Criminal Justice and Public Health: MRSA and Other Deadly Pathogens

Author(s): Dennis Stevens

Edition: 1

Copyright: 2015

Pages: 380

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ISBN 9781465269782

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An estimated 100,000 individuals are killed annually from deadly infectious pathogens after being admitted to American hospitals, regardless of the reason he or she had been admitted to the hospital in the first place.

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) advance the idea that most of those infectious deaths were preventable.

Criminal Justice and Public Health: MRSA and Other Deadly Pathogens is an account of the relationship between the quality of public safety services, treatment, and care provided by criminal justice personnel and their collaborative partners (firefighters, hospitals and clinics, and healthcare personnel). The struggle to provide and to receive quality services is, in essence, a struggle for social justice.

Criminal Justice and Public Health: MRSA and Other Deadly Pathogens:

  • Is an account of public health organizations toward their fulfillment to assure conditions in which individuals can be healthy in a world invaded by antibiotic resistant mutate strains of bacteria and viruses.
  • Provides evidence revealing that individuals of the lower social economic class most often intersect with the justice community and their collaborative partners. Generally those same individuals experience poor healthcare, tend to be less healthy than others for a variety of reasons, and once confined are more likely to be exposed and contaminated by infectious diseases placing prisoners and correctional personnel at risk.
  • Is an account of people and tribes; it is a description of bureaucratic hierarchies and social class, and American greed; it’s a story about the haves and the have-nots and the unintentional agenda of the Power Elite and their sophisticated approach to saving mankind from itself resulting in mass incarceration, criminalization policies, and punitive enforcement strategies that haven’t changed the color of crime.
  • Ignites your imagination, attacks your peace of mind, and will lead to some anxious but worthy debates in the classroom and at home.

 

You May Also Like

The Failure of the American Prison Complex: Let's Abolish It

 

 

 

Chapter 1 Disaster Comes in Threes
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
The Gulf Coast
First and Last Lecture
The Lessons of History
The Eye of the Storm
Courageous People
An Unprepared Government
Federal Government’s Unprofessional Decisions
Medical Care: Who Should Receive and Who Shouldn’t Receive Treatment
Investigation of Medical Practitioners
Immediate Government Response to NO Police Officers and Others
The Aftermath of Katrina
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes
 

Chapter 2 Lessons Learned: Disasters Two and Three
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
America Is Engaged in Another Disaster of Our Own Design
Early Results of This New Disaster
Colonization
What Powers the New Disaster?
Transmission of Infectious Pathogens Including MRSA
The Black Sheep
Patch and Pray Healthcare
Disease Transmission Linked to Prison Populations
Early Reports of Infectious Pathogens
Social Justice and Public Health
Infectious Pathogens and Occupational Public Service Performance
Nothing Is as It Seems: Thomas Theorem
Neutralizing the Plague
Other Reasons for Not Resolving the Superbug Epidemic
What Causes Antibiotic Resistance?
Midst of a Deadly Infectious Pathogens Invasion
Ideas Inspiring This Book
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes
 

Chapter 3 Essentials of Public Health
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Enhancing Our Knowledge about Public Health (PH)
Scratchy Understanding of Public Health
The Affordable Care Act
Starting Point
Medical Model of Health: Reductionist and Holistic Approaches
What Is Public Health (PH)?
Five Leading Causes of Death
The Role of Public Health
Public Health Intervention Strategies
Idea Inspiring This Chapter
From Justice to Prevention
Government’s Annual Public Health Spending
The Public’s Health Spending
Necessity of Government
Law and Obligation of Government toward Public Health and Public Safety
The Constitution, Government, and Public Health
The National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO)
Local Health Departments (LHD)
Mecklenburg County Health Department (MCHD): Charlotte, North Carolina
Multnomah County Health and Human Services (MCHHS): Portland, Oregon
Massachusetts Department of Public Health (DPH)
Ohio Department of Health (ODH)
Alivio Medical Center
US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
HHC Management Challenges According to HHC
Ethical Principles of Public Health
Summary
Student Worksheets
Appendix 1: Universities with PH Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees
Appendix 2: US Government Health Agencies, Description of Services, and Websites Addresses
Appendix 3: PH Website Links
Appendix 4: Disciplines of PH
Endnotes
 

