Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on "Code Orange Alert" - A Look At Nursing, Workplace Violence & OSHA Regulations. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5-page paper that examines the rules and regulations mandated for the health care profession by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA, with a focus on violence in the workplace. Discussed is OSHA's 1996 3148 Guidelines for Preventing Workplace Violence for the Health Care and Social Service Workers and the fact that the suggestions it presents are optional rather than mandatory. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_LCOrange.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
past the midnight hour. The muted night lighting that illuminated the halls brightened perceptibly at a central point that divided the wide hallways of the rectangular building, a central
point that marked the location of the recessed nurses station. Behind the waist-high, open circular desk that surrounded the station, a solitary nurse concentrated on the mixture of charts
and forms that spread across the surface of the desk. Normally the nurse would be accompanied by at least one additional coworker to lend assistance and companionship to the
long nocturnal hours, but recent layoffs due to budget cuts coupled with higher than average absenteeism due to the flu often left lone employees in charge as of late. Focused
on the tasks at hand, the nurse heard neither the soft click of the closing door nor the quiet approach of bare feet. Either a flash of peripheral vision
or a hint of mental intuition caused the nurse to glance up in time to register the form of the patient standing across the narrow desktop, but a fraction too
late to avoid the execution of the weapon held in the patients hand. This type of situation could occur in any given workplace under any given set of circumstances at
any given time, but the Bureau of Labor Statistics has deemed that health care and social service employees are subject to a higher risk of violent physical assaults and resultant
cases of injury and death than workers in any other profession (Chenier, 1998; p. 557). The Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries report issued by the Bureau Labor Statistics department
in 1997, in fact, placed health care workers at an overall risk of violence and injury that was 16 times higher than that of other occupations (Elliott, 1997; p. 38).
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