Syllabus for NUR-810

Health, Healthcare Policy, and Politics


COURSE DESCRIPTION

In Health, Healthcare Policy, and Politics, students enhance skills to analyze health policy, develop and implement health policy in institutions and government, and advocate for sound health policies. Health policy content addresses the interplay of access, cost, and quality in healthcare; quality assessment; financing; governance; delivery; and the social justice of policies affecting health. Students will examine this interplay from the patient, nursing workforce, and organization perspectives. Policy and advocacy concepts will be reinforced by examining how they are demonstrated in specific policy initiatives and the impact they have on the behavior and outcomes of patients, nurses, and healthcare organizations.

COURSE TOPICS

COURSE OBJECTIVES

After completing this course, you should be able to:

CO1        Critically analyze health policy proposals, health policies, and related issues from the perspective of consumers, nursing, other health professions, and community stakeholders.

CO2        Demonstrate skills in the development and implementation of institutional, local, state, federal, and/or international health policy that shape healthcare financing, regulation, and delivery.

CO3        Influence policy makers through active participation on committees, boards, or task forces at the institutional, local, state, regional, national, and/or international levels to improve healthcare delivery and outcomes.

CO4        Educate others, including policy makers at all levels, regarding nursing, health policy, social justice, and system level outcomes.

CO5        Articulate health policy options to improve nursing, healthcare, and health.

COURSE MATERIALS

You will need the following materials to do the work of the course. The required textbook is available from the University’s textbook supplier, MBS Direct.

Required Textbooks

ISBN-13: 978-1284048865 

 

ISBN-13: 978-1483359465

 

Recommended Sources:

These sources are optional and not required. They are recommended because they contain information that  supplements the assigned readings for the course.  

ISBN-13: 978-1284053203  

Available as a companion source with the Milstead text.                                                        

Available online: http://www.jblearning.com/catalog/9781284053203/ 

Textbook available to purchase or rent: https://westviewpress.com/books/theories-of-the-policy-process/

Print ISBN: 978-0813349268

Ebook ISBN: 978-0813349275

Available for a fee at the Wiley Online Library: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1541-0072.1990.tb00633.x/full 

COURSE STRUCTURE

Health, Healthcare Policy, and Politics is a three credit, online course consisting of six modules and a final project that includes both a paper and videotaped oral presentation. Modules include an overview, topics, learning objectives, study materials, and activities. Module titles are listed below.

ASSESSMENT METHODS

For your formal work in the course, you are required to participate in online discussion forums, complete written assignments, complete a comprehensive midterm written assignment, and complete a final project. See below for details.

Consult the Course Calendar for due dates.

Please note: (1) Rewriting or resubmitting assignments is not permitted; (2) no assignments may be submitted after the last day of the course without an approved extension; and (3) extension requests must be approved by the mentor and submitted by the student to the Registrar's Office prior to the last day of the course.

Discussion Forums

All of the modules are two weeks long. All modules except Modules 4 and 6 feature two discussion forums. The first discussion forum is designed to be completed during the first week of the module and the second discussion forum is for the second week of the module.  

Note: The minimum participation requirement for discussion forum activities is at least three posts on at least three different days—an initial post responding to the questions and at least two posts to at least two classmates. Located within the Evaluation Rubrics folder on the course website is the online discussion forum rubric used to grade all online discussions.

Written Assignments

You are required to complete three written assignments. The written assignments are on a variety of topics associated with the course modules.

Midterm Comprehensive Written Assignment

You will complete a midterm comprehensive written assignment worth 15 percent of your final grade for the course. This assignment is designed to test your comprehension and mastery of the material from the first half of the course (Modules 1–3). The assignment consists of three short-answer questions and an essay question that consists of three parts.

For more information see the Midterm Comprehensive Written Assignment area of the course.

Final Project

Throughout this course, you will work on a final project in which you will write and present a policy evaluation and response plan, or a detailed advocacy plan for stakeholders. This final project synthesizes what you have learned throughout the course. The following periodic deliverables for this final project are due at various milestones throughout the course:

Step 1: Choice of Specific Policy Issue and Preliminary List of Sources

Step 2: Outline and Refine List of Sources

Step 3: Oral Presentation and Discussion Forum

Step 4: Final Written Report

For more information see the Final Project area of the course.  

TURNITIN REQUIREMENT

You are required to submit both the Midterm Comprehensive Written Assignment and the Final Project Step 4 (Final Written Report) in this course to Turnitin.com, an academic plagiarism prevention site, prior to submitting the assignment within your course space.

You will be able to view your originality report from Turnitin, which will provide information regarding writing style as well as a plagiarism gauge with tips for proper citations (see the FAQ page, linked below, for further information). Based on this feedback you will have the option to keep the original attempt or to choose to edit your assignment and resubmit it one more time to Turnitin (you will be allowed only one additional attempt). Please note: You will still need to submit the final version of your assignment in the course space.

