Posts Tagged ‘Health Care’

Qualified Health Service Professional

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

In fact, there are more and more health services schools opening every year to meet the demand for well-trained health services professionals. It can prepare you for any number of occupations in health care or medical practice. Those seeking a career in health care will discover a wealth of career choices. A few of the most popular fields of study would include medical billing and coding, physical therapist, nursing assistant, dental assistant, medical transcription, cardiovascular and EKG technologist, and many more. You can select from an array of professional medical credentials, including diplomas, certificates, and college degrees in health services fields.

At the college and university level, health services degrees are offered, including associate, bachelor, master, and even doctorate degrees. Four-year degree programs will include courses in anatomy, biology, physiology, math, medical terminology, arts, sciences, social studies, and more. Graduate degree programs might include a broad array of classes in business, management, finances, economics, health services administration, and others. The medical field is always looking for well-trained, qualified health service professionals. With a certificate or diploma in one or more health services, you could qualify for positions in hospitals, medical centers, geriatric care facilities, outpatient clinics, private health care practices, and other facilities that provide medical and health care services.

The earning power of health services professionals is wide-ranging, and salaries are based on the particular field of study, the level of health services education, and on-the-job experience. The certified professional might expect annual earnings around $40,000, while those with an advanced degree might earn $100,000 or more.

Medical Equipment

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

There is plenty of medical equipment out there with long complicated names, but I want to highlight a few of them and explain how they first appeared and what miracles they do each and every day in the hospitals around the world.

First of all I want to start with ECG machines. ECG is stands for Electrocardiography and what they do is monitor the heart by using electrodes on the skin and creates a representation of the electrical activity of the heart over a certain period. The ECG machine amplifies the micro electrical changes on the skin that are caused during each beat. It can also determine if certain parts of the heart is damaged and can reliably measure the heart’s pumping ability, which can be used in ultrasound tests. ECG machines where invented in 1872 at ST Bartholomew’s Hospital by Alexander Muirhead. He attached a rope to the wrists of patients to achieve a record of the patient’s heart beating while he was studying for his Doctor of Science. The machines themselves don’t cure or fix but help in a patient diagnosis.

Centrifuges were first invented by an English military engineer Benjamin Robins and were later developed in 1864 by Antonin Prandtl. Antonin used a centrifuge like apparatus to separate cream from milk. It wasn’t until 1879 that Gustaf de Laval made it a commercial application. What a centrifuge does is rotates what ever is put into it at a fixed axis. Its rotated so fast that dense substances separate from the lighter substance. They are used in chemistry, biochemistry and biology when testing on samples and play it part in helping create cures and a better understanding of how our body works. There are many other non-medical uses for it also.

The final piece of medical equipment I’m going to mention is the medical freezer. Process of freezing or chilling items was first invented in the 11th century by a Persian physicist and was developed into an artificial low temperature unit in 1748. It was mainly used to keep ice frozen for many years until about the 1920?s when it turned into a huge commercial venture for home and work. The use of a freezer as a piece of medical equipment is put to use when sample and vaccines need to kept chilled. Also body parts need to be kept frozen so they can still be used. Hearts are transported in freezer boxes as well as severed limbs.