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This study is based on the bibliometric analysis of research publications that focus on highlighting the interlinkages between natural disasters and human trafficking as its aftermath. The main objectives of the study are to determine the frequency of such publications and also to establish that the problem of trafficking as a result of natural disasters has not received enough attention from.
Introduction to Public Health Posters
Learn how to spot human trafficking victims in this course that meets Florida’s requirement for CE on human trafficking. Mac OS X 10.1 or higher. Mac OS X Starting with Mac OS X Leopard, an implementation of the TrustedBSD MAC framework (taken from FreeBSD), was included. 8 The TrustedBSD MAC framework is used to sandbox services and provides a firewall layer given the configuration of the sharing services in Mac OS X Leopard and Snow Leopard. (Excerpt) This Note argues that the Baston court was incorrect both in finding the Amendment consistent with the protective principle and in its analysis of the defendant’s nexus with the United States. This Note asserts, instead, that (1) the Amendment is not valid under any traditional bases of prescriptive jurisdiction but is consistent with the United States’ international obligations. Since before the dawn of the #MeToo Movement, civil litigators have been confronted with imperfect legal responses to gender-based harms. Some have sought to envision and develop innovative legal strategies. One new, increasingly successful tactic has been the deployment of federal anti-trafficking law in certain cases of domestic violence and sexual assault. In 2017, for example, victims of.
Title
Authors
Files
Faculty Advisor
Ginger Cameron
Publication Date
11-16-2017
Abstract
Human trafficking is a current problem that health professionals, such as pharmacists, should be aware of. This poster was created as a group project by pre-pharmacy majors and exhibited to faculty and graduate pharmacy students. The primary purpose of the project was to learn about human trafficking as a public health concern, increase awareness, and search for ways to reduce the problem. The poster highlights the different forms of human trafficking and what determinants of health apply to this problem. It also seeks to show how human trafficking relates to the pharmacy profession.
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences | Public Health
Keywords
Social health, modern slavery, problem awareness, pharmacy
Recommended Citation
Kennedy, Katelyn H.; Dobbs, Kylie S.; and Peters, Hannah L., 'Human Trafficking' (2017). Introduction to Public Health Posters. 21.
https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/public_health_posters/21
https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/public_health_posters/21
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License
Included in
Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences Commons, Public Health Commons
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Overview
Many health care providers in the United States practice with the thought that human trafficking, also referred to as modern day slavery, does not exist here in the United States. Rather, they believe that it is a problem relevant only to far off distant countries. The truth is that this terrible crime is occurring right here in the United States, just as it is in faraway places. In the United States, roughly 88% of victims have had an interaction with a healthcare provider during their captivity. This puts health care professionals in a unique position to interact with victims in a way that, if appropriately identified, can result in liberation for the victim. Identifying persons believed to be a victim of human trafficking requires health care providers to not only recognize the many types of trafficking that can occur, but also be able to recognize the indicators that unlawful human trafficking may be taking place.
To identify victims that are potentially in plain view yet unseen, health care professionals must be diligent to read between the lines of those things left unsaid to see the bigger picture presenting before them. From a pharmacy viewpoint, a woman that you notice coming into the pharmacy often to purchase emergency contra- ception may not be a victim of human trafficking, but she may be. It takes a closer examination of the bigger picture to discover if there are indicators of unlawful activity taking place. Does she have any other indicators that would merit striking up a conversation with her to dig a little deeper?..
Details
Publication Date: 01/22/2019
Expiration Date: 01/22/2022
CE Credit: 2.0 (02.0 CEU)
Type of Activity: Knowledge-based
Expiration Date: 01/22/2022
CE Credit: 2.0 (02.0 CEU)
Type of Activity: Knowledge-based
This program was developed by The Rx Consultant and published by Continuing Education Network, Inc. The Rx Consultant accepts no advertising or financial support from the pharmaceutical industry and is funded solely by the purchase of programs. The Rx Consultant is dedicated to providing unbiased, balanced information to health care practitioners.
