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Healthcare providers and patients: an essay on the importance of professional assertiveness in healthcare today

Claude richard, marie-thérèse lussier, bernard millette, issam tanoubi.

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CONTACT Issam Tanoubi [email protected] Medical Simulation Centre, Centre d’Apprentissage des Attitudes et Habiletés Cliniques (CAAHC), Université de Montréal, QC H3T 1J4, Service Rd, Montreal

Received 2022 Jul 13; Accepted 2023 Apr 4; Collection date 2023.

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. The terms on which this article has been published allow the posting of the Accepted Manuscript in a repository by the author(s) or with their consent.

Professional assertiveness can enable the healthcare provider to confidently share their expertise without seeming authoritarian to the patient. Professional assertiveness is an interpersonal communication skill that helps express opinions or knowledge while respecting similar competencies in others. For healthcare providers, this compares to sharing scientific or professional knowledge with their patients while respecting their person, ideas, and autonomy. Professional assertiveness also connects the patient’s beliefs and values with actual scientific evidence and healthcare system constraints. The definition of professional assertiveness might be easy to understand, but it remains challenging to apply in clinical practice. In this essay, we hypothesize that the practical difficulties healthcare providers encounter with assertive communication stem from their misunderstanding of this style.

KEYWORDS: Professional assertiveness, communication, healthcare provider, patient, Healthcare system

Introduction

Nowadays, information is increasingly accessible on a variety of platforms and from a multitude of sources. Some sources provide the public with rigorous and verified information, while others can produce misleading or questionable facts on important topics, such as healthcare. These sources can range from journal articles to newsprint or even social media. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the amount of information produced on the virus, vaccines, treatments, and protective measures, for example, grew exponentially. Zielinski called this proliferation of health information an ‘infodemic’ [ 1 ], or the overproduction of accurate and inaccurate information during an epidemic. He noted that it was increasingly becoming ‘difficult, if not impossible, to separate the important from the mundane, the original from the repetition, and – most worryingly – the true from the false’ [ 1–3 ].

This infodemic directly impacted, and still influences, the relationship between healthcare providers (HCP) and their patients. While the general population holds their own beliefs and attitudes towards health care and scientific information, this sheer amount of new information greatly affects how patients see, trust, or feel about healthcare and science. This shift has given HCP some nuanced challenges going forward, particularly in communicating with patients on important and life-saving topics.

People now have easier access to scientific opinions, evidence, and studies. Non-scientific professionals, such as the general public, may take these studies and their results at face value without criticism, despite these studies not going through rigorous peer review. These studies can be methodologically questionable, and their results can be erroneous. Still, patients could be profoundly influenced and believe its contents as the information is packaged as ‘scientific’ literature [ 3 ].

Rigorous, insightful, and life-saving scientific material for the general public abound, these materials can improve people’s understanding of healthcare-related issues and contexts. For patients, they can improve their understanding of treatment and therapy and help them make informed decisions about their therapeutic choices. Indeed, the greater availability of health information could also improve patient literacy in healthcare and science. By enhancing a patient’s medical knowledge, we could also improve the shared decision-making process and enhance the patient-partner approach, which is proven to be quite effective [ 4 , 5 ]. Ultimately, a more accurate understanding and factual information can help patients commit to their own care.

Contextualizing the significance of professional assertiveness

The abundance of competing scientific ‘truths’ has contributed to the waning confidence in actual scientific fact. We are witnessing a post-factual era where the ‘truth’ has become closer to faith than science. At its core, science does not offer ‘truths’ but seeks to identify associations or probable casualties and prove these links with rigorous testing and data. Therefore, the advancement of technologies and the evolution of knowledge can constantly challenge accepted scientific evidence, as perhaps it should. However, the overabundance of information created by an infodemic can have two significant consequences for non-scientifically trained individuals (i.e., patients, general population) seeking healthcare information [ 6 ].

First, the value of evidence-based information can be ‘downgraded’ to the status of an opinion where one opinion is as valuable as any other. Since the same amount of data may support either and the accuracy of the data is unquestioned, the two opinions can be argued as equally ‘correct’ (i.e., everyone is entitled to their own opinion ). The danger lies in whether one of those ‘opinions’ can directly cause public harm or erode established fact-based public health protocols. Second, the internet strongly drives alternate auto-confirming ‘health realities,’ often entirely dissociated from scientific evidence. Algorithms in search engines and social media can contribute significantly to the cognitive confirmation bias of false narratives and erroneous scientific discourse [ 7 ].

Therefore, the general public risks trusting statements they perceive as truths based on unsubstantiated evidence rather than scientific information that has undergone rigorous verification [ 8 ]. In this new context, and in a healthcare setting, simply providing information to a patient about their disease or therapy may prove insufficient to establish or maintain trust between them and their HPC [ 9 ]. In the COVID-19 pandemic and infodemic context, HCP have witnessed a shift in how they may now need to communicate with patients on health-related issues. Now, HPC may have to work extra hard to prove to or convince some populations that science is indeed fact , and once communicating informally in a neutral discourse about science may now require a more persuasive or professionally assertive speech.

Defining professional assertiveness

Professional assertiveness (PA) requires both interpersonal skills and professional expertise to effectively express opinions or knowledge while simultaneously respecting those same competencies in others. In a healthcare context, PA helps the healthcare professional respectfully share important scientific knowledge without patronizing the patient and while respecting their autonomy. Demonstrating PA in healthcare must not be misconstrued as a call to dominate or force the patient. Patients assign some disciplinary authority to their HPC because they recognize their expertise and competencies. Patients gain access to these skills by consulting their HPC to identify and treat their health problems. While patients assign a sort of authority to the HCP and gain access to their skills through, they, however, should be viewed as autonomous decision-makers. By explicitly asking for their expert opinion, patients do concede ‘limited’ disciplinary authority to HCP. Still, the nature of the professional’s authority is epistemic and in no way refers to a form of control over the patient [ 10 ]. Patients can also withdraw their trust from HCP and grant it to other entities according to their expectations [ 11 ].

Patients would not respond well to a treatment plan that compelled them to subjugate themselves to a healthcare professional or institution. The patient may not prefer a pre-determined therapeutic plan. Instead, they may favour a convincing and reassuring therapeutic approach where they see themselves as a key player, a project manager, or someone slightly in charge of the way forward. So, the patient expects the physician to consult, provide understandable explanations, and enter into a mutual tacit agreement. The absence of one of these steps directly threatens the patient’s confidence in their HCP. Professionally assertive communication links patient values and evidence-based decisions through the connection with the HCP; therefore, PA is integral to any informed decision-making process [ 12–17 ]. However, while the definition of PA seems intuitive and easy to understand, it remains challenging to apply in practice.

What does professionalism entail?

Professionalism is a structuring concept that fosters a set of similar behaviours among the members of the same profession, such as healthcare professionals. Professionalism allows those in the same field to commit to similar and coordinated behaviours to ensure patient safety and satisfaction. Patients can often identify expected professional behaviours in HCP and foster complementary behaviours [ 18 ]. For example, mental health professionals treat their patients as a primary decision-maker. They use suggestions or assertions to collaboratively integrate patient preferences and decisions into the proposed therapeutic plan. According to a study of 52 primary-care consultations for depression, anxiety, and stress, these professionals seldom used direct or authoritative statements or propositions, suggesting that they have mainly developed verbal strategies consistent with PA [ 19 ]. To be relevant to the patient, PA cannot be dissociated from professional knowledge, commitment, credibility, or reputation [ 20 ]. Doctors strongly endorse their treatment recommendations through verbal, paralinguistic, and non-verbal cues for patients to understand their therapeutic options. However, weak or poorly conveyed endorsements may negatively affect the patient’s confidence in the proposed treatment.

Some physicians adopt a cautious or conciliatory verbal style, avoiding an authoritarian approach with a sincere desire to avoid confrontation or offend their patients. This cautiousness may cause the patient to perceive the HCP as disengaged from their professional responsibilities or unsure of their knowledge, including treatment options. When the HCP attempts to avoid authoritarianism through a ‘soft’ approach, he may prevent patients from grasping the severity of the situation or the importance of the treatment plan. Consequently, this attitude toward communicating important scientific knowledge and expertise may ultimately harm the patient.

