Improvement of "Premium Coffee" Production in SRIDONORETNO Association of Dampit District, Malang

2019 ◽  
pp. 51
Author(s):  
Sugeng Riyanto ◽  
Jhauharotul Muchlisyiyah ◽  
Septrial Arafat

Malang is regency that has a high potential of coffee production which is 7,703 tons every year. Of the several types of coffee producers, one of the well-known is Dampit District which since the Dutch era was known as a coffee producer and until now the Dampit District is still known as the first coffee producer. The coffee quality improvement activity has consistently been started by the SRIDONORETNO Association. Currently the SRIDONORETNO Association's coffee production results are directly absorbed by the community of coffee shops and lovers in Malang (± 80 shops in Malang) and several shops outside the city of Malang. Activities undertaken to support consistent quality and increase the production of premium coffee are simply educating the group to raise the number of members participating in the red picking program. Train group members to become quality controllers. Create a processing group by making mobile devices that can serve many groups.

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. e001002
Author(s):  
Orestis Kanter Bax ◽  
Nadim Hakim ◽  
Michael Jeggo ◽  
Declan Phelan ◽  
Timothy Stevens ◽  
...  

Smoking tobacco is a major public health issue and a significant cause of increased mortality. People with a first episode of psychosis are more likely to smoke and the subgroup that goes on to have schizophrenia will have a significantly reduced life expectancy to the general population. The City & Hackney Early and Quick Intervention in Psychosis Team is a community mental health team at East London NHS Foundation Trust, providing outpatient care for adults presenting with first episode psychosis. This project aimed to increase the number of smoking cessation referrals from EQUIP to national smoking cessation services to 15% of the total team caseload over 6 months initially. A secondary measure was to complete an assessment of the smoking status for 90% of the caseload at all times. Change ideas were tested using plan-do-study-act cycles. A smoking cessation referral pathway was created and disseminated to the outpatient and inpatient services. The project was discussed at least monthly at the clinical team meeting. An education and skills building session was organised and took place at the team away day and an education drop-in session for patients was organised. The project was slow to take-off and patient participation was essential in driving progress. The aim was achieved at 23 months. A collateral benefit indicated that 25.7% of the total number of smokers had been recorded as having stopped smoking during the course of this project. This project demonstrates the effectiveness of quality improvement methodology facilitated by efficient leadership, collaborative teamwork, patient participation and persistence to address a complex problem that has significant consequences to patient health.


2003 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 117-121
Author(s):  
Marie A. Krousel-Wood ◽  
Richard B. Chambers ◽  
Richard N. Re ◽  
Phyllis R. Nitzkin ◽  
Laurence M. Cortez

2012 ◽  
Vol 426 ◽  
pp. 65-72 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgios Fontaras ◽  
Giorgio Martini ◽  
Urbano Manfredi ◽  
Alessandro Marotta ◽  
Alois Krasenbrink ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thaïs A Miles ◽  
Linda V Granger ◽  
Colleen L Gately

Immunisation at the earliest appropriate age and high levels of vaccine coverage at milestone ages are important in preventing the spread of vaccine-preventable diseases. At the Central Coast Public Health Unit, the authors sought to determine if follow-up of children said by the Australian Childhood Immunisation Register (ACIR) to be overdue for vaccination improved both of these factors. In a quality improvement activity, monthly ACIR lists of overdue Central Coast children aged 9 to 10 months of age were examined. The study alternated three months of intervention with three months of no intervention. The intervention was designed to find evidence of vaccination, first from the last known provider, and then if this was unsuccessful, from the parent. If no information was available, a letter was sent to the parents. If the child was indeed vaccinated, the register was updated. If the child was missing any vaccinations, the parent(s) were encouraged to complete the schedule. On reviewing routinely-published quarterly ACIR data at three-monthly intervals for 24 months after the intervention (or non-intervention), timeliness of vaccination improved in the intervention cohort. Central Coast fully vaccinated rates diverged from NSW rates during the study. In addition, the ACIR quarters that contained two out of three months of intervention rather than one out of three months of intervention had the highest rates of fully vaccinated children. The authors concluded that the intervention improved both timeliness of vaccination and the proportion of fully vaccinated children.