Chapter 4 Public Healthcare and Society
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Public Health Controversy
Individual Freedom or Liberty
The Economic Impact of PH Measures
Intervention Strategy Agreement
Behavior of Public Health Officials
Moral and Religious Oppositions
People Can Be Healthy
Proactive versus Curative
Public Health, Monopoly, and Methods of Social Control
Public Health and Medicaid Issues
Costs of Nursing Homes
Natural and Built Physical Environments
Social Class
Social Hierarchy
Conflict Theory
Chapters Ahead
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes

Chapter 5 Prisoners, Correctional Personnel, and Compliance Issues
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Chapter’s Theory
Objectives of This Chapter
Correctional Personnel Compliance Issues
Old News
Correctional Statistics
Standard of Care
Healthcare for Prisoners
Denying Healthcare
Correctional Dilemma
Budget Issues or Something Else
Prisoner Exposure to Infectious Pathogens
Prison Systems and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
Jails and HIV
Prison Systems and Tuberculosis (TB)
Female Prisoner Healthcare
Females in Jail
Female Solitary Confinement or SEG and Healthcare
Mandated Prison Healthcare: California
Criticism of Mandated Healthcare
Private Healthcare in Prisons
Florida Private Healthcare
Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC)
Maine Department of Corrections
Crisis with Private Healthcare Providers
Final Analysis of Healthcare Providers
Effects of Prisoner Health on Correctional Personnel
Occupational Stress
Needlesticks
Hepatitis B (HBV)
HBP Disease Transmission
Female Correctional Officers
Correctional Officers’ Health
Conclusions about Healthy Correctional Personnel
Happy Correctional Officers
Unhealthy Communities
HIV
African American Women
Catalysts of Infectious Pathogens Epidemic and Violence
Summary
Student Worksheets
Appendix 1: My Bias Linked to Crime and Punishment
Appendix 2: Standard 23-6.1 General Principles Governing Healthcare
Appendix 3: How to Prevent Infection
Appendix 4: Facts About Female Prisoners
Endnotes

Chapter 6 Law Enforcement Officers and Compliance Issues
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
The Role of Police
Mission of Local Law Enforcement
Use of Force
Five Assumptions about Local Law Enforcement in America
A Word about Social Environments
Occupational Death Rate among Workers
Officers Assaulted and Murdered
Local Law Enforcement Statistics
Despite the Rule of Law
Legitimacy of Law Enforcement
Imbalance
Syringe Sticks
Reducing Syringe Sticks
Hazardous Chemical Exposures
Hazardous Materials
Clandestine Methamphetamine Labs
Different Way to Manufacture Meth 2014
Clan Lab Raids Can Lead to Dead Officers and Lawsuits
Dead Bodies
Dead Bodies after Natural Disasters
Disease Transmission
After the Meth Raid
Tuberculosis (TB)
Evidence Room Contamination
Traffic Particles
Traffic Radar
Prevention from Disease
Spray Device
Police Subculture
Changing Police Subculture
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes

Chapter 7 Firefighters, Emergency Medical Technicians, and Compliance Issues
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Active Shooter Response
Profile of an Active Shooter
Active Shooter Preparedness
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Denver
Firefighters and Natural Disasters
World Trade Center
Leading Cause of Line-of-Duty Death among Firefighters
Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) and Firefighters
Heart Disease
Carbon Monoxide
Association between Fine Particles and Respiratory/Cardiovascular
Increased Heart Rates and Heavy Physical Exertion
Heat Stress and Heat Illnesses
Noise Exposure
Streptococcus Pyogenes (Strep Throat) and Firefighters
Statistics of Fatalities and Injuries among Firefighters
Slips, Trips, and Falls
Presumption Laws
Presumption Law Rationale
Baltimore and Presumption Laws
California and Presumption Laws
Pennsylvania and Presumption Laws
British Columbia (BC), Canada, and Presumption Laws
The Politics of Presumption Laws
Inconsistent Evidence and Presumption Laws
Preventing On-Duty Cardiovascular Deaths
The Healthy Worker Effect (HWE)
Final Thoughts
Summary
Student Worksheets
Appendix 1: Employment Profile of Firefighters
Appendix 2: Employment Profile of Emergency Medical Technicians (EMT)
Differences between EMT and EMS
Appendix 3: State Presumptive Disability Laws
Endnotes