An assertive attitude: flexible in form and firm in ideas

There is a relationship between assertiveness, self-confidence, and personality. We have adapted this relationship in the context of HCP assertiveness [ 21–25 ] in a diagram of the assertive interview that goes beyond the verbal exchange ( Figure 1 ). We based this two-dimensional PA concept on the content of idea exchanges and the relational approach to the patient. This approach distinguishes four professional profiles: the assertive, aggressive, passive, and passive-aggressive professional.

Figure 1.

Two-dimensional professional assertiveness concept.

The assertive professional combines firmness and clarity of language regarding their professional knowledge and skills while maintaining an attitude of benevolence and respect for others. They allow and encourage patient participation, express scientific or medical information clearly, and pay attention to the relational quality and the patient’s reaction. The aggressive professional is firm in expressing their knowledge and skills but imposes their views without considering those of others. Aggressive professionals do not seek collaborative relationships. The passive professional is flexible on ideas, always complacent, and avoids affirming their professional knowledge and skills to appear less confrontational or circumvent contention. They choose to preserve the relationship at the expense of their professional identity or beliefs. The passive-aggressive professional is flexible on ideas while remaining confrontational.

The assertive professional profile seems well suited to healthcare since medical and scientific knowledge expresses itself in probabilities and not certainties; however, confidence in these certainties is paramount. Patient trust is built by having confidence that the HCP knows what they are talking about (logos), is committed to that knowledge (pathos), and possesses the necessary professional credibility (ethos) conveyed by their actions and expertise [ 20 ]. Trust between the patient and HCP may weaken if these aspects are compromised. For example, patients may question the HCP’s competence, feel that they are not committed to their professional knowledge, or do not seem emotionally engaged.

Medical encounters as polyphonic dialogue

Healthcare professionals have several ways of communicating with patients and colleagues. The HCP verbatim can be represented in a fascinating ethical framework for healthcare communication and relationships called the ‘ethics triangle’ [ 26 ]. This framework describes the actors involved in any clinical decision and organizes them with an associated pronoun. In this ‘triangle’, there are three elements: 1) the HCP’s knowledge, professional experience, and values are represented in the first person as ( I ); 2) the patient, with their own beliefs and understandings of their health, in the second-person of ( you ); 3) and finally, the context outside the HCP and the patient relationship, such as colleagues, institutions, scientific knowledge, guidelines, and the healthcare system, is represented in the third-person ( they ). When communicating with patients, the HCP often uses external examples to contextualize the situation [ 20 , 26 ].

In addition to these three actors, the HCP–patient relationship generates a ( we ). This ‘ we’ is how HCP and patients are referred to as a team. Using we associates and affirms a common approach, project, and goal [ 27 , 28 ]. The presence of the we could thus constitute an important driver of patient participation.

PA is inextricably linked to the professional I . The I amalgamates a representation of the personal I and the they (professional ethics, organizations, etc.). Words associated with the professional I and the they are often dictated to answer we questions ( who, what, where, when , and how ).

Here are a few verbatim illustrations of the polyphonic dialogue in the medical encounter.

Invocation of the they refers to scientific/ethical/practice guide sources: ‘It’s my job to talk to you about your sleeping pills.’

Use of the professional I that refers to the healthcare provider’s knowledge, recommendation, and experience: ‘ I am confident that this new prescription will control all your symptoms.’

Use of the you that refers to the HCP’s patient: ‘I see you don’t take much. You only take it when needed.’

Use of the we that refers to a common project, an agreed plan, and the patient’s relationship: ‘Do you agree that we stop these pills? We have been talking about it for a long time.’

On the one hand, references to the I and they are relatively stable over time – these references evolve slowly. On the other hand, the you and the we are more dynamic and vary with different interlocutors. Therefore, we have qualified these references as temporary or passing.

From a normative point of view, but also because of the development of their relationship, a unique we can emerge. The we has numerous shared building blocks: shared knowledge, collaboration on specific areas, common goals, mutual respect, and so on. The we is associative and may take on as many expressions as possible relationships as a product of the dialogue ( Figure 2 ). Establishing the we is signalling a partnership with the patient, representing the best guarantee of the long-term success of the therapeutic plan, especially for chronic diseases.

Figure 2.

Professional behavioral mouldability.

We witness a polyphonic dialogue where each (who?) responds to the other with multiple ‘voices.’ To the ‘voices’ of the HCP, the patient will respond with their own ‘voices.’ Each uses the combination of ‘voices’ they consider most appropriate to move the dialogue toward a favourable conclusion. Language, in its use, is dynamic, complex, carries multiple realities, and serves primarily to act on the other [ 29 , 30 ]. The HCP should consider assertiveness in a dynamic context that takes on several forms or colours depending on the evolution of the dialogue.

As a communication device among healthcare professionals, professional assertiveness should not be mistaken as an attempt to force a patient to accept the directives but rather a collaborative effort with the patient to bring about a positive outcome in their healthcare experiences. Professional assertiveness is a valuable professional competence, especially in the context of the Covid-19 pandemic and infodemic, where multitudes of unverified, misleading, and even false information are now omnipresent. Advocating and affirming the value of professionally assertive discourse is critical to stemming facetious sources of information. In other words, the HCP may need to defend what the patient usually takes for granted – scientific truths. Indeed, professional assertiveness requires openness and benevolence toward the patient. Still, precise, kind, and respectful communication allows healthcare professionals to better situate the patient’s experience according to their condition and help them toward a healthier future.

Acknowledgments

The authors are grateful to Geneviève Agoues from Université de Montréal for her precious collaboration. The authors would like to thank Mr Kyle Roerick for his professional, comprehensive, and insightful language editing of the manuscript.

Funding Statement

This research received no external funding.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Author contributions

Conceptualization, C.R., M.L.T., and I.T.; resources and data, C.R. and M.L.T.; writing – original draft preparation, C.R., M.L.T., and I.T.; writing – review and editing, C.R., M.L.T., B.M., and I.T. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

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Unconventional medicine encompasses a wide range of approaches from various cultures worldwide. While some are helpful, many practices don’t have scientific proof or may even be harmful. If the patient is on medication, they have to be extra careful since herbal remedies can interact with the prescribed ones and lead to severe injuries.

