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Importance of collaboration with other agencies in disaster response
$7.50When disasters strike that are so large that many jurisdictions are involved (cities, states, provinces, etc), the health sector needs to coordinate the health care organizations, personnel and physical assets (hospitals, labs, ambulances, etc) in such a manner that the most good is done with the available resources. This is a huge task.
Is this something that the health sector can do on its own, or does it need to collaborate with other kinds of agencies and services? If so, with whom, and how? And, given that the health sector is almost never the lead agency in the IMS, how can the health sector coordinate without being the overall leader?
1 Page
APA – 3 References
Ebola epidemic of 2014-15 in West Africa
$49.00Choose between one of the two following scenarios. For the scenario you choose, please answer the following questions:
- Could this disaster and its health effects have been prevented or significantly mitigated? If so, how?
- Describe the health services component of the disaster response. How was it coordinated? Why do you think that the coordination failures occurred? How could the coordination have been improved?
- In each scenario, insufficient resources were dedicated to the health aspect of the response. Why do you think this is, and how would you change it?
- What have we learned from this disaster that will help us perform better in the future?
Scenario 1: The Ebola epidemic of 2014-15 in West Africa.
Scenario 2: The 2010 Haitian earthquake.14 Pages
APA – 19 References
Healthcare Finance News Assignment
$10.00You will choose articles from Healthcare Finance News (http://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/ (Links to an external site.)) to summarize for this assignment. Select two articles from two different topics and explain the important effects that the topics have on healthcare.
Articles selected:
5 challenges facing health systems by Mary Mosquera
More hospitals investing in robots to cut costs in the long run by Susan Morse
Format:
Microsoft word
Font size 12
Calibri, Arial, Times New Roman fonts only
Should be one page per article
Please be sure to correctly cite your sources in APA style for each article1 Page – 2 Article review
APA – 2 References
Advantages and disadvantages of inflation accounting
$5.00During the past 50 years, accounting standards have encouraged companies to supplement historical cost-based financial statements with price-level (inflation) adjusted statements, but few companies have done so. In your opinion, what are the advantages and disadvantages of inflation accounting? Would you recommend using price-level adjusted statements? Why or why not?
1 page
Study Tips 101: Make sure that you understand the material well, don’t just read through the material and try to memorize everything.
Response actions required to manage a rapid onset versus a slowly emerging outbreak
$5.00There are disasters and emergencies that have public health and medical consequences and there are “public health emergencies”. A naturally occurring disease pandemic could qualify as both.
For this week’s discussion question compare and contrast the response actions required to manage a rapid onset, highly transmissible outbreak versus a slowly emerging, limited transmission outbreak.
– Make Citation every 3 sentences.
– Please do not use books as references.Disaster response plan for the California State Community
$49.00For California state use what you have learned throughout the semester to write a disaster response plan for that community. I am not expecting a full plan, but rather a basic framework with the considerations we’ve talked about throughout the semester. Many, many jurisdictions have their emergency operations plans or comprehensive emergency plans posted online. If the community you select has their plan posted online, you are absolutely allowed to use it as a source. However, you are not allowed to simply copy from that plan. This must be your own original work.
Format Details
Microsoft Word format (no PDF). Fonts should be something standard (Times New Roman, Arial, Calibri, Cambria, etc.) and should be a reasonable size (11 or 12, preferably). The format of the plan is up to you, but it should likely include a mix of text, maps, graphics, charts, etc. Use headings wherever possible. Double spacing is not necessary.
Most existing plans that you will find will be 50+ pages. I am not expecting you to write something that thorough. Your plan should be around 10-15 pages.14 pages
APA – 10 References
Importance of Avant-garde art in Soviet Union
$15.00The paper discusses the Importance of Avant-garde art in Soviet Union
4.5 pages
APA – 4 References
How ems personnel may contribute to the transmission of infectious disease
$20.00Jems Article on how ems personnel may contribute to the transmission of infectious disease from one patient to another?
So you’re writing a JEMS article…
Congratulations on starting this wonderful journey of penning an article for JEMS. The editors, A.J., Ryan & Allie, are here to make this voyage smooth and pain-free. Use this cheat-sheet to avoid grandiose post-submission edits. Let us help you help yourself, which will, in turn, help us! (An example of a perfect article is included at the end.)
