Biomedical research is the broad area of science that involves the investigation of the biological process and the causes of disease through careful experimentation, observation, laboratory work, analysis, and testing.
proposal writing for funding agencies pptPriya Ammu
This document provides guidance on writing an effective project proposal for funding. It recommends choosing a specific, high priority project and developing a practical vision with good planning. It also suggests identifying available resources, generating strategies, and deciding on monitoring. The proposal should integrate with existing activities, address identified problems, and demonstrate local initiative and utilization of local resources. It outlines key sections of the proposal including background, goals and objectives, organization profile, costs and benefits analysis, monitoring, appendices, budget, and executive summary. Projects that are developmental, promote self-reliance and sustainability have a higher chance of being funded.
This document provides guidance on writing a successful grant proposal. It outlines the basic steps, including responding to funding calls, refining the proposal based on self-evaluation, finding relevant funding agencies, and tailoring the proposal to the agency. Key elements are discussed such as objectives, methodology, budget, justification, and staff requirements. International and Pakistani funding agencies are listed. Tips provided include managing conflicts of interest, developing collaborative networks, starting early, and gaining experience through practice and feedback. The overall goal is to create a strong, well-designed proposal that clearly addresses the needs and priorities of the target funding agency.
The document summarizes the Diamond v. Chakrabarty Supreme Court case from 1980. It discusses that Ananda Chakrabarty, a genetic engineer, developed a bacterium capable of breaking down crude oil. When the US Patent and Trademark Office rejected a patent application for the bacteria, citing that living things were not patentable, Chakrabarty appealed. The Supreme Court ultimately ruled 5-4 that genetically modified bacteria constituted patentable subject matter as a "non-naturally occurring manufacture or composition of matter." This expanded the definition of patent eligibility and supported the nascent biotechnology industry.
The document discusses ethical guidelines for biomedical research involving human participants as outlined by the Indian Council of Medical Research. It covers the history of ethical codes emerging from inhumane experiments, key principles of informed consent, protecting vulnerable populations, and preventing therapeutic misconception. Guidelines address general research principles, review procedures, clinical trials, and other specialized research areas. The importance of ethics committee oversight and obtaining valid informed consent is emphasized throughout.
This document discusses international patent law and new developments in intellectual property rights. It covers several key topics:
1. The basics of international patent law, including that patents only apply within the granting country and most countries follow a "first to file" system.
2. Important international treaties like the Paris Convention, Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT), and Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS). The PCT allows filing a single international patent application.
3. Developments making the international patent system more unified and efficient, such as the Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) and Patent Law Treaty (PLT).
The document discusses intellectual property rights transfers between US firms and foreign businesses. There are several reasons why US firms may transfer their IPRs, such as receiving licensing fees, contributing technology to joint ventures, or shifting production to lower cost countries. International agreements like the Paris Convention and TRIPS Agreement established standards for protecting IPRs like patents, trademarks, and copyrights across signatory countries. The PCT and Madrid Protocol set up centralized filing systems for international patent and trademark applications.
proposal writing for funding agencies pptPriya Ammu
This document provides guidance on writing an effective project proposal for funding. It recommends choosing a specific, high priority project and developing a practical vision with good planning. It also suggests identifying available resources, generating strategies, and deciding on monitoring. The proposal should integrate with existing activities, address identified problems, and demonstrate local initiative and utilization of local resources. It outlines key sections of the proposal including background, goals and objectives, organization profile, costs and benefits analysis, monitoring, appendices, budget, and executive summary. Projects that are developmental, promote self-reliance and sustainability have a higher chance of being funded.
This document provides guidance on writing a successful grant proposal. It outlines the basic steps, including responding to funding calls, refining the proposal based on self-evaluation, finding relevant funding agencies, and tailoring the proposal to the agency. Key elements are discussed such as objectives, methodology, budget, justification, and staff requirements. International and Pakistani funding agencies are listed. Tips provided include managing conflicts of interest, developing collaborative networks, starting early, and gaining experience through practice and feedback. The overall goal is to create a strong, well-designed proposal that clearly addresses the needs and priorities of the target funding agency.