  • Information and Communications Technology Benefits in Healthcare ICT has also made it possible for caregivers and their institutions to easily transfer information from one place to the other.
  • Impact of Technology on Healthcare Services This chapter will highlight some of the important milestones in the health sector in relation to health technology. The benefits of the spending will be weighed against the efficacy of the technology in this chapter.
  • Organizational Theory in Healthcare Organizations The origin of the pressures is both from internal and external sources which have in turn affected the manner in which the organizations are run, structured and organized. This paper has focused on the application […]
  • The Pros and Cons of Using Pie Charts in Healthcare The pie chart is one such tool for presenting a quantitative data report in a healthcare setting. Moreover, it is possible to manipulate parts of the data in a circular circle to emphasize the necessary […]
  • Healthcare Organization Departmentalization If I were the CEO of a hospital, I would personally design the organization with the patient at the center. The patient-centered approach means defining patient care as a core aim of the healthcare system.
  • Healthcare Policies in Nursing Informatics In this context, nurses aid in the technological transformation of the healthcare delivery system, particularly in the effective and efficient HIT deployment.
  • Billing and Reimbursement in Healthcare Fundamentally, compliance initiatives seek to establish a culture within the billing organization that promotes the detection and resolution of instances of conduct that contravenes federal and state law and requirements of federal, state, and private […]
  • Employee Turnover Rates in Healthcare The definition of the main characteristics of the job or position and the requirements for the employee is accomplished during the analysis of the job and its description.
  • Healthcare: Comparative Analysis of Licensure, Certification, and Accreditation 98% of responders in a poll conducted by the public health accreditation agreed that accreditation encouraged their organization to raise the bar on quality and performance.
  • Ranking Issues Facing Healthcare Organizations The three principles of ranking are linked to various quality improvement areas for HCOs. Concerning improvement areas, the basis might inspire increasing the HCO’s EMR/EHR adoption compliance in return for financial and reputational gains.
  • Utilitarianism: Ethical Theory in Healthcare The ethical theory addresses the main concepts: the intrinsic value of one’s happiness, the importance of operating under the premise of well-being as the primary value, and happiness being equally important regardless of the individual.
  • Homelessness as a Major Healthcare Issue As such, relocating the money to provide shelter and improve housing for homeless people would ensure a positive result of spending the budget to care for the homeless.
  • Coding and Billing Errors in Healthcare It is stated that errors in clinical coding can result in the potential loss of income and revenue due to incorrect assignment of appropriate diagnosis and treatment procedures.
  • Healthcare Disparities Among Senior Citizens This expected increase in the number of older people in the population is because of the falling birth rate in countries including the United States.
  • Market Failures in UAE Healthcare System C-section as an incomplete market failure type The given failure affects education and healthcare Reducing C-sections would lead to significant economy Annual savings would rise to Dh305 million Figures prove C-sections to be market […]
  • Strategic Management in Healthcare There is no doubt that this implementation is valuable for service development because reducing the length of patient stay is one of the essential challenges that many medical facilities face.
  • The Importance of Customer Service in Healthcare The location of the training was the Brooklyn Hospital Center, and the presenter was the Nurse Educator. Since the professional background of the audience was nursing, the subject was clinically relevant, and the nurses could […]
  • Mayo Clinic: Marketing of the Healthcare System Some of the notable direct impacts of marketing in Mayo Clinic include increased number of patients in the hospital owing to the increased awareness and expanded scope of operation.
  • Fisher & Paykel Healthcare: Strategic Environment and the Supply Chain One of the main environmental factors that could change the work of the company and create new rules and standards is the idea of global warming and other environmental concerns that could occur at the […]
  • Employee Management Intervention in Healthcare The goal of the project is to develop an intervention by the OD framework aiming at the improvement of communication between employees and management through the enhancement of leadership practices.
  • Belbin Team Roles Inventory in Healthcare It allows a person to understand and identify the designation better to be more functional in the work of the team.
  • Healthcare Issues of Elderly Population One of the most practical solutions that can be implemented with a view to the health and welfare of the elderly is choosing a suitable nursing home that is well equipped to deal with the […]
  • Problems Facing Healthcare Management: Financial, Reform Implementation, Government Mandates, and Patient Safety Challenges facing the health sector seem to increase since the signing of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act into law.
  • Population Health Outcomes and Healthcare Service Delivery In terms of population health outcomes, changes in indicators like general and infant mortality and life expectancy “show that the health status in the U.S.population is improving over time, although racial and ethnic disparities persist”.
  • Hear Her Healthcare Campaign Evaluation The purpose of the following section is to provide a comprehensive and detailed evaluation of the described project. To begin with, it is essential to explore whether the goal and objectives of the project are […]
  • The Administrator’s Role in the Healthcare System In conclusion, it is crucial to see the administration’s influence on the whole healthcare system, understanding that not all problems are clinical.
  • Community Diagnosis in Healthcare The data in the disaster assessment tool show that the most vulnerable groups in the Santa Maria community to disasters such as earthquakes, fires, hurricanes, tornados, and storm are children and the elderly.
  • The Primary Healthcare: Key Issues Primary health care has helped to reduce the prevalence of obesity in girls in Saudi Arabia through government provision of sporting activities, inclusion of education on food and health in the school curriculum.
  • Access to Healthcare at Attawapiskat Community Aboriginal health is one of the pivotal aspects of the Canadian healthcare system due to the vulnerability of this population under the social determinants of health.
  • Automation in Healthcare System This can be achieved by not mentioning the names of patients and employees in the data, and, for example, identifying them by identification numbers that are not linked to their names in the database.
  • Lifelong Learning in Healthcare In summary, lifelong learning is of great significance for the medical profession, but it is defined by meaningful advantages and disadvantages.
  • Ethical and Legal Implications in Healthcare The situation signals the collective’s inability to cooperate correctly, and issues in the team can cause the worsening quality of healthcare services and severe patient outcomes.
  • Healthcare Access and Its Importance for Community Since access is intertwined with both individual and the population’s well-being, as can be seen from the analysis above, it is vital for the health of people as well as communities in general.
  • Issue of Racism in Healthcare The theory would question whether racism in healthcare is ethical and whether it facilitates the provision of care in a manner that is centered on values such as compassion, fairness, and integrity.
  • The Royal United Hospital: Barriers Affecting Delivery of Quality Healthcare The primary focus of this paper is to discuss some of the barriers that have proved to be daunting to both the hospital and the wider population and how these challenges may be alleviated.
  • Evolution of Computers in Commercial Industries and Healthcare Overall, healthcare information systems are ultimately vital and should be encouraged in all organizations to improve the quality of healthcare which is a very important need for all human beings.
  • The Healthcare System in Nigeria and the Universal Tri-Level of Care The social and infrastructural problems evolving out of the poor healthcare system have been represented as an inverted health care pyramid where the primary and secondary care are depicted as neglected.
  • The Leadership in Healthcare: The Intelligent Quotient and Technical Aspects TF type of leadership is therefore considered to be the way forward to influence and shape the healthcare culture in a way that will epitomize the basic culture attributes.
  • The Healthcare App: Review of the Concept and Vision Indeed, there is a need to do market research to highlight the features that the app should have depending on the needs of the target audience.
  • Managing Change in Healthcare Setting: Challenges and Diversification of Clients’ Needs The health of the nation is the primary concern of the government, which means that the constant improvement of the work of facilities belonging to this sphere acquires the top priority.
