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Stakeholders within Health Care Number Question Health Care Jobs of the Future The Russell Goldberg (2008) challenges people to "Think outside-in when it comes to considering options." for careers in the health care field because people have a tendency to restrict their consideration to the medical field yet there are other careers that are important in public health, related to medicine but are not purely medical. Specifically, people have a penchant for fields such as nursing, pharmacy and medicine yet there are equally important careers in epidemiology and public health, among an array of options.
Goldberg also wills that people consider the global aspects and need for medical care and practice and not just concerns that are constrained within the local. Those considering career in the healthcare sector should consider impacting the world and not just America. ReferenceGoldberg, R. (2008). Career Planning and Adult Development Journal, 24 (2), 36Question 2: Medical Education in United States Medical education and schools have changed over time as is evidenced by a greater preference for careers in radiology, surgical subspecialties and dermatology to family medicine, pediatrics and internal medicine.
The predominant ethnic (racial) group is the white American. This is because, the data produced by the Association of American Medical Colleges showed that there were more white medical colleges in the US than medical colleges belonging to people of color. Even if the number of African Americans graduating with a medical degree is high in historically black medical colleges, they are significantly outnumbered in traditionally white medical colleges. Presently, women are dominating medical schools by 52% (Turner and Avison, 2011).
ReferencesTurner, R. J. and Avison, W. R. (2012). Status Variations in Stress Exposure: Implications for the Interpretation of Research on Race, Socioeconomic Status, and Gender. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 44 (4), 488 – 505Question 3: The Role of Stakeholders and Diagnosis It is important to understand the impact of a diagnosis on a consumer because it helps in the administration of accurate treatment or medical intervention, and thereby helping in the actualization of the principle of beneficence (Churgay and Aftab (2012).
Proper diagnosis helps the health care provider: know the magnitude and nature of the healthcare complication he is dealing with; administer accurate treatment; discharge his role confidently; and to observe the principles of medical ethics such as beneficence and non-maleficence. Results from the diagnosis will also become an important part of the patient’s health records. As a healthcare professional understanding the impact of a diagnosis on the various stakeholders is important because it enhances the import of diagnoses among patients and physicians.
When patients and physicians do not understand the significance of accurate diagnosis, there is no confidence on the side of both stakeholders that the treatment being administered is right. The reality of the placebo effect underscores the importance of confidence. The physician will also be unable to administer proper treatment while the patient will also be exposed to maleficence. Medical records will also not be detailed enough for meaningful follow-up. ReferencesChurgay, C. A. and Aftab, Z. (2012). Diagnosis.
American Family Physician, 85 (11), 1059
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