Project Hospital - Hospital Services



About the course

  1. Project Hospital - Hospital Services Jobs
  2. Project Hospital - Hospital Services Inc
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The MBA (Hospital and Health Services Management) is a flagship qualification designed to meet the needs and aspirations of early career individuals through the combination of a general management education with the specialist area of Hospital and Health Services Management.

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It is designed for individuals who want to develop their leadership and management skills along with their interest in Hospital and Health Services Management and for those seeking fast track career progression opportunities.

Expansion pack for Project Hospital! Breathe life into your hospitals with two new departments, more activities for staff and with visitors coming to improve your patients' mood!

Project Hospital - Hospital Services

HOSPITAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEM A Project work submitted to the DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER APPLICATIONS Guided. Project Hospital - Hospital Services DLC is now available on GOG.COM with a special 10% discount lasting until 1st May, 2 PM UTC. See comments (2) Psychonauts - 15th anniversary of the quirky action-adventure platformer. Hospital management system project 1. Systems Introduction 1.1 Description of the project: Hospital are the essential part of our lives, providing best medical facilities to people suffering from various ailments, which may be due to change in climatic conditions, increased work-load, emotional trauma stress etc.

This postgraduate degree aims to enhance your professional prospects by developing your capability to apply the latest thinking relating to organisational development and change in the competitive global context.

Successful completion of the MBA (Hospital and Health Services Management) highlights your potential to have a real impact on the transformation of the organisation you join.

Our courses are designed to be engaging, attractive and flexible in the current global marketplace. There are six entry points through the year. This allows you to start when it is most suitable.

Your course takes place over three semesters. Depending upon when you join the course, this will determine the order of units which you will study. You will benefit by beginning your studies with others who started at one of the earlier points of entry.

  • Apply Via - DIRECT ENTRY
  • Course Level - Postgraduate
  • Campus Location - University Square Campus, Luton
  • Start Dates - Apr,Jun,Aug,Oct,Nov
  • Duration - 1 Year
  • Attendance - Full-time | Part-time | Block delivery

The course adopts a practical and applied business curriculum and aims to develop an advanced knowledge of organisations and their effective management in the dynamic competitive global context, and the ability to creatively apply this knowledge and understanding to complex issues to systematically and innovatively enhance strategic business and management practice.

This offers a challenging learning opportunity to encourage the integration of theory and practice supported by experienced academics with substantial management experience.

You will work with academics and professors of practice on live consultancy projects with leading employers in organisations across private, public and not-for-profit sectors to support your personal and professional development as a creative and innovative leader with the knowledge and skills needed in the global, knowledge-based economy.

You will develop the attributes and skills expected of post-graduates confirmed by partner industry bodies including the Chartered Management Institute and the Confederation of British Industry, including team-working, negotiation skills, leadership, confidence and the ability to apply critical and creative thinking to complex and unclear problems to develop innovative solutions.

Visit the Department of Strategy & Management
  • Digital Technology Management (BSS059-6) Compulsory
  • Leading And Managing Organisational Resources (BSS064-6) Compulsory
  • Management Practice (BSS063-6) Compulsory
  • Managing Modern Healthcare Organisations (BSS062-6) Compulsory
  • Strategy And The Global Competitive Environment (BSS058-6) Compulsory
  • Theory Into Practice Project (BSS056-6) Compulsory
The underpinning philosophy of all assessments is to develop both your knowledge and skills to enter employment as a confident manager with a strong base from which to meet your own aspirations. This requires consideration of your own personal capabilities as well as looking outward at the business world. The aim is for you to become an independent and self-directed lifelong learner. Apart from the formal assessments there will be an emphasis on self, peer and group assessment. Tutors will provide feedback on formative assessments to support your development of good academic practice. All assessments are rooted in authentic and practical workplace scenarios to enable the integration of theory and practice in dynamic `real world work contexts. Exams are kept to a minimum. To facilitate learning for all students a range of assessment methods are used throughout the course, including:- Business Reports to demonstrate contextual insight and professional practice;- Project Plans to demonstrate project planning skills;- Seminar Papers to develop critical analysis skills;- In-class tests of your knowledge of core concepts in context;- Project Report integrates learning throughout the course independently applied in practice; Business simulation where you demonstrate the impact of your strategic decision making.The focus is on the impact of management education to management practice and later assessments require greater complexity and integration through independent study to support your successful transition into work. This is exemplified by two units at the dissertation stage: Management Practice and the Theory into Practice Project. These help you to consider your personal and professional development and the complexity of applying management education in practice once in employment.

