Mental Health in the Movies Student’s Name Institutional Affiliation Course Professor’s Name Date Mental health in the movies Case formulation A predisposing social factor to the drug addiction problem by Suzanne is the nature of her mother. The movie shows how Suzanne grew up under her mother’s shade and that she had tried all she could to get away from her mother. Suzanne’s mother was a self-centered woman (Fisher, 2012). A predisposing psychological factor is that her mother was very loud and irritating while issuing orders and private conversations that she used to engage Suzanne as advice platforms. A predisposing biological factor to Suzanne’s condition was that her mother is also a drug addict (Fisher, 2008). A precipitating social factor to Suzanne’s drug addiction was that she was a young lady who needed to explore the love and relationship world. Going on a date had resulted in a cocaine overdose. A precipitating psychological factor to her condition could be her mother’s judging…
Personal SWOT Strengths Many years of experience in healthcare environment, discipline, practicing self-confidence and good positive professional behavior I can evaluate as one of my strengths. It took me few years to get confident and my desire and hunger for new challenges brought me opportunities to learn more practical skills at hospitals. For example I was fully trained at the hospital to change trachea on ventilated patients on adults and children. Most of Healthcare assistants simply don’t have enough confidence to change tracheostomy as is very complex act which requires patience, leadership and professionalism. I am proud of myself to be organized in time planning, self-motivated and good professional companion for those who we care about. Weaknesses Weakness is human natural feeling and its process where we are afraid or scared of factors or circumstances where we are not confident, we are worried or simply don’t know how to react. “Sometimes the biggest strength can be found in how you understand and comfort your greatest weakness”, (Michael Springel.,2014). Weakness have both site character self-aware protective and miss-educated. English…
Part C: Case Analysis – Real Estate (62% of the test score) Tuesday morning, the Chief Executive Officer for Jackson Miller Properties inspected her daily mail. In it was a letter from Attorney Malik Davis, a well-known local lawyer specializing in employment law. He is writing on behalf of two clients: Mr. Matt Evans and Ms. Jennifer Dawson. He requests a meeting to see if satisfactory arrangements can be made for these two terminated employees before they file charges with the NLRB, saying they were terminated unlawfully. Section 8(a)1 will be cited for the violation.* In preparation for the meeting, the CEO asks the HR Director for a briefing on each case. She wants to know: We don’t have a union. Why is the attorney talking about the NLRA? The two workers bad-mouthed the company on Facebook, right? How does that relate to the NLRA? What are the legal criteria in the NLRA? If the NLRB pursues this, what will be the company’s legal argument(s) to justify each termination? What will each employee argue? Are we likely to win? What…
Case Study Rape/ Date Rape Student’s Name Institutional Affiliation Instructor’s Name Course Date Rape/ Date Rape Rape is a form of sexual assault that involves unconsented sexual penetration. The Federal Bureau of Investigations defines it as the slightest penetration of the vagina or anus with any body part, object, oral penetration by another person’s sex organ, out of consent from the victim. Rape is a crime mostly is a form of violence against women, and so far, it remains one of the most severe challenges of our generation. It is a brutal crime to violate human rights across the world, multi-ethnic societies, and cross-cultural diversities. Globally, rape is a deviant criminal behavior. The perpetrators apply crude methods of executing it, including psychological torture, emotional coercion, violent threats to comply, and intimidation and manipulating the victim until they submit to sexual intercourse out of their consent. A rape ordeal is not only agonizing but also dehumanizing practice widely condemned from various global fronts ranging from…
Why American Restaurants Waste more food Food waste is the throwing away of items that are fit for human consumption that end up in landfills. America is a global leader in food wastage. However, 37 million people, including 11 million children, suffer from food insecurity. Instead of having ways of ensuring that they provide food to these populations, the Americans increasingly waste more food than any other country annually. The enormous food waste in landfills takes nearly 22% of the municipal solid waste (MSW) and is comprised up “80 billion pounds” of foods, which equates to more than “$161billion”, making almost 30-40% of trash out of the total food supply in the country (“RTS”). The restaurants’ food waste accounts for 15% of the country’s entire food waste, while nearly $1600 worth of food wasted annually are discarded by an average American family of four members. The problem of food wastage is affecting the world not only by costing them a lot but by increasing the greenhouse effects due to the methane gas generated by the pile of food wastes and…
