Ihuman Case WEEK #4 5 YEAR OLD PATIENT REASON FOR ENCOUNTER COUGH AND
TROUBLE BREATHING.(CLASS 6541) Walden University .LATEST CASE STUDY WITH
SCREENSHOTS 100
China - ANSWERBasic Info: policy, late 1970s, prevent famine (Great Famine caused 35
million deaths),
China - ANSWERAdvantages: controls pop, less strain on resources, increase living standards,
family planning education, BR decreased since 1979, rate of pop growth is 0.7%, 3-4 mil fewer
people in 2008 w/ policy
China - ANSWERDisadvantages: still has 1 million more births than deaths every 5 weeks,
abortion problem, in 2001 20 000 abortions set for Huaji Country (2002 outlawed physical force
of abrotion/sterilisation), lack of people of working age, ageing population, imbalanced gender
structure 119 boys to 100 girls, 6 million more young men than women --> rape, forced
marriage, lack of human rights, black market ultrasound, female infanticide, illegal immigration
Kerala - ANSWERBasic: introduced in 1952, family planning programme, focused on social
change, 32 million pop represent 3.5% of India's pop
China - ANSWERPolicy: only 1 child, 5-10% salary rise, tax incentives, free services, granny
police established (neighbours inform others), rural families allowed 2 for work, free pension,
housing, education, benefits for single child
if disobeyed: 10% salary cut, large fine, women forced into abortion
Kerala - ANSWERPolicy: Improve policies and sexual equality, provide adult literacy classes,
education to understand benefits of small families, reduce infant mortality, improve healthcare,
health clinics set up free contraception and advice, allow maternity leave for first 2 babies, extra
retirement benefits for those with smaller families, enforced through soap operas, billboards,
school visits
Kerala - ANSWERSuccess: India's GDP/capita $460, Kerala's $2950, AL 91% (before 58%),
LE 71 years (64), IM 12/1000 (65)
Disadvantages: X industrialise, intelligent people --> Dubai
Italy - ANSWER56 mil pop, predicted to fall to 41 mil by 2050 when 40% of pop will be ageing,
BR 1.3/1000, few consumers to keep economy going, decreased tax revenues and increasing
pension/healthcare costs, baby bonus paid for children of £600 since 2003
Germany - ANSWERIf X increase in current BR, work force will fall by 40% in next 50 years,
declined economy, if BR doubled overnight, take Germany 20 years to recover, tax breaks for
families with children, BR 8.5/1000
Spain - ANSWERone-off payments for children at birth
, Poland - ANSWERpaid for each child born, BR 9.3/1000
Sweeden - ANSWERflexible working hours for family, high quality child-care
Norway - ANSWER10-12 months maternity leave, 80-100% wages during leave, time off for
new fathers, policies began in 1956
France - ANSWERBR 12.7/1000, affordable child care subsidised by gov, tax breaks for large
families, flexible working hours, 3 years paid parental leave, more children a woman has =
younger retirement on full pension
Poland Migration - ANSWERPush: low wages, high unemployment, 18% in 2004, Catholic
church makes people feel restricted, new wing gov, more restricted society
Poland Migration - ANSWERPull: higher wages, plumber in P gets £240/month, UK £1
800/month, many jobs available, educational opportunities, improve Eng, good
services/resources, generous benefit system (NHS)
Poland Migration - ANSWERPositive: Accession 8 countries boost economy by 0.4%, generate
£300 mil in tax, more working class, full employment, takes jobs others in UK don't want, more
cultural mixing
Negative: racial issues/exploitation, strawberry picker only gained £70/week for 6 days,
pressure on resources and services, 1 in 3 homes for migrants, 60 new children X speak Eng,
£4 bil sent back to Poland
Poland Migration - ANSWERWhy gov trying to attract people home: 10% doctors left,
decreased healthcare, less skilled workers
Difficulties faced by migrants: language barriers, exploitation
Kenya - ANSWERBasic Info: 36 mil pop, $500 GDP/capita, earns $850 mil from tourism = 15%
country's GDP, 1.8 mil tourists/year, 500 000 people employed indirectly/directly by tourism
Kenya - ANSWERPhysical Attractions: Wildlife parks, 80% of tourists due to wildlife, easy to
see 'Big Five' (elephant, lion, leopard, buffalo, rhino), Indian Ocean coastline, Mombasa, white
coral sand and warm water, home to 240 species of fish and wide variety of coral
Human Attractions: in 1970s, Kenya protected wildlife within 45 National Parks and Game
reserves, cover 10% of country, gov invested in providing luxury safari accommodation,
neighbouring countries where wildlife can be seen deemed unsafe (Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan)
Kenya - ANSWERBenefits
Economic : contributes to 15% of GDP, 500 000 people employed directly/indirectly by tourism,