Entry Requirements

Applicants should have a good undergraduate degree at Honours level, or equivalent.

To apply for a place on a postgraduate course (MA/MSc/MBA) at the University of Bedfordshire you should have a good first degree and the required English language qualification

To apply for a postgraduate degree (MA/MSc/MBA/LLM) at the University of Bedfordshire you should have a good honours degree (or equivalent qualification) in an appropriate subject from a recognised university or HE institution.

We will also consider candidates with other relevant qualifications or appropriate work experience.

You also need to have the required English language qualification

Contact your country’s International Admissions Team for more information.

  • We also consider candidates with other relevant qualifications and individuals with appropriate work experience.
  • For international students English competence of IELTS 6.0 or equivalent is required.

How will this course improve my career prospects?

Fees and Funding

The standard fee for the MBA for students starting in the academic year 2020/21 is £12,250. This is the cost of the whole two year course.
The standard fee for the Executive MBA for students starting in the academic year 2020/21 is £14,000. This is the cost of the whole two year course.

The University reserves the right to increase tuition fees by no more than inflation.

Alternatively if you have any questions around fees and funding, please email admission@beds.ac.uk

The standard fee for the MBA for international students starting in the academic year 2020/21 is £14,250. This is the cost of the whole two year course.
The standard fee for the Executive MBA for international students starting in the academic year 2020/21 is £14,500. This is the cost of the whole two year course.

The University reserves the right to increase tuition fees by no more than inflation.

Alternatively if you have any questions around fees and funding, please email admission@beds.ac.uk

Extra Costs

Find out more about additional costs while studying at Bedfordshire. Click here.
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Luton Campus Centre

The Campus Centre brings together all our student services under one roof including the Students’ Union and spaces to eat, drink, relax and learn.

There's a large central lecture theatre as well as a range of study rooms & breakout spaces on the upper floors.

Luton Campus Accommodation

The University guarantees accommodation to all new students. Fitzroy Court and Wenlock Court, the two main halls of residence, are located on campus so getting to lectures, shopping in town and participating in events and activities is easy.

STEM building

The STEM building is home to courses in the subject areas of science, technology, engineering and mathematics.

Opened in Autumn 2019, its cutting edge facilities provides four computer laboratories; workshops for subjects such as automotive engineering, cyber-security and robotics, along with three large teaching labs, and four specialist containment labs.

Luton Campus Library

The library is a modern 9-storey building dedicated to study and learning.

As well as traditional library provisions it offers individual and group study spaces, a cafeteria on the ground floor and a ‘Study Hub’ offering guidance and workshops on academic writing and research skills to ensure all Bedfordshire students get the help they need to succeed in their studies.

Aspire Gym - Luton

The Aspire Gym has state of the art cardiovascular equipment with smart phone compatibility. There is also an extensive range of fixed resistance machines and a small free weights area.

Changing rooms with showers and lockers are available for members to use.

PG and CPD Centre

The Postgraduate & CPD Centre at Luton campus is home to our University's postgraduate courses and continuing professional development (CPD) students from industry.

The Centre has modern lecture theatres and seminar rooms and a large ground floor lounge area where careers fairs and speaker events take place.

Media Arts

Our Media Arts Centre has state-of-the-art facilities for students on our journalism, media and writing degrees.

Facilities include broadcast television and digital radio studios, digital video editing suites, electronic newsrooms, white space studio, multimedia suites, and additional studios for online and design work.

Luton Cultural Quarter

The School of Art and Design is located in the Cultural Quarter of the town.

The Cultural Quarter is a regeneration project to convert the old hat manufacturing area of Luton into a hub for the creative industries.

Luton - Location

The Luton campus is right in the centre of town next to a large shopping mall and within easy walking distance of train and bus stations. Luton is the largest town in Bedfordshire, approximately 50km north of London which is a 30-minute train journey away. Luton has excellent transport links to the rest of the UK and Europe.