Programs developed by The Rx Consultant are written by health care providers with expertise in the topic area, peer-reviewed, extensively edited, and fact-checked. This development process was created to insure that every program presents information that is current, accurate, relevant to 'real world' health care providers, and written in an easy reading, 'plain English' style.
Authors
Trafficking Mac Os 11
Dr. Anthony Cole earned his Bachelor’s degree in pharmacy, with a minor in Criminal Justice, from Wayne State University, then earnd his PharmD from Idaho State University, and subsequently enrolled at the University of Michigan to double major in graduate studies earning his MBA and MPH simultaneously.Disclosure Statement
Dr. Cole reports no actual or potential conflict of interest in relation to this activity.Target Audience
This accredited program is targeted to pharmacy technicians .Goals & Objectives
At the conclusion of this program, participants will be able to:- Describe the types of human trafficking
- Outline key factors that place a person at greater risk of being a victim of human trafficking
- Recognize general indicators that a person may be a victim of human trafficking as well as validated assessment tools for identifying a human trafficking victim
- Identify methods for reporting human trafficking to include the national hotline.
- Outline referral options for legal services as well public and private social services available for rescue, food, clothing and shelter
- Describe procedures for sharing information related to human trafficking with a patient
Accreditation Statements
The Rx Consultant is a publication of Continuing Education Network, Inc.
Continuing Education Network, Inc. is accredited by the Accreditation Council for Pharmacy Education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education as a provider of continuing pharmacy education.
Continuing Education Network is approved by the California Board of Registered Nursing, Provider Number CEP 13118. Programs approved by CA BRN are accepted by most State Boards of Nursing.
ACPE Universal Activity Number: 0428-0000-19-003-H04-T
Exam & Credit Statement Procedures
Upon successful completion of this program and the post test (70%), 2.0 hours of continuing education credit will be awarded. To receive credit and your exam score, please complete the exam questions andprogram evaluation.Editorial and Review Board
Chief Editor and CE AdministratorTerry M. Baker, PharmD Managing EditorTracy Farnen, PharmD Associate EditorsJames Chan, PharmD, PhD Pharmacy Quality and Outcomes Coordinator Kaiser Permanente Oakland, CA Associate Clinical Professor School of Pharmacy University of California San Francisco San Francisco, CA Richard Ron Finley, B.S. Schlemmer catcher mac os. Pharm.,R.Ph. Clinical Pharmacist (volunteer faculty) University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Memory and Aging Center Lecturer (Emeritus) UCSF, Department of Clinical Pharmacy Health Sciences Clinical Professor, UCSF School of Pharmacy San Francisco, CA Consultant Pharmacist Ray Dolby Brain Health Center, Sutter Health/CPMC San Francisco, CA Consult Pharmacist Aging and Adult Health Services San Francisco Health Department San Francisco, CA Julio R. Mr. fast mac os. Lopez, PharmD, FCSHP Chief of Pharmacy Service VA Northern California Health Care System Adjunct Clinical Professor College of Pharmacy Touro University Vallejo, CA | Assistant Clinical Professor School of Pharmacy University of California, San Francisco San Francisco, CA Adjunct Professor Thomas J. Long School of Pharmacy University of the Pacific Stockton, CA Visiting Associate Professor and Lecturer Nursing School Samuel Merritt University Oakland, CA Pamela Mausner, MD Helen Berlie, Pharm.D. CDE, BCACP Clinical Assistant Professor, Pharmacy Practice Wayne State University Detroit, MI Ambulatory Care Specialist - Diabetes Health Centers Detroit Medical Group Detroit, MI Senior Editorial AdvisorGerard Hatheway, PharmD, PhD Editorial AdvisorsBelinda M. Danielson, RPh Christopher M. DeSoto, PharmD Angie S. Graham, PharmD Cynthia Chan Huang, PharmD, MBA Fred Plageman, PharmD Editorial Advisor and Clinical Practice Consultant for Nurse PractitionersEmily K. Meuleman, RN, C, MS |
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