To write this research paper the student will need to use at least one secondary source. The book is a secondary source so the students will be able to write the entire paper only using the text book. With that said, the student is able to pull information from outside materials. This includes both primary and secondary sources. The source, however, must be scholarly and legitimate. If in doubt, please do not hesitate to ask me. No Wikipedia!

Length and Structure:

          This paper is to be four to six double spaced pages long. The paper should be written in size 12 Times New Roman font. The paper is to have one-inch margins, and the page length does not include notes or bibliography. The paper cannot be any longer than six pages. 

Thesis Statement:

          All historical works include a thesis statement as all texts are making an argument. As this is a history paper a thesis statement is required. The thesis statement is the argument that your paper is making, and should be present in the introductory paragraph/s. The main body of the essay should reinforce your argument or your thesis statement.

Overall Structure:

          The essay should be broken up into three distinct sections. The first section is comprised of your introduction, which includes your thesis statement. The second section should contain your body paragraphs that reinforce your thesis statement. The third section is your conclusion where you bring it all together.

Completion:

          The essay must be turned in both in class and online through the plagiarism checker. This is to ensure that the essay is the students own original work, and not simply copied and pasted from a website. If the report comes back from the plagiarism checker that the student did plagiarize then the student will receive a grade of zero and undergo the consequence of academic dishonesty as per the institution’s guidelines. If the student does not upload their paper to Turnitin they will automatically receive a zero.

Style:

          This research paper will be written in the Chicago Style. The Chicago Style is the style used by historians, and since this is a history paper Chicago Style is required. Below are examples of how to cite various sources in the Chicago Style. If the student fails to use Chicago style citation it is an automatic 20 points off even if they cite MLA.

Book:

Authors First Name Last Name, Title of the Book (Place of Publication: Publishers Name, Date of Publication), Page Numbers.

James Oaks, Et Al, Of the People: A History of the United States to 1877 (New York: Oxford University Press, 2017), 133-134.

Et Al is only used if the book has more than two authors

*** If you use the same book more than once you do not have to use this long citation after the first time citing the book. *** example below:

Author’s Last Name, Page Number(s)

Oaks, Et Al, 276-277

Academic Journal:

Authors First Name Last Name, “Title of Journal Article,” Title of Journal Volume Number (Date of Publication): Page Numbers.

Pramod K. Nayer, “Marvelous Excesses: English Travel Writing and India, 1680-1727,” Journal of British Studies 44, No. 2 (April 2005): 213.

You can use the shortened version of the citation here after using the long citation first.

Manuscript or Letter:

Authors Name, What the Document is, date of the document, Where you found the document i.e. what collection the document was found, collection number, where that collection is located.

James Oglethorpe to the Trustees, January 13, 1733, Phillipps Collection of Egmont Manuscripts, 14200:13, University of Georgia Library, Athens.

You can use the shortened version of the citation here after using the long citation first.

Website:

Author, “title of the page”, Title of the website, URL, Access Date

Kyle Dalton, “Revolt of the Marlborough: The Toll of Captain Codd”, British Tars 1740-1790, http://www.britishtars.com/2016/08/revolt-of-marlborough-toll-of-captain.html, Accessed September 16, 2017.

There is no shortened version of a website citation. You must use the long citation every time.

Lecture:

Speaker, title or topic presented, location, date.

Professor Amber Jolly, The English Civil War, Tarrant County College: Southeast Campus, Day 2 Week 3 Fall 2017.

There is no shortened version of a lecture citation. You must use the long citation every time.

Inserting footnotes in Chicago style formatting:

If you use WORD:

Place the cursor at the end of your sentence or wherever you want the citation.

Go to References then click on AB1 insert footnote

It will automatically place a number where your cursor is and drop you to the bottom of the page. The bottom of the page is where you will type your citation. DO NOT USE A CITATION GENERATOR!

If you use Google Docs:

Place the cursor at the end of your sentence or wherever you want the citation.