  • Nathan-Pulliam as a Healthcare Legislator It is hard to overestimate the role of nurses in the health care industry. Nathan-Pulliam is among them, and the former healthcare worker has created and supported a few bills that were designed to make […]
  • Big Data Management in the Healthcare Sector Big data in healthcare is a collective term used to refer to the process of collecting, analysing, leverage, and make sense of complex and immense patient and clinical data in a way that traditional data […]
  • Strategic Alternatives for Improvement Healthcare Sector Careful assessment of the business practices, of the core elements of the operations, and the team members offers guidelines for the strategies that the organization can undertake to improve the quality of service.
  • Pressure Ulcers as a Quality Issue in Healthcare Pressure ulcers or otherwise known as bed sores or decubitus ulcers are skin injuries in the underlying tissue that result from long periods of pressure on the skin.
  • Statistics of Crime Costs to the UK Healthcare The statistic is describing the claims by Labour that the NHS uses 500 million a year to treat wounds caused by knife crimes.
  • Staffing Ratio Mandates in Healthcare Studies conducted to assess the impact of staffing ratios have proved that there is a causal relationship between the quality of care provided by Health Service Organizations and overall patient outcomes.
  • Healthcare Services: Internal and External Factors I as the administrator of this hospital will conduct the environmental analysis, and in the context of this paper, I will define the most powerful external and internal forces and their impact on the competitive […]
  • Linear Programming in Healthcare Organisations Provided that medical workers identify the type of services required by a patient, they will be able to estimate the amount of costs which will be needed. On the whole, this discussion shows that linear […]
  • Smart Bed Technology in Healthcare An example of such a technology is a smart bed, which is a type of bed with sensors that collect information on the occupant. Nurses could use smart beds to track a patient’s response to […]
  • Ethical Issues and Nonmaleficence in Healthcare Straight calls in the chief surgeon to examine the possible implications for the patient’s health and decide the hospital’s reaction to the incident.
  • Globalization and Its Impact on Healthcare The solution to the problem is to rethink health service delivery policies and funding sectors. Globalization affects life expectancy; therefore, the healthcare system needs to be revised.
  • Leading a Culture of Excellence in Healthcare Industry The concept of a culture of excellence is to maintain personnel’s conviction that their work is meaningful and requires to be performed with superiority and be continuously improved.
  • Earthquake Prevention From Healthcare Perspective In terms of primary prevention of such a disaster, it is necessary to establish a public body or organization responsible for the creation of an extensive network of food, water, and first-aid kits to last […]
  • Hospital Operations Mismanagement: Healthcare Organizations The programs that seem to be working successfully in most institutions are the ones that involve streamlining hospital operations through a radical redesign of the entire process. This takes a thorough commitment of the hospital […]
  • Dubai Healthcare City’s Work System: Business Strategies The paper will also assess the organization’s business strategy using the following Porter’s models: Five Forces, Generic Model, and Value Chain.
  • Sociology and Health Care The healthcare industry is a social institution due to the fact that it is in the institutions where many people with various health complications meet.
  • Historical Evolution of Technology in Healthcare During the 18th century, the medical field was in disarray due to the lack of organization and deaths resulting from inefficiencies and negligence of doctors.
  • The Issue of Stereotypes in Healthcare As a result, the paper focuses on stereotypes in healthcare since bias and discrimination can imprison people in a cycle of illness.
  • Unilateral vs. Group Decision-Making in Healthcare Unilateral decision-making models are based on the concept of a leader being responsible for the whole process and having the most influence on the final say.
  • Healthcare Leadership and Economic Models This is further amplified by Priore who argues that the personnel who encourage their peers to question and identify the possible sections that could use research, development, and acceptance and implementation of changes to implement […]
  • Policy Competence and Policymaking in Healthcare Policy competence refers to the ability of a professional to partake efficiently in the preparation and implementation of relevant policies. Indeed, the key property of health policy competence is to ensure informed and competent decision-making […]
  • Multidisciplinary Teams Management in Healthcare However, despite forming the basis of numerous problem-solving and decision-making techniques in healthcare, dysfunctional team dynamics are attributed to more than 70% of medical errors. This investigation aims to review, analyze, and critically synthesize extant […]
  • China’s and India’s Healthcare Comparison The rate of women’s inclusivity in education, career, and professional opportunities is substantially lower in India than in China due to India’s cultural beliefs. However, the health status in India still lags behind relative to […]
  • Importance of Diversity in Healthcare Through my experience working in the medical field in the United States for many years, I witnessed the impact that diversity has on cultivating respectful and honorable relationships in patient care settings. My goal is […]
  • Socioeconomic Factors Affecting Healthcare Socioeconomic factors in healthcare influence the rates of disease, access to healthcare, and health outcomes. Overcrowding, poor sanitation, access, and availability of health facilities are the socioeconomic factors affecting healthcare.
  • Biometrics in Healthcare We will discuss biometrics, by providing its history and current uses, it’s impact on healthcare and nursing, advantages and disadvantages, issues/regulatory implications.
  • Healthcare Administrators and Managers’ Career Development Healthcare managers and administrators are in increasing demand as the organizations become more cumbersome and complex. It refers to the processes of recording, interpreting, classifying, and reporting financial transactions and economic data of the company.
  • Patient Education and Its Influence on Healthcare Moreover, the healthcare professional advised Jake to avoid smoking, include more vegetables and fresh fruits in his daily meals, and undertake a forty to fifty-minute walk daily.Mr.
  • Project Feasibility in Healthcare The aim of this study is to conduct a literature review and identify the value of feasibility in the implementation of sustainable and socially significant projects in healthcare, with an emphasis on economics and complementing […]
  • Quantitative Research Designs in Healthcare Consequently, when beginning a treatment program, the research nurses will have a conclusive data on the number of patients to diagnose and the number of practitioners to be deployed in every affected location.
  • Healthcare: Meaning of Communication I employed empathy when handling my patient by immersing myself in the patients feeling; this will boost patient satisfaction during the treatment process.
  • Biomedical Theories and Models in Healthcare Delivery The genetic basis of cancer theory is one of these paradigms, and it focuses on the genesis of the disease. A combination of factors leads to the occurrence and proliferation of cancer cells.
  • Healthcare Decision Making: Theory and Practice The decision to make is whether to administer the drugs to save the situation or not to do so and wait for medical back up that could take quite a lot of time to reach […]
  • Confidence Intervals and Hypothesis Testing in Healthcare Thus, the p value is used to determine whether the variables of a given study are within a desired range to accept or reject the null hypothesis.
  • Direct and Indirect Healthcare Providers Competencies The direct health care providers are nurse educators and advanced practice registered nurses. As distinct from nurse informaticists, nurse educators belong to the category of direct care providers.
  • The Magnet Recognition Program. Healthcare The Magnet Recognition Program was introduced by the American Nurses Credentialing Center to promote the use of best practices to provide healthcare in the US.
  • Major Challenges in the Healthcare Organizations The emergency room department is the most affected department and many lives have been lost due to the many challenges facing the department in many healthcare facilities.
  • Data Rules in Healthcare: Cerner vs. Epis Software Some of the information that is contained in a control file is the date and time that the database was created, the timestamp of the data created, the locations of the files that are used […]
  • Budgeting in Healthcare and Financial Management of Hospitals The departments in these institutions are many and each of them has to be planned for and, the finance department should understand the flow of funds in the institution. It shows the needs of the […]
  • Partnership Among the Leading Companies: Global Healthcare Exchange The development of alliances took place at a time when the US experienced a significant increase in healthcare expenditures amid an increase in complexity in the delivery of healthcare services.