Chapter 8 Healthcare Personnel and Compliance Issues
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
The Reality of Patient Associated Infections
Disease Transmission in Healing Centers
Primary Routes of Infectious Disease Transmission
Emergency Departments (ED), Disease Transmission, Professionals, and Patients
Emergency Departments (ED) and Adolescents
Ambulatory Care and Acute Care Centers
Evolution of Healthcare Providers
Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) Ambulatory Care
University of North Carolina (UNC) Ambulatory Care
University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) Ambulatory Care
Levine Cancer Institute, Charlotte, North Carolina
Hospitals and Disease Transmission
Registered Nurses and Disease Transmission
Contact Network Epidemiology
Staffing Patterns and Turnover
Manual Therapists and Disease Transmission
Healthcare Personnel Injury Statistics
Healthcare Personnel and Occupational Death Statistics
Expenditures versus Prevention
Some Issues and Observations of the Writer
Keep Chapter Uncomplicated
Final Thoughts
Key Differences between Healthcare Centers
Gender-Specific Policies
Occupational Conflict between Registered Nurses and Physicians
What to Do about Hospital Infection?
Summary
Student Worksheets
Appendix 1: Job Listing: RN I/Infection Preventionist Levine Cancer Institute (28361)
 

Chapter 9 Hospitals, Physicians, and Agents of Compliance
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Healthcare Providers and Agents of Compliance
Hospitals
Hospitals and Commercialization
Vertical Integration
Hospital Policy Differences
Relevance of Hospital Commercialization Descriptions
Hospitals and Federal Prosecution
Largest Hospitals in the United States
Physicians
Capitalist Physicians and Surgeons
Physicians, Surgeons, and Venture Capital
Venture Capital Is Not Without Its Ills
Success of Venture Capital
Examples of Venture Capital Firms for Physicians
Physicians, Health Maintenance Organization Act (HMO), and Managed Care
Physician Error
Medicine and Human Error
Surgeon Error
‘Never Events’
Cost of Medical Errors
Explanations of Physician and Surgeon Errors
Fear of Prosecution
Physician Depression and Suicide
Healthcare Fraud Prevention and Enforcement Action Team (HEAT)
Expanding the Medicare Fraud Strike Force
HEAT’s Annual Report to Congress
Monetary Results of Federal Prosecution
Enforcement Actions of Department of Justice
Sample of Healthcare Fraud Won the First Week in August 2014
Federal Prosecution Concerns
An Example of Exclusion
Decision Process of Physicians and Surgeons
Criminal Justice Decision Making versus Medical Decision Making Processes
Final Thoughts and Prediction
Hospitals and Infant Mortality
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes
 

Chapter 10 After a Bioweapon Attack on America
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Focus of This Chapter
Warning Signs of a Bioweapon Attack on America
The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS)
Use of Biological Agents as Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
Ethnic Bioweapons
Chemical Bioweapon Agents
Nerve Agents
Infectious Bioweapon Agents
Chaos before a Bioweapon Attack
Assumptions about Federal and Local Law Enforcement Officers
First-Responder’s Performance: Law Enforcement
The Media’s Bit in Establishing Punitive Punishment Policy
Issues about Healthcare after a Bioweapon Attack
Overview of Government and Healthcare Response
Surge Capacity
Hospital Response after a Bioweapon Attack
Hospital Turn-Away Rates
Age of Bioterrorism: Physicians
Physicians and Misconceptions
Medical Residents and Bioweapon Treatment
Physician Uncertainty
Physicians Refusing to Treat Patients
Preparedness of Healthcare Professionals: Physicians and Nurses
Nurses’ Preparedness
The Final Solution: The US Constitution is a Suicide Pact
Final Thoughts
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes

Chapter 11 A Key to a Safer America
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Criminal Justice and Public Health
My Objectives in Writing This Book
Agents of Compliance
Physician-Assisted Suicide Should Not Be Permitted
Physician-Assisted Suicide Should Be Permitted
Fear of Prosecution
Linking Infectious Disease Transmission to Prison Populations
Curing Prisoners and Personnel
Amenability to Treatment
Unreported Cases of Infection
Blaming the Victim
Organizational Environments
Changing Justice and Healthcare’s Organizational Environment
Organizing for Empowerment
Hierarchical Leveling
Professionalism
Hospitals
Chargemaster
Human Beings and Human Errors
Anomie
Nurses
Some Realities: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
After a Bioweapon Attack
Head Fake
One Conclusion
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes

Index

Dennis Stevens

New Publication Now Available!

