Effectiveness of Rehabilitation Essay

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    Over half of all inmates suffer from some form of mental health issues, while also being susceptible to contracting infectious diseases. America’s prison system is in desperate need of reform which can best be accomplished by shifting focus to rehabilitation and reducing recidivism. One of the issues Gopnik highlights in “The Caging of America” is the inhumane and unconstitutional nature of the judicial systems in America. “America is famous... for its process-driven judicial ‘The bastard got…

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    The criminal justice system is constructed of various agencies with explicit procedures that are used to control and diminish crimes, along with, implementing penalties on those who are in violation of the laws. Since the seventeenth-century, society and the criminal justice system has manifested based on our evolution. During that era, the criminal justice system focused primarily on punishment rather than deterrence. The criminal justice system was not as complex and intricate as it is today.…

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    non-communicable diseases can be more difficult to treat than a communicable disease, but treatments do not have to be expensive. There are many cost effective interventions that can be implemented to treat and help prevent substance abuse. Cost effectiveness is defined in Public Health 101 (2015) as “a concept that combines issues of benefits and harms with issues of financial costs” (Riegelman & Kirkwood, p. 127). Three cost effective preventive measures are discussed in the following…

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    that cannot be cured and are 70 years old or younger are eligible for a heart transplant. (TSANZ, 2015) Any patient who has a condition of which they have less than a 50% survival rate of 5 years post-transplant or cannot participate in active rehabilitation is not eligible for a heart transplant. If a person has a very virulent tumor or has an uncontrolled infection they and disallowed to receive a heart transplant. If the patient suffers from irreversible dysfunction of other organs (may be…

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    This paper discusses the process of marketing and implementation of the drug-free workplace policy. The costs of the program and the measurements of success or failure of the program are examined. This paper talks about the leadership roles in successfully implementing the policy. The legal issues and ethical considerations are reviewed. The global dimensions of substance abuse in society is debated against pending legislation that could make a DFWP harder to be successful. The marketing and…

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    way forward. Journal of Addiction Behaviors. Therapy& Rehabilitation, 2(2), 782 Kulesza, M., Ramsey, S. E., Brown, R. A., & Laimer, M. E. (2014). Stigma among individuals with substance use disorders: Does it predict substance use, and does it diminish with treatment? Journal of Addiction Behaviors, Therapy & Rehabilitation, 3(1), 100-115. doi:10.4172/2324-9005.1000115. Livingston, J. D., Milne, T., Fang, M. L. & Amari, E. (2012). The effectiveness of interventions for reducing stigma related to…

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    The nursing process is a scientific method used by nurses to properly, effectivly, efficiently, orderly, and thorough care. There are five steps consisting of: assessing, diagnosing, planning, implementing, and evaluating. Assessing constitutes gaining information and data about the patient. In addition to this, it is the responsibility of the nurse to interpret and analyze the data attained. Diagnosing bears its own seperate and valuble place. The diagnosis step has an RN take the information…

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    Georgia Portfolio Essay

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    order to prepare and give these solution to those who needed it, it cost about 9.3 million for these people to help the people of Bangla. In the Integration Service at the Grassroots Level I was able to learn that this case study focused on the effectiveness and efficiency in the vitamin A program for onchocerciasis which is a type of river blindness found in Africa. This study used 50,000 people both male, female and children. In addition, I also learned that this eilment is the second leading…

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    Mandatory Minimums: The Importance of Discretion in Sentencing In 2013, Florida local John Horner’s friend asked to buy some of the former’s medication, prescribed to treat an eye injury in 2000. Horner agreed, later discovering his friend was a police informant and himself thrown behind bars. He was sentenced to 25 years in prison. (Flatow, 2013) It didn’t matter that his case was a textbook example of police entrapment; that he had no previous criminal record; that he was a steadily employed…

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    Social Worker’s role in medication management is evident. Furthermore, social workers can gather medical and nonmedical information, unlike physicians, during home visits, PCPs appointments, car drives and community interactions. All information gathered or can be contributed during PCPs appointment that would have been missed due to language or cultural differences, or cognitive problems. To me, social workers are eyes and ears behind a medical setting that can in fact verify, or attempt to…

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