The document summarizes the Diamond v. Chakrabarty Supreme Court case from 1980. It discusses that Ananda Chakrabarty, a genetic engineer, developed a bacterium capable of breaking down crude oil. When the US Patent and Trademark Office rejected a patent application for the bacteria, citing that living things were not patentable, Chakrabarty appealed. The Supreme Court ultimately ruled 5-4 that genetically modified bacteria constituted patentable subject matter as a "non-naturally occurring manufacture or composition of matter." This expanded the definition of patent eligibility and supported the nascent biotechnology industry.
The document discusses ethical guidelines for biomedical research involving human participants as outlined by the Indian Council of Medical Research. It covers the history of ethical codes emerging from inhumane experiments, key principles of informed consent, protecting vulnerable populations, and preventing therapeutic misconception. Guidelines address general research principles, review procedures, clinical trials, and other specialized research areas. The importance of ethics committee oversight and obtaining valid informed consent is emphasized throughout.
This document discusses international patent law and new developments in intellectual property rights. It covers several key topics:
1. The basics of international patent law, including that patents only apply within the granting country and most countries follow a "first to file" system.
2. Important international treaties like the Paris Convention, Patent Cooperation Treaty (PCT), and Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS). The PCT allows filing a single international patent application.
3. Developments making the international patent system more unified and efficient, such as the Patent Prosecution Highway (PPH) and Patent Law Treaty (PLT).
The document discusses intellectual property rights transfers between US firms and foreign businesses. There are several reasons why US firms may transfer their IPRs, such as receiving licensing fees, contributing technology to joint ventures, or shifting production to lower cost countries. International agreements like the Paris Convention and TRIPS Agreement established standards for protecting IPRs like patents, trademarks, and copyrights across signatory countries. The PCT and Madrid Protocol set up centralized filing systems for international patent and trademark applications.
The document provides an overview of research methodology. It defines research and describes the objectives and characteristics of research. It discusses the scientific method, including basic postulates and criteria for good research. It also outlines the research process, including defining the research problem and reviewing literature. The summary covers the key aspects of research methodology discussed in the document such as the meaning of research, objectives of research, characteristics of the scientific method, criteria for good research, and steps in the research process.
This document discusses the patentability of live organisms. It begins by explaining what patents are and the criteria for patentability. It then discusses how traditionally only inventions could be patented, but now living things like cells, bacteria, and extracts from plants have also been patented. The US initially only allowed patents on microorganisms, but later expanded this to include animals and modified life forms. Several controversial patents have been granted, such as on the OncoMouse and human genes. While many see issues with patenting life, proponents argue it encourages innovation. The document reviews patenting scenarios in countries like the US, India, and under international agreements.
Scientific integrity calls for some basic originality. Plagiarism can destroy this original creativity and ideation. This presentation defines plagiarism (stealing from others' works) and some of the creative and systematic remedies.
This document discusses the process of identifying and formulating a research problem. It begins by defining research as creating new knowledge. A researcher spends time refining a research idea into a testable problem by defining a specific problem area, reviewing literature, and examining feasibility. Problems can come from various sources like ongoing projects, data sets, theories of interest, and daily issues. When selecting a problem, it should be interesting, researchable, significant, manageable, and come from known facts. The document provides guidance on narrowing a problem and cautions that preconceptions could influence research. A good problem statement clearly identifies variables and their relationship while specifying the population in an empirically testable way.
The document provides guidelines for maintaining a proper lab notebook. It states that the notebook should allow others to reproduce one's work and experiments from the recorded details. Key guidelines include writing in pen during lab time, documenting all experimental details, procedures, observations, and conclusions with dates. Pictures and computer data should also be included. Maintaining a well-organized notebook accurately following these guidelines helps researchers reproduce their own work and can provide evidence for patent applications.
In this PPTs i have given strategies for writing Synopsis which covers Synopsis, INTRODUCTION, TITLE OF THE PROJECT, Statement of the problem, OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY, Review the literature, SAMPLING DESIGN, PRIMARY SOURCES OF DATA COLLECTION, SECONDARY SOURCE OF DATA COLLECTIO.