Need to write a paper but don’t know which topic suits you best? Follow these simple tips to make the right choice:

  • Make sure the topic is arguable. In an argumentative essay, you need to present your point of view. That’s why it’s best to pick a theme that allows you to take a stance and make a valid argument to support it.
  • Do preliminary research. This will help you understand whether there’s enough information on your chosen subject. It’ll also help you narrow down the scope of your work.
  • Choose a controversial idea. Playing safe is often the right thing to do, but that might not be true for an argumentative paper. A debatable topic will make the writing process fun and engage your audience.
  • Ask your teacher for advice. Consulting your instructor may be a fantastic idea. After all, who else knows your research area as well as they do?

Healthcare is a multifaceted topic with abundant research dedicated to it. Here are some areas you might be interested in:

  • Medical malpractice. This branch is concerned with holding healthcare providers accountable for their actions and compensating patients who are injured due to a professional’s mistake.
  • End-of-life care. Assisted suicide is a sensitive topic for many. This sector looks into how much autonomy a patient should have over the decision to die.
  • Psychological support. Emotional well-being is often neglected compared to physical health. That’s why there is a separate branch dealing with issues such as access to and funding for mental health services.
  • Universal healthcare. The study in this field revolves around whether the government or private institutions should cover medical help.
  • Prescription drug prices. Millions of patients struggle to afford the necessary medications. This research field looks for ways to balance the need for innovation in the pharmaceutical industry and the cost of pills for patients.
  • Decision-Making Process in Healthcare Sector In spite of the popularity of the decision-making process, many critics admit that “the ideal decision-making process is unrealistic” because economic, social, and political changes affected modern society and an organization.
  • Cultural Impact on Healthcare Perception Members of some cultures are more hesitant to seek treatment because of the influence of cultural beliefs that govern their decisions and lifestyles.
  • Bright Road Healthcare System’s Quality Management The purpose of this paper is to identify the theoretical and practical implications of the use of Total Quality Management in healthcare.
  • Interdisciplinary Teams Role in Healthcare The role of the mental health nurse is to plan and deliver care to the patient. Due to this lack of clarity, Peck and Norman note the possibility of assuming that social workers might be […]
  • Human Factors and Their Impact on Healthcare To ensure its sufficient functioning, one could not underestimate paramount importance of Human Factors that aims at enhancing the quality of the provided services with the help of teamwork, tasks, workforce and its collaboration, culture, […]
  • Healthcare Disparities in East Harlem In terms of education, East Harlem has one of the highest rates of dropouts and school absenteeism in all levels of education.
  • Competing Needs in Improving Access to Healthcare According to Barros et al, more competition improves geographical access to health services by stimulating the entry of new providers. The changes will allow nurses to deliver care to underserved groups of the population and […]
  • Diabetes Insipidus: Disease Process With Implications for Healthcare Professionals This presentation will consider the topic of Diabetes Insipidus (DI) with a focus on its etiology and progress.
  • Professional Attributes of a Healthcare Professional Health Care Professionals are expected to commit and believe in certain fundamental principles to develop attributes characteristic of a professional person.
  • Banner HealthCare: Mission, Vision & Values, Statements The mission statement of Banner HealthCare depicts the reason why the organization exists. This is a goal that aligns with the mission statement because it improves the living conditions of people.
  • Creating SMART Nursing Goals: What It Takes to Improve Healthcare Standards In order to change the standards of the organizational behavior within the healthcare facility in question, it will be required to adopt the principles of lean management. Such attitudes can and will be changed with […]
  • Professional Identity and Stewardship in Healthcare I cannot but agree with my peer that the aspects of the role of a health care team member are multiple.
  • Preventing Never Events: Resilient Healthcare Principles According to Anderson and Watt, Several other events that are connected to severe levels of harm are not classified as never events, while not all never events are connected to significant patient harm.
  • Anti-Racism: Marginalization and Exclusion in Healthcare This essay examines the course’s impact and the concepts of marginalization and exclusion in healthcare. Marginalization is a concept that has profoundly influenced the understanding of race and racism in healthcare.
  • Healthcare Regulatory Agencies: Health and Human Services The Health and Human Services is an agency established to enhance the health and well-being of all Americans through fostering a sound and sustained advances in the sciences underlying public health, social services, and medicine.
  • International Healthcare Systems and Mortality Rates The main semantic result of this transition was a change in the epidemiological picture, which caused the need for mobilization and transformation of the healthcare system of developing countries.
  • The Role of the Incivility Concept Within the Healthcare Metaparadigm Although the essence of humanity is essential in any industry, the intertwining of several orientations in the essence of healthcare increases the complexity of adhering to all norms and concepts.
  • Patient Involvement in Healthcare The changing dynamics and increasing complexity of the healthcare system make it imperative for patients to take an active role in their care.
  • Strategies in the Healthcare Sector A healthcare organization that uses this principle is able to cluster the challenges and overcome them with coherent actions. These levels and components help managers to search for the best solutions and alternatives for their […]
  • The Ethical Use of Technology in Healthcare The patient should always feel seen and heard, and their needs and concerns should be at the forefront of any healthcare interaction.
  • Liability Issues in Healthcare Systems The other liability concerns employee safety, which is based on their work environment; the protective gear and safety measures are taken to safeguard them at the workplace.
  • Effective Risk Management in Healthcare Improvement in health resources and the diversity of inherent risks have rendered risk management a notion of central importance. In addition to addressing financial problems, effective risk management assumes a fundamental role in response to […]
  • In-Service Training on Effective Communication in Healthcare Using gestures and visual aids would improve communication between a medical assistant and patient since it would reduce language barriers since they can convey meaning without the use of spoken language.
  • Leadership in Healthcare Management Managing healthcare staff requires adherence to ethical, professional, communication, and other principles, and due to the work done, I can see that I have the prospects to strengthen and develop the necessary skills in myself.
  • Quality of Healthcare Delivery at Palmetto Hospital The vision to improve the quality of healthcare delivery at Palmetto Hospital in Miami Dade implies a fundamental change in the structure of the institution.
  • Qualitative Research in Healthcare The application of quantitative data is crucial for such an issue, as it is challenging to reflect the impact of positive affirmations on a hospital’s performance through numbers.
  • Healthcare Informatics System-Related Experiences The easy-to-use program allows for less effort on paperwork, freeing up more time for patient care, which is directly related to the quality of service and the efficiency of the nurse.
  • Bioethics as an Essential Part of Healthcare Models are interconnected in terms of reliance on internal and external factors of care, yet the narrative medicine model is the most crucial due to its emphasis on transparent communication and attention to patient history.
  • Healthcare Informatics and Its Key Functions The specific data obtained through the use of healthcare informatics is information regarding patients’ interactions with the facility. Thus, it ensures that all computers in the facility are connected to the same network and data […]
  • Cultural Assessment in a Healthcare Setting I had an example when a cultural assessment made it possible to establish the correct diagnosis. I decided to conduct a cultural assessment after the patient revealed during conversations that he had just arrived in […]
  • The Connection of Muslims and Healthcare Both Quran, the Holy Book of Islam, and the Hadiths, teachings of Muhammad, emphasize preventative care as well as health since the human body is a gift from God.
  • Religion and Spirituality as an Ethical Issue in Healthcare It is essential for a medical professional to understand the idea of spirituality and to be able to apply it in different contexts. However, the decline in religion has led to a rising popularity of […]
  • Aspects of the Benchmarking in Healthcare In this scenario, the HIM director utilized the principles of benchmarking to improve the performance of the organization’s transcription unit. This background work allowed the HIM director to understand the problem in greater detail and […]
  • Theology: Religion and Healthcare The methods of medicine are based on theological beliefs such as hospitality, the impossibility of healing the body without the soul, and medicine as a divine gift as life and the human body.
  • Professionalism and Attendance in Healthcare As a result, professionalism in healthcare is an integral element that focuses on the creation of safe conditions and the provision of quality care.
  • Healthcare Cost Depending on Chronic Disease Management of Diabetes and Hypertension A sufficient level of process optimization and the presence of a professional treating staff in the necessary number will be able to help improve the indicators.
  • The Spread of Monkeypox as a Topic in Healthcare Considering the significance of the issue, it is necessary to assess the level of governmental awareness and measures that are planned to be taken as well.
  • LGBTQ+ (Queer) Military Discrimination in Healthcare Furthermore, the subject is relevant to the field of psychology as the current phenomenon examines discrimination in healthcare both from the psychological outcomes experienced by veterans as well as the perception of LGBTQ+ patients through […]
