[Solved] Nurse Administering Incorrect Medication

[Solved] Nurse Administering Incorrect Medication

Impact of Active vs. Latent Errors in HealthcareIn the realm of healthcare, there are two categories of errors that one must take into consideration: active and latent. Immediate in nature, active errors bring about an instantaneous impact on patient care. Healthcare providers bear responsibility for these types of mistakes which can entail a nurse administering incorrect medication or a surgeon blemishing a procedure (Institute for Healthcare Improvement, 2021). 

[Solved] Provide Information Without Forming

[Solved] Provide Information Without Forming

ESSAY 1 PROMPT

Many instructors write their assignment prompts differently. By following a few steps, you can better understandthe requirements for the assignment. The best way, as always, is to ask the instructor about anything confusing.1. Read the prompt the entire way through once. This gives you an overall view of what is going on.2. Underline or circle the portions that you absolutely must know. This information may include due date,research (source) requirements, page length, and format (MLA, APA, CMS).3. Underline or circle important phrases. You should know your instructor at least a little by now – whatphrases do they use in class? Does he repeatedly say a specific word? If these are in the prompt, you knowthe instructor wants you to use them in the assignment.4. Think about how you will address the prompt. The prompt contains clues on how to write theassignment. Your instructor will often describe the ideas they want discussed either in questions, in bulletpoints, or in the text of the prompt. Think about each of these sentences and number them so that you canwrite a paragraph or section of your essay on that portion if necessary.5. Rank ideas in descending order, from most important to least important. Instructors may include morequestions or talking points than you can cover in your assignment, so rank them in the order you think ismore important. One area of the prompt may be more interesting to you than another.6. Ask your instructor questions if you have any.

After you are finished with these steps, ask yourself the following:1. What is the purpose of this assignment? Is my purpose to provide information without forming anargument, to construct an argument based on research, or analyze a poem and discuss its imagery?2. Who is my audience? Is my instructor my only audience? Who else might read this? Will it be postedonline? What are my readers’ needs and expectations?3. What resources do I need to begin work? Do I need to conduct literature (hermeneutic or historical)research, or do I need to review important literature on the topic and then conduct empirical research, suchas a survey or an observation? How many sources are required?4. Who – beyond my instructor – can I contact to help me if I have questions? Do you have a writing lab orstudent service center that offers tutorials in writing

[Solved] Memo Template • Maximum

[Solved] Memo Template • Maximum

Overview:

Imagine that you are a paralegal in law firm. You have been tasked with drafting the initial memo regarding the case of a new client to the firm, Ms. Baker. After interviewing Ms. Baker, you learned the following:

Ms. Baker, a resident of Connecticut, was on road trip to visit the world’s largest ball of twine in Cawker City, Kansas. When she was driving in Kansas, her car was hit from behind by Ms. Smith, a Kansas resident. Unfortunately, Ms. Baker’s car was totaled, she suffered injuries, emotional distress and lost time from work. Her damages exceeded $75,000. The police determined the accident was wholly the faulty of Ms. Smith.

Instructions:

• Use the attached Memo template.

• Draft an office memorandum to your supervising attorney in which you answer

the following questions:

• Can this case be filed in federal court? Why? (HINT: See Diversity

Jurisdiction)

• Identify and explain the first document that the firm should file in court on

behalf of Ms. Baker that will let Ms. Smith know that she is being sued.

• Identify what information should be sought in discovery.

• Identify and explain witnesses that should be called on behalf of Ms.

Baker at trial.

• Would ADR be helpful in this case? Why?

Requirements:

• Use APA format for non-legal sources such as the textbook. Use Bluebook citation format for any legal citations.

• Submit a Word document using the Memo template.

• Maximum two pages in length, excluding the Reference page.

Copyright 2022 Post University, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Be sure to read the criteria below by which your work will be evaluated before you write and again after you write.

That’s the format she wants us to use thank you 

LAW204 – Business Law I

Memorandum

To:

From: Your Name

CC: Other recipients

Subject: 

References

[Solved] Formerly Enslaved Peoples Drew

[Solved] Formerly Enslaved Peoples Drew

In 400-600 words reflect on the major underlying geographical representations of a film, TV show, music video, or novel that deals with power and inequality in some way.