How to Apply

UK students applying for most postgraduate degrees at the University of Bedfordshire should apply direct using our admissions form

International students applying for a full-time postgraduate degree at the University of Bedfordshire should apply direct using our admissions form or via our representatives in your home country. You can also apply online

International students applying for a full-time postgraduate degree at the University of Bedfordshire should apply direct using our admissions form or via our representatives in your home country. You can also apply online

Ideas into Action

To help North Dakota communities address the top health needs identified through their Community Health Needs Assessment (CHNA), models and examples are listed on this page as potential resources. Not all ideas listed will apply or be practical for all communities; rather it is a list of ideas that could be modified or tailored to fit your needs, or serve as a springboard for new ideas.

These ideas are not evidence-based best practices. Rather, they serve as additional qualitative data and can act as conversation starters to help think of activities that may have worked in other rural settings in North Dakota. For more information on evidence-based practices, check out County Health Rankings & Roadmaps, 'What Works For Health.' It may be helpful to look at those and then cross-reference to these ideas for what is feasible in a rural context.

On This Page:

Access to Needed Equipment/Facility Update

  • Acquire new or updated equipment (i.e. CT scanner)
  • Publicize when new equipment has been purchased to explain how it is beneficial to community
  • Update website to include information about new equipment and technology acquisitions

Aging Population Services

  • Promote public transportation services
  • Offer mobile screening services so seniors don't have to leave their home
  • Offer Meals on Wheels
  • Great Plains Senior Services Collaborative provides the following services in North Dakota: Aging Life Care Management that connects participants with an advisor to navigate later life care. Services include care coordination, crisis management, patient advocacy, and transitional care; Remote Caregiver uses technology to support senior caregivers as they take care of older loved ones; and Volunteer Companions provide social engagement and help with household chores

Attracting & Retaining Young Families

  • Develop hospital sponsored day care opportunities for staff and community members
  • Develop and offer health and wellness programs
  • Collaborate with other community organizations such as the school to offer health education programs and exercise equipment.
  • Promote Bismarck-Mandan Young Professionals Network
  • Market and promote the rural community culture – feeling of safety (low crime), strong education systems, active faith community, strong and vital health sector, lower cost of living
  • Contact North Dakota Department of Commerce for economic development ideas
  • Create leadership opportunities for community members in their 20’s and 30’s – hospital board, community health task force, membership and chairing a committee
  • Develop a community job site wellness program – contact North Dakota Department of Health and BCBSND
  • Fund (with other community organizations) a health career scholarship program with an obligation to return to the community for service for a specified period of time.
  • Consider Rural Health Outreach Grants, Network Development Grants, and Network Planning grants to address a number of ideas for both the community but also a regional network to address common issues.

Bullying

  • Cyberbullying in School: Prevention and Support – Discusses what cyberbullying is and its potentially devastating consequences. These can include stress, depression, self-harm and suicidal thoughts. There's advice about what to do if you're being cyberbullied, including how to get support and how to block bullies online. There's also some great information and preventative strategies relevant to each group - teachers, parents, and students. It also includes social media safety tips, which provides key strategies for students, such as not responding to abusive posts or allowing programs to track location.

Cancer

  • Form cancer support groups for patients and caregivers
  • Promote online support groups though Cancers Survivors Network sponsored by American Cancer Society
  • Promote skin cancer awareness at local events
  • Form a Knitting for Charity group to knit hats and blankets for chemotherapy patients

Chronic Disease Management

  • Provide space and equipment for fitness center
  • Offer mobile diabetic screenings in community
  • Organize a community event related to physical activity and/or nutrition, such as walk/run-a-thon, healthy food potluck, etc.
  • Organize speaker for community Senior Group to raise awareness of diabetes, serve a healthy meal, and distribute healthy eating recipes
  • Institute a wellness page on hospital website
  • Implement comprehensive, sustainable wellness and disease management program based on improving baseline health numbers (e.g., weight, BMI, body composition, cholesterol, glucose, blood pressure) through evidence-based practices, shared medical appointments, and a health coach
  • Implement health coach program in which coaches work with patients on self-management skills, nutrition counseling, etc. during the four-week period following hospital or clinic discharge; through either telemedicine or home visits

