...Case Study #10 1. Botulism is the diagnosis because of the characteristics of botulism. The symptoms all match with botulism because botulism makes muscle weakness caused by the supply of cells to the cranial nerves, the nerves connecting to the control of eye movement, facial muscles and the control of chewing and swallowing. The weakness then spreads throughout the body to the arms (starting in the shoulders and proceeding to the forearms) and legs (again from the thighs down to the feet). As for infant botulism is the most common form of botulism. It is also most common in kids under than 6 months. 2. If botulism was the case Kevin would have to be admitted to the hospital to start treatment. Treatment cannot usually be treated in the home but in the hospital. If botulism is not treated quickly it can be fatal, with the treatment it is usually possible to stop toxins causing further paralysis. Since Kevin is a 13 week old he will need to be incubated to keep him warm and protect him from other infections, this still requires treatment from hospitals. 3. An antitoxin is administered to Kevin at the earliest opportunity. Antitoxin is derived from horse serum that is distributed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Antitoxin is effective against toxin type A,B and E and these of the4 toxins that are in the botulinum toxin and that is what unattached the nerve endings. Antibiotics cannot be administered to botulism because the Clostridium groups of toxins...
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...Initial Reflection I was writing this paper I started by going to the Pre-Med AMSA’s website and making the flyer using the basic layout of most flyers. I used a template on Microsoft to organize my flyer and then I put the information I found on the club’s website in along with the logo. After doing my process work I took the suggestions and I switched the logo and contact information around so that the flyer would be more effective. After revising my flyer, I started creating my essay with the introduction where I included Ann John’s definition of a community of practice and a description of my community. When I began describing the Genre convention and the social role I tried to include as much detail as possible while answering all...
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...I have always been interested in the brain ever since I stumbled upon the book Gifted Hands by Ben Carson in 8th grade. In the book, Carson described how he removed half the brain in order to resolve seizures in a five year old girl! How could someone live with only half their brain? I was also intrigued by the ambiguity of right and wrong which led me to an interest in medical humanities. Baylor offers me this opportunity to study medical humanities, continue my interest in sports, grow my faith, pursue undergrad research, and to contribute to the community. I love that Baylor has so many options for students like me interested in pre-med. From the Alpha Elipson Delta honor society to specialized dorms just for students interested in...
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...Baderman Island Resort Executive Summary Baderman Island is accepting design bids for its seasonal annual marketing campaign. Team B is asked to design the following: * An 11” x 14” poster designed for print delivered as an unflattened PSD file smaller than 10 MB. * A 300 x 300 pixel web advertisement delivered as an unflattened PSD file smaller than 10 MB and a flattened JPEG of no more than 200 KB. * The color scheme must be consistent with the color scheme established on the Baderman Island website. * Both the poster and web advertisements to include the Baderman Island logo, located in the banner at the top of the Baderman Island home page. * Designs to include at least three different examples of text to include: The Baderman Island motto. A new additional slogan created by Design Team B. The company name Baderman Island, modified from text into a graphic. In order for Team B to create these designs, it is beneficial for them to learn more about the Baderman Island Resort, such as the accommodations, amenities, and restaurants. The site also has a blog that could be useful in finding out what guests look for most when coming to visit Baderman Island Resort. History “Welcome to Baderman Island: where paradise is reality.” "Established in 2004, leisure and convention center focused Baderman Island is dedicated in providing unique and quality experiences to Island guests and daily visitors. The Board of Directors and operational...
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...Club Med 'The Club Med (A) case is a big-picture case that examines the strategy of an international chain of all-inclusive vacation resorts. It outlines the forces that shape the industry's structure, and presents the particular factors that contribute to Club Med's success. Of critical concern are the potential areas where Club Med can establish a defensible competitive advantage. What are the essential ingredients of Club Med’s service-delivery system? Can the process be appropriated? We think the Club Med has diverse unique service-delivery system such as AI(all-inclusive) vocation package Unique concept to GM that means nothing to worry about except relaxing and enjoying themselves Guest-friendly talented Staff Advance distribution network for example indirect sales through travel agencies as well as direct sales to customers “Word of Mouth” of market strategy Location for eco-friend resort environment Customer centralized information: easy to use and share for future opportunity What are the determinants of service quality at Club Med? We think the Club Med has diverse unique systems. For example The Club Med has a lot of talented GO having passion and energy for customer’s satisfaction The Club Med rotate its GOs from one resort to another every 6 months, resulting in new ideas and better practices In pricing strategy, the Club Med provide a service with all-inclusive approach and provide membership programs. The Club Med think Word...