Reverse discrimination & mythologies about Aborigines Student’s Name Institution Affiliation Date Reverse discrimination & mythologies about Aborigines The aborigines make the majority of people, especially in the northern parts of Australia. The mythologies about the Aborigines are the claims that they get everything irrespective of not contributing to society and working. The truth is that they fought in every war since the Boer war. The lands were not handed over to the ancient Australian, instead of a species of land titles that could continue to restrict whites’ settlement. The restriction was the law of the land, and there was no handing over the land tracks to the Aborigines. There is an eight national Native Title Tribunal that was set up to affect the decisions of the high court and the Malcolm Fraser Aboriginal Land Rights Act. The native title cannot interfere with anybody else’s title, and that the laws only apply to selective lands. The Implicit Association test done by the Australians shows that there might be a negative implicit bias…
Review new change initiative in System thinking, ODC, world health organization Student’s Name Institutional Affiliation Course Number and Name Instructor’s Name Date Review new change initiative in System thinking, ODC, world health organization Organizational change is essential and inevitable as it enables organizations to enter into a competitive advantage to compete with their competitors. When organizational change is conducted well, it leads to a more efficient and effective business with more satisfied employees, customers, and stakeholders. Further, it embraces and leads to a successful change that promotes organization performance (Flinchbaugh et al., 2020). The organization is an essential field as it requires the concept of system thinking to be used to make the right decision when solving the organization’s challenges. It is also an organization that needs employees to be educated on the importance of adapting changes and being motivated to allow employees to produce the best performance that will make it compete with its competitors. For an organization to…
Student Name Instructor Course Date Kindred by Octavia Butler The above mentioned literary appreciation is a fictitious text. The critical argument and the storyline on which the book is based is on slavery. The propagation of the activities of the aforementioned takes place in the South of the Antebellum. By taking the time to literary analyze the text, one would be tempted to embark on reading it. The reason is largely that it takes the reader back when the slave trade was the day’s order. Therefore, the reader gets to be magically transported back in time through a loop of time travel in the perception that would best serve to enlighten them in matters about the struggles of the modern African-American woman. The critical character who the story composed by Butler seems to be revolving around is Dana. She serves as a perfect representation of the modern-day woman. According to the text, Rufus, a plantation owner, summons Dana, to protect him across time when his life is in danger. She is, therefore, dragged back in time and forced to endure…
RISK ASSESSMENT IN THE ENGINEERING FIELD Name Institutional Affiliation Introduction Successful processing industries and manufacturers have taken upon themselves to find solutions that increase the productivity and throughput in their companies by ensuring that they minimize costs to the lowest possible. However, companies must ensure that at the same time they enhance the safety standards of the company to avoid potential health risks. Therefore, risk assessment and management is very crucial in any processing or manufacturing environment. Productivity of employees can only be maximized when the working environment is safe. Importance of risk assessment in processing industries Assessing the risk in a workplace of any business is important to improve the occupational safety (Hudáková, Míka & HOLLÁ, 2016). Therefore, to ensure safe operations and installations, risk assessment and management is very important. It is upon risk managers to understand and identify the factors that may in future set the business apart. Innovative processing solutions can be materialized and implemented if the practices from risk assessment are adopted. Many activities that are carried out at processing…
Risk Assessment Plan Name of the Student Professor Course Date Statement of purpose The increased use of cell phones without observing antiseptic practices by healthcare professionals poses a potential means of transmission of bacterial pathogens. Research shows that the root cause of nosocomial infections within the healthcare set-up is inanimate objects such as cellphones used by healthcare professionals. The cellphones act as reservoirs for nosocomial infections, which can be easily transmitted from the cellphones to healthcare workers’ hands. This causes the spread of infection from one patient to another through the healthcare workers. Nosocomial infections have been associated with a huge number of morbidity and infection rates; thus, it important to devise a strategy for mitigating infections (Banawas et al., 2018). This paper aims to present a risk assessment plan aimed at protecting healthcare workers and patients from nosocomial infections associated with cellphones for hospitals in Saudi Arabia. Authority and responsibility of implementation This risk assessment plan is based on a study performed in three different hospitals in…