  • First, select the film/TV show/music video/video game/novel that interests you and watch or read it carefully. You may want to choose something you’ve already seen or read, or you may want to choose something new, it’s up to you.
  • Second, state the name of the film/TV show/music video/novel, the author, and the year it was released, and briefly summarize the plot, setting, and characters of the story in two or three sentences. Dedicate the bulk of the assignment to reflecting on the way that space and place figure in the story and the specific ways that various places and relationships between places are portrayed.
  • Finally, how do the geographical representations in the story generate implicit feelings and understandings about inequality?

Evaluation

  • The student has stated the title, author, release date, and summarized the plot, setting, and characters of the story in two-three sentences (2% of final course grade);
  • The student has clearly explained how space and place figure in the story and how specific places are portrayed (4% of final course grade);
  • The student has explained how the geographical representations in the story generate implicit feelings and understandings about inequality (4% of final course grade).

Readings:

This unit invites us to consider the definition of culture and its relationship to geography and inequality. Raymond Williams introduces a “social definition” of culture, which takes into account not only the formal works of art that comprise usual definitions of culture, but the much wider set of institutions, practices, and habits – each with its own set of conscious and unconscious meanings and values – that make up a given way of thinking and living. Williams is concerned with the character of the relationship between “culture” and “social context”, resisting the idea that social context totally determines culture and equally opposing the notion that cultural production can be considered apart from its given social context. Instead, Williams proposes “the study of relationships between elements in a whole way of life” towards producing “a sense of the ways in which the particular activities combined into a way of thinking and living” (Williams 1998, 52). Ruth Wilson Gilmore takes up Williams’ concept of “structures of feeling” in her discussion of “abolition geography”. Gilmore defines the latter as an ongoing tradition of making and remaking the world according to principles of freedom and equality. Taking the abolition of slavery in the US as an example, Gilmore emphasizes how formerly enslaved peoples drew upon a rich culture – a set of sensibilities, dependencies, talents, consciousness, and capacity – to remake the US South as a place of freedom during reconstruction.

  • Williams, Raymond. 1998. The Analysis of Culture. In Cultural Theory an Popular Culture: A Reader, Second Edition. Storey, John (ed.) Athens: University of Georgia Press. pp. 48-56.
  • Williams, Raymond. 1977. Structures of Feeling. In Marxism and Literature. Oxford University Press. pp.132-135 only.
  • Williams, R. (1985). Culture. In Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society. Oxford University Press.
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmjgPxElk7A
  • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iQzpExpsezI

[Solved] Let Say Gabriel Met

[Solved] Let Say Gabriel Met

Gabriel Feitosa Dog Grooming

Watch the CNBC video above and answer the following 5 questions:

NOTE- a full page of text is likely needed for thorough answers.

  1. Assume Gabriel choose a Sole Proprietorship structure, what could be his concerns for choosing that option? 
  2. If Gabriel wanted to raise money from outside investors, what structure option might he choose?; Would you invest in his business? why/why not?
  3. Let say Gabriel met someone who he thinks might be a good business partner, what could be the items most important to address and discuss in a Partnership Agreement?
  4. Why do you think Gabriel has been successful?
  5. Are you inspired by the business that Gabriel has created? If so, why?

[Solved] Submitted Electronically Via Brightspace

[Solved] Submitted Electronically Via Brightspace

All written assignments will be submitted electronically via Brightspace and will include: 1. 1” margins 2. 12 Font (Times New Roman or Garamond) 3. Double spacing 4. numbered pages (do not number the cover page) 5. Citations and bibliography as appropriate (depending on assignment).  

A. Research Proposal & Annotated Bibliography: You will submit a 5–6-page proposal that identifies the topic you plan to engage in your research essay. You should include at least 4 secondary sources you anticipate will prove helpful to your research. Each source should be fully cited in accordance with formal citation practices. 

