Healthcare
Primary care setting
Primary care case study
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> Clinical Judgment: Choose a patient presenting to the primary care clinic with a specific diagnosis and describe the process of the treatment from the nurse practitioner at the primary care setting.
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> an exemplar of a case study that demonstrates your critical thinking skills, diagnostic skills, utilization of evidenced based practice, and clinical judgment, pharmacological management, follow up plan, and how you would promote preventive care for this patient. In your conclusion, relate your approach to the concept of risk management (i.e. how does following evidence-based guidelines reduce your risk of practicing below the standard of care).
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> at least 3 references, not older than 5 years old
Aspirin and clopidogrel
respond in 250 words or more, APA Format. References within the last 5 years. 2-3 references.
Requirements: 250 words or more
Professional Growth for Health Care Professionals
Perform the preassessment Mind Mapping activity located on the first page of at least one chapter in your textbook assigned for this topic. What did you learn while reading the chapter? What was reinforced? Remember there are no right or wrong answers.
Personal and Professional Growth for Health Care Professionals
American healthcare system
Go to your state board of nursing site and provide information on prescriptive authority for your state. (be sure to identify the state in which you live).
Describe the differences between Schedule I, II, III, IV and V drugs and who can prescribe them. Give 5 examples of each.
Go to the DEA.gov site and identify the process of obtaining a DEA license, the initial cost and the cost of renewal. How long is each (initial and renewal) good for.
Requirements: Full answers
hello I currently live in Illinois . The information needed is for nurse practitioner
Infection and colonization
Mortality and morbidity rates for infectious diseases vary greatly by geographical location. World Health Organization (WHO) statistics provide striking documentation that deaths due to infectious diseases are much higher in poor countries than in the countries with the highest income levels. It is particularly striking that malaria and tuberculosis are significant causes of death in low-resource countries, whereas these diseases are rarely fatal in wealthy countries. Other infectious diseases that significantly cause death in low-resource countries are pneumonia, diarrhea, and HIV infection. The top ten causes of death in lower and middle-resource countries In lower and middle-resource countries also include lower respiratory