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This document provides guidance on writing a review article. It defines a review article as a critical analysis of existing literature that does not present new experimental data. The key functions of a review article are to organize, evaluate, identify trends in, synthesize, and identify gaps in existing literature. Review articles are intended for experts, students, and decision-makers. There are different types of reviews, including narrative reviews, best evidence reviews, and systematic reviews. Review articles can vary significantly in length from 8,000-40,000 words. The elements that should be included are a title, author list, abstract, introduction, body, conclusions, and references. An 18-step process is outlined for preparing a review article.
When writing a paper, always acknowledge all sources clearly and avoid copying other authors’ words verbatim. Failure to do so could lead to loss of tenure/funding and loss of credibility.
There are two basic types of scientific research: inductive and deductive. Inductive research involves assuming theoretical concepts and patterns from observed data to build theories, while deductive research tests concepts and patterns using empirical data to evaluate theories. Additionally, there are three types of scientific research based on purpose: exploratory research investigates new areas of interest to generate initial ideas and test feasibility; descriptive research carefully observes and documents phenomena through reliable scientific methods; and explanatory research seeks explanations for observed phenomena by answering "why" and "how" questions.
The h-index is a metric used to characterize both the productivity and impact of a researcher's publications. It is defined as the number of papers (h) that have been cited at least h times each. The h-index takes into account both the number of publications and the number of citations received. Several research databases, including Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar, will calculate a researcher's h-index.
Predatory publishers and journals exploit academic authors by charging publication fees without providing proper editorial and quality review services. They prioritize profits over quality. Characteristics include lack of peer review, editorial boards, and transparency about fees and operations. Jeffrey Beall created criteria to help identify predatory journals, and Cabell's Blacklist now catalogs over 4,000 questionable journals. Savitribai Phule Pune University developed a software tool to help researchers identify predatory publications. Several journal selection tools can also help match articles to legitimate journals.
Patentable and Non Patentable Inventionsegoistic_ek
The document provides information on patentable and non-patentable inventions under Indian patent law. It discusses what constitutes a patent, requirements for an invention to be considered patentable such as novelty, non-obviousness, and industrial applicability. Biotechnological inventions are discussed, including examples of patentable subject matter such as genetically modified organisms, DNA/protein sequences. The document also outlines acts and sections of Indian patent law that define non-patentable subject matter such as discoveries, plants/animals, and traditional knowledge.
This document provides an overview of the literature review process. It defines a literature review, discusses the types and purposes of literature reviews. It outlines the key steps in conducting a literature review including defining the research problem, searching relevant literature, planning the review, taking notes, and summarizing findings. Sources of literature are primary sources like reports and theses, secondary sources like books and journals, and tertiary sources like indexes and abstracts. The document provides examples of formatting literature in bibliographies and taking structured notes on index cards to organize the review.
This document provides guidance on completing a research paper and presentation. It outlines 4 steps: 1) Define the task by choosing a subject, topic, subtopic, and essential question; 2) Define sources to use, including 2 books and 3 web references; 3) Locate and access information from sources like the school and public libraries as well as specific databases and websites; 4) Use the information by organizing it, taking relevant notes without copying, and citing sources as work is done. An annotated bibliography is also discussed where citations are followed by brief descriptions and evaluations of sources.
Current stem cell delivery methods for myocardial repairR.Harish Kumar
This document discusses cardiovascular disease and stem cell therapy for heart disease. It covers the causes and risk factors for cardiovascular disease, types of stem cells used for therapy, and different delivery systems for stem cell therapy including direct injection into the heart muscle, catheter-based delivery, and intravenous delivery. The goal of stem cell therapy is to repair damage caused by cardiovascular disease such as heart attacks.
A physician (also known as a medical practitioner or doctor) provides a variety of services to patients. The primary role of a doctor is to ensure the health of their patients. It can be highly stressful at times, especially when treating patients who have life-threatening injuries or chronic conditions. Anesthesiologists, family and general practitioners, internists, obstetricians and gynecologists, pediatricians, psychiatrists, and surgeons are among the doctors who work in the hospital.
20 topics for a biology literature review – pubricaPubrica
The building block of all academic research activities, regardless of discipline, is to base the work on existing knowledge and link it up. Hence, doing so correctly should be a priority for all academics. However, the task has got more and more complicated. Development of knowledge within the field of business research is growing at a tremendous pace while remaining fragmented and interdisciplinary at the same time.