Go to insert then footnote

It will automatically place a number where your cursor is and drop you to the bottom of the page. The bottom of the page is where you will type your citation. DO NOT USE A CITATION GENERATOR!

If you use Google Docs make sure that you download your paper as a word document. So, go to file then click on download as Microsoft word. It’s that simple. You must do this before you attempt to upload your paper to Turnitin but ONLY if you use Google Docs.

To turn your paper in to Turnitin just click on the research paper tab if you are a blackboard user at TCC or go to assignments and then click on research paper if you are a Canvas user at Collin College then follow the steps to upload the paper.

JSTOR is a very helpful place to go to find a lot of sources for almost any topic. They are journal articles. How to access JSTOR:

TCC:

Sign into tccd.edu and go all the way down to the bottom of the page and click on libraries

TCC article databases click down arrow and go to JSTOR

Type a subject ie: women in the 1920s

Collin:

sign into collin.edu and go to cougar web login

at the top left click on libraries

go to find articles in databases and click on the letter J

then click on JSTOR and search a topic ie: 19th century Irish immigration

Patient safety

Patient safety

Work type:          Discussion Essay

Format:      APA

Pages:        1 pages ( 275 words, Double spaced

Academic level:  Master’s

Discipline:  Nursing

Title: Discussion 6

Number of sources:     2

Paper instructions:     

In Discussion Forum 6, post your response to the following discussion question. Reply to at least two classmates’ responses by the date indicated in the Course Calendar. Your post should be 250 to 350 words.

After reading the information from the World Health Organization, go to a NJ State Library search interface such as CINAHL, ProQuest, or EBSCOhost and search for an article on patient safety in another country. Write a brief summary of the problem, including why it is a problem and what, if anything, is being done to alleviate it. How does the problem affect nursing? What are some possible solutions that could involve nurses? [MO 3.1]

https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/patient-safety

The impact of cotton intensification in Central Asia

The impact of cotton intensification in Central Asia

Work type:          Research paper

Format:      APA

Pages:        6 pages ( 1650 words, Double spaced

Academic level:  Undergrad. (yrs 1-2)

Discipline:  Natural Sciences

Title: APPENDIX 2 Optional Final Research Paper Instructions

Number of sources:     3

Paper instructions:     

APPENDIX 2

Optional Final Research Paper Instructions.

Instructions attached

Lecturer advice write this assignment using this two topics. 

1.) Discuss the impact of cotton intensification in Central Asia. And How and why was cotton put into this dry region?

2.) Discuss the multiple issues associated with the drying up of the Aral Sea, especially on the local Karakalpak population?

APPENDIX 2

Optional Final Research Paper Instructions

Instructions for Optional Final Critical Analysis Research Paper:

This paper is designed around the idea that you will further develop and compare one of the general themes or case studies discussed in class (or will be discussed or is directly related to the themes covered during class). These topic is for you to choose, but some ideas can be an analysis such topics as resource extraction issues, desertification, hyper-urbanism, hyper-industrialization to the impacts of river damming, deforestation, and agricultural intensification, conflict minerals, etc. The analysis must be focused on the regions/countries discussed in class (Africa, Middle East, Central, Eastern, South, and Southeast Asia) and compared with one or more regions within our study area that have similar issues.

This paper is intended to be a critical analysis of the theme/topic you choose, so you must look at all sides of the debate surrounding the issue. Questions you can ask include: How has the definition of the theme/topic changed over time? How is the issue used or misused politically/socially/environmentally in our study areas? What are the various scales that are impacted? What evidence is found on-the-ground in support of, or contradictory to, your topic—positive and negative examples? Are there alternatives, lights at the end of the tunnel, or course corrections that you can identify through your research?

Paper Requirements:

1) Six (minimum) to eight—or more–(complete) double-spaced pages with 1” or 1.25” margins and in Times New Roman 12pt font. Please number your pages. Include your name and the title/topic in the header of the first page or on a cover page. Do not include this in the body of the paper.