An estimated 100,000 individuals are killed annually from deadly infectious pathogens after being admitted to American hospitals, regardless of the reason he or she had been admitted to the hospital in the first place.

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) advance the idea that most of those infectious deaths were preventable.

Criminal Justice and Public Health: MRSA and Other Deadly Pathogens is an account of the relationship between the quality of public safety services, treatment, and care provided by criminal justice personnel and their collaborative partners (firefighters, hospitals and clinics, and healthcare personnel). The struggle to provide and to receive quality services is, in essence, a struggle for social justice.

Criminal Justice and Public Health: MRSA and Other Deadly Pathogens:

  • Is an account of public health organizations toward their fulfillment to assure conditions in which individuals can be healthy in a world invaded by antibiotic resistant mutate strains of bacteria and viruses.
  • Provides evidence revealing that individuals of the lower social economic class most often intersect with the justice community and their collaborative partners. Generally those same individuals experience poor healthcare, tend to be less healthy than others for a variety of reasons, and once confined are more likely to be exposed and contaminated by infectious diseases placing prisoners and correctional personnel at risk.
  • Is an account of people and tribes; it is a description of bureaucratic hierarchies and social class, and American greed; it’s a story about the haves and the have-nots and the unintentional agenda of the Power Elite and their sophisticated approach to saving mankind from itself resulting in mass incarceration, criminalization policies, and punitive enforcement strategies that haven’t changed the color of crime.
  • Ignites your imagination, attacks your peace of mind, and will lead to some anxious but worthy debates in the classroom and at home.

 

You May Also Like

The Failure of the American Prison Complex: Let's Abolish It

 

 

 

Chapter 1 Disaster Comes in Threes
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
The Gulf Coast
First and Last Lecture
The Lessons of History
The Eye of the Storm
Courageous People
An Unprepared Government
Federal Government’s Unprofessional Decisions
Medical Care: Who Should Receive and Who Shouldn’t Receive Treatment
Investigation of Medical Practitioners
Immediate Government Response to NO Police Officers and Others
The Aftermath of Katrina
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes
 

Chapter 2 Lessons Learned: Disasters Two and Three
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
America Is Engaged in Another Disaster of Our Own Design
Early Results of This New Disaster
Colonization
What Powers the New Disaster?
Transmission of Infectious Pathogens Including MRSA
The Black Sheep
Patch and Pray Healthcare
Disease Transmission Linked to Prison Populations
Early Reports of Infectious Pathogens
Social Justice and Public Health
Infectious Pathogens and Occupational Public Service Performance
Nothing Is as It Seems: Thomas Theorem
Neutralizing the Plague
Other Reasons for Not Resolving the Superbug Epidemic
What Causes Antibiotic Resistance?
Midst of a Deadly Infectious Pathogens Invasion
Ideas Inspiring This Book
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes
 

Chapter 3 Essentials of Public Health
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Enhancing Our Knowledge about Public Health (PH)
Scratchy Understanding of Public Health
The Affordable Care Act
Starting Point
Medical Model of Health: Reductionist and Holistic Approaches
What Is Public Health (PH)?
Five Leading Causes of Death
The Role of Public Health
Public Health Intervention Strategies
Idea Inspiring This Chapter
From Justice to Prevention
Government’s Annual Public Health Spending
The Public’s Health Spending
Necessity of Government
Law and Obligation of Government toward Public Health and Public Safety
The Constitution, Government, and Public Health
The National Association of County and City Health Officials (NACCHO)
Local Health Departments (LHD)
Mecklenburg County Health Department (MCHD): Charlotte, North Carolina
Multnomah County Health and Human Services (MCHHS): Portland, Oregon
Massachusetts Department of Public Health (DPH)
Ohio Department of Health (ODH)
Alivio Medical Center
US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
HHC Management Challenges According to HHC
Ethical Principles of Public Health
Summary
Student Worksheets
Appendix 1: Universities with PH Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees
Appendix 2: US Government Health Agencies, Description of Services, and Websites Addresses
Appendix 3: PH Website Links
Appendix 4: Disciplines of PH
Endnotes
 

