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2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (suplemento) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Toledo

The Pro-Huerta program delivers the autumn-winter and spring-summer seasonal seed kits free of charge to all INTA agencies. Each seed kit removed from the agency by the beneficiary, is registered in a form with the information of the address where the vegetable garden will be and a contact number. Using the data and a geographic information system (GIS), it was possible to georeference the potential vegetable gardens in the city of Río Cuarto, becoming a tool for intervention and territorial accompaniment of the extension agency in order to plan the survey and monitoring of activities productive of them.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Andrea Mockford

<p>In New Zealand there are concerns about the high numbers of preventable admissions of young children with acute illnesses. These admissions are concentrated in the under five age group, with higher rates of admissions for tamariki Maori and Pacific children. This study sought to address these concerns by focusing on what happened once these children were discharged. Its aims were to find out what the expressed needs of parents were, as they cared for their child, once home. Whilst there has been a small amount of international research undertaken in this area, there is little known about expressed parent need in the New Zealand context. This exploratory descriptive study involved parents of under five year old children, who had been admitted to a hospital, with one of five acute illnesses. Eighteen parents were surveyed over the telephone. This study found the parents expressed a need for reassurance and advice once home, and that they worried about their child getting sick again. It highlighted gaps in discharge planning and support. None of the parents had received a written discharge plan for their child. Only five parents had received either a contact number for advice or a referral back to their primary care provider. This study found that whilst some parents considered their discharge needs had been met, others considered that they had not. Four local discharge practice opportunities to support these families were recommended, these included, providing parents and caregivers with an individualised written discharge plan, giving a contact number for advice after discharge, offering a follow-up phone call in the first 48 hours, and ensuring that all children have a referral back to their primary health care provider. Areas for further research were highlighted, including the need for a larger study to explore and compare the needs of rural and urban parents, and Maori and Pacific parents.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Andrea Mockford

<p>In New Zealand there are concerns about the high numbers of preventable admissions of young children with acute illnesses. These admissions are concentrated in the under five age group, with higher rates of admissions for tamariki Maori and Pacific children. This study sought to address these concerns by focusing on what happened once these children were discharged. Its aims were to find out what the expressed needs of parents were, as they cared for their child, once home. Whilst there has been a small amount of international research undertaken in this area, there is little known about expressed parent need in the New Zealand context. This exploratory descriptive study involved parents of under five year old children, who had been admitted to a hospital, with one of five acute illnesses. Eighteen parents were surveyed over the telephone. This study found the parents expressed a need for reassurance and advice once home, and that they worried about their child getting sick again. It highlighted gaps in discharge planning and support. None of the parents had received a written discharge plan for their child. Only five parents had received either a contact number for advice or a referral back to their primary care provider. This study found that whilst some parents considered their discharge needs had been met, others considered that they had not. Four local discharge practice opportunities to support these families were recommended, these included, providing parents and caregivers with an individualised written discharge plan, giving a contact number for advice after discharge, offering a follow-up phone call in the first 48 hours, and ensuring that all children have a referral back to their primary health care provider. Areas for further research were highlighted, including the need for a larger study to explore and compare the needs of rural and urban parents, and Maori and Pacific parents.</p>


Author(s):  
Snehalata K. Funde ◽  
Gandharba Swain

These days e-medical services frameworks are getting famous for taking care of patients from far-off spots, so a lot of medical services information like the patient’s name, area, contact number, states of being are gathered distantly to treat the patients. A lot of information gathered from the different assets is named big data. The enormous sensitive information about the patient contains delicate data like systolic BP, pulse, temperature, the current state of being, and contact number of patients that should be recognized and sorted appropriately to shield it from abuse. This article presents a weightbased similarity (WBS) strategy to characterize the enormous information of health care data into two classifications like sensitive information and normal information. In the proposed method, the training dataset is utilized to sort information and it comprises of three fundamental advances like information extraction, mapping of information with the assistance of the training dataset, evaluation of the weight of input data with the threshold value to classify the data. The proposed strategy produces better outcomes with various assessment boundaries like precision, recall, F1 score, and accuracy value 92% to categorize the big data. Weka tool is utilized for examination among WBS and different existing order procedures.


