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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
This course provides instruction and lab application to the theories and concepts of advanced anesthesia equipment that are used in complex anesthesia/surgical situations. Topics include invasive monitoring and high-level equipment: thromboelastograph, cell saver, transducers and transesophageal echocardiogram to properly assist with care of a high-risk patient. This course requires a per credit health career fee; Check the tuition and fee schedule for the current rate.
Prerequisite:
ANE 110 and ANE 111
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3.00 Credits
This clinical experience provides the student with the opportunity to observe and practice the principles of infection control in a surgical setting as well as gain experience with specific anesthesia equipment. The student will observe, obtain and practice specific technical skills. Hands-on experience will provide technical skills and further understanding of the theories taught within the classroom. This course will be graded on a pass/fail basic. This course requires a per credit health career fee; Check the tuition and fee schedule for the current rate.
Prerequisite:
ANE 114 and ANE 116
Corequisite:
ANE 214
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4.00 Credits
This course covers the theory and concepts in the proper use and safe practice of delivery and storage of anesthesia medications. Drugs commonly used in the practice of anesthesia will be studied. Emphasis is placed on the proper identification of these drugs by trade and generic names, their basic pharmacological action, and how they are used in a clinical setting. This course requires a per credit health career fee; Check the tuition and fee schedule for the current rate.
Prerequisite:
ANE 114 and ANE 116
Corequisite:
CHM 109
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2.00 Credits
This course surveys the current trends in anesthesia technology. Emphasis is placed on professional issues such as continuing education, ethical behavior, team functioning and organization of health care institutions. This course requires a per credit health career fee; Check the tuition and fee schedule for the current rate.
Prerequisite:
ANE 203C and ANE 214
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3.00 Credits
This 8-week clinical experience takes place in diverse health care settings. This clinical experience provides the student with the opportunity to observe and practice the entry level skills with specific anesthesia equipment. The student observes, obtains and practices at an entry skill level. Hands-on experience provides technical skills and further application of the theories taught within the classroom. This course is graded on a pass/fail basis. Anesthesia Clinical 2 must be successfully completed before beginning Anesthesia Clinical 3. This course requires a per credit health career fee; Check the tuition and fee schedule for the current rate.
Prerequisite:
ANE 203C
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3.00 Credits
This 8-week clinical experience takes place in diverse health care settings. This clinical experience provides the student with the opportunity to observe and practice the entry level skills with specific anesthesia equipment. The student observes, obtains and practices at an entry skill level. Hands-on experience provides technical skills and further application of the theories taught within the classroom. This course is graded on a pass/fail basis. This course requires a per credit health career fee; Check the tuition and fee schedule for the current rate.
Prerequisite:
ANE 203C
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3.00 Credits
This course is a scientific inquiry into human variability across space and time and provides a general introduction to the four fields of anthropology. Students explore how anthropologists study cultural and physical aspects of humanity and the evolution of human's biocultural nature from prehistory to the present by drawing upon evidence from archaeology, physical anthropology, ethnography and linguistic anthropology.
Prerequisite:
ENG 090 or placement
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3.00 Credits
Cultural anthropology is the study of humans across the globe and looking into what makes us all tick. What makes groups different, and what similarities do we have? How is family defined? A major difference between anthropology and sociology is that anthropologists focus on non-industrialized or indigenous societies, while sociologists focus on the western world. The course deals with cultural variations among living populations of the present and recent past whose cultures have been described by ethnographic fieldworkers. Topics include language and communication (not always verbal or even among humans), ritual and religion, families, kinship and marriage and aspects of culture.
Prerequisite:
ENG 090 or placement
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3.00 Credits
Students in this course experience an overview of current data and theory related to biological variability among living and past human populations and the extensive fossils documenting human evolution. This course provides an essential comparative zoological perspective to understand our species' origins, evolution and diversity through comparisons between humans and other mammals, particularly the living nonhuman primates. The course is structured around the theory of evolution, the unifying concept of biological anthropology. Throughout the course, students are introduced to evolutionary theory, the mechanisms of evolution and their relevance for understanding variation in past and present human populations. The course covers current research and topics in human evolutionary biology, including evolutionary theory, natural selection, molecular and population genetics, human variation, human biology, primate diversity and behavior, and the paleontological record of human evolution. This course also provides a rich foundation for understanding the human condition from a biological and anthropological perspective.
Prerequisite:
ENG 090 or placement
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3.00 Credits
Archaeology is the study of the human cultural past by analyzing the material left behind by past societies. Students focus on what archaeologists try to accomplish, how they conduct their work and why. Students survey world prehistory from the evolution of ancestral hominin species through the rise of ancient civilizations. Focus is on the methods employed by archaeologists to locate and study cultures and peoples' ways of life using the shreds of evidence recovered during excavation and from museum collections. Students also explore ethical, legal and political issues involved in conducting archaeological study in the United States today.
Prerequisite:
ENG 090 or placement
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