My research Topic (The increasingly significant role of the youth in transforming Africa)  

Side note (Do not use news outlets)  

[Solved] Police Force Enable Effective

[Solved] Police Force Enable Effective

PLAGIARISM FREE PLEASE!!

WRITTEN SPEECH OF 700-1,050 WORDS

Exam Content

Police organizations are instruments through which policing services are organized and delivered to the public. The primary function of the police force is crime prevention. As an aspiring police officer, it is crucial to understand how the organizational structure of the police department and its various practices influence its day-to-day functions.

Imagine you have completed your probationary period and are being interviewed for the post of a police officer. Your hiring officer wants to evaluate your understanding of the practical implications of police theory and practices on its functions of crime prevention and keeping order.

Respond to the questions provided below. Do your research and choose 1 of the following formats to document your responses to your hiring officer:

  • A written speech of 700-1,050 words
  • A recorded video of 5-7 minutes (if you choose to record a video of yourself, please see the note at the end of this assignment)
  • Why are you interested in a career in law enforcement?
  • Does legitimacy in the police force enable effective crime-fighting? Explain how.
  • Is problem-oriented policing an answer to building partnerships with the public? Explain why.
  • Is civilianization a beneficial practice in police work? Provide reasons to support your answer.
  • What are the positive and negative impacts of bureaucracy on communication within a police department?
  • Which type of mentality makes the best police officer: warrior or guardian? Explain why.
  • Is the code of silence the desired police subculture? Explain why.
  • What impact has been seen with the inclusion of women and minorities in the police force?
  • How is crime control influenced by the contingency theory?
  • How does the environment in which police organizations function influence their operational activities? Explain your reasoning in context with the appropriate policing theory.

[Solved] High School Class Visiting

[Solved] High School Class Visiting

PLAGIARISM FREE!

Assignment Content

Because of personal experiences and stories in the media, there are many different opinions on the police. To work in the field of policing in today’s environment, it is important to understand the past and those who have had an impact.

Imagine you are a police officer who is requested to address a high school class visiting the police precinct. The topics will include the history and evolution of police in America and the various police departments that come under the purview of law enforcement.

Consider the following questions and write a 350- to 525-word conversational script where you introduce yourself to the students. Address the following in the script:  

  • Who is Robert Peel, and what is his significance related to policing?
  • Describe an event that occurred in the Political Era of Policing. How do you feel it has impacted policing today?
  • Explain what changed in policing during the Professional Era.
  • Explain the police crises of the 1960s.
  • Describe at least 2 developments in policing since 1970.
  • Briefly explain the structure of the police force at the state and local levels.

[Solved] Learning Outcomes Addressedanalyze Historical

[Solved] Learning Outcomes Addressedanalyze Historical

Link to Chapters/ Book coverage 

https://www.mediafire.com/file/6xt34ivdpfvwbvv/Chapter4.html.zip/file

https://www.mediafire.com/file/11q6sd0ldn1nywf/Chapter5.html.zip/file

https://www.mediafire.com/file/y6qvdvtqw3ghx2x/Reading+The+1776+Declaration+of+Independence.html.zip/file

Assignment: 

You will be writing an essay from the perspective of a loyalist to the British Empire who lives in the Americas. You will present evidence to support the argument that the thirteen rebelling British colonies should remain part of the British Empire. Take on the persona of a Loyalist when you write your paper, and remember – evidence is key.  

Required Reading/Watching

Prior to completing this assignment, you should have:

  • Read Chapters 4 and 5 of your textbook, The American Yawp, Volume I.
  • Read the 1776 Declaration of Independence
  • Watch Lecture 4: Empires Fighting Over North America
  • Watch Lecture 5: The American Revolution

Purpose

This assignment teaches how to look upon a historic event from an unfamiliar perspective. United States students, especially in their youth, are often taught to look upon the Declaration of Independence and the Patriots in American Revolution with a degree of reverence. The discipline of History requires a more flexible position, which includes examining events from multiple viewpoints. Approximately one-third of whites in the thirteen rebelling colonies wished to stay loyal to British rule, many of them from the upper classes. Indeed, a majority of Britain’s thirty or so colonies did not entertain the idea of separation. The Founding Fathers themselves were so aware of their own fragile coalition that they used names like “Continental Army,” “Continental Congress,” and “United States” to give the false impression of a unified front. 