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...Baderman Island HM/486 02 December 2013 University of Phoenix Professor Lequrica Gaskins Baderman Island Baderman Island offers guests an all-inclusive vacation, destination wedding, or conference experience. Part of the Baderman Island mission statement includes offering price ranges for all budgets while providing a premium guest experience. The property, on an island in the Kelsey River boasts a size of approximately 930 acres. The lodging options include The Tenney, a couple’s retreat featuring only suites, The Melancon Conference Center, equipped to handle groups of nearly any size, and The Baderman Main Hotel, which accommodates the largest variety of guests. The main hotel caters primarily to family vacationers, and the facility is designed to accommodate all ages. In addition to the various lodging options, Baderman Island also hosts food services including several fine dining restaurants, cafes, and bistros. Currently reservations for dinner at any of the fine restaurants can be made online. The island features spas, art galleries, and boutiques as well as gift shops. The convention center offers full event services including access to recreational pursuits popular with conference attendees. These include an 18-hole golf course, water sports, and a botanical garden. The garden property alone consists of nearly one third of Baderman Island’s total acreage. At 375 acres, the Botanical Gardens offer some of the most intriguing of...
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...Case Analysis Club Med Luya Li (999651880) Lec 02 Professor Tarun Dewan 23rd January 23, 2015 OVERVIEW Club Mediterranee, or Club Med, is a corporation in the hotel and travel industry. It was originally founded as a sports association by a group of French sports enthusiasts in 1950, as the customer demand and business opportunities increased, it transformed from an association into a travel company with the help of the managing director Gilbert Trigano. Club Med created the all-inclusive vacation concept and later became the market leader in the resort industry. Throughout the years, the corporation had enjoyed financial growth and geographically expanded its business throughout the world. In 1984 and 1985, both Club Med S.A and its subsidiary, Club Med. Inc. went public and offered their shares on major stock exchange. However, the company should pay close attention to its potential weakness given the pace of commerce and heated competition. This report will list the comparative advantages of Club Med and explain the reasons for its success over the past years. It will also highlight the company’s unique corporate culture. Moreover, the report will point out Club Med’s potential problems, and provide recommendation in regards to Club Med’s future strategy. ANALYSIS Club Med’s success can be measured both financially and non-financially. After transforming into a travel and hotel company, Club Med further expanded its business by forming the U.S. subsidiary...
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...peers glanced at him with the up most respect sent a trigger alerting me to the significance of him. Although he sat patiently through his detailed introduction, his eyes focused around the room, seemingly categorizing each student into a database, well organized through years of practice. Light applause trailed him as he took a firm stance in the front of the ballroom. Deceptively, he began with generalized questions about how people perceive each other, trivial knowledge that determined little, other than the common sense of his audience. After a series of varyingly mediocre topics, Mr. Taylor quieted down and pondered to himself for a second, gaining his thoughts and deciding how best to approach the next topic, “How many of you are pre-med students?” he asked inquisitively. I was one of many of the proud students who raised their hands. Nodding in acceptance, he continued with a sinister grin, “A show of hands, how many of your parents are doctors?” He searched the room for one proud hand, yet, none could be seen. With mock surprise, he indulged the curious crowd as to the direction of his questions. “I just left USM a few honors ago, delivering a speech to students with much the same career path as all of you. But somehow, when I asked if...
