Wednesday 15 May 2013

How To Keep Sane In The Face Of Financial Crisis


The global financial crisis could have profound implications for the health spending plans of national governments and unless countries have safety nets in place, the poor  and vulnerable will be the first to suffer, the World Health Organisation (WHO) has warned. Dr. Harry Taiwo Ladapo, the Chief Medical Director of Federal Neuro Psychiatry Hospital, Yaba, Lagos, in this interview with CHUKWUMA MUANYA, x-rays the situation and proffers solutions to keeping sane in the midst of the financial meltdown.

that constitute the problem. And there has been no solution apart from maybe palliatives, prayer; giving olive oil, barbiturates and all sorts of drugs to calm victims down. But there was no drug to arrest the main problem of madness which is delusion and hallucination until in the 50s when science was now able to identify a specific neuro hormone responsible and that neuro hormone was called Dopamine. Science now thought that the only way to cure this condition is to block the excessive production of dopamine.
When dopamine is produced excessively in the system, the individual now becomes something else-be talking rubbish, be hearing voices, be deluded, be roaming the streets, be out of touch with reality and that is what we call madness in this environment.

5 ACTS OF NEGLIGENCE NURSES MUST AVOID


The Oxford advanced learner’s dictionary defines negligence as failure to give somebody or something enough care or attention.  Applying this definition of negligence to Nursing Practice, one would be correct to say that failure of a Nurse to give enough care or attention to his/her patient is an act of negligence.  Any act of negligence by a Nurse can lead to a job loss for the Nurse, imprisonment or forfeiture of the right to practice as a Nurse.

Lest we forget; what are the common acts of negligence for which a Nurse can be sanctioned?  Let us consider five of them:

1. A Patient who falls from bed:  A Nurse can be sued and held liable if a patient under her care falls out of bed and sustains injury.  This may likely occur with patients that are under sedation, unconscious patients, blind patients, patient who have not fully recovered from electroplexy, patients who are dizzy and geriatric patients.  It’s the duty of the Nurse to ensure that this group of patients do not fall from their bed and sustain injury.

2. Administering wrong drugs, wrong dosage and injections at wrong site:  This is the worst form of negligence by a Nurse.  By virtue of her training she is supposed to know that she is expected to check every drug dosage and identify the particular patient before administering the drugs.  Injections are supposed to be administered at the right sites.  Where a Nurse fail to follow these standard procedure and this result in harm or death of a patient, the Nurse will be held liable for negligence and be sanctioned by a law court.