Simultaneously, this assignment teaches empathy. Conflicts are part of human history, but they might be reduced in their frequency and intensity if humans learned how their assumed opponents feel. Though people have differences, they often have more in common than they may realize or are told to believe. Thus, greater understanding and common ground is within the realm of possibilities.

Learning Outcomes Addressed

  • Analyze historical facts and interpretations.
  • Analyze and compare political, geographic, economic, social, cultural, religious, and intellectual institutions, structures, and processes across a range of historical periods and cultures
  • Recognize and articulate the diversity of human experience across a range of historical periods and the complexities of a global culture and society
  • Recognize the impact of geography, environment, and the natural world on the course of history and how choices are often limited by physical factors beyond the control of human beings
  • Grasp the capacity of human beings to make a difference in history, and recognize the complexities of cause and effect and of intended and unintended consequences

Tasks

Step 1: Gather evidence from the textbook readings, lectures, and the Declaration of Independence. Take notes on the statistics, events, and examples that you see to be most significant concerning the bitter divisions that existed between the rebels and loyalists.  

Step 2: Analyze that evidence and see what it is telling you. Explore the evidence from the viewpoint of a person who would want to remain under the protection and power of the British Empire, the largest and most powerful empire on earth at the time. Also consider the costs of yet another international war. Remember that the Declaration of Independence came near the start of the Revolution, not at the end. Win or lose, people were going to suffer. 

Step 3: Communicate your findings honestly to yourself and others, although in this case, look through the eyes of a loyalist. A good way to achieve this goal is to examine the types of people who tended to be loyalists, and adopt the persona of one of those people. Write a three or more page paper from the viewpoint of that person, and show the passages in the Declaration of Independence, and events in the Revolutionary War that they would find objectionable and way.  

Criteria for success high score: 

  • Gathering evidence: A successful exploration will show ten or more statistics, events, and/or examples, being a combination of passages in the Declaration of Independence and events in the Revolution, that a loyalist would find objectionable.
  • Analyzing the evidence: A successful examination will include detailed evidence (statistics, events and examples) why a loyalist would find the above-mentioned passages and events objectionable.
  • Communicating honestly to yourself and others: Successful communication will include four or more pages with detailed evidence and analysis, with major topics organized into paragraphs, with correct grammar and spelling.

[Solved] Complete Assignment Details

[Solved] Complete Assignment Details

ETH501 BUSINESS ETHICS 

Module 1 CASE 

Case Assignment

For a successful start-Business Ethics

Address the following in a 4-page essay, demonstrating your critical-thinking skills:

  • Discuss Warren Buffett’s approach to business dealings, especially as they relate to business ethics.
  • Compare that approach to Bernie Madoff’s.
  • Apply ethical philosophies that you have learned about in this Module and state which you think apply to Mr. Buffett.
  • Which ethical philosophies apply to Mr. Madoff? Why?

Create a table where you compare and contrast these two investors from an ethical standpoint. Be sure to discuss your table in your paper.

Write a well-integrated paper with a strong introduction and conclusion, and use a few section headings (i.e., do not simply follow a Q & A format).

Use your module background information and any other reliable sources you wish to find. The sources do not need to come from the Trident Online Library. For all sources, however, provide in-text citations and include a reference list.

General References Useful for Preparing Graduate-Level Papers:

For a list of general reference sources related to locating library sources, using APA formatting, applying critical-thinking skills, and so forth, see General References Useful for Preparing Graduate-Level Assignments. It is not required that you read these sources page-by-page, but rather use them as guides.

****Please see attached files for complete assignment details*****

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/509fix4ajjqvvkziz1fqp/ETH501-Business-Ethics-Module-1-Case-Info.docx?rlkey=daprool57envl0lqtphh1za36&dl=0

https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/jtcg7s7w4zen1cv6dqqwi/apa-7th-assignment-template-v.1-3-71906-3.docx?rlkey=s95y7c9vfw6wkasx079jpwlro&dl=0