tourists like local products (cafes/taxis)
TROUBLE BREATHING.(CLASS 6541) Walden University .LATEST CASE STUDY WITH
SCREENSHOTS 100
China - ANSWERBasic Info: policy, late 1970s, prevent famine (Great Famine caused 35
million deaths),
China - ANSWERAdvantages: controls pop, less strain on resources, increase living standards,
family planning education, BR decreased since 1979, rate of pop growth is 0.7%, 3-4 mil fewer
people in 2008 w/ policy
China - ANSWERDisadvantages: still has 1 million more births than deaths every 5 weeks,
abortion problem, in 2001 20 000 abortions set for Huaji Country (2002 outlawed physical force
of abrotion/sterilisation), lack of people of working age, ageing population, imbalanced gender
structure 119 boys to 100 girls, 6 million more young men than women --> rape, forced
marriage, lack of human rights, black market ultrasound, female infanticide, illegal immigration
Kerala - ANSWERBasic: introduced in 1952, family planning programme, focused on social
change, 32 million pop represent 3.5% of India's pop
China - ANSWERPolicy: only 1 child, 5-10% salary rise, tax incentives, free services, granny
police established (neighbours inform others), rural families allowed 2 for work, free pension,
housing, education, benefits for single child
if disobeyed: 10% salary cut, large fine, women forced into abortion
Kerala - ANSWERPolicy: Improve policies and sexual equality, provide adult literacy classes,
education to understand benefits of small families, reduce infant mortality, improve healthcare,
health clinics set up free contraception and advice, allow maternity leave for first 2 babies, extra
retirement benefits for those with smaller families, enforced through soap operas, billboards,
school visits
Kerala - ANSWERSuccess: India's GDP/capita $460, Kerala's $2950, AL 91% (before 58%),
LE 71 years (64), IM 12/1000 (65)
Disadvantages: X industrialise, intelligent people --> Dubai
Italy - ANSWER56 mil pop, predicted to fall to 41 mil by 2050 when 40% of pop will be ageing,
BR 1.3/1000, few consumers to keep economy going, decreased tax revenues and increasing
pension/healthcare costs, baby bonus paid for children of £600 since 2003
Germany - ANSWERIf X increase in current BR, work force will fall by 40% in next 50 years,
declined economy, if BR doubled overnight, take Germany 20 years to recover, tax breaks for
families with children, BR 8.5/1000
Spain - ANSWERone-off payments for children at birth
, Poland - ANSWERpaid for each child born, BR 9.3/1000
Sweeden - ANSWERflexible working hours for family, high quality child-care
Norway - ANSWER10-12 months maternity leave, 80-100% wages during leave, time off for
new fathers, policies began in 1956
France - ANSWERBR 12.7/1000, affordable child care subsidised by gov, tax breaks for large
families, flexible working hours, 3 years paid parental leave, more children a woman has =
younger retirement on full pension
Poland Migration - ANSWERPush: low wages, high unemployment, 18% in 2004, Catholic
church makes people feel restricted, new wing gov, more restricted society
Poland Migration - ANSWERPull: higher wages, plumber in P gets £240/month, UK £1
800/month, many jobs available, educational opportunities, improve Eng, good
services/resources, generous benefit system (NHS)
Poland Migration - ANSWERPositive: Accession 8 countries boost economy by 0.4%, generate
£300 mil in tax, more working class, full employment, takes jobs others in UK don't want, more
cultural mixing
Negative: racial issues/exploitation, strawberry picker only gained £70/week for 6 days,
pressure on resources and services, 1 in 3 homes for migrants, 60 new children X speak Eng,
£4 bil sent back to Poland
Poland Migration - ANSWERWhy gov trying to attract people home: 10% doctors left,
decreased healthcare, less skilled workers
Difficulties faced by migrants: language barriers, exploitation
Kenya - ANSWERBasic Info: 36 mil pop, $500 GDP/capita, earns $850 mil from tourism = 15%
country's GDP, 1.8 mil tourists/year, 500 000 people employed indirectly/directly by tourism
Kenya - ANSWERPhysical Attractions: Wildlife parks, 80% of tourists due to wildlife, easy to
see 'Big Five' (elephant, lion, leopard, buffalo, rhino), Indian Ocean coastline, Mombasa, white
coral sand and warm water, home to 240 species of fish and wide variety of coral
Human Attractions: in 1970s, Kenya protected wildlife within 45 National Parks and Game
reserves, cover 10% of country, gov invested in providing luxury safari accommodation,
neighbouring countries where wildlife can be seen deemed unsafe (Somalia, Ethiopia, Sudan)
Kenya - ANSWERBenefits
Economic : contributes to 15% of GDP, 500 000 people employed directly/indirectly by tourism,
tourists like local products (cafes/taxis)