  • Fuzzy Decision-Making in Healthcare Fuzzy decision making in healthcare administration practice refers to the process of deciding which best intervention goals or measures should be applied when it is difficult to precisely tell medication for a given illness.
  • Public Authorities’ Role in the Healthcare System The key stakeholders of the health care system include doctors, pharmaceutical companies, insurance firms, and the government. Since the main objective of employers is to make money, offering health insurance to workers is more of […]
  • The Use of Simulation in Healthcare
  • Statistics: The Use in Healthcare
  • Predictive Analytics in Healthcare Decision-Making
  • Reducing Healthcare Spending: Annotated Bibliography
  • Pre- and Post-Test Evaluation Design in Healthcare
  • Promoting Equity With Healthcare Reforms
  • Analytical Tools Used in Healthcare
  • Quality Care in Healthcare Facilities
  • Costing Effect on Canadian Healthcare After COVID-19
  • Addressing the Healthcare Language Barrier of Afghan Refugees in California
  • Quadruple Aim: Enhancing Healthcare Efficiency
  • Staffing Shortages in Healthcare
  • Conflict Resolution in Pediatric Healthcare
  • Standards of Care Violation Incident and Risk Management in Healthcare
  • Ethics in Healthcare: Biggest Healthcare Data Breaches
  • The Influence of Third-Party Payment on Healthcare Economics
  • Conflict Management in Healthcare
  • The Role of the H.R. Department in Healthcare
  • The Importance of Healthcare Compliance
  • Peculiarities of the U.S. Healthcare System
  • SBAR in Healthcare Contexts: Interpersonal Communication
  • State Laws and Regulations Governing Healthcare Organizations
  • The Replacement for the ACA Healthcare Insurance Policy
  • The Issue of Abuse in the Healthcare Sector
  • Lillian Wald: Pioneering Public Health Nursing and Healthcare Reforms
  • Use of Technology in Healthcare
  • Home Healthcare Renovation Project Proposal
  • Syphilis as a Healthcare Threat
  • Digital Technology in Healthcare
  • The Violence Towards Healthcare Workers Podcast
  • The US Healthcare Financing Concerns
  • Better Communication in Healthcare
  • Nursing Interventions and Healthcare Technologies
  • Resources Allocation in the Healthcare Sector
  • HIPAA Regulations and Telepsychiatry Challenges in Modern Healthcare
  • Balance of Power and Influence in Healthcare
  • Social Disparities and Access to Healthcare Services
  • Artificial Intelligence as a Tool in Healthcare
  • Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare Administration
  • A Fall Reduction Policy in Healthcare
  • Service Quality Impact on Customer Retention in Healthcare
  • Access of Refugees to Healthcare in Nevada
  • Program Model Implementation in Healthcare
  • Data Visualization Methods in Healthcare
  • A Pandemic-Driven Shift Transforming Healthcare Worldwide
  • Ethical Dilemma in Healthcare: Privacy and the Right to Know
  • Discrimination in the US Healthcare Sector
  • Aspects of the Healthcare Project Teams
  • Systems, Applications, and Products in Healthcare
  • Human Resource Departments in Healthcare
  • Racism in the Healthcare Sector
  • Data Stewardship in Healthcare
  • The Healthcare-Associated Infections Prevention
  • Employee Onboarding in Healthcare
  • Advanced Practice Nurses: Impact of Healthcare Policy and Advocacy
  • Healthcare Reforms in Saudi Arabia
  • Discussion: Moral Climate of Healthcare
  • The Healthcare Breach Reporting Assessment
  • Healthcare Fraud and Kickbacks
  • The Six Sigma Projects in Healthcare
  • Examining Progress Towards Collaborative Multidisciplinary Healthcare Teams
  • The Analytics Methodology Applied to the Australian Healthcare Industry
  • Advanced Access Scheduling System in Healthcare
  • A Healthcare Change Project Manager’s Roles
  • Racism in Healthcare and Education
  • Healthcare Policies and Delivery
  • Effect of COVID-19 on Healthcare
  • Approaches to Effective Change Management in the Healthcare Settings
  • The VITAS Healthcare Program Evaluation
  • Healthcare Devices in Smart Home and Telemedicine
  • Low Back Pain Management in Healthcare Workers in New York City
  • The Healthcare-Associated Infections Educational Program
  • Behavioral Epidemiology for Healthcare Management
  • Characteristics of the Healthcare Industry
  • Healthcare Supply Chain Management Post COVID-19
  • Quantitative Methods in Healthcare Management
  • Quantitative Tools and Methods in Healthcare Management
  • Research Technique in Healthcare
  • The Valley Healthcare System’s Use of Technology
  • Economic Influences on Peru’s Healthcare System
  • Healthcare Reimbursement and Associated Influences
  • Organizational Assessment in Healthcare
  • The Liberal and Conservative Perspectives on Free Healthcare
  • Healthcare Laws and Ethical Principles
  • Healthcare Inequalities and Continuing Reform
  • Inadequate Nurses in Healthcare Centers
  • Healthcare Issues in Texas and Their Interconnection
  • Incivility, Violence, and Bullying in the Healthcare Workplace
  • Aspects of Statistics in Healthcare
  • Fraudulent Activity in Healthcare
  • Statistical Concepts in Healthcare
  • How the Insurance and Drug Industries Affected the Universal Healthcare
  • Fraud and Abuse in the Healthcare Industry
  • Telehealth and Its Role in the Healthcare Sector
  • A Healthcare Proposal for a Social Change
  • Aetna: The Transformation of Healthcare
  • Healthcare Research: Data Collection
  • Research and Quality Improvement in Healthcare
  • Non-, Quasi-, and Experimental Research in Healthcare
  • The Mental Healthcare Provision
  • Nutrient Delivery in Healthcare
  • Marketing: The Role in Healthcare
  • Edwin Chadwick and Statistics in Healthcare
  • Professional Development in American Healthcare
  • Social Media and Mobile Devices in Healthcare
  • LGBTQ (Queer) Community’s Challenges in Healthcare
  • Ethical Decisions in Healthcare
  • Strategic Development in Healthcare
  • Research Methods Analysis: Healthcare
  • Protocols and Standards in Healthcare
  • The Massachusetts Healthcare Reform Act
  • Rising Healthcare Costs in the United States
  • The US Healthcare System: Management Methods
  • A Healthcare Public Policy Meeting on Number of Doctors
  • Patient Safety in Ambulatory Healthcare
  • Sustainable Healthcare and COVID-19 Pandemic
  • Pacific Healthcare in New Zealand
  • Gender and Leadership in Healthcare Administration
  • Demographic Changes’ Impact on Healthcare
  • The Use of Social Media in Healthcare
  • Nursing Role in Healthcare Reimbursement System
  • The Importance of Quality Healthcare
  • The Use of Dashboards in Healthcare
  • Cultural Considerations in Health Policy and Effective Healthcare Delivery
  • Wearable Technology in Healthcare
  • Technological Innovations in Healthcare
  • Patients with Arterial Hypertension: Healthcare Changes
  • Measuring Quality in Healthcare Facilities
  • Patient Falls Within the Healthcare Facility
  • Evaluating Elasticity in Healthcare
  • Elasticity and How It Affects Decision-Making in Healthcare
  • Promoting Social Change in Healthcare through Student-University Alignment
  • Overcoming Nurse Shortages for Improved Healthcare
  • Exploring Theories Across Multiple Disciplines in Healthcare
  • Concerns Related to Complex Adaptive Systems in Healthcare
  • COVID-19 and Competing Needs in Healthcare
  • Evidence-Based Practice in Healthcare: Concept
  • The Role of Evidence-Based Practice in Healthcare
  • Universal Healthcare Coverage in Different Countries
  • Corporate Liability of Healthcare Organizations
  • Diabetes Mellitus as Problem in US Healthcare
  • The Aspects of Databases in Healthcare
  • Improving Healthcare Straight from the Heart
  • Why Healthcare Economics Will Never Be the Same
  • Healthcare Workers’ Burnout Sources and Solutions
  • Tort Reform: Impact on Healthcare
  • Cost-Minimization Analysis in Healthcare
  • Healthcare as a Right: Access, Quality, and Impact
  • Reasons Why Markets Fail in the Healthcare
  • Ethical Committee in Healthcare Presentation
  • Augmenting the Disaster Healthcare Workforce
  • Problem in Healthcare: The Case of Dr. Duntsch
  • Financing in Healthcare: Hospital and Solo Practice
  • Johns Hopkins Healthcare: Policy Evaluation
  • Interest Group Model of Regulation in Healthcare
  • How Behavioral Economics Affects Healthcare Decisions
  • Delegation of Authority in Healthcare
  • Access to Healthcare in the United States
  • Expectancy and Goal-Setting Theories in Healthcare
  • Political Boundaries in Healthcare: Expanding Options for Effective Management
  • Professions in Healthcare: Scope of Practice and Competencies
  • Implementing a Combination Payment System in Healthcare
  • Healthcare Burnout and Its Impact
  • Chatbots as a Healthcare Trend
  • Human Resource Planning in Healthcare
  • Cost Containment in Healthcare
  • Cost Containment Strategies in Healthcare
  • Collaboration and Leadership in Healthcare
  • Project Translation and Planning in Healthcare
  • Detecting Abuse in Healthcare Practice
  • Solving Healthcare Organizational Issues
  • Provider Turnover’s Impact on Healthcare
  • The Reality of Providing Nursing Services in a Healthcare Rationing System
  • The Data Mining Method in Healthcare and Education
  • Healthcare Information Technologies
  • Transformational Leadership in a Healthcare Team
  • A Healthcare Issue of Diabetes Mellitus
  • Evidence-Informed Decision Making in Healthcare
  • Pharmacoeconomics’s Role in Healthcare
  • “Healthcare Service Utilization…” by Moonpanane et al.
  • Healthcare Providers’ Shortage and Telemedicine
  • Collaboration and Emotional Competence in Healthcare
  • Future of Nursing and Transformation of Healthcare
  • Mental Health of Healthcare Workers After COVID-19
  • Cutting Investments in Healthcare
  • Healthcare in the United States vs. Canada
  • Discussion of Disclosure of Information in Healthcare
  • Mental Healthcare in Harlem United
  • Healthcare Fraud and Abuse Prevention
  • Organizational Changes in Healthcare
  • Data Breach in the Healthcare Sector
  • Information Technology in Healthcare
  • Aspects of American Indians Healthcare
  • Aspects of the US Healthcare System
  • Authentic Leadership in Healthcare
  • Aspects of Leadership in Healthcare
  • Emerging Issues in American Healthcare
  • Applications of Positive Psychology in Healthcare
  • Healthcare for Undocumented and Immigrant Populations
  • Walmart: Healthcare and Customer Perspective
  • Teleology and Deontology in Healthcare
  • Tai Chi as Complementary and Alternative Healthcare
  • Quality Improvement in Healthcare
  • Approaches to Improving Cultural Competence in Healthcare
  • Mexico’s COVID Policy: Healthcare Measures and Economic Stimuli
  • Enhancing Electronic Solutions in Healthcare Facilities