2) The paper must have a clear thesis statement (what you will look at specifically in the paper or the questions you will ask—basically, what you are going to prove or disprove in the paper) and a solid conclusion that ties the whole paper together.

3) The paper must be clear and grammatically correct.

  • No contractions and no colloquial statements
  • Remember, you cannot “know” what authors are thinking, you have to find references to it in their work
  • When using block quotes be sure to single space and “tab” the entire quote over once.

4) You must use (drawing important quotes into your text) a minimum of four outside, peer-reviewed, academic sources (journal articles and books), but try for more— and no internet sites.

  • Try to find sources younger than 20 years (1990s and 2000’s)
  • You need to incorporate the ideas of experts in the field into your paper whether you agree or disagree with them
  • Do not use quotes that state obvious points, rather use ones that are essential to furthering your argument.

What do not count as sources:

  1. Internet sites (the internet may be used only to find online copies of journals through the library webpage).
  2. Sources that are three pages or less.
  3. Encyclopedias
  4. Newspaper articles (unless prior approval is given)
  5. Other introductory Environmental, Science or World Regional textbooks (can be used for further reading or clarification but are generally not interpretive).

5) Be sure to incorporate any outside sources covered in class when applicable. Vague mention with no references are not acceptable.

6) Include a Works Cited page at the end (see bibliography format below). This is a separate page and does not fulfill the 6-page minimum above.

7) Please upload a copy of the paper to the “Optional Extra Credit Research Paper” on the course’s Canvas site.

8) Everyone must discuss their topic with me well in advance of submitting the paper.

Extra Bits:

Possible Paper Format

  1. Introductory paragraph (thesis statement or research questions)
  2. Literature review section/paragraph (not always applicable, but a discussion of how others have approached your topic in the past)
  3. Analysis paragraphs (your discussion of the topic using a combination of original sources, scholarly interpretation and your own interpretations)
  4. Conclusions section/ paragraph (final summary of your discussion, review of your thesis and what you found)      

Thesis Statement:

Thesis statements should be clear, concise, and compelling. It should not only say what you are going to do in the paper but also how you are going to do it (what sources you will use, what questions you will ask, etc). An example is:

“. . .  Drawing from the works of Jones (1987), Smith (2004), Inwood (1998) and Norseman (1976), I will examine the changing definition of desertification and how the process is reflected in the changing ecosystem of the Aral Sea region in Central Asia.”

Quoting in the paper:

Use of block quotes to be at a minimum (no more than two or three block quotes of 4-5 lines).

Block quotes are used for quotes over four lines long and need to be separated from the text, single spaced, and tabbed over.

– If you use someone else’s exact words put them in “quotation marks” and cite them

– If you paraphrase (not exact words but their ideas are the same) cite the author and year with page numbers when possible.

Word of advice: when in doubt, include a citation. Using someone else’s words or unique ideas without citation is plagiarism and will result in a failing grade (“History repeats itself” does not need a citation).

Citation Types:

Parenthetical citation: an exact quote is cited with “quotation marks” and the author, year, and page numbers are given: (Sourvinou-Inwood 1998 pg 204).

Endnotes are fine but do not count to satisfy paper length requirements.

Bibliography Style:

Be sure to alphabetize your bibliography. Any accepted style is fine as long as the author’s name, year, the title, place of publication, and publisher is present. I personally prefer the Chicago 14b style:

Smith, John. 2007. Conflicts Over Nature. Granville: Denison University Press.

For journal articles:

Smith, John. 2006. “Humans and the Environment” in Journal of Human-

Environment  Interaction 26: 2, pp 123-165.

Grading Rubric:

What I will look for (and reduce your grade if you do not include these points in light of those mentioned in 1) through 8) above):

Thesis statement:

          Is the introduction clear and essential to the purpose of the paper (no stories)?

Is the thesis of the paper basic or advanced?

Is there a description what sources they will use or questions to be asked?

Use of scholarly sources:

          Quotations from multiple pages from the outside sources

          All authors quoted and cited

          Use of citations to further the thesis

          Do the works cited in the paper match those in the bibliography?

