Basic patofisiology Key concepts: 26-32 f Relevance to public health Q on enrionmental scan: 1. what are you expeciting form this sessionms amd the natural history of disease: Whay things do not go on order - changes of normal function caused by disease or other relevant issue (abnormal syndrome) 2. what is one thinkg you would like to learn about about this toipic and how we can prevent that 3. what is pathology 9or pathofiziology) - pathofiz ima quantifiable measures in scientific
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Public SPeaking SucceSS Other titles Of interest frOm l e ar ni ng e xp r e s s Algebra Success in 20 Minutes a Day Biology Success in 20 Minutes a Day Chemistry Success in 20 Minutes a Day Earth Science Success in 20 Minutes a Day Grammar Success in 20 Minutes a Day Physics Success in 20 Minutes a Day Practical Math Success in 20 Minutes a Day Reading Comprehension Success in 20 Minutes a Day Statistics Success in 20 Minutes a Day Trigonometry Success in 20 Minutes a Day Vocabulary and Spelling
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was inclined towards social work since my school days. So naturally I was inclined to do some good when I was studying to be a dentist. So in the rather drab subject of Community Dentistry which most of students hated well I found some interest on Public Dental Health services‚ recordings for case studies‚ Indices and Epidemiology. There I learnt that the delivery of health services and primary care was very difficult in a vast and diverse country as India. Epidemiology and diagnosis of diseases like
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Public Relations has a lot to offer‚ and political campaigning has a lot to learn. Campaigning‚ especially when it comes to politics‚ can often be misleading and discouraging. I would like to refer to the PR professional Richard Edelman‚ who brought up the key issues concerning campaigning in his blog article «Is Public Relations Ready for Discontinuous Change?» He states that creating two-way conversations with the community is vital to the practice of public relations‚ and without this flow of
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of a magazine or journal article‚ written by someone other than the original author. abstract words Words that refer to ideas or concepts. acceptance speech A speech that gives thanks for a gift‚ an award‚ or some other form of public recognition. acronym A word composed of the initial letters or parts of a series of words. active listening Giving undivided attention to a speaker in a genuine effort to understand the speaker’s point of view. ad hominem fallacy
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SELECTING A SPEECH TOPIC When you need to select a speech topic‚ considers these guidelines: Suiting Yourself 1. Are you interested in topic? 2. Do you already have information through experience or study? 3. If you need further information‚ do you have the time and resources to find it? 4. Will you enjoy talking this topic? 5. Are there other topic that suit your audience and occasion that you’d rather speak on? 6. Does the topic let you entertain‚ inform‚ persuade? Which purpose do you want to
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PUBLIC SECTOR WHAT ARE PUBLIC GOODS‚ MERIT GOODS AND IMPURE PUBLIC GOODS? WHAT KIND OF A PROBLEM IS ASSOCIATED WITH THE PROVISION OF PUBLIC GOODS? WHAT ARE THE REMEDIES? A public good is a good or service that can be consumed simultaneously by everyone and from which no one can be excluded—nonrival and nonexcludable. They are determined in terms of their economic rather than their administrative‚ physical‚ normative or financing charateristics. The market will fail to exist for public goods because
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In physics‚ the charge of a volume is commonly described by a quantity called the charge density or the charge distribution. When the electric field that arises from the charge distribution exhibits a volumetric symmetry‚ a handy relationship known as Gauss’s Law may be used to calculate the charge distribution of the volume. The charge volume of a ball or rod mill is expressed as the percentage of the volume within the liners filled with balls or rods. When the mill is stationary‚ the charge
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Using Charles’ Law to Determine Absolute Zero Background Info It is noticed that in this lab‚ as the temperature of the water in the beaker is increased‚ the distance between the pipette and water plug increases. When this distance increases‚ the volume of trapped gas also increases. This relates to Charles’ Law as it shows that the volume of a gas is positively proportional to temperature. Theoretically‚ absolute zero is the lowest possible temperature‚ where all molecules have the least possible
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This is a good calculus question. Have you bothered trying this at all? Or are you just giving up completely? You know that the volume of a cylinder is pi r^2 h. If r and h are in centimeters‚ then the volume will be in cubic centimeters‚ which is the same as mL. So we at least have to pick r and h such that pi r^2 h = 355. That means h = 355 / (pi r^2). The surface area of a cylinder is the top (pi r^2) plus the bottom (also pi r^2) times the lateral side (2 pi r h). So the total surface area
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