Prepare a presentation in which you reflect on patient


Presentation Assignment

Deployment Flow Chart

Instruction: For this assignment, you will first need to carefully review the scenario in this document. You will then construct a presentation in which you reflect on patient needs and the processes that must be in place surrounding an acute illness for a smooth transition for everyone involved. Your presentation must include the deployment flowchart you drafted in Module Two.

Prompt: Carefully review the information in this scenario. Then construct a presentation (including speaker's notes) in which you reflect on the needs of the patient and the processes that must be in place surrounding this acute illness for a smooth transition for everyone involved.

Specifically, include the following information in your presentation:

• Priority care needs of the patient at the center of the scenario
• Priority care needs of the family care providers
• The disruption that this acute illness has caused for the patient, family members, and clinical microsystem
• The experiential features of acuity that are apparent in this case
• The elements that the clinical microsystem must possess in order to meet this patient's care needs
• Potential barriers that may exist and must be managed in order to provide that care
• The communication strategies that were used in the delivery of care
• Well-defined (but flexible) roles within the clinical microsystem
• Potential strategies to plan for unexpected changes in care needs
• The deployment flowchart you created in Module Two (see page 225 of Value by Design), which must include the following:

o Evidence-based core measure algorithms
o Structured decision making and standing orders
o Advanced access
o Reliable handoffs
o Effective communication o Rehearsal of coordinated actions

Presentations: In a professional career, one may be called upon to conduct research and deliver findings in professional settings. No matter how extensive the research or accurate the conclusions, a weak presentation can undermine an argument. A presentation can be an effective way of making your argument. When creating presentations, you develop skills in researching an issue, synthesizing the information, organizing data logically, and presenting findings in an effective manner.

Principles of an Effective Presentation:

• There are various template designs that you can find on the web for your presentation. However, first consider your presentation from the perspective of your audience prior to selecting a specific style. Distracting backgrounds, large blocks of text, all uppercase fonts, elaborate font styles, grammatical errors, and misspellings are distracting. Be consistent with the style of text, bullets, and sub-points in order to support a powerful presentation that allows your content to be the focus.

• Each slide should include your key point(s). Do not place large blocks of text on the visual. Your presentation is not a means of presenting a short paper. In an actual presentation you would not "read" from your slides but rather use them as prompts.

• Any notes or narration you would use in delivering this presentation to a group should be listed in the "notes" section of the slide.

• References should be listed at the bottom of the slide in slightly smaller text.

• Use clip art, AutoShapes, pictures, charts, tables, and diagrams to enhance but not overwhelm your content.

• Be mindful of the intended audience and seek to assess the presentation's effectiveness by gauging audience comprehension (when possible).

Attachment:- Presentation-Scenario.rar

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Biology: Prepare a presentation in which you reflect on patient
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