For more details, please visit our website: http://bit.ly/32WQeVz
Why Pubrica?
When you order our services, we promise you the following – Plagiarism free, always on Time, outstanding customer support, written to Standard, Unlimited Revisions support and High-quality Subject Matter Experts.
Reference: literature review writing services
Contact us :
Web: https://pubrica.com/
Blog: https://pubrica.com/academy/
Email: sales@pubrica.com
WhatsApp : +91 9884350006
United Kingdom: +44-1143520021
The document provides an overview of research methodology. It defines research and describes the objectives and characteristics of research. It discusses the scientific method, including basic postulates and criteria for good research. It also outlines the research process, including defining the research problem and reviewing literature. The summary covers the key aspects of research methodology discussed in the document such as the meaning of research, objectives of research, characteristics of the scientific method, criteria for good research, and steps in the research process.
This document discusses the patentability of live organisms. It begins by explaining what patents are and the criteria for patentability. It then discusses how traditionally only inventions could be patented, but now living things like cells, bacteria, and extracts from plants have also been patented. The US initially only allowed patents on microorganisms, but later expanded this to include animals and modified life forms. Several controversial patents have been granted, such as on the OncoMouse and human genes. While many see issues with patenting life, proponents argue it encourages innovation. The document reviews patenting scenarios in countries like the US, India, and under international agreements.
Scientific integrity calls for some basic originality. Plagiarism can destroy this original creativity and ideation. This presentation defines plagiarism (stealing from others' works) and some of the creative and systematic remedies.
This document discusses the process of identifying and formulating a research problem. It begins by defining research as creating new knowledge. A researcher spends time refining a research idea into a testable problem by defining a specific problem area, reviewing literature, and examining feasibility. Problems can come from various sources like ongoing projects, data sets, theories of interest, and daily issues. When selecting a problem, it should be interesting, researchable, significant, manageable, and come from known facts. The document provides guidance on narrowing a problem and cautions that preconceptions could influence research. A good problem statement clearly identifies variables and their relationship while specifying the population in an empirically testable way.
The document provides guidelines for maintaining a proper lab notebook. It states that the notebook should allow others to reproduce one's work and experiments from the recorded details. Key guidelines include writing in pen during lab time, documenting all experimental details, procedures, observations, and conclusions with dates. Pictures and computer data should also be included. Maintaining a well-organized notebook accurately following these guidelines helps researchers reproduce their own work and can provide evidence for patent applications.
In this PPTs i have given strategies for writing Synopsis which covers Synopsis, INTRODUCTION, TITLE OF THE PROJECT, Statement of the problem, OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY, Review the literature, SAMPLING DESIGN, PRIMARY SOURCES OF DATA COLLECTION, SECONDARY SOURCE OF DATA COLLECTIO.
Subscribe to Vision Academy for Video Assistance
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCjzpit_cXjdnzER_165mIiw
This document provides guidance on writing a review article. It defines a review article as a critical analysis of existing literature that does not present new experimental data. The key functions of a review article are to organize, evaluate, identify trends in, synthesize, and identify gaps in existing literature. Review articles are intended for experts, students, and decision-makers. There are different types of reviews, including narrative reviews, best evidence reviews, and systematic reviews. Review articles can vary significantly in length from 8,000-40,000 words. The elements that should be included are a title, author list, abstract, introduction, body, conclusions, and references. An 18-step process is outlined for preparing a review article.
When writing a paper, always acknowledge all sources clearly and avoid copying other authors’ words verbatim. Failure to do so could lead to loss of tenure/funding and loss of credibility.
There are two basic types of scientific research: inductive and deductive. Inductive research involves assuming theoretical concepts and patterns from observed data to build theories, while deductive research tests concepts and patterns using empirical data to evaluate theories. Additionally, there are three types of scientific research based on purpose: exploratory research investigates new areas of interest to generate initial ideas and test feasibility; descriptive research carefully observes and documents phenomena through reliable scientific methods; and explanatory research seeks explanations for observed phenomena by answering "why" and "how" questions.
The h-index is a metric used to characterize both the productivity and impact of a researcher's publications. It is defined as the number of papers (h) that have been cited at least h times each. The h-index takes into account both the number of publications and the number of citations received. Several research databases, including Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar, will calculate a researcher's h-index.
