MILLENNIALS

 

 

We all see the world a little differently. Our personal experiences and attitudes often filter what we see, hear, and imagine. All of us have slightly different filters, which helps us to make sense of the world. Nonetheless, our perceptions are never exactly like anyone else’s.

Click on this link to watch a few videos to see how easy it is for people to make assumptions and judge others too quickly: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DadIBPZVaNE&feature=youtu.be

Now, let’s consider stereotypes. A stereotype is an often unfair and untrue belief that many people have about all people or things with a particular characteristic. Too often we stereotype others because of our personal beliefs, experiences, and attitudes. Actually, some of us have been a victim of stereotypes, placed on us by others with whom we’ve never met. Considering the list of 4 types of people below, what is your first perception of them? What personal stereotypes have you formed about them or what stereotypes have you heard others say? Have you been a victim of any of these stereotypes? How has your communication with these people been affected due to these stereotypes?
1. WOMEN

2. MEN

3. OLD PEOPLE

4. MILLENNIALS

Note: Most of us have been stereotyped because of our race and ethnicity. However, for the sake of this Discussion Board, in your responses please try to keep your focus on just the groups of people mentioned above, instead of your experiences with race and ethnicity.

 

Sample Solution

Millennials, also known as Generation Y or Gen Y, are the generation that comes after Generation X but before Generation Z. The early 1980s are commonly used as starting birth years, and the mid-1990s to early 2000s are commonly used as ending birth years, with the generation being classified as persons born between 1981 and 1996. The majority of millennials are the offspring of baby boomers and early Gen Xers, and they are frequently the parents of Generation Alpha. Young people all throughout the world are deferring marriage. Millennials were born during a period when global fertility rates were decreasing, and they are having fewer children than their forefathers.

17), these failures caused patients to suffer partial loss of vision or complete blindness, they also reported that patients died as a result of poor care. The report identified persistent evidence of care that fell below standard and the trust was placed in special measures. Without intervention from the CQC the findings would have been more catastrophic. The Nursing and Midwifery Council (NMC) (2017) and the CQC now work in partnership to promote patient safety and improve service, a driving force for the NHS, similarly NHS England and NHS Improvement recently came together as a single organisation, likewise to better support the NHS and improve patient care (NHS, 2019).

Similarly, an independent inquiry chaired by Robert Francis QC found many failures in the quality of care at Mid Staffordshire NHS Foundation Trust resulting in a complete breakdown in fundamental nursing care and in the wider governance. 290 key recommendations were made for healthcare regulators, providers and government to improve services in order to provide safe, high quality health care for all (Francis, 2013).

The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) (2016) focusses its drive to continually improve the quality of care whilst also managing the financial sustainability of the NHS. To support this the NHS devised a shared delivery plan known as the Five Year Forward View, their objectives are to reduce costs by £22 billion which will be reinvested in front line services (Gov.UK, 2015). The Quality Innovation Productivity and Prevention (QIPP) programme into how the NHS proposes to make those savings whilst continuing to improve the quality of care the NHS delivers. Arguably, The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) (2012) are concerned that short term savings are at the expense of the long-standing service change needed to meet the challenges of an ageing population, they further describe their concern for the damage it may be doing to patients today and in the future. Similarly, (CQUIN) (2018), more commonly known as Commissioning for Quality and Innovation, is a framework which aims to continually improve quality and drive innovation, it is incentive based to encourage service providers to achieve targets in exchange for financial payment. This system drives forward productivity, beneficial in any establishment.

It is also through continued SI that the NHS has been able to respond successfully to the growing population, the sicker population as well as the ageing population. Statistics show that even with such a growing population the percentage of the general public being satisfied with the NHS has dou

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