Whey Aye WI's last year in pictures (2013 - 2014)wheyaye
This document provides a summary of the activities that the Whey Aye WI group participated in between June 2013 and April 2014. It lists the month followed by a brief 1-2 word description of the event, including midsummer solstice, tap dancing, photography lessons, afternoon tea on a railway, thanksgiving evening, book night, crochet and baking, Christmas afternoon tea, a history of the WI, a talk about women inventors, presenting crochet blankets, Charleston dancing lessons, and a talk from a local butcher. It concludes by looking forward to the next year of activities.
The document provides a summary of Alexander Miller's education, credentials, experience, and qualifications. It outlines that he has a Master's degree expected in Spring 2017 from CUNY Queens College in Adolescent Special Education with a 4.0 GPA. He has New York State teaching certifications in Social Studies and is working on Special Education certification. His experience includes substitute teaching at a high school and student teaching at two schools. He also has professional experience working in day habilitation and community habilitation programs.
Kids In Danger (KID) had a productive year advocating for child safety. They helped ban crib bumpers in Maryland and formed an Action Team. KID expanded programming, reaching over 300 parents and caregivers. Their website, social media presence, and mobile site allowed them to provide safety information to more users. KID also released research reports that influenced policy, participated in standard development, and engaged volunteers who contributed over 200 hours per month. Looking ahead, KID will continue their advocacy work and outreach to help protect children.
Kids In Danger (KID) was founded to promote safer children's products after the death of Danny Keysar. KID's mission is to promote safer products, advocate for children, and educate the public on safety. Online shopping is increasingly popular globally, but can pose safety concerns if products lack warnings, instructions, or have been improperly assembled. To address this, sellers should provide comprehensive safety information online as required by law. Consumers can help ensure safety by thoroughly researching products and reviews before purchasing, and registering products with manufacturers. Regulators, organizations, and businesses all have a role to play in monitoring online sales and enforcing standards to achieve the shared goal of a safe marketplace.
The Consumer Product Safety improvement act of 2008 made significant improvements in product safety, especially for children. Learn more about this landmark law on its 10th Anniversary of adoption.
Best Practices for Keeping Consumers Safe in a Global Marketplace (Chinese)Kids In Danger (KID)
Detailing the best ways to keep consumers safe when purchasing products globally. Presented by Nancy Cowles at the CPSC Tri-lateral Summit on June 27th, 2018.
Best Practices for Keeping Consumers Safe in a Global Marketplace (English)Kids In Danger (KID)
Detailing the best ways to keep consumers safe when purchasing products globally. Presented by Nancy Cowles at the CPSC Tri-lateral Summit on June 27th, 2018.
Each year, Kids In Danger (KID) reports on children's product recalls and the public health impact. Learn about the problem and how to keep your children safe.
Whey Aye WI's last year in pictures (2013 - 2014)wheyaye
This document provides a summary of the activities that the Whey Aye WI group participated in between June 2013 and April 2014. It lists the month followed by a brief 1-2 word description of the event, including midsummer solstice, tap dancing, photography lessons, afternoon tea on a railway, thanksgiving evening, book night, crochet and baking, Christmas afternoon tea, a history of the WI, a talk about women inventors, presenting crochet blankets, Charleston dancing lessons, and a talk from a local butcher. It concludes by looking forward to the next year of activities.
The document provides a summary of Alexander Miller's education, credentials, experience, and qualifications. It outlines that he has a Master's degree expected in Spring 2017 from CUNY Queens College in Adolescent Special Education with a 4.0 GPA. He has New York State teaching certifications in Social Studies and is working on Special Education certification. His experience includes substitute teaching at a high school and student teaching at two schools. He also has professional experience working in day habilitation and community habilitation programs.
Kids In Danger (KID) had a productive year advocating for child safety. They helped ban crib bumpers in Maryland and formed an Action Team. KID expanded programming, reaching over 300 parents and caregivers. Their website, social media presence, and mobile site allowed them to provide safety information to more users. KID also released research reports that influenced policy, participated in standard development, and engaged volunteers who contributed over 200 hours per month. Looking ahead, KID will continue their advocacy work and outreach to help protect children.
Kids In Danger (KID) was founded to promote safer children's products after the death of Danny Keysar. KID's mission is to promote safer products, advocate for children, and educate the public on safety. Online shopping is increasingly popular globally, but can pose safety concerns if products lack warnings, instructions, or have been improperly assembled. To address this, sellers should provide comprehensive safety information online as required by law. Consumers can help ensure safety by thoroughly researching products and reviews before purchasing, and registering products with manufacturers. Regulators, organizations, and businesses all have a role to play in monitoring online sales and enforcing standards to achieve the shared goal of a safe marketplace.
The Consumer Product Safety improvement act of 2008 made significant improvements in product safety, especially for children. Learn more about this landmark law on its 10th Anniversary of adoption.