Predatory publishers and journals exploit academic authors by charging publication fees without providing proper editorial and quality review services. They prioritize profits over quality. Characteristics include lack of peer review, editorial boards, and transparency about fees and operations. Jeffrey Beall created criteria to help identify predatory journals, and Cabell's Blacklist now catalogs over 4,000 questionable journals. Savitribai Phule Pune University developed a software tool to help researchers identify predatory publications. Several journal selection tools can also help match articles to legitimate journals.
Patentable and Non Patentable Inventionsegoistic_ek
The document provides information on patentable and non-patentable inventions under Indian patent law. It discusses what constitutes a patent, requirements for an invention to be considered patentable such as novelty, non-obviousness, and industrial applicability. Biotechnological inventions are discussed, including examples of patentable subject matter such as genetically modified organisms, DNA/protein sequences. The document also outlines acts and sections of Indian patent law that define non-patentable subject matter such as discoveries, plants/animals, and traditional knowledge.
This document provides an overview of the literature review process. It defines a literature review, discusses the types and purposes of literature reviews. It outlines the key steps in conducting a literature review including defining the research problem, searching relevant literature, planning the review, taking notes, and summarizing findings. Sources of literature are primary sources like reports and theses, secondary sources like books and journals, and tertiary sources like indexes and abstracts. The document provides examples of formatting literature in bibliographies and taking structured notes on index cards to organize the review.
This document provides guidance on completing a research paper and presentation. It outlines 4 steps: 1) Define the task by choosing a subject, topic, subtopic, and essential question; 2) Define sources to use, including 2 books and 3 web references; 3) Locate and access information from sources like the school and public libraries as well as specific databases and websites; 4) Use the information by organizing it, taking relevant notes without copying, and citing sources as work is done. An annotated bibliography is also discussed where citations are followed by brief descriptions and evaluations of sources.
Current stem cell delivery methods for myocardial repairR.Harish Kumar
This document discusses cardiovascular disease and stem cell therapy for heart disease. It covers the causes and risk factors for cardiovascular disease, types of stem cells used for therapy, and different delivery systems for stem cell therapy including direct injection into the heart muscle, catheter-based delivery, and intravenous delivery. The goal of stem cell therapy is to repair damage caused by cardiovascular disease such as heart attacks.
A physician (also known as a medical practitioner or doctor) provides a variety of services to patients. The primary role of a doctor is to ensure the health of their patients. It can be highly stressful at times, especially when treating patients who have life-threatening injuries or chronic conditions. Anesthesiologists, family and general practitioners, internists, obstetricians and gynecologists, pediatricians, psychiatrists, and surgeons are among the doctors who work in the hospital.
20 topics for a biology literature review – pubricaPubrica
The building block of all academic research activities, regardless of discipline, is to base the work on existing knowledge and link it up. Hence, doing so correctly should be a priority for all academics. However, the task has got more and more complicated. Development of knowledge within the field of business research is growing at a tremendous pace while remaining fragmented and interdisciplinary at the same time.
For more details, please visit our website: http://bit.ly/32WQeVz
Why Pubrica?
When you order our services, we promise you the following – Plagiarism free, always on Time, outstanding customer support, written to Standard, Unlimited Revisions support and High-quality Subject Matter Experts.
Reference: literature review writing services
Contact us :
Web: https://pubrica.com/
Blog: https://pubrica.com/academy/
Email: sales@pubrica.com
WhatsApp : +91 9884350006
United Kingdom: +44-1143520021
This document provides information about acute bronchitis and acute gastroenteritis in children. It defines acute bronchitis as a viral infection causing inflammation of the bronchi, with cough as the main symptom. Acute gastroenteritis is defined as an inflammation of the stomach and intestines causing diarrhea. The document discusses the etiology, signs and symptoms, diagnosis, and treatment of both conditions. It aims to analyze the contributing factors and nursing interventions for a pediatric patient diagnosed with acute bronchitis and acute gastroenteritis using the nursing process.