Chapter 4 Public Healthcare and Society
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Public Health Controversy
Individual Freedom or Liberty
The Economic Impact of PH Measures
Intervention Strategy Agreement
Behavior of Public Health Officials
Moral and Religious Oppositions
People Can Be Healthy
Proactive versus Curative
Public Health, Monopoly, and Methods of Social Control
Public Health and Medicaid Issues
Costs of Nursing Homes
Natural and Built Physical Environments
Social Class
Social Hierarchy
Conflict Theory
Chapters Ahead
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes

Chapter 5 Prisoners, Correctional Personnel, and Compliance Issues
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Chapter’s Theory
Objectives of This Chapter
Correctional Personnel Compliance Issues
Old News
Correctional Statistics
Standard of Care
Healthcare for Prisoners
Denying Healthcare
Correctional Dilemma
Budget Issues or Something Else
Prisoner Exposure to Infectious Pathogens
Prison Systems and Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
Jails and HIV
Prison Systems and Tuberculosis (TB)
Female Prisoner Healthcare
Females in Jail
Female Solitary Confinement or SEG and Healthcare
Mandated Prison Healthcare: California
Criticism of Mandated Healthcare
Private Healthcare in Prisons
Florida Private Healthcare
Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC)
Maine Department of Corrections
Crisis with Private Healthcare Providers
Final Analysis of Healthcare Providers
Effects of Prisoner Health on Correctional Personnel
Occupational Stress
Needlesticks
Hepatitis B (HBV)
HBP Disease Transmission
Female Correctional Officers
Correctional Officers’ Health
Conclusions about Healthy Correctional Personnel
Happy Correctional Officers
Unhealthy Communities
HIV
African American Women
Catalysts of Infectious Pathogens Epidemic and Violence
Summary
Student Worksheets
Appendix 1: My Bias Linked to Crime and Punishment
Appendix 2: Standard 23-6.1 General Principles Governing Healthcare
Appendix 3: How to Prevent Infection
Appendix 4: Facts About Female Prisoners
Endnotes

Chapter 6 Law Enforcement Officers and Compliance Issues
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
The Role of Police
Mission of Local Law Enforcement
Use of Force
Five Assumptions about Local Law Enforcement in America
A Word about Social Environments
Occupational Death Rate among Workers
Officers Assaulted and Murdered
Local Law Enforcement Statistics
Despite the Rule of Law
Legitimacy of Law Enforcement
Imbalance
Syringe Sticks
Reducing Syringe Sticks
Hazardous Chemical Exposures
Hazardous Materials
Clandestine Methamphetamine Labs
Different Way to Manufacture Meth 2014
Clan Lab Raids Can Lead to Dead Officers and Lawsuits
Dead Bodies
Dead Bodies after Natural Disasters
Disease Transmission
After the Meth Raid
Tuberculosis (TB)
Evidence Room Contamination
Traffic Particles
Traffic Radar
Prevention from Disease
Spray Device
Police Subculture
Changing Police Subculture
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes

Chapter 7 Firefighters, Emergency Medical Technicians, and Compliance Issues
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Active Shooter Response
Profile of an Active Shooter
Active Shooter Preparedness
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Denver
Firefighters and Natural Disasters
World Trade Center
Leading Cause of Line-of-Duty Death among Firefighters
Coronary Heart Disease (CHD) and Firefighters
Heart Disease
Carbon Monoxide
Association between Fine Particles and Respiratory/Cardiovascular
Increased Heart Rates and Heavy Physical Exertion
Heat Stress and Heat Illnesses
Noise Exposure
Streptococcus Pyogenes (Strep Throat) and Firefighters
Statistics of Fatalities and Injuries among Firefighters
Slips, Trips, and Falls
Presumption Laws
Presumption Law Rationale
Baltimore and Presumption Laws
California and Presumption Laws
Pennsylvania and Presumption Laws
British Columbia (BC), Canada, and Presumption Laws
The Politics of Presumption Laws
Inconsistent Evidence and Presumption Laws
Preventing On-Duty Cardiovascular Deaths
The Healthy Worker Effect (HWE)
Final Thoughts
Summary
Student Worksheets
Appendix 1: Employment Profile of Firefighters
Appendix 2: Employment Profile of Emergency Medical Technicians (EMT)
Differences between EMT and EMS
Appendix 3: State Presumptive Disability Laws
Endnotes