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...antenatal care providers will continue to perform dipstick urinalysis at each and every appointment, whereas other providers will only perform one at every appointment if the patient presents with Gestational diabetes with oral glucose screening, Pre-eclampsia with blood pressure and Asymptomatic bacteriuria [urine infection with no symptoms] with a culture at the first visit (IHS.gov 2005). According to an article in the Journal of Family practice by William A. Alto, Screening for gestational diabetes using urine dipsticks for glycosuria is ineffective with low sensitivities. False-positive tests outnumber true positives 11:1. A 50-g oral glucose challenge is a better test. Tests for glycosuria after this blood test are not useful. Proteinuria determined by dipstick in pregnancy is common and a poor predictor for preeclampsia with a positive predictive value between 2% and 11%. If the blood pressure is elevated, a more sensitive test should be used. After urinalysis at the first prenatal visit, routine urine dipstick screening should be stopped in low-risk women. Urinalysis can be a quick and reliable indicator for some conditions such as UTI, dehydration and malnourishment (ketonuria). However in the case of gestational diabetes and pre eclampsia,...
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...this project is to build a successful plant in Huntsville, Alabama. With having a successful plan, this will directly affect the number 5 priority (attain a national presence in the container industry) and number 6 priority (increase productivity). Then it will indirectly affect the rest of the priorities. | | Scope | The board expects the following to be in place when the project is completed: * Select resources such as: Architect, Real Estate Consultant, and General Contractor * Recruit and Train Managers for Huntsville Plant * Create a Pre-Production and Production Plan * Create a Building Concept and Design * Procure Building Site, Permits, and Appropriate Approvals * Construct the Huntsville Plant Building * Landscaping on Site * Personnel Recruiting for Plant Operations * Procure Equipment, Raw Material and Truck Fleet * Install Equipment * Create Product Distribution Plan and Pre-Production Plan * Start Up Production and Distribution The board doesn’t expect the following: * Geothermal Heating * Solar Powered Electric Feed * Multi-Level Parking Garage * In-House Food Court * Construction of Separate Distribution Facility | | Objectives | As the company grows, one of the objectives for building a new plant is to double the total sales within the next decade being top priority. Another objective is to develop and market new products based on the companies plastics experience. A couple more direct objectives to...
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...objective. Risk identification includes determining which may adversely affect the project objective and what the impact of each risk might be if it occurs. (Gido/Clements, Pg. 285) I have created a risk matrix that identifies the potential risk that can place a burden on the project scope, schedule and budget. My main concern and identification is the recruitment and training of new employees. We have been provided with 6 weeks to train new employees, some individuals come with experience and several will be new to the plastic container industry. New recruits will require additional time to learn all of the functions of daily operations. If they are not trained in time, this will put a burden on the creation of the production plan. The pre-production plan can be used as a training activity to ensure that they will be able to assist in the production plan. Solution: Apply a headhunter to scan resumes for candidates with required experience and qualifications. Request additional training time for new employees; propose 9 weeks for individuals with no industry experience. If the board and budget allows, provide paid training to those individuals who are willing and able to start early. The second identification that is of major concern is the procurement of building site, acquiring permits and approvals on time. The fact that all approvals must come from outside agencies, all documents should be submitted early. Solution: I would suggest sending documentation 4 weeks prior...
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...Movies today are probably the most dominant industry that contributes in the production of popular culture today. What movies show depict what society is like and in turn as well decide what society would be like. Although movies are not particularly a medium meant to impart knowledge or awareness only, however it does do it and when it does it has the most impact compared to any other medium, to say for example books or news. We as mere human beings living our lives isolated by the rest of the world in our own little homes, towns and countries have a fairly little idea of what the world is like outside of our homes. All the knowledge that we have of the world around us is through books, movies, news, TV shows, etc. And among all these forms, movies hold a prominent position in developing the psyche of the common masses. To provide an example, the issue of Kashmir has always been a controversial issue in the politics of India. And though the common man hardly knows something about the actual socio-economic-political situation of that geographical region, that does not mean they don’t have an opinion about it! There is a common sense that is propagated in society about the whole situation. So, if you go around asking a random guy on the street, what does he think about the whole Kashmir issue, you are very likely to get an answer, “Kashmir hamara hai, hamare paas rahega”. He might as well add the (in)famous dialogue from the movie Gadar, another example of the influence of movies...