2021 ◽  
Vol 108 (Supplement_2) ◽  
Author(s):  
C McCann ◽  
S Mackenzie ◽  
T White

Abstract Background Accurate medical notes are essential for effective patient care and safety. The Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) set forth guidelines for standards of documentation. Lack of awareness of these standards can result in inaccurate documentation, compromising patient safety. Method Four prospective audits of admission documents for orthopaedic inpatients were completed, each 1 year apart. For each cycle, 50 admission documents were assessed to determine compliance with the RCS standards. Interventions were carried out between each audit cycle in the following order: educational posters, change from handwritten to online admission forms and optimisation of the online proforma. Results Initially, only two criteria showed above 95% compliance. Implementing educational posters produced significant improvement in one criterion: ‘note signed’ (60% to 96%, p &lt; 0.05). Moving admission documents online improved ‘date stamp’ (66% to 100%, P &lt; 0.05) and ‘contact number’ (0% to 34%, p &lt; 0.05), but decreased documentation of ‘time recorded’ (18% to 0%, p &lt; 0.05) and ‘name and grade’ (74% to 26%, p &lt; 0.05). Further education and modification to the admissions proforma improved documentation of all criteria to over 95%. Conclusions Early cycles of this audit highlighted poor standards of documentation in admission records. Changing to online patient records significantly changed documentation standards. These were further improved with educational measures.


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (8) ◽  
pp. 2187
Author(s):  
Xing Tian ◽  
Jian Yang ◽  
Zhigang Guo ◽  
Qiuwang Wang

In this paper, the heat transfer of pin-fin plate unit (PFPU) under static and oscillating conditions are numerically studied using the discrete element method (DEM). The flow and heat transfer characteristics of the PFPU with sinusoidal oscillation are investigated under the conditions of oscillating frequency of 0–10 Hz, amplitude of 0–5 mm and oscillating direction of Y and Z. The contact number, contact time, porosity and heat transfer coefficient under the above conditions are analyzed and compared with the smooth plate. The results show that the particle far away from the plate can transfer heat with the pin-fin of PFPU, and the oscillating PFPU can significantly increase the contact number and enhance the temperature diffusion and heat transfer. The heat transfer coefficient of PFPU increases with the increase of oscillating frequency and amplitude. When the PFPU oscillates along the Y direction with the amplitude of 1 mm and the frequency of 10 Hz, the heat transfer coefficient of PFPU is increased by 28% compared with that of the smooth plate. Compared with the oscillation along the Z direction, the oscillation along the Y direction has a significant enhancement on the heat transfer of PFPU.


Author(s):  
Pritom Kumer Rajvor ◽  
Md. Shafiqul Islam Shovon ◽  
Minira Akter ◽  
Farzana Nawrin ◽  
Suraiya Yasmin

Hungers in the world are burning issue now-adays and wastage of food is increasing day by day. Surplus Food for Orphanage (SFO) is an online food management system that manages extra food for starving people who have not enough food to remain alive. The aim of the research is to develop a web-based portal named “Surplus Food for Orphanage” which makes a communication between donor and food seeker. This paper represents a new internet-based website that will be helpful for donating old stuff and extra food to all needy people. In this website the donor can register his/her account. When registration becomes successful, donor can access this website by log in to their account. Donor will publish their post by enrolling their food item’s name, quantity of food that donor want to donate, their contact number and location also. A simple notification is given to the admin. Charity can view the donor/restaurant post by logging in to this website. Then charity can contact to the food donor and collected the surplus food from donor and collected food will be distributed to the disadvantaged people. This system will be helpful to reduce the wastage of food, inspiration for the donor to come forward to donate foods for orphanage easily.


Author(s):  
Meenakshi Sumeet Arya ◽  
Prashant Borkar ◽  
Prasanna S. Devi

The buddy system framework is a thought where two individuals need to be as one during the class, sit alongside one another, answer pair cooperate, examine together, and share materials with one another. In addition, a buddy needs to share the ongoing proceedings, lessons, assignments, or activities in and out of the class at whatever point he/she will be late or missing in class. Accordingly, with the buddy system, everyone needs to have each other's contact number. This chapter aims to introduce buddy pair as a catalyst in achieving the outcomes as desired by a student during the course of his education. The chapter also aims to throw light on various case studies giving out the relevance and efficacy of the method.


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