2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 410-417
Author(s):  
Haris Darmawan ◽  
Suyanti Kasimin ◽  
Edy Marsudi

The purpose of this study was to investigate the characteristics of consumers who come kewarung coffee in Banda Aceh, to determine the characteristics of the coffee shops are visited by consumers in the city of Banda Aceh and to determine the correlation between consumer characteristics with the characteristics of the coffee shop in the city of Banda Aceh.Lokasi this study is in the city of Banda Aceh is in the famous coffee shop in Banda Aceh with the number 9 coffee shops that have the most visitors. The object of this research is that people have become consumers of a coffee shop. The scope of this study is limited to consumer characteristics and the characteristics of the coffee shops in the city of Banda Aceh. The results showed that the highest correlation coefficient between the level of income with the completeness of the product, while the lowest is the level of income with a coffee shop facilities.Keywords: Characteristics of Respondents, Coffee Shops, Correlation Coefficient


2017 ◽  
pp. 453-475
Author(s):  
Michael Batty ◽  
Andrew Hudson-Smith ◽  
Stephan Hugel ◽  
Flora Roumpani

This chapter introduces a range of analytics being used to understand the smart city, which depends on data that can primarily be understood using new kinds of scientific visualisation. We focus on short term routine functions that take place in cities which are being rapidly automated through various kinds of sensors, embedded into the physical fabric of the city itself or being accessed from mobile devices. We first outline a concept of the smart city, arguing that there is a major distinction between the ways in which technologies are being used to look at the short and long terms structure of cities, and we then focus on the shorter term, first examining the immediate visualisation of data through dashboards, then examining data infrastructures such as map portals, and finally introducing new ways of visualising social media which enable us to elicit the power of the crowd in providing and supplying data. We conclude with a brief focus on how new urban analytics is emerging to make sense of these developments.


Author(s):  
Henrik Stormer

In the last years, mobile devices have become more and more popular. To further enhance the success of mobile devices, companies in the mobile market are constantly looking for new possible applications. One application with a high potential is the mobile Web. Mobile Web means that people access Web sites using their mobile device. However, due to the limitations of the mobile device compared to stationary devices, mobile Web sites need to be adapted. This chapter presents an approach for creating Web solutions that can be used on all kinds of devices. The main idea is adapted from Web portals, where users can customize their personal sites by choosing different viewlets that present all kinds of content. The approach has been tested using the online shop eSarine.


2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 19-34 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Antonia Brovelli ◽  
Marco Minghini ◽  
Giorgio Zamboni

The dawn of GeoWeb 2.0, the geographic extension of Web 2.0, has opened new possibilities in terms of online dissemination and sharing of geospatial contents, thus laying the foundations for a fruitful development of Volunteered Geographic Information (VGI) systems. The purpose of the study is to investigate the extension of VGI applications, which are quite mature in the traditional bi-dimensional framework, up to the third dimension by means of virtual globes. Inspired by the visionary idea of Digital Earth, virtual globes are changing the way people approach to geographic information on the Web. Unlike the 2D visualization typical of Geographic Information Systems (GIS), virtual globes offer multi-dimensional, fully-realistic content visualization which allows for a much richer user experience. The proposed system should couple a powerful 3D visualization with an increase of public participation thanks to a tool allowing data collecting from mobile devices (e.g. smartphones and tablets). The participative application, built using the open source NASA World Wind virtual globe, is focused on the cultural and tourism heritage of Como city, located in Northern Italy. Users can create and manage customized projects and populate a catalogue of cartographic layers which is available to the entire community. Together with historical maps and the current cartography of the city, the system is also able to manage geo-tagged data, which come from user field-surveys performed through mobile devices in order to report POIs (Points Of Interest). Users can also extend POIs information adding more textual and multimedia contexts (e.g. images, audios and videos) directly on the globe. All in all, the resulting application allows users to create and share contributions as it usually happens on social platforms, additionally providing a realistic 3D representation enhancing the expressive power of data.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 35
Author(s):  
Joko Tri Brata ◽  
La Ode Bariun ◽  
Asri Djauhar ◽  
Andi Gusti Tantu

The long-term goal of the concept of poverty reduction is to give the same level of welfare for the Indonesian people, and in this research is the development of innovative Models of Poverty Reduction, with the subject on (1) How the application design model of the institutional prevention of poverty through interface Program Quality Improvement of Slums and (2) how the efforts in governance of slum through simulation integration with poverty alleviation. The method used is the description by sharpening the Focus Group Discussion (FGD) about the handling of the slums in the city of Kendari and intervention efforts Increase the quality of housing and slums, so that the governance model can be used in other areas in Southeast Sulawesi.


JAMA ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 287 (7) ◽  
pp. 843-844 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. V. Miles

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