Empowerment Education and Practice in Luxury Hotels of New Delhi, India

2010 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 43-50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Asad Mohsin ◽  
Bhuphesh Kumar
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 097215092093975
Author(s):  
Prithvi Roy ◽  
Badrinarayan Srirangam Ramaprasad ◽  
Manan Chakraborty ◽  
Nandan Prabhu ◽  
Shreelatha Rao

This research endeavour tested and validated the artificially intelligent device use acceptance (AIDUA) three-stage AI acceptance framework in the context of the Indian hospitality sector. For this purpose, data on the constructs that captured primary appraisal (i.e., social influence, hedonic motivation and anthropomorphism), secondary appraisal (i.e., performance and effort expectancy), emotion, willingness to use AI devices and objection to use AI devices were captured from 210 guests/customers from 14 luxury hotels spread across the union territory of New Delhi and the state of Chandigarh in India. Findings that emerge from this study validate the fact that customers do indeed go through three stages of decision-making process before they demonstrate their proclivity to use AI devices or exhibit objection to use AI devices. In particular, the study found that both performance and effort expectancy influenced customer emotion which, in its turn, exercised its effect on the construct of willingness to use AI devices and objection to use AI devices among hotel customers. Accordingly, drawing from the findings of this study, implications for practitioners, decision-makers, and academic researchers are discussed in the article.



Author(s):  
Harimohan Garg ◽  
Haritej Anand Khirawari ◽  
Sona Priyadarshi

Background: Pancytopenia is diagnosed when there is a reduction in all three hematopoietic cell lines. Till date there is limited number of studies on the frequency of various causes of pancytopenia. Of these some have been reported from the Indian subcontinent. There appears to be a changing spectrum of pancytopenia over the past two decades. The objective was to study the etiopathological spectrum of adult patients with pancytopenia over a period of one and half year. Methods: The Prospective and retrospective observational study was conducted in the Department of Family Medicine, Batra Hospital and Medical Research Centre, New Delhi.  A total of 120 Patients were included in the study. All patients gave their consent to take part in the study and were subjected to a questionnaire regarding symptoms, past relevant history, lifestyle and detailed clinical examination and investigations as mentioned in materials and methods. Results: Six broad diagnostic groups could be identified in adults with pancytopenia. Megaloblastic anemia (D1) was the largest group comprising 57.5% of all patients. 11.7% of patients with pancytopenia were diagnosed as Aplastic anemia (D2).11.7% of patients with pancytopenia were diagnosed as leukemia/lymphoma (D3) such as lymphoma (1), metastatic anaplastic carcinoma (1), acute leukemia (11), and metastatic gastric carcinoma (1). 15% of patients with pancytopenia were diagnosed with infections (D4) such as complicated malaria cases (7), HIV (5), disseminated tuberculosis (4), viral (2). We also encountered (D5) 0.8% was Myelophthisis/Storage disorder as myelodysplastic syndrome (1) and 3.3% were other (D6) as reactive marrow (4). Conclusion: Pancytopenia is not a disease itself. It is a hematological feature of varying etiology with slight male preponderance. Megaloblastic anemia along with mixed nutritional anemia is leading cause of pancytopenia in India followed by infections being second and aplastic anemia and acute leukemia being third common causes. Keyword: Pancytopenia, Megaloblastic anemia, Nutritional anemia.





2007 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. E231-E234 ◽  
Author(s):  
Balram Airan ◽  
Sachin Talwar ◽  
Shiv Choudhary ◽  
Akshay Bisoi ◽  
Ujjwal Chowdhury ◽  
...  


2011 ◽  
Vol 3 (7) ◽  
pp. 132-133
Author(s):  
Dr. Harjindar Pal Singh Saluja Dr. Harjindar Pal Singh Saluja ◽  
◽  
Dr. Ravish Kumar Soni ◽  
Smt. Sangita Sakvar Mahuriya ◽  
Dr. Harjeet Singh Bhatiya
Keyword(s):  


PEDIATRICS ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 137 (Supplement 3) ◽  
pp. 409A-409A
Author(s):  
M. Earth Hasassri ◽  
Thomas G. Boyce ◽  
Robin Patel ◽  
Ritu Banerjee
Keyword(s):  


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