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Course Administration Guide.[taliem.ir]

Course Administration Guide

ourse Evaluations: Cisco uses a post-course evaluation system, Metrics That Matter (MTM), for its instructor- led courses. The instructor must ensure that each student is aware of the confidential evaluation process and that all students submit an evaluation for each course. There are two options for students to complete the evaluation . For Classes with Internet Access: A URL will be made available, specific to each Cisco Learning Partner. Obtain the URL from your MTM system administrator before the last day of class. 1. Upon completion of the course, instruct the students to enter the URL into their browser. 2. Make sure that the students input their e-mail address (used only for a follow-up evaluation). 3. Instruct the students to select the appropriate course from the drop-down list. 4. Instruct the students to complete the course evaluation and click Submit one time only. 5. Advise the students to wait for “Thank you” to appear on the screen before leaving.
Bariatric.Surgical.Practice.Guide.Recommendations.2017.[taliem.ir]

Bariatric Surgical Practice Guide

Morbid obesity is becoming a serious public health problem worldwide. In Asian countries, the prevalence has increased many times over in the past few decades. Bariatric surgery has been shown to be the most effective treatment for these patients. The primary goal of bariatric surgery is to reduce the body weight or the body mass index (BMI). However, it is increasingly recognized that this surgery can also help several medical comorbidities associated with obesity such as type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), dyslipidemia, obstructive sleep apnea etc. linical guidelines for bariatric surgery were frst suggested by the NIH (National Institutes of Health) in 1991 and over the past few decades, there have been many modifcations introduced by many national and international societies. BMI cutoff points and co-morbidities are commonly used to defne the indications for bariatric surgery. According to the world health organization (WHO) criteria, BMI cutoffs for obesity in Asian population are lower than the Western countries because obesity associated health risks tend to occur at a lower threshold of BMI in Asians . This aim of this chapter was to review the indications for bariatric surgery from many guidelines worldwide, especially in Asian countries. The discussed guidelines include those by the National Institutes of Health, Asian Pacifc Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery Society, Diabetes Surgery Summit, Obesity Surgery Society of Australia and New Zealand, Asian Consensus Meeting of Metabolic Surgery, Asian Diabetes Surgery Summit, The International Diabetes Federation, The International Federation for the Surgery of Obesity-Asia Pacifc, American Society for Metabolic & Bariatric Surgery and the International Federation for the Surgery of ObesityEuropean guidelines.
Your Patient Safety Survival Guide[taliem.ir]

Your Patient Safety Survival Guide

Healthcare is a dangerous business. Every day, over one thousand hospital patients in the United States die and many more are needlessly harmed by the care they receive. When I was a young mother listening to doctors at a military hospital apologize for nearly killing my four-year-old daughter, I had no idea how often human error jeopardized our health and safety. And it wasn’t until fifteen years later, after being hired to serve as the director of patient safety and performance excellence for a large healthcare system, that I realized our country was in the midst of a patient safety crisis. Since taking that first patient safety job, I have learned much about the science and practice of safety in hospitals and nursing homes; as well as in nuclear power plants, shipbuilding and ship-repair facilities, and motor repair shops. One thing is clear: every industry is doing a better job with safety than the healthcare industry, but none is working harder to improve it. The public first got a glimpse into the world of patient safety in 1999, when the Institute of Medicine (IOM) published the now seminal report titled To Err Is Human. Until then, healthcare had never systematically tallied and publicly reported how often care that is supposed to help and heal patients actually harms them. The report claimed that nearly one hundred thousand US hospital patients died each year as a result of medical mistakes. This finding shocked people inside and outside of the industry.