Concerns of Low Customer Service & Quality of Care

  • Provide comment box in waiting room to allow for anonymous customer feedback
  • Ensure a clean and quiet waiting room with updated magazines
  • Hold employee trainings on confidentiality

Cost and Adequacy of Health Insurance

  • Support community awareness of Medicaid Expansion
  • Promote open enrollment of Marketplace
  • Promote North Dakota Department of Human Services website for financial assistance and healthcare coverage application
  • Launch marketing campaign to increase access and awareness of Marketplace and other options such as sponsoring education, articles in the paper, interviews on radio

Elevated Level of Uninsured Adults

Project Hospital - Hospital Services Jobs

  • Hire financial service counselor who can educate patients about insurance policies
  • Hire a Medicaid Expansion Navigator
  • Post requirements of Affordable Care Act on hospital website, along with resources relating to meeting those requirements
  • Distribute flyers in clinic about requirements of Affordable Care Act
  • Organize a speaker for senior groups or other community clubs about the requirements of the Affordable Care Act

Elevated Rate of Adult Smoking

  • Use social media to advertise availability of smoking cessation assistance
  • Promote nicotine replacement therapies in hospital waiting rooms
  • Set up tobacco prevention booth and give cessation presentations at oil field/business health fairs
  • Place information about quitting at “man camps”
  • Display visual representation of healthy vs. diseased lung at high school
  • Create smoke-free environments through policy changes

Elevated Level of Excessive Drinking/Alcohol Use

  • Partner with Safe Communities Program for beer goggle simulation and reaction simulation
  • Develop public service announcement and videos of real alcohol- related accidents from own communities
  • Collaborate with student groups to produce video/media campaign to educate that “buzzed driving is drunk driving”
  • Park “drunk driving car” (car that has been damaged as the result of an alcohol-related crash) outside of high school
  • Collaborate with law enforcement to increase random checkpoints for driving under the influence
  • Collaborate with law enforcement to perform no-consequence breathalyzer tests in bars to promote awareness and education about levels of intoxication, along with distributing information about excessive and binge drinking
  • Collaborate with city council to make the approval of liquor licenses contingent on all servers taking server training
  • Develop poster to use at fair booth about prescription drug abuse and proper disposal of prescription drugs
  • Develop media campaign (based on CDC and attorney general’s office models) to present on local cable and radio about prescription drug abuse and proper disposal of prescription drugs

Emphasis on Wellness, Education & Prevention

  • Engage with employers in area to offer blood pressure checks, promote awareness of physical therapy services, and offer prevention education services (e.g., prevention of diabetes, chronic disease, and back injury)
  • Offer one or more cooking classes to educate participants about healthy eating and diabetic meals
  • Dedicate space in hospital newsletter, as well as space on hospital website, to a “Wellness Update”
  • Use hospital newsletter and website to educate community members about services and facilities available within the community and from consumers’ health insurance companies
  • Send hospital staff member to wellness program training
  • Host booth at community festival which highlights alternative, healthy cooking and baking options
  • Partner with senior center and other community organizations to offer dinner and dance class to encourage wellness and healthy recipes
  • Engage with county extension service and public health to find ways to promote community wellness events and activities
  • Implement comprehensive, sustainable wellness and disease management program based on improving baseline health numbers (e.g., weight, BMI, body composition, cholesterol, glucose, blood pressure) through evidence-based practices, shared medical appointments, and a health coach
  • Launch media campaign through radio, newspaper and website to raise awareness and education about cancer screening services and obesity services
  • Implement weight management program that includes meal replacement program and nutrition coaching
  • Offer “Stepping On” program, which helps older people reduce falls and increase self confidence in situations where they are at risk of falling
  • Offer 12-week weight management program that features comprehensive health evaluation along with detailed exercise prescription, dietary/eating suggestions, three months of fitness center membership, ongoing monitoring of health measures, mobile phone apps for recording progress, follow-up phone calls, weekly weigh-ins, and one-on-one guidance with a physical therapist to teach use of exercise equipment

Healthcare Workforce Shortages (physicians, visiting specialists, healthcare professionals)