Complexity of the argument:

          How well does the paper integrate the thesis?

          Does the paper actually follow the thesis?

          Are all sides of the issue investigated?

Is the discussion basic or does it go into the issues surrounding the question?   

Clear and grammatically correct prose:

          No colloquialisms or contractions

          No wild assumptions or judgmental words

          No misspellings and wrong words

Conclusions:

          Are the goals of the paper adequately fulfilled?

          Does the conclusion wrap the paper up (good) or introduce new ideas (bad)?

          Does the conclusion show that the author thought about the topic?

Applying Research Results: Social Policy

Applying Research Results: Social Policy

  1. Research on human development has an influence on social policy.  Throughout the text, connections between human development research and social policy will be made.
  2. These connections are broad ranging and include areas that many of us may take for granted.  For example, lead-based paint cannot be used anymore in the U.S. because several research studies showed that exposure to lead-based paint had a negative impact on children’s brain development.
  3. Research on human development provides many insights into what makes people do the things they do.  Human development research also provides ways to improve quality of life. 
  4. Stem cell research, a very controversial topic, is explored in the section on Current Controversies.  Stem cell research has far-reaching implications.

Communicating Research Results

Communicating Research Results

  1. When a researcher completes a study, a report will be written describing it.  This report will be submitted for publication to one of several scientific journals that specialize in human development research.
  2. For a human development researcher, part of the benefits of conducting research is planning a study that no one has done before and, as a result of that research, being able to provide useful information to other specialists in the field or related fields of study.

Conducting Research Ethically

Conducting Research Ethically

  1. Minimize risks to research participants.
  2. Describe the research to potential participants.
  3. Avoid deception.
  4. Make results anonymous or confidential.

Designs for Studying Development

Designs for Studying Development

  1. Longitudinal studies observe or test the same individuals (a single cohort) repeatedly at different points in their lives.  This approach studies development over time and is the most direct way to watch development occur.  These studies have several limitations, such as participant dropout and repeated testing effects.
    1. Microgenetic study is a special type of longitudinal design in which participants are tested repeatedly over a span of days or weeks, typically with the aim of observing change directly as it occurs.  These types of studies are useful in tracking change as a result of intervention.
    1. Cross-sectional designs compare groups of people varying in age at one point in time.  These studies only uncover age differences and are subject to the cohort effect.
    1. Cohort effects are problems with cross-sectional designs in which differences between age groups (cohorts) may result as easily from environmental events as from developmental processes.
    1. Sequential designs are multiple cross-sectional or longitudinal studies.
    1. Meta-analysis is a tool that allows researchers to synthesize the results of many studies to estimate relations between variables.

General Designs for Research

General Designs for Research

  1. Correlational studiesallow the researcher to investigate relationships between variables.  A correlation coefficient expresses the strength and direction of a relation between two variables.
  2. Experimental studies involve systematically manipulating key factor(s) that the investigator thinks causes a particular behavior.
  3. Independent variable is the variable being manipulated (cause).
  4. Dependent variable is the behavior being observed (effect or outcome).
  5. The qualitative research method involves gaining in-depth understanding of human behavior and what governs it by attempting to uncover reasons underlying various aspects of behavior.

Doing Developmental Research

Doing Developmental Research

  1. Measurement in Human Development
  2. Systematic observation involves watching people and recording what they do in a natural setting, naturalistic observation, or in a setting created by the researcher for structured observation.
  3. Sampling behavior with tasks is used when a behavior cannot be observed directly.  A task is created to sample the behavior of interest.
  4. Self-reports are people’s answers to questions about the topic of interest.
  5. Physiological measures involve measuring people’s physiological responses, such as heart rate, cortisol levels, and brain activity, to focus on a particular aspect of a person’s behavior.
  6. Reliability and validity refer to the extent to which a measure provides a consistent index of a characteristic (reliability) and whether it really measures what we think it measures (validity).
  7. Representative sampling must reflect the characteristics of the population of interest.