Category: Administration & Public Health
Managing Highly Hazardous Communicable Diseases: Administrative & Engineering Controls
Upon completion of this module, learner will be able to select engineering and administrative control to prevent the spread of infection in a variety of situations.
Apr 11, 2019
The Pharmacist Patient Care Process
The Pharmacist Patient Care Process (PPCP) describes how pharmacists deliver patient care across healthcare settings. It was developed to help standardize pharmacists’ approach to care. The PPCP also helps communicate the role of the pharmacist to others on a healthcare team.
Apr 11, 2019
This e-module defines and identifies the types of obesity bias that present within interprofessional clinical scenarios. This learning modality offers ample reflection and interaction questions to solidify instances of bias and reinforce alternative behaviors that can help mitigate obesity bias in clinical practice.
Apr 10, 2019
U.S. Healthcare System & Healthcare Reform for the Health Professions Student
This is the first module of a 5-part series that provides requisite knowledge for any health profession student about the U.S. healthcare system in an informative, interactive, one-hour course. This module introduces a simple, conceptual, model for understanding the complex U.S. healthcare system, and subsequent modules reinforce the model by examining patterns in U.S. healthcare […]
Apr 4, 2018
Activation of the Incident Command System (ICS)
The goal of this e-module is to assist health-care professionals in better understanding of the roles and responsibilities involved in the activation and implementation of the ICS. By completing this module, health-care professionals will achieve a basic, but essential, understanding on how the ICS is activated, obtain knowledge on who will be activated to complete […]
Apr 4, 2018
Malaria: An Overview in School Age Children
This e-module will explain the symptoms, treatment options, complications, social implications, and preventative treatment of malaria in children ages 6-12 years old. This module was created through a collaboration between students at the University of Gitwe and the University of Nebraska Medical Center.
Sep 11, 2017