  • Increase postings on hospital’s social media sites, including Facebook, that convey vision of future healthcare delivery and present a positive message of where the hospital is going
  • Form Marketing Group involving hospital, economic development, Chamber of Commerce to promote strengths of community
  • Hold meeting/workshop with community members who meet with physician candidates and share a consistent, positive vision of the future of healthcare delivery in the community
  • Support local student in medical school
  • Prepare written and visual materials about the future medical facilities to share with physician candidates that will present the short-term and long-term vision of what future healthcare will look like
  • Engage with medical school residents to encourage them to return to community to practice medicine
  • Work with Center for Rural Health on physician recruitment
  • Work to build stable, well-liked staff of nurse practitioners and physician assistants that includes both female and male providers
  • Implement or increase use of Telehealth programs, including emergency Telehealth
  • Present recruitment efforts in a better light by using professionally designed and printed marketing materials that include information about hospital services, clinic services, and community information
  • Create a video to highlight the hospital’s work and community’s assets, to recruit providers as well as educate community members about available services; send it on a flash drive to prospective provider candidates and show it at the local theater prior to movies
  • Apply for grant funding to assist with travel costs (airfare, hotel, etc.) associated with community visits by physicians (and their spouses) being recruited by the hospital

Financial Viability of Hospital

Project Hospital - Hospital Services Inc

  • Meet with stakeholders and community groups to help disseminate information and tell story of hospital’s strengths/value of to community (tourism, economic development)
  • Increase promotion and marketing of current services by improving web presence, developing marketing campaign (possibly featuring patient testimonials), sponsoring weekly newspaper column, and using local electronic marquee
  • Promote locally available services to discourage local residents to travel for specialty healthcare services (e.g., surgery, etc.)
  • Explore alternate uses for hospital
  • Implement strategy to effectively communicate with community about hospital’s challenges
  • Communicate about finances and what’s behind “bad debt”
  • Educate community to help people understand why sales tax is needed
  • Reduce dependence on locum physicians through promotion and greater use of existing nurse practitioners and physician assistants
  • Expand geographic service area by marketing new nurse practitioners and physician assistants to nearby communities

Higher Costs of Healthcare for Consumers

  • Hire a Medicaid Expansion Navigator

Lack of Affordable Housing

  • Partner with North Dakota Housing Finance Agency (NDHFA) to increase stock of affordable housing
  • Advertise funds available from Housing Incentive Fund (HIF) administered by NDHFA
  • Appeal for more federal low-income housing tax credits (LIHTCs) in oil patch
  • Research zoning models in other U.S. cities for affordable housing policies and solutions

New Hospital Building Projects

Lack of Collaboration with Community

  • Increase hospital presence at community events through sponsorship of events or information booths
  • Form steering committee with hospital representatives, public health, and other local healthcare providers to promote collaboration

Lack of Daycare

  • Offer incentives in the form of subsidies for licensed home daycare providers
  • Create babysitting online exchange through Babysitter Exchange
  • Promote Child Care Aware of North Dakota as resource to find local child care centers
  • Offer extended Clinic hours, in evenings and weekends, for working parents

Maintaining EMS

New Hospital Construction Projects

  • Research potential funding sources to assist with first responder training
  • Work with high school to encourage students to volunteer for emergency service careers
  • Organize event to recruit ambulance drivers
  • Explore alternate models of emergency care, such as community paramedicine

Marketing/Promotion of Hospital Services

  • Announce hospital services and schedule of visiting specialists on outgoing hospital phone line and run while callers are put on hold
  • Advertise clinic hours, visiting specialists on electronic signs in town (banks, community buildings)
  • Create hospital Facebook page
  • Distribute flyer listing services to local businesses
  • Partner with area businesses to host health fair and offer free food, screenings and advertise services
  • Develop professionally printed marketing materials that include information about hospital and clinic services, community information, and provider bio cards; distribute them to clients, patients, at community events, and at recruitment and health fairs
  • Run advertisements in local newspaper that promote and educate the public about some of the underutilized, and sometimes unknown, services offered by hospital
  • Create a video to highlight the hospital’s work and community’s assets to recruit providers as well as educate community members about available services; send it on a flash drive to prospective provider candidates and show it at the local theater prior to movies

