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Statistics Number Module 8 Question As the director of the of the nursing for the Federal Qualified Healthcare Center, the best way of creating a patient-centered medical home is to adopt and promote the use of evidence-based research (EBR). It is through the use of EBR that proper diagnoses and treatment are administered. Accurate diagnoses and treatment is the very mainstay of patient-centered medical care (Broyles, 2010). Likewise, the use of statistics one finds the way in which the use of interval variables may help the Federal Qualified Healthcare Center to promote patient-centered medical home.
Particularly, when one knows how to carry out critical appraisal on interval variables, translating the research results and findings into practice becomes possible. For instance, when determining the relationship between temperature and effective treatment, the use of internal variables may come in handy. A physician who is thorough in research studies will for instance know that a temperature of 0.0 on the two sides of the scales must not be misconstrued to mean the absence of temperature, just as a PH of 0.
0 will not mean the absence of acidity. The determination of the PH and temperature is very sacrosanct to the provision of healthcare services. The same use of statistical provisions as part of the EBR in medical services provision heavily relies on the concept of statistical significance. By being able to appreciate the importance of significance level, the director of the nursing department will be able to correctly decide whether to discard research findings as false, or to implement them as true.
For instance, a statistical significance of .95 will compel the director of the Federal Qualified Healthcare Center, nursing department, to adopt research findings of an inquiry on the relationship between inpatient admission and patient satisfaction. Throughout the course, the connection between the use of research and efficiency in the administration of healthcare services is maintained, and thereby helping the learner appreciate the nexus between EBR and patient-centered medical programs.
Module 8 Question 2Thoughts about the Ethics of Informed Consent vs. binding the Subject to an Expected Outcome The term informed consent is a legal jargon applicable in many fields including healthcare. The fundamentals that must be thought out when invoking informed consent from the patient are competency, benefits, risks and details. According to Hahn and Collier (2010), competency demands that the patient should have a mind that is at least able to comprehend the details, benefits and the risks that will accompany a specific form of medical intervention.
Likewise, the patient should be informed about the benefits and the risks that accompany the form of medical intervention should it go through successfully or unsuccessfully. It is also important that in divulging these details to the patients, the physician must do so in a simple manner that is free from medical jargon, so that the patient can understand fully, the essence of the problem at hand. Thus, in respect to the foregoing, matters that must be put into thought when considering informed consent include the mental stability of the patient, the age of the patient (whether the patient has attained the legal age or not), and the patient’s immediate next of kin, in the event that he has not attained the legal age.
The impacts of the Placebo effect upon patients being informed about the intervention to be usedUpon patients being informed about the intervention to be used, the placebo effect is likely to assuage. This is because; the patient will have been informed about the benefits, risks and details that will accompany a given form of medical intervention. The import of this is that the recovery that the patient will experience after medical treatment will not emanate from the placebo effect but from proper diagnosis and effective administration of treatment.
Although the placebo effect is amoral, many a time, quacks have used it to their advantage, yet this should not be the case. ReferencesBroyles, M. (2010). Fundamentals Statistics in Health Administration. Boston: Jones and Bartlett Publishers. Hahn, A. D. & Collier, H. G. (2010). Fair Market Value: Appraisal Practice in an Evolving Legal Framework. Journal of Healthcare Compliance, 12 (3): 5-67.
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