How to search the medical literature on the netSamir Haffar
This document provides an overview of how to search the medical literature on the internet. It discusses the large volume of published literature, challenges in finding high-quality evidence, and resources that can help. Key points include:
- Over 50,000 new biomedical articles are published each year, making it difficult to find relevant information.
- Formulating focused clinical questions using PICO/PIO criteria can help target searches.
- Resources like PubMed, textbooks, and synthesis sources like Cochrane Reviews can help filter the literature to find the most valid and applicable evidence.
- The Cochrane Collaboration established a standard for compiling systematic reviews and meta-analyses to synthesize the best evidence on various clinical topics.
Global Medical Cures™ | ANTIOXIDANTS- Get the Facts!
DISCLAIMER-
Global Medical Cures™ does not offer any medical advice, diagnosis, treatment or recommendations. Only your healthcare provider/physician can offer you information and recommendations for you to decide about your healthcare choices.
2nd International Conference and Exhibition on Nutritional Science and Therapy, will be organized around the theme "Assessing, Analyzing & Monitoring Nutritional Research."
BIOETHICS. Which is used in daily routine lifesamiiikhan5264
This document provides an overview of bioethics. It begins by defining ethics as the study of morality and principles of conduct. Bioethics is then defined as applying ethical principles to medicine and healthcare issues arising from biotechnology and medical advances. The history of bioethics dates back to ancient times but the field emerged in the 1970s due to new ethical issues. Principles of bioethics include beneficence, non-maleficence, autonomy, and justice. Examples of ethical issues discussed include abortion, euthanasia, human cloning, and stem cell research. The document emphasizes that science and research must be conducted ethically.
Biostatistics is the science of collecting, analyzing, and interpreting data, especially as it relates to biological and medical problems. It involves studying populations and samples, as well as descriptive and inferential statistics. Biostatistics has a long history dating back to John Graunt who used mortality bills to make predictions, but it remains challenging due to the mixture of systematic and random factors in life.
Biomedical science is a broad field that underpins modern medicine. It includes four main disciplines: infection sciences, blood sciences, cell sciences, and genetics/molecular pathology. Biomedical scientists analyze samples to diagnose diseases, identify microbes and viruses, monitor drug therapies, and more. They work in laboratories and handle over 150 million samples annually. Studying an accredited biomedical science degree and completing training leads to registration and work as a licensed biomedical scientist.
Antioxidants are substances that may prevent potentially disease-producing cell damage that can result from natural bodily processes and from exposure to certain chemicals.
This document provides details of a proposed research study on the nutritional status of people living with AIDS receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) at B.P. Koirala Institute of Health Sciences in Dharan, Nepal. The principal investigator is a nursing officer in the medical-surgical nursing department. The study will use a descriptive cross-sectional design to assess the nutritional status of approximately 200 ART patients through measurements of weight, BMI, serum proteins, micronutrients, and fat distribution over the course of one year with a budget of 25,000 Nepali rupees. A literature review establishes that malnutrition is common in HIV/AIDS and predicts health outcomes, so this study aims to identify nutritional deficiencies and
Training tomorrow's health care professionals, in exercise medicine, for tomo...Ann Gates
This document discusses training healthcare professionals in exercise medicine to advise patients on physical activity. It notes that healthcare professionals see hundreds of thousands of patients over their careers, providing many opportunities to promote physical activity. It advocates training every student healthcare professional to provide physical activity advice and counselling to patients during every health consultation from cradle to grave. The goal is to capitalize on teachable moments and potentially provide hundreds of thousands of brief physical activity interventions every day across the NHS.
The document discusses the role and career path of a physician assistant. It begins by introducing PAs and their responsibilities in assisting physicians. It then covers the history of the profession, originating in the 1960s to address physician shortages. The text outlines the educational requirements, including a bachelor's degree and 26-month PA program. It describes the applicant's qualities, such as being social and curious. Finally, it discusses the growing field and salary range, making PA a stable and fulfilling career choice.
Megan McLelland is a physician who focuses on primary care and manual medicine. She has a holistic outlook influenced by Dr. Andrew Taylor Still, the founder of osteopathic medicine in 1892. Dr. Still opened the first osteopathic school in Missouri after studying alternative treatments and believing orthodox medicine was ineffective. Osteopathic medicine focuses on how the musculoskeletal system impacts health and uses