Week |
Subject |
Related Preparation |
1) |
Guidelines for Design of Health Care Facilities (AIA)
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2) |
Hospital Accreditation and JCI Standards; QHA Trent Accreditation Standards
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3) |
Design Requirements for ICU, OR, X-Ray Department, PET Shielding Requirements
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4) |
"Medical Gas Pipeline System, Guidelines for Testing Medical Gases (O2, N20 and Medical Air),
Medical-surgical vacuum systems, Design of the Vacuum Pump System, Waste Anesthetic Gas Disposal"
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5) |
Clean-air Systems and Classification, Hospital clean-air zones, Airborne Infection, ISO 14644
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6) |
Particle Counting, Active/Passive Air Sampling, Isolation Rooms Design Requirements |
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7) |
Midterm Exam I
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8) |
Earth Grounding System, Isolated Power Systems and Line Isolation Monitor, Conductive Flooring |
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9) |
"Guidelines for Design of Sterilization Department, Sterilization Validation,
Sterility and Shelf Life, Bowie-Dick test, Chemical indicators, Biological indicators"
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10) |
Sterilization Techniques (EtO, Formaldehyde, Ozone, Plasma , Gamma)
Compaing EtO and Plasma sterilization techniques |
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11) |
Sterilization Department Design Guidelines, Validation in Sterilization
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12) |
Health Devices IPM System for Medical Device Performance and Safety Measurements
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13) |
Waste Management, Management of Hazardous Materials |
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14) |
Midterm Exam II |
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Program Outcomes |
Level of Contribution |
1) |
To develop an interest in the human mind and behavior, to be able to evaluate theories using empirical findings, to understand that psychology is an evidence-based science by acquiring critical thinking skills. |
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2) |
To gain a biopsychosocial perspective on human behavior. To understand the biological, psychological, and social variables of behavior. |
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3) |
To learn the basic concepts in psychology and the theoretical and practical approaches used to study them (e.g. basic observation and interview techniques). |
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4) |
To acquire the methods and skills to access and write information using English as the dominant language in the psychological literature, to recognize and apply scientific research and data evaluation techniques (e.g. correlational, experimental, cross-sectional and longitudinal studies, case studies). |
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5) |
To be against discrimination and prejudice; to have ethical concerns while working in research and practice areas. |
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6) |
To recognize the main subfields of psychology (experimental, developmental, clinical, cognitive, social and industrial/organizational psychology) and their related fields of study and specialization. |
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7) |
To acquire the skills necessary for analyzing, interpreting and presenting the findings as well as problem posing, hypothesizing and data collection, which are the basic elements of scientific studies. |
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8) |
To gain the basic knowledge and skills necessary for psychological assessment and evaluation. |
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9) |
To acquire basic knowledge of other disciplines (medicine, genetics, biology, economics, sociology, political science, communication, philosophy, anthropology, literature, law, art, etc.) that will contribute to psychology and to use this knowledge in the understanding and interpretation of psychological processes. |
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10) |
To develop sensitivity towards social problems; to take responsibility in activities that benefit the field of psychology and society. |
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11) |
To have problem solving skills and to be able to develop the necessary analytical approaches for this. |
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12) |
To be able to criticize any subject in business and academic life and to be able to express their thoughts. |
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