Read carefully the document at the following link, as it will give you instructions for this requirement:

Turnitin FAQ Page 

GRADING AND EVALUATION

Your grade in the course will be determined as follows:

All activities will receive a numerical grade of 0–100. You will receive a score of 0 for any work not submitted. Your final grade in the course will be a letter grade. Letter grade equivalents for numerical grades are as follows:

A

=

93–100

B

=

83–87

A–

=

90–92

C

=

73–82

B+

=

88–89

F

=

Below 73

To receive credit for the course, you must earn a letter grade of B or better, based on the weighted average of all assigned course work (e.g., assignments, papers, discussion postings).

Lateness Policy

Written assignments should be submitted no later than the due date unless prior arrangements are made with the mentor and a new due date is established. If a student submits an assignment after the due date without having made arrangements with the mentor, a minimum of five points (based on an assignment grading scale of 100 points) or 5% of the total points will be deducted for each week, or part thereof, that the assignment is late. Discussion forum assignments must be done in the week they are due or points will be forfeited.

STRATEGIES FOR SUCCESS

First Steps to Success

To succeed in this course, take the following first steps:

Study Tips

Consider the following study tips for success:

ACADEMIC INTEGRITY

Thomas Edison State University is committed to maintaining academic quality, excellence, and honesty. The University expects all members of its community to share the commitment to academic integrity, an essential component of a quality academic experience.

Students at Thomas Edison State University are expected to exhibit the highest level of academic citizenship. In particular, students are expected to read and follow all policies, procedures, and program information guidelines contained in publications; pursue their learning goals with honesty and integrity; demonstrate that they are progressing satisfactorily and in a timely fashion by meeting course deadlines and following outlined procedures; observe a code of mutual respect in dealing with mentors, staff, and other students; behave in a manner consistent with the standards and codes of the profession in which they are practicing; keep official records updated regarding changes in name, address, telephone number, or e-mail address; and meet financial obligations in a timely manner. Students not practicing good academic citizenship may be subject to disciplinary action including suspension, dismissal, or financial holds on records.

All members of the University community are responsible for reviewing the Academic Code of Conduct Policy in the University Catalog and online at www.tesu.edu.

Academic Dishonesty

Thomas Edison State University expects all of its students to approach their education with academic integrity—the pursuit of scholarly activity free from fraud and deception. All mentors and administrative staff members at the University insist on strict standards of academic honesty in all courses. Academic dishonesty undermines this objective. Academic dishonesty can take the following forms:

Plagiarism

Thomas Edison State University is committed to helping students understand the seriousness of plagiarism, which is defined as using the work and ideas of others without proper citation. The University takes a strong stance against plagiarism, and students found to be plagiarizing are subject to discipline under the academic code of conduct policy.

If you copy phrases, sentences, paragraphs, or whole documents word-for-word—or if you paraphrase by changing a word here and there—without identifying the author, or without identifying it as a direct quote, then you are plagiarizing. Please keep in mind that this type of identification applies to Internet sources as well as to print-based sources. Copying and pasting from the Internet, without using quotation marks and without acknowledging sources, constitutes plagiarism. (For information about how to cite Internet sources, see Online Student Handbook > Academic Standards > Citing Sources.)

Accidentally copying the words and ideas of another writer does not excuse the charge of plagiarism. It is easy to jot down notes and ideas from many sources and then write your own paper without knowing which words are your own and which are someone else’s. It is more difficult to keep track of each and every source. However, the conscientious writer who wishes to avoid plagiarizing never fails to keep careful track of sources.

Always be aware that if you write without acknowledging the sources of your ideas, you run the risk of being charged with plagiarism.

Clearly, plagiarism, no matter the degree of intent to deceive, defeats the purpose of education. If you plagiarize deliberately, you are not educating yourself, and you are wasting your time on courses meant to improve your skills. If you plagiarize through carelessness, you are deceiving yourself.

For examples of unintentional plagiarism, advice on when to quote and when to paraphrase, and information about writing assistance and originality report checking, click the links provided below.

Examples of Unintentional Plagiarism

When to Quote and When to Paraphrase

Writing Assistance at Smarthinking

Originality Report Checking at Turnitin

Disciplinary Process for Plagiarism

Acts of both intentional and unintentional plagiarism violate the Academic Code of Conduct.

If an incident of plagiarism is an isolated minor oversight or an obvious result of ignorance of proper citation requirements, the mentor may handle the matter as a learning exercise. Appropriate consequences may include the completion of tutorials, assignment rewrites, or any other reasonable learning tool in addition to a lower grade for the assignment or course. The mentor will notify the student and appropriate dean of the consequence by e-mail.

If the plagiarism appears intentional and/or is more than an isolated incident, the mentor will refer the matter to the appropriate dean, who will gather information about the violation(s) from the mentor and student, as necessary. The dean will review the matter and notify the student in writing of the specifics of the charge and the sanction to be imposed.

Possible sanctions include:

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