Best Practices for Keeping Consumers Safe in a Global Marketplace (Chinese)Kids In Danger (KID)
Detailing the best ways to keep consumers safe when purchasing products globally. Presented by Nancy Cowles at the CPSC Tri-lateral Summit on June 27th, 2018.
Best Practices for Keeping Consumers Safe in a Global Marketplace (English)Kids In Danger (KID)
Detailing the best ways to keep consumers safe when purchasing products globally. Presented by Nancy Cowles at the CPSC Tri-lateral Summit on June 27th, 2018.
Each year, Kids In Danger (KID) reports on children's product recalls and the public health impact. Learn about the problem and how to keep your children safe.
This document provides safety tips for the holidays, including when shopping, decorating, traveling, and preventing toy and house hazards. It recommends checking saferproducts.gov for product recalls, avoiding small toys that could cause choking, and not leaving candles unattended. When traveling, it advises against using mittens or hats with strings on young children and buckling car seats with coats still on.
Kids In Danger (KID) was founded to promote safer children's products after the death of Danny Keysar in an unsafe portable crib. KID's mission is to promote safer products, advocate for children, and educate the public on safety. Online shopping for children's products presents both safety benefits like product tracking but also safety concerns if warnings and instructions are missing. The document outlines recommendations for consumers, businesses, and regulators to ensure safety standards are met and consumers have the information needed to properly use online purchases.
Kids In Danger (KID) was founded in 1998 following the death of Danny Keysar in an unsafe portable crib. KID's mission is to promote safer children's products, advocate for children, and educate the public on safety. As a member of several standards committees, KID reviews and comments on mandatory standards and regulations. Harmonization should increase safety standards rather than lower them, and not prioritize ease of compliance over safety. A strong standards process includes adequate consumer participation, transparency, and oversight to effectively address safety hazards. Harmonization must consider impacts on all stakeholders and regulations while strengthening global consumer safety.
KID’s educational workshop, Creating Safe Environments for Children outlines the problem of unsafe children’s products, identifies specific product hazards, and provides participants with concrete tools and resources to identify and remove unsafe children’s products. It is a flexible and interactive presentation which can be adapted for a variety of audiences. Each participant receives KID’s Product Safety Guide– a comprehensive booklet on children’s product safety. Check out our workshop informational flyer for more details and take a look at the reviews of past workshop participants. If you would like to host a safety workshop at your facility or for your organization, contact Laura@KidsInDanger.org or call (312) 595-0649.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive functioning. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
The document is a presentation by Kids In Danger about creating a safe environment for children. It discusses how unintentional injuries are the leading cause of child deaths and over 300,000 children are treated annually for product-related incidents. It highlights crib safety issues that have led to children's deaths and outlines federal safety standards for nursery products. The presentation provides tips on reducing choking, ingestion, and tip-over hazards and emphasizes the importance of recalls, product registration, and reporting unsafe products.
The document appears to be a newsletter from Kids In Danger, a nonprofit organization focused on product safety for children. It lists several conferences and events held in April 2015 related to early childhood education and product safety standards. It also notes that Laura graduated from Notre Dame and provides contact information for Kids In Danger.
The document mentions three different programs related to testing: an ASTM meeting at the CPSC, a UM TEST program, and a Northwestern TEST program. No other details are provided about these programs in the short, 3-line document.
Summary of Findings for KID's After Recall: Dangerous Products Remain in HomesKids In Danger (KID)
This a summary of some of the key findings that Kids In Danger (KID) uncovered in their 13th annual recall report. This year's report, After Recall: Dangerous Products Remain in Homes, focused on recall report data from 2013 children's product recalls and 2012 monthly reports on 2012 children's product recalls to determine recall trends and effectiveness. All data was either acquired through the CPSC or collected by KID. All analysis was done by KID.
Monitoring Health for the SDGs - Global Health Statistics 2024 - WHOChristina Parmionova
The 2024 World Health Statistics edition reviews more than 50 health-related indicators from the Sustainable Development Goals and WHO’s Thirteenth General Programme of Work. It also highlights the findings from the Global health estimates 2021, notably the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on life expectancy and healthy life expectancy.
UN WOD 2024 will take us on a journey of discovery through the ocean's vastness, tapping into the wisdom and expertise of global policy-makers, scientists, managers, thought leaders, and artists to awaken new depths of understanding, compassion, collaboration and commitment for the ocean and all it sustains. The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
Preliminary findings _OECD field visits to ten regions in the TSI EU mining r...OECDregions
Preliminary findings from OECD field visits for the project: Enhancing EU Mining Regional Ecosystems to Support the Green Transition and Secure Mineral Raw Materials Supply.
This document provides safety tips for the holidays, including when shopping, decorating, traveling, and preventing toy and house hazards. It recommends checking saferproducts.gov for product recalls, avoiding small toys that could cause choking, and not leaving candles unattended. When traveling, it advises against using mittens or hats with strings on young children and buckling car seats with coats still on.