Mental Health (including substance abuse)

  • Promote national suicide hotline: 1 (800) 273 TALK (8255)
  • Promote and utilize the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration as a resource
  • Inventory available community services including oil companies' safety offices and conflict resolution assistance
  • Develop mental health screenings in schools; research granting agencies (Gates Foundation, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Helmsley Foundation)
  • Promote national suicide hotline
  • Develop network/resources for runaways
  • Increase promotion, through advertising and public relations efforts, of counseling services that currently are available, including those through Telehealth
  • Collaborate with schools on educational seminars for students about mental health issues and increase interaction with school counselors
  • Continue collaboration with ministerial groups, including potential training of group by social worker
  • Train Emergency Room personnel on how to effectively facilitate mental health committals, transportation, and other responses, including training on paperwork and patient interactions
  • Establish support groups (such as families with mental health crises, grief group) led by a social worker

Not Enough Jobs with Livable wages

  • Promote jobs in healthcare as they tend to provide high paying jobs. Jobs.net website lists all jobs by North Dakota community
  • Create a liaison between hospital and area economic or jobs development corporation to promote economic impact of healthcare jobs. North Dakota CAHs have an average economic impact of $6.4 million and contribute about 220 jobs to the community
  • Start a local scholarship for health education with understanding recipient returns to the community for service for a specified period of time

Obesity & Physical Inactivity

  • Create and promote community facility available for indoor walking
  • Grant community access to school fitness center that includes weight and cardio equipment
  • Organize adult co-ed volleyball, pickleball, and basketball leagues
  • Promote availability of fitness opportunities though hospital website, cable television, post office signage, and via schools and churches
  • Partner with Extension Office to plant community or school garden
  • Develop community farmer’s market
  • Host a 5K or 10K race (running, walking, rollerblading, biking)
  • Implement comprehensive, sustainable wellness and disease management program based on improving baseline health numbers (e.g., weight, BMI, body composition, cholesterol, glucose, blood pressure) through evidence-based practices, shared medical appointments, and a health coach
  • Pilot wellness programs using hospital staff with the idea, “How can you get your community healthy if your staff is not healthy?”
  • Implement weight management program that includes meal replacement program and nutrition coaching
  • Hold monthly cooking classes focused on better nutrition choices with take-home recipes, informational materials, and placemats; incorporate blood pressure checks and cholesterol tests into the class time
  • Offer 12-week weight management program that features comprehensive health evaluation along with detailed exercise prescription, dietary/eating suggestions, three months of fitness center membership, ongoing monitoring of health measures, mobile phone apps for recording progress, follow-up phone calls, weekly weigh-ins, and one-on-one guidance with a physical therapist to teach use of exercise equipment

Sexually Transmitted Infections/Spreadable Disease

Project Hospital - Hospital Services Llc

  • Contact North Dakota Health Department for STD informational material and supplies
  • Discuss with public health and primary care clinic how to collaborate to address the issue for the community
  • Work with the local school on sex education curriculum
  • Contact business community as part of worksite wellness education – include STD screenings
  • Use social media to raise awareness, especially among young people, of STDs and prevention strategies

Traffic Safety & Elevated Motor Vehicle Crash Death Rate

  • Sponsor defensive driving course through Highway Patrol for community members
  • Partner with ND Safety Council on projects
  • Promote Distracted Driving course at high school
  • Reinstate SADD (Students Against Distracted/Drunk Driving) at high school
  • Display wrecked vehicle during community events
  • Offer Defensive Driving course with speaker's panel consisting of DUI victim and those who have been affected by drunk driving to share experience of loss and impact of loss
  • Have high school student create video about distracted driving and show movie as trailer at local movie theater. Hold community contest to see who can make most effective video
  • Promote public transportation on hospital's webpage

Violence

Hospital

Project Hospital Download Free

  • Promote Safer Tomorrows to increase awareness on child exposure to violence
  • Partner with Cut It Out: Salons Against Domestic Abuse to get training materials for hair stylists and other professionals to get employees to recognize signs of abuse
  • Contact Community Violence Intervention Center (in Grand Forks) for programming ideas, education, treatment and collaborative work for peace to prevent violence