WORD COUNT Were you assigned a specific word count? If so, it’s best to stick to it. Going over the word count means either drastic cuts that could cause you to re-write sections (or waste all that hard work you spent on those eight paragraphs we can’t fit) or could mean the elimination of photos. If you weren’t assigned a word count, it’s best to ask for one.
PHOTOS/ILLUSTRATIONS If you’re also submitting photos with your article (and we want you to!), send them as separate files and do not embed them in the word document. We accept .jpg, .png, and .psd formats. In the article document, include a caption for each photo (or at least enough information about what is being shown so that the editors can write a caption) and list who should be credited for each photo.
TABLES/GRAPHS Tables and graphs must be included in the article document as part of the Word document, and not as a PDF or .jpg. Our designers will recreate these for you, so there’s no need to make it pretty. If you don’t know how to make a graph, you can write out a description of what you want.
AUTHOR BIOS At the end of your piece, include a small bio that begins with your name and credentials. Below is an example:
Gary Ludwig, MS, EMT-P, is a deputy fire chief with the Memphis (Tenn.) Fire Department. He has over 36 years of fire, EMS and rescue experience. He is also the immediate past chair of the EMS Section for the IAFC. He can be reached at www.garyludwig.com.
ARTICLE DATA We want you to have as much creative control as you can, and that means offering ideas. When submitting your article, please include suggestions for the following: Magazine headline (1–5 words), magazine subhead (sentence that describes article), online headline (longer, more descriptive than magazine headline), key words, 10-word summary of article and ideas for social media posts. We might change them, but we also might keep them.
REFERENCES—NUMBERING All clinical articles must have references. Non-clinical articles are not required to have references, but must properly cite sources if included. Format citations according to the style guide included below. If you have questions about citing or numbering references, it’s better to email your lead editor and ask rather than guess and hope for the best.
Footnotes: Do not use the footnote function on Word. The formatting doesn’t cross over into the program we use to design the magazine. Instead, add the superscript manually (if you don’t know how to make a superscript, just add the number and leave it regular-sized). All superscripts should come after the period. Add the reference manually at the end of your article in a consecutively numbered list. The number of the cited reference should match the number of the correlating superscript.
ibid: JEMS doesn’t use the ibid abbreviation. If you reuse a reference, simply reuse its number. Do not list the reference more than once in the list at the end of your article. For example, your superscripts may read: 1, 2, 3, 4, 2, 5. Your list of references, however, should only read: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.
Resources: If you want to include items of information that you didn’t directly cite or use, add them to a list under the term “Resources” below your References list. All resources should be listed in alphabetical order and unnumbered.
REFERENCES—FORMATTING Use this guide to properly format your references and resources.
Journal Articles >>Do not abbreviate page numbers. Right: 342–348; Wrong: 342-8 >>List all authors up to three. After the third author is listed, use et al. >>Abbreviate journal title according to PubMed.com.
Last name First name initial, Last name First name initial. Article title lower case except first word. Journal title in italics. Year;Vol(Issue #):pages.
Chouten EG, Dekker JM. QT interval prolongation predicts cardiovascular mortality in an apparently health population. Circulation. 1991;84(2):1516–1523.
Books
Author Last name First name initial, title (if applicable): Book title in italics. Publisher name: City, State, pages, year.
Goldstein N, editor: The Associated Press stylebook and libel manual. Addison-Wesley: Reading, Mass., pp. 16–18, 1998.
Reference to an article or chapter in an edited book
Chapter/article author last name First name initial, Article or chapter title. In Editor first initial Editor last name (Ed./Eds.), Book title in italics. Publisher name: City, State, pages, year.
Doe J: Common grammar issues. In J Smith (Ed.), Everything you need to know about editing. Fantastic Publishing: San Diego, pp. 45–68, 2011.
Internet References
Author last name First name initial. (Date published if available; n.d.—no date—if not). Title of article. In Title of website. Retrieved date, from URL.
Landsberger J. (n.d.) Citing websites. In Study Guides and Strategies. Retrieved May 13, 2005, from www.studygs.net/citation.htm.
Note: If the author name is not available, start the reference with the article title, and move the date published (or n.d.) after the article title. Example: Citing websites. (n.d.) In Study Guides and Strategies. Retrieved May 13, 2005, from www.studygs.net/citation.htm.4 pages
Is the balance sheet or statement of cash flows more important
$5.00Balance sheet vs. statement of cash flows
Is the balance sheet or statement of cash flows more important? What about the income statement? If you had to consider only one financial statement, which would it be?