Kids In Danger (KID) was founded to promote safer children's products after the death of Danny Keysar in an unsafe portable crib. KID's mission is to promote safer products, advocate for children, and educate the public on safety. Online shopping for children's products presents both safety benefits like product tracking but also safety concerns if warnings and instructions are missing. The document outlines recommendations for consumers, businesses, and regulators to ensure safety standards are met and consumers have the information needed to properly use online purchases.
Kids In Danger (KID) was founded in 1998 following the death of Danny Keysar in an unsafe portable crib. KID's mission is to promote safer children's products, advocate for children, and educate the public on safety. As a member of several standards committees, KID reviews and comments on mandatory standards and regulations. Harmonization should increase safety standards rather than lower them, and not prioritize ease of compliance over safety. A strong standards process includes adequate consumer participation, transparency, and oversight to effectively address safety hazards. Harmonization must consider impacts on all stakeholders and regulations while strengthening global consumer safety.
KID’s educational workshop, Creating Safe Environments for Children outlines the problem of unsafe children’s products, identifies specific product hazards, and provides participants with concrete tools and resources to identify and remove unsafe children’s products. It is a flexible and interactive presentation which can be adapted for a variety of audiences. Each participant receives KID’s Product Safety Guide– a comprehensive booklet on children’s product safety. Check out our workshop informational flyer for more details and take a look at the reviews of past workshop participants. If you would like to host a safety workshop at your facility or for your organization, contact Laura@KidsInDanger.org or call (312) 595-0649.
The document discusses the benefits of exercise for mental health. Regular physical activity can help reduce anxiety and depression and improve mood and cognitive functioning. Exercise causes chemical changes in the brain that may help protect against mental illness and improve symptoms.
The document is a presentation by Kids In Danger about creating a safe environment for children. It discusses how unintentional injuries are the leading cause of child deaths and over 300,000 children are treated annually for product-related incidents. It highlights crib safety issues that have led to children's deaths and outlines federal safety standards for nursery products. The presentation provides tips on reducing choking, ingestion, and tip-over hazards and emphasizes the importance of recalls, product registration, and reporting unsafe products.
The document appears to be a newsletter from Kids In Danger, a nonprofit organization focused on product safety for children. It lists several conferences and events held in April 2015 related to early childhood education and product safety standards. It also notes that Laura graduated from Notre Dame and provides contact information for Kids In Danger.
The document mentions three different programs related to testing: an ASTM meeting at the CPSC, a UM TEST program, and a Northwestern TEST program. No other details are provided about these programs in the short, 3-line document.
Summary of Findings for KID's After Recall: Dangerous Products Remain in HomesKids In Danger (KID)
This a summary of some of the key findings that Kids In Danger (KID) uncovered in their 13th annual recall report. This year's report, After Recall: Dangerous Products Remain in Homes, focused on recall report data from 2013 children's product recalls and 2012 monthly reports on 2012 children's product recalls to determine recall trends and effectiveness. All data was either acquired through the CPSC or collected by KID. All analysis was done by KID.
Monitoring Health for the SDGs - Global Health Statistics 2024 - WHOChristina Parmionova
The 2024 World Health Statistics edition reviews more than 50 health-related indicators from the Sustainable Development Goals and WHO’s Thirteenth General Programme of Work. It also highlights the findings from the Global health estimates 2021, notably the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on life expectancy and healthy life expectancy.
UN WOD 2024 will take us on a journey of discovery through the ocean's vastness, tapping into the wisdom and expertise of global policy-makers, scientists, managers, thought leaders, and artists to awaken new depths of understanding, compassion, collaboration and commitment for the ocean and all it sustains. The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
Preliminary findings _OECD field visits to ten regions in the TSI EU mining r...OECDregions
Preliminary findings from OECD field visits for the project: Enhancing EU Mining Regional Ecosystems to Support the Green Transition and Secure Mineral Raw Materials Supply.
Working with data is a challenge for many organizations. Nonprofits in particular may need to collect and analyze sensitive, incomplete, and/or biased historical data about people. In this talk, Dr. Cori Faklaris of UNC Charlotte provides an overview of current AI capabilities and weaknesses to consider when integrating current AI technologies into the data workflow. The talk is organized around three takeaways: (1) For better or sometimes worse, AI provides you with “infinite interns.” (2) Give people permission & guardrails to learn what works with these “interns” and what doesn’t. (3) Create a roadmap for adding in more AI to assist nonprofit work, along with strategies for bias mitigation.
Donate to charity during this holiday seasonSERUDS INDIA
For people who have money and are philanthropic, there are infinite opportunities to gift a needy person or child a Merry Christmas. Even if you are living on a shoestring budget, you will be surprised at how much you can do.
Donate Us
https://serudsindia.org/how-to-donate-to-charity-during-this-holiday-season/
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