  • The American Healthcare System as Apartheid
  • Importance of Experts in Healthcare Project Implementation
  • Major Forces Affecting Healthcare and Challenges for Leaders
  • Case Management in Healthcare Delivery
  • High Costs of Healthcare Services
  • Observation in Healthcare Settings
  • Choosing Personnel in Healthcare
  • Issues in the American Healthcare System
  • Healthcare Organizations: Vision and Mission
  • The Importance of Aligning a Healthcare Organization’s Vision
  • Healthcare and Family Diversity
  • Healthcare Testing of a Domestic Violence Victim
  • Leadership Approaches in Healthcare
  • Price Transparency in Healthcare
  • Control Charts for Healthcare Organizations
  • Healthcare Systems Factors
  • Social Determinants in Healthcare
  • Technology and Public Outreach in Healthcare
  • American Vulnerable Populations’ Healthcare Needs
  • The Healthcare Legislation S. 610 and HR 1667
  • Ethical Principles in Healthcare
  • Qualitative Research Methods in Healthcare
  • Kurt Lewin’s Change Framework in Healthcare
  • Healthcare Administrators’ Role in Population Health
  • Healthcare-Associated Infections and Preventive Measures
  • Healthcare Policy. S. 3799: Prevent Pandemics Act
  • Flexible Working Arrangements in Healthcare
  • The Coping Concept Analysis in the Healthcare Context
  • The Electronic Tools Use in Healthcare
  • High-Performance Work Team Environment in Healthcare
  • Discussion of Healthcare Issue: Falls in Older Adults
  • Population Health and How It Relates to Healthcare
  • Ensuring Data Integrity of Healthcare Information by Zarour et al.
  • Evidence-Based Practice and Healthcare Issues
  • Analysis of Healthcare in University
  • Ageism in Healthcare Settings
  • Basic Components of a Healthcare Delivery Service
  • US Healthcare: Shifting from Reactive to Proactive
  • Analysis of Healthcare Accreditation Importance
  • Workplace Violence Prevention Act in Healthcare
  • Advanced Registered Nurse Practitioners and Healthcare Quality Improvement
  • Bioethics Principles in Healthcare
  • The United States Healthcare Institutions’ Challenges
  • Income and Expenses in Healthcare
  • Online Healthcare Resources and Telehealth
  • Challenges to Healthcare Delivery
  • Emergency Preparedness Regarding Healthcare Informatics
  • A Healthcare Study in the Vancouver Sun Newspaper
  • Importance of Leadership Attributes for Healthcare
  • Importance of Leadership in Healthcare and Nursing
  • The Safety of Medical or Healthcare Workers
  • The Cost-Effective Analysis in Healthcare
  • Security Plan for Healthcare Facility
  • Analysis of Realm of Global Healthcare
  • Discussion: Poverty and Healthcare
  • Legal and Ethical Regulations in Healthcare
  • Security Regulation Compliances in Healthcare
  • The Controlling Healthcare Organizations
  • Equitable Medical Care to Native Groups: Healthcare Clinic Plan
  • Effective Communication in Healthcare Culture
  • Healthcare System: Weaknesses and Complications
  • Primary Healthcare Community Resources
  • The Strength-Based Approach in Healthcare
  • Healthcare Data Integration Failure
  • Importance of Analyzing Undesired Outcomes in a Healthcare Setting
  • Leading Change and Sustainability in the Healthcare
  • Data Integrity and Analysis in Healthcare
  • Healthcare Application of Statistics
  • Importance of Hand-Hygiene to Prevent Healthcare-Associated Infections
  • Multidimensional Approach to Healthcare
  • Healthcare Settings and Affordable Care Act
  • Healthcare Insurance and Job Search
  • The Cost of Quality in Healthcare
  • The Nurse’s Role in Improving Healthcare Interventions
  • Is American Healthcare Good: Comparison to Japan and Germany
  • Information Governance Considerations in Healthcare
  • Healthcare Compliance Department
  • Digital Packages in Healthcare
  • Duty-Based Ethics and Kant’s Theory in Healthcare
  • A School Nurse’s Role in Healthcare
  • Organizational Behavior Management in Healthcare
  • Depression in the Field of a Healthcare Administrator
  • Data-Driven Decisions in Healthcare
  • Productivity and Operational Planning in Healthcare
  • Healthcare Issues and Government Response
  • The Role of the Nurse in the Healthcare System
  • The Concept of Healthcare Disparities
  • Interprofessional Collaboration Initiatives in Healthcare
  • Healthcare Informatics: Application and Importance
  • Advanced Directive Legislation in Healthcare
  • Healthcare: Mrs. Maggie Meriwether Case Study
  • Productivity Analysis in Healthcare System
  • Measurements for Performance in Healthcare
  • The Healthcare Cost Interview with a Family Member
  • How Teladoc Is Transforming Access to Healthcare
  • Legal and Ethical Implications in Healthcare
  • The Consumers’ Assessment of Healthcare
  • States of Elasticity of Demand From the Healthcare Sector
  • “Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare” and “From Spreading to Embedding Innovation”
  • IT Management in Healthcare and Its Importance
  • IT Department in Modern Healthcare Organization
  • Equity in the United States’ Healthcare
  • Nurses Perception of Leadership and Impact of Healthcare Changes
  • The Process of Deploying New Technology in the Healthcare Organization
  • Ethical and Legal Issues With the Disclosure of HIV Status of Healthcare Workers
  • The Cost of Healthcare and Privatization
  • The Seven Step Revenue in Healthcare
  • Participatory Healthcare Informatics
  • Racism: Healthcare Crisis and the Nurses Role
  • Memorandum of Understanding in Healthcare
  • Communication in Healthcare: Social Penetration
  • Public Health and Healthcare Laws
  • Women’s Health as Male-Dominated Healthcare Field
  • Laws Influencing Information Security and Privacy in the Healthcare Sector
  • SLP Assignment: Leadership and Cultural Competence of Healthcare Professionals
  • Business Plan: Devoted Elderly Healthcare Services
  • Workplace Violence Prevention Bill for Healthcare Workers
  • The Essential Issues in the Healthcare System
  • Two-Sided Message Marketing Strategy in Healthcare
  • Interoperability in the Healthcare System
  • “The Language of Healthcare Reform” by Larry Levitt
  • Developing a New Online Healthcare Education Site
  • Online Healthcare Education Program in Hospitals
  • Patient HealthCare: Early Diagnosis of Cancer
  • Irrevocably Broken Healthcare System
  • Main Benefits of Market Segmentation in Healthcare
  • Promoting Diversity in Healthcare
  • Increasing Cultural Awareness in Healthcare
  • Accreditations of Higher Educations Healthcare Schools
  • Analysis of Opioid Use in Healthcare
  • Vertical Integration Strategy in Healthcare Facilities
  • Pricing Strategies in Healthcare
  • Cultural Competency in Healthcare
  • Mental Health Services for Healthcare Providers of Critical Patients
  • Conflict Management in the Healthcare Workplace
  • Business Principles in Healthcare
  • Barriers to Healthcare Plan Implementation
  • Financial and Organizational Barriers to Healthcare
  • How the Pandemic Affects the US Healthcare System
  • Addressing Constraints in the Healthcare Setting
  • Importance of Statistical Measures for Healthcare Administrator
  • Organizational Culture for Safety in Healthcare
  • Increasing Preventative Healthcare Measures
  • Data Collection in Healthcare Programs
  • Healthcare and Emergency Preparedness Among Rural Communities
  • Bullying and Harassment in the Healthcare Workplace
  • Genetics and Genomics in Healthcare Development
  • Innovation and Change in Healthcare
  • Role and Impact of Gospel in Healthcare
  • Healthcare Workers’ Stress Coping Strategies
  • Diversicare Healthcare Analysis and Strategic Goals
  • Written and Verbal Reports on a Patient Condition and Errors in Healthcare
  • The Six Sigma Quality Improvement Skills in Healthcare
  • Change Champions in Healthcare Organizations
  • Healthcare Infrastructure and Private Finance Initiative
  • Diversicare Healthcare’s Financial Management
  • Application of the Internet of Things (IoT) in the Healthcare Industry
  • The Role of Diversity in Healthcare
  • Healthcare Administration: The Role of Information Technologies
  • Healthcare Regulations and Federalism’s Impact
  • Public and Private Healthcare in Australia
  • Non Traditional Healthcare Practices in the Healthcare System
  • The Spirituality Concept in Healthcare
  • The Pandemic’s Effect on the US Healthcare System
  • Marketing Techniques in the Healthcare Industry
  • Diversicare Healthcare Services Inc.’s Obstacles
  • The United Healthcare Organization Strategic Direction
  • A Manager’s Power Bases in a Healthcare Setting
  • Analysis of Tort in Society and Healthcare
  • Comprehensive Assessment in Healthcare
  • Balance Scorecard for United Healthcare
  • The Impact of Stereotypes on the Healthcare System
  • Healthcare Industry: Aspects of Financing
  • Outcome Measures of Healthcare Systems
  • Challenges Facing Healthcare Organizations and Managers
  • Shortage of Healthcare Personnel
  • Aging Population and Its Effect on the US Healthcare
  • Healthcare Call to Action: Racism in Medicine
  • Ethical Challenges in Healthcare and Nursing Practice: Obesity-Related Diseases
  • How Covid-19 Changed Healthcare Marketing
  • Neuroplasticity Practice in Australian Healthcare
  • Revenue Cycle Management in Healthcare
  • Creating a High-Performance Culture in Healthcare
  • Workplace Errors in the Healthcare Industry
  • Affordable Healthcare Technologies Development
  • Healthcare Evolution and Its Effect on the US
  • Marketing Healthcare Plan for Baby Boomers Close to Retirement
  • Environmental Factors in Healthcare Marketing: In-Company and After-Hours Clinics
  • Implementation of Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare Settings
  • Practice Environment in Healthcare
  • Healthcare Financial Management Implications
  • Aster DM Healthcare Firm’s Strategies to Deal With COVID-19
  • Receptive Contexts for Change Framework in Healthcare
  • Impact of Socioeconomic Status on Treatment Within Healthcare System
  • The Cultural Context in Nursing and Healthcare
  • The Governmental Healthcare Program and Patient Behavior
  • Motivation Theories in the Healthcare Context
  • Patient Portal Benefits for Better Healthcare Delivery
  • Universal Healthcare in the US
  • Web-Based Healthcare Information on American Heart Association
  • Neighborhood Assessment: Healthcare Options, Leisure, Entertainment, and Infrastructure
  • Healthcare Laws and Their Impact on Procedures
  • Population Health Disparities and Healthcare Access
  • COVID-19 Vaccine: The Importance for Healthcare Workers
  • Metron Healthcare Organisation’s Development
  • Driving Change in Healthcare With Rational Decision-Making
  • The US Healthcare System Essay
  • Ideas of Flexibility in Healthcare
  • Applying Quality Management in Healthcare
  • Changes in Healthcare, Nursing Leadership & Management
  • Diabetes and Its Economic Effect on Healthcare