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...Shannel Henry Dr. Brennan HUMN 1002 4/15/2014 Baby Face In the 1930s the United States was experiencing a depression era. This era known as ,The Great Depression, had a great effect on the movie industry. Films began to focus on sex, violence, infidelity, and promiscuous ways to target new audiences, mainly the males. The other types of genres like horror, gangster, and musical were still high in Demand during this era also. Social realism came about, which is a style of art that focuses on the ugly realities of the modern life and sympathizes with the working class people, especially the poor. The movies that were being produce during this time was to interest the men, which cause the movie producers to give women the lead roles and takeover the movie screen. A movie example is the film Baby Face. Baby Face, a movie directed by Alfred E. Green shows how women took over the ‘Big Screen’. This movie is based on Lily powers, who is played by Barbara Stanwyck, and how she moves up through her social class and financial status. She uses her beauty and her intelligence to get what she wanted from the men that she came into contact with. An example of her getting her way is at the end of the movie, when she wants the bank to fund her 15,000 to have a fresh start, but instead they gave her a new position at a firm in Paris. This is basically her getting her way because she has her new start from the scandal. Social realism is portrayed because every man that she met...
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...Edward Burne Jones was an English painter, illustrator, and designer and a key figure in the second phase of Pre-Raphaelitism. In 1853 he began studying at Oxford University, intending to train for a priesthood, but his interest was turned to art first by William Morris, his fellow student, and then by Rossetti, who remained the decisive influence on him. He left Oxford without taking a degree in 1856 and settled in London. Rossetti gave him a few informal lessons and he attended life drawing classes for a while, but essentially he was self-taught; his taste was more classical than Rossetti's and his elongated forms owed much to the example of Botticelli. He favoured medieval and mythical (especially Arthurian) subjects and hated such modernists as the Impressionists, describing their subjects as ‘landscape and whores’. His own ideas on painting are summed up as follows: ‘I mean by a picture a beautiful romantic dream, of something that never was, never will be—in a light better than any that ever shone—in a land no-one can define or remember, only desire—and the forms divinely beautiful.’ He had a fairly low-key career until 1877, when he became famous overnight with the showing of eight large paintings at the opening exhibition of the Grosvenor Gallery. Thereafter he acquired huge fame and prestige, not only in Britain, but also on the Continent: he had considerable influence on the French Symbolists, and the ethereally beautiful women who people his paintings, like the more...
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...A618C90F-C2C6-4FD6-BDDB-9D35FE504CB3 First American paperback edition published in 2006 by Enchanted Lion Books, 45 Main Street, Suite 519, Brooklyn, NY 11201 Copyright © 2002 Philip Stokes/Arcturus Publishing Limted 26/27 Bickels Yard, 151-153 Bermondsey Street, London SE1 3HA Glossary © 2003 Enchanted Lion Books All Rights Reserved. The Library of Congress has cataloged an earlier hardcover edtion of this title for which a CIP record is on file. ISBN-13: 978-1-59270-046-2 ISBN-10: 1-59270-046-2 Printed in China Edited by Paul Whittle Cover and book design by Alex Ingr A618C90F-C2C6-4FD6-BDDB-9D35FE504CB3 Philip Stokes A618C90F-C2C6-4FD6-BDDB-9D35FE504CB3 ENCHANTED LION BOOKS New York Contents The Presocratics Thales of Miletus . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Pythagoras of Samos . . . . . 10 Xenophanes of Colophon 12 Heraclitus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 The Scholastics St Anselm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 St Thomas Aquinas . . . . . . . 50 John Duns Scotus . . . . . . . . . 52 William of Occam . . . . . . . . . 54 The Liberals Adam Smith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Mary Wollstonecraft . . . . 108 Thomas Paine . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Jeremy Bentham . . . . . . . . . 112 John Stuart Mill . . . . . . . . . . 114 Auguste Comte . . . . . . . . . . . 116 The Eleatics Parmenides of Elea . . . . . . . 16 Zeno of Elea . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 The Age of Science Nicolaus Copernicus . . . . . . 56 Niccolò Machiavelli...
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