This document provides a lesson on the ethical, legal, and economic foundations of the educational process. It covers key concepts like confidentiality, beneficence, autonomy, and informed consent in healthcare. It also addresses ethical frameworks like deontology. Additionally, it discusses costs associated with healthcare education including direct, indirect, fixed, and variable costs. The lesson aims to build understanding of how ethical principles, law, and economics all contribute to the patient education process.
This document provides a lesson on the ethical, legal, and economic foundations of the educational process. It covers key concepts like confidentiality, beneficence, autonomy, and informed consent in healthcare. It also addresses ethical frameworks like deontology. Additionally, it discusses costs associated with healthcare education including direct, indirect, fixed, and variable costs. The lesson aims to build understanding of how ethical principles, law, and economics all contribute to the patient education process.
This document provides a lesson on the ethical, legal, and economic foundations of the educational process. It covers key concepts like confidentiality, beneficence, autonomy, and informed consent in healthcare. It also addresses ethical frameworks like deontology. Additionally, it discusses costs associated with healthcare education including direct, indirect, fixed, and variable costs. The lesson aims to build understanding of how ethical principles, law, and economics all contribute to the patient education process.
This document provides a lesson on the ethical, legal, and economic foundations of the educational process. It covers key concepts like confidentiality, beneficence, autonomy, and informed consent in healthcare. It also addresses ethical frameworks like deontology. Additionally, it discusses costs associated with healthcare education including direct, indirect, fixed, and variable costs. The lesson aims to build understanding of how ethical principles, law, and economics all contribute to the patient education process.
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HES 008 (Health Education)
LESSON TITLE: Ethical, Legal, and Economic Foundations of the Educational Process
CHECK FOR UNDERSTANDING
1) C. Confidentiality Ratio: One of the application of ethical and legal principles to patient education is confidentiality that refers to personal information that is entrusted and protected as privileged information via a social contact, healthcare standard or code, or legal covenant. 2) A. Beneficence Ratio: A part of ethical practices that act as doing good for the benefit of others. 3) B. Veracity Ratio: It a right that make decisions for the individual’s body. It is a ruling provided a basis in law for patient education regarding for the invasive medical procedures, thus it is closely linked with informed decision making and informed consent. 4) A. Autonomy Ratio: It was derived from the Greek words auto and nomos, that refers to the right of self-determination. It is a law to protect the patient’s right to make choices for oneself. 5) B. Malpractice Ratio: Malpractice refers to limited class of negligent activities committed within the scope of performance by those pursuing a particular profession involving highly skilled and technical services. 6) A. Ethics Ratio: Though ethics used interchangeably but in can be differentiate as ethics refers to the guiding principles of behavior. 7) D. Practiced Acts Ratio: A documents that defines a profession’s scope of practice and developed to protect individuals from unqualified practitioners and protects the professional’s title. 8) B. Deontology Ratio: In the term from Greek word deon and logos, that is an ethical belief stresses the importance of doing one’s duty and following the rules. 9) C. Justice Benjamin Cardozo Ratio: Justice Bejamin Cardozo established in the court as early as 1914 the basic tenet of ethical thought; the informed consent. 10) B. John Stuart Mill Ratio: John Stuart Mill purported a teleological approach (greater good for the greatest number). 11) A. Cost Savings Ratio: In falls to money though decreased use of costly services, shortened lengths of stay, or fewer complications resulting for preventive services. 12) D. Indirect Costs Ratio: It is a fixed but not necessarily directly related to particular activity such as the given examples. 13) C. Cost Recovery Ratio: It occurs when revenues generated are equal to or greater than expeditions. 14) A. Fixed Cost Ratio: They are stable and ongoing such salaries, utilities, durable equipment. 15) D. Variable Costs Ratio: To fluctuation in volume, program attendance, occupancy rates, etc.