Modern Lifestyle and Its Effect on Public Health

Everyday habits can influence an individual’s physical and psychological state. A modern lifestyle is often associated with serious illnesses since it negatively affects people’s diet and sleeping patterns. It has been found that millions die across the globe due to the fast pace of life.

How Is Genetic Engineering Used in Healthcare?

New medical technology opens up opportunities and ways of treatment that were previously unthinkable. This includes increasing the usage of genetically modified organisms in healthcare. For instance, they are used to produce insulin, therapeutic proteins, and vaccines.

The Role of Public Policies in Mental Health Care

Psychological well-being is frequently overlooked. Policies regarding mental health are crucial in making healthcare services effective. The right strategies can increase public awareness of mental diseases and make individuals seeking help more comfortable and open about their struggles.

Heart Diseases and Healthcare Access

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death among Americans. High costs and lack of access to healthcare are what make the illness so dangerous. Millions simply can’t afford the treatment and are unlikely to receive appropriate assistance when needed.

Health Diversity

America is a diverse country with people of all backgrounds. The concept of inclusion is not new to many fields of work, but it has only recently been intertwined with healthcare. Having diverse medical staff is essential since it creates a stronger community and reduces discrimination towards patients. The shift towards inclusion contributes to creating a productive and open-minded medical community.

  • Can Government Deliver Quality Rural Healthcare?
  • Does Healthcare Infrastructure Have an Impact on Delay in Diagnosis and Survival?
  • Does Institutional Quality Improve the Appropriateness of Healthcare Provision?
  • Does Leadership Matter for Healthcare Service Quality?
  • Does the United States Get the Best in Return for What We Invest in Healthcare?
  • How Does Electronic Healthcare Records Provide Additional Recommendation?
  • How Good Communication Skill Is Significant in Healthcare?
  • How Has the Healthcare Industry Changed in the Last 10 Years?
  • How Healthcare Has Advanced in Europe Since the Dark Ages Days?
  • How Health Policy Shapes Healthcare Sector Productivity?
  • How Pharmaceutical Companies Affect the Healthcare System?
  • How Technology Has Revolutionized the Dimension of Healthcare?
  • How the Price Inflation Affects the Federal Healthcare System?
  • What Makes Hospice Such a Unique Area of Healthcare Service?
  • What Privacy Concerns Docs Transmitting Healthcare?
  • What Has Been the Impact of Medicare on the Healthcare System?
  • What Effect Will the Baby Boomer Population Have on Healthcare?
  • What Competencies Are Needed for Entry Level Employment in Healthcare?
  • What Are the Current Health Setbacks in Healthcare?
  • What Is the Term Strategic Planning Window for Healthcare?
  • What Are the Issues Affecting Sustainability of Healthcare Financing in Romania?
  • What Are the Interactions Between Patient Satisfaction and Efficiency in Healthcare?
  • What Is the Importance of Healthcare Provider?
  • What Is the Significance of Values in the Healthcare Field?
  • What Are the Current Trends and Issues in Healthcare?
  • Government Regulation Titles
  • Health Promotion Research Topics
  • Nursing Theory Questions
  • Hygiene Essay Topics
  • Obamacare Questions
  • Pharmacy Research Ideas
  • Wellness Essay Topics
  • First Aid Research Topics
  • Chicago (A-D)
  • Chicago (N-B)

IvyPanda. (2024, November 12). 612 Healthcare Topics to Write about & Essay Examples. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/healthcare-essay-topics/

"612 Healthcare Topics to Write about & Essay Examples." IvyPanda , 12 Nov. 2024, ivypanda.com/essays/topic/healthcare-essay-topics/.

IvyPanda . (2024) '612 Healthcare Topics to Write about & Essay Examples'. 12 November.

IvyPanda . 2024. "612 Healthcare Topics to Write about & Essay Examples." November 12, 2024. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/healthcare-essay-topics/.

1. IvyPanda . "612 Healthcare Topics to Write about & Essay Examples." November 12, 2024. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/healthcare-essay-topics/.

Bibliography

IvyPanda . "612 Healthcare Topics to Write about & Essay Examples." November 12, 2024. https://ivypanda.com/essays/topic/healthcare-essay-topics/.

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