HCR6001 Global Health And Sustainability
Assignment Brief
As part of the formal assessment for the programme you are required to submit a Global Health and Sustainability briefing paper. Please refer to your Student Handbook for full details of the programme assessment scheme and general information on preparing and submitting assignments.
Learning Outcomes : 1. Appraise the theoretical concepts and ideologies which inform Health Care and their translation into policy and practice. 2. Identify key elements in Health Care policy and evaluate their application in practice and the constraints on implementation. 3. Deconstruct the social, political, economic and environmental contexts of disease 4. Present a coherent and informed case for a Healthcare intervention.
HCR6001 Global Health And Sustainability

HCR6001 Global Health And Sustainability

HCR6001 Global Health And Sustainability

HCR6001 Global Health And Sustainability : Responsible Global Citizenship:- Understand global issues and their place in a globalised economy, ethical decision-making and accountability. Adopt self-awareness, openness and sensitivity to diversity in culture.

Guidance : Your assignment should include: a title page containing your student number, the module name, the submission deadline and the exact word count of your submitted document; the appendices if relevant; and a reference list in AU Harvard system(s). You should address all the elements of the assignment task listed below. Please note that tutors will use the assessment criteria set out below in assessing your work.
You must not include your name in your submission because Arden University operates anonymous marking, which means that markers should not be aware of the identity of the student. However, please do not forget to include your XXXU number.

HCR6001 Global Health And Sustainability

Maximum word count: 4000 words

Please refer to the full word count policy which can be found in the Student Policies section here: XXX University | Regulatory Framework

Please note the following:

Students are required to indicate the exact word count on the title page of the assessment.
The word count includes everything in the main body of the assessment (including in text citations and references). The word count excludes numerical data in tables, figures, diagrams, footnotes, reference list and appendices. ALL other printed words ARE included in the word count.
Please note that exceeding the word count by over 10% will result in a 10-percentage point deduction.

Assignment Task :
Critically discussing relevant theories, concepts and ideologies underpinning healthcare practice in a chosen country’s setting, write a Briefing paper to a local or national government addressing an issue of concern.

Note: students are further advised, in completing this task, to choose a topic or area of interest relevant to a ‘health’, ‘sustainability’ and ‘resilience’ concern in the chosen country.]

Note: The focus and objective(s) of your briefing paper (Briefing note) must be clearly stated from the onset.

HCR6001 Global Health And Sustainability

Why a Briefing paper?
Decision-makers have limited resources and time constraints. They have to make hard choices about many different topics every day, and they do not have time to research each one in-depth. A briefing paper helps bring a single issue to someone’s attention and fills in key details they need to know

It then proposes solutions and recommends improvements. Knowing how to write a briefing paper is a useful skill for students, therefore. A persuasive briefing paper is concise, research-based, and evidence-informed, well-organised and covers the most important theories, models, technical issues supported by relevant data, trends and potential solutions.

The most important point to remember about the structure of briefing notes is that they have three main parts; that is:

  • The purpose (usually stated as the issue, topic or purpose).
  • A summary of the facts (what this section contains, and the headings used will be determined by the purpose of the briefing note).
  • The conclusion (this may be a conclusion, a recommendation or other advice, or both).
HCR6001 Global Health And Sustainability

HCR6001 Global Health And Sustainability

These three main parts are presented under some or all of the following section headings. Remember, any Briefing note you write will only have the sections that are relevant to your purpose and audience.

  • Issue (also Topic, Purpose): A concise statement of the issue, proposal or problem. This section should explain in one or two lines why the briefing paper matters to the reader. It sets out in the form of a question or a statement what the rest of the note is about.
  • Background: The details the reader needs in order to understand what follows (how a situation arose, previous decisions / problems, actions leading up to the current situation). Typically, this section gives a brief summary of the history of the topic and other background information. What led up to this problem or issue? How has it evolved? etc.
  • Current Status: Describes only the current situation, who is involved? What is happening now? The current state of the matter, issue, situation, etc.
  • Key Considerations: A summary of important trends, data, facts, considerations, developments – everything that needs to be considered now. While you will have to decide what to include and what to leave out, this section should be as unbiased as possible. Your aim is to present all the details required for the reader to be informed or to make an informed decision. Keep the reader’s needs uppermost in your mind when selecting and presenting the facts. Remember to substantiate any statements with evidence and to double check your facts. Additional details may be attached as appendices.
  • Options (also Next Steps, Comments): Basically, observations about the key considerations and what they mean; a concise description either of the options and sometimes their pros and cons or of what will happen next.
  • Conclusion and / or Recommendations: Conclusions summarise what you want your reader to infer from the Briefing note. Many readers jump immediately to this section, so be sure it covers the points you most want your reader to be clear about. Do not introduce anything new in the Conclusion. If you are including a recommendations section, it should offer the best and most sound advice you can offer. Make sure the recommendation is clear, direct and substantiated by the facts you have put forward.

HCR6001 Global Health And Sustainability

To be continue…