Chapter 8 Healthcare Personnel and Compliance Issues
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
The Reality of Patient Associated Infections
Disease Transmission in Healing Centers
Primary Routes of Infectious Disease Transmission
Emergency Departments (ED), Disease Transmission, Professionals, and Patients
Emergency Departments (ED) and Adolescents
Ambulatory Care and Acute Care Centers
Evolution of Healthcare Providers
Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) Ambulatory Care
University of North Carolina (UNC) Ambulatory Care
University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) Ambulatory Care
Levine Cancer Institute, Charlotte, North Carolina
Hospitals and Disease Transmission
Registered Nurses and Disease Transmission
Contact Network Epidemiology
Staffing Patterns and Turnover
Manual Therapists and Disease Transmission
Healthcare Personnel Injury Statistics
Healthcare Personnel and Occupational Death Statistics
Expenditures versus Prevention
Some Issues and Observations of the Writer
Keep Chapter Uncomplicated
Final Thoughts
Key Differences between Healthcare Centers
Gender-Specific Policies
Occupational Conflict between Registered Nurses and Physicians
What to Do about Hospital Infection?
Summary
Student Worksheets
Appendix 1: Job Listing: RN I/Infection Preventionist Levine Cancer Institute (28361)
 

Chapter 9 Hospitals, Physicians, and Agents of Compliance
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Healthcare Providers and Agents of Compliance
Hospitals
Hospitals and Commercialization
Vertical Integration
Hospital Policy Differences
Relevance of Hospital Commercialization Descriptions
Hospitals and Federal Prosecution
Largest Hospitals in the United States
Physicians
Capitalist Physicians and Surgeons
Physicians, Surgeons, and Venture Capital
Venture Capital Is Not Without Its Ills
Success of Venture Capital
Examples of Venture Capital Firms for Physicians
Physicians, Health Maintenance Organization Act (HMO), and Managed Care
Physician Error
Medicine and Human Error
Surgeon Error
‘Never Events’
Cost of Medical Errors
Explanations of Physician and Surgeon Errors
Fear of Prosecution
Physician Depression and Suicide
Healthcare Fraud Prevention and Enforcement Action Team (HEAT)
Expanding the Medicare Fraud Strike Force
HEAT’s Annual Report to Congress
Monetary Results of Federal Prosecution
Enforcement Actions of Department of Justice
Sample of Healthcare Fraud Won the First Week in August 2014
Federal Prosecution Concerns
An Example of Exclusion
Decision Process of Physicians and Surgeons
Criminal Justice Decision Making versus Medical Decision Making Processes
Final Thoughts and Prediction
Hospitals and Infant Mortality
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes
 

Chapter 10 After a Bioweapon Attack on America
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Focus of This Chapter
Warning Signs of a Bioweapon Attack on America
The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS)
Use of Biological Agents as Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
Ethnic Bioweapons
Chemical Bioweapon Agents
Nerve Agents
Infectious Bioweapon Agents
Chaos before a Bioweapon Attack
Assumptions about Federal and Local Law Enforcement Officers
First-Responder’s Performance: Law Enforcement
The Media’s Bit in Establishing Punitive Punishment Policy
Issues about Healthcare after a Bioweapon Attack
Overview of Government and Healthcare Response
Surge Capacity
Hospital Response after a Bioweapon Attack
Hospital Turn-Away Rates
Age of Bioterrorism: Physicians
Physicians and Misconceptions
Medical Residents and Bioweapon Treatment
Physician Uncertainty
Physicians Refusing to Treat Patients
Preparedness of Healthcare Professionals: Physicians and Nurses
Nurses’ Preparedness
The Final Solution: The US Constitution is a Suicide Pact
Final Thoughts
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes

Chapter 11 A Key to a Safer America
Learning Objectives
Key Terms
Words of Wisdom
Introduction
Criminal Justice and Public Health
My Objectives in Writing This Book
Agents of Compliance
Physician-Assisted Suicide Should Not Be Permitted
Physician-Assisted Suicide Should Be Permitted
Fear of Prosecution
Linking Infectious Disease Transmission to Prison Populations
Curing Prisoners and Personnel
Amenability to Treatment
Unreported Cases of Infection
Blaming the Victim
Organizational Environments
Changing Justice and Healthcare’s Organizational Environment
Organizing for Empowerment
Hierarchical Leveling
Professionalism
Hospitals
Chargemaster
Human Beings and Human Errors
Anomie
Nurses
Some Realities: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
After a Bioweapon Attack
Head Fake
One Conclusion
Summary
Student Worksheets
Endnotes

Index

Dennis Stevens