Qualitative Health Care

 

 

Using the Learning Resources and other academic sources you found, expand on this simple statement. In 3
paragraphs, explain several dimensions of this paradigm that make qualitative research interesting and unique.
Be sure to use the terminology you are learning (including but not limited to “phenomena”, “constructivist,” and
“naturalistic”), and provide historical context.
Ravitch, S. M., & Carl, N. M. (2016). Qualitative research: Bridging the conceptual, theoretical, and
methodological. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
• Chapter 1, “Qualitative Research: An Opening Orientation” (pp. 1–31)
Erickson, F. (2011). Chapter 3: A history of qualitative inquiry in social and educational research. In N. K.
Denzin, & Y. S. Lincoln (Eds.), The SAGE handbook of qualitative research (4th ed., pp. 43–58). Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Denzin, N. K., & Lincoln, Y.S. (2013). Chapter 1: Introduction: The discipline and practice of qualitative
research. In The landscape of qualitative research (4th ed., pp. 1–44). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Retrieved from http://www.sagepub.com/sites/default/files/upm-binaries/17670_Chapter1.pdf

Sample Solution

incentive to work and save will be sustained”.

Issues with UK Tax System

The UK needs to change the separate systems of income tax and National Insurance, with different sets of rules and exemptions, pointlessly increasing administration and compliance costs and making the system less transparent. NI is not a true social insurance scheme anymore; it is just another tax on earnings, which is added to the total revenue. The current tax and benefit system is unnecessarily complicated and convinces many people not to work or to work too little.

Coherence requires first that the income tax system itself be sensibly structured. We need to move away from pointless complexities such as that which any amount between £100,000 and £123,700 means the personal allowance reduces and can actually mean that some people would get more net income if they earned less.

Conclusion

A good tax system is one which has primarily good taxes and fulfils most of the canons of taxation. It should be a balanced system where there are all types of taxes in the right proportion. The tax and benefit system should therefore be progressive, coherent, and designed to reflect income distribution and how different groups respond to work incentives. In the current system, there are a disarray of tax rates, a lack of a coherent vision of the tax base, and arbitrary discrimination across different types of economic activities. However, income tax does fundamentally treat the individual proportionately equal and helps provide items all benefit from. Ultimately, a good tax system is definitely better than none.

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