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DHA 805 Great Western Hospital High Risk Pregnancy Care Discussion

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Running head: HIGH-RISK PRGNANCY CARE
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Crystal Colone
Case Risk Analysis: Great Western Hospital: High-risk Pregnancy Care.
Bevin Alexander Law, PLC
DHA 805 Risk Management
June 14, 2021

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Discussant Note- Case Risk Analysis: Great Western Hospital: High-risk Pregnancy Care.
Main Problems:
* Increase in high-risk pregnancy population
Poor adherence to regulator boards (The Care Quality Commission (CQC), National Health
Services (NHS)
* Merger issues
Economic constraints
Insufficient planning, reorganization, and delivery of Dr. Narayan's successful evidence-based
care (Expansion Issues).
Executive Summary
The purpose of this analysis is to comprehend the associated risks at Great Western
Hospital (GWH) regarding high-risk pregnancies (HRP) and care. Known as a large, based
community hospital, GWH has a knack for enduring challenges, which may cause shutdown and
even employee backlash in other organizations. Opened in 2002, GWH provided a wide range
of services for the community, with primary and community-based services being provided by
General Practitioners (GPs) and commissioned by Primary Care Trust (PCTs) (Porter, Stanton,
and Takvorian, 2013).
Systemically, England's National Health Services (NHS) offers universal access to free
health care at the time of need for anyone in need, regardless of capacity to pay; hence, it
governs under the world's most extensive integrated health system and the fourth-largest
employer. Comparatively, the majority of the NHS budget stemmed from the control of PCTs
and adjusted according to the underlying etiologies, age, and sex distribution of a given patient,
resulting in directing funds to the elderly and the more critical, including high-risk pregnancies
(Porter, Stanton, and Takvorian, 2013). However, there were still out-of-pocket expenses for
prescriptions, but pregnant women and women within one year of childbirth were exempt.
GPs acted as regulators to the healthcare system, recommending patients to specialists as
necessary. Since 2008, GWH had been part of NHS but later merged with Wiltshire, making
GWH the largest maternity resource in the UK (Porter, Stanton, and Takvorian, 2013).
GWH was divided into four major divisions. The management of high-risk pregnancy
care was regulated by the women and children's department, henceforth following a historical
approach to the high-risk pregnancy model instead of moving with the times.

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Running head: HIGH-RISK PRGNANCY CARE Crystal Colone Case Risk Analysis: Great Western Hospital: High-risk Pregnancy Care. Bevin Alexander Law, PLC DHA 805 Risk Management June 14, 2021 1 Running head: HIGH-RISK PRGNANCY CARE 2 Discussant Note- Case Risk Analysis: Great Western Hospital: High-risk Pregnancy Care. Main Problems: * Increase in high-risk pregnancy population • Poor adherence to regulator boards (The Care Quality Commission (CQC), National Health Services (NHS) * Merger issues • Economic constraints • Insufficient planning, reorganization, and delivery of Dr. Narayan's successful evidence-based care (Expansion Issues). Executive Summary The purpose of this analysis is to comprehend the associated risks at Great Western Hospital (GWH) regarding high-risk pregnancies (HRP) and care. Known as a large, based community hospital, GWH has a knack for enduring challenges, which may cause shutdown and even employee backlash in other organizations. Opened in 2002, GWH provided a wide range of services for the community, with primary and community-based services being provided by General Practitioners (GPs) and commissioned by Primary Care Trust (PCTs) (Porter, Stanton, and Takvorian, 2013). Systemically, England's National Health Services (NHS) offers universal access to free health care at the time of need for anyone in need, regardless of capacity to pay; hence, it governs under the world's most extensive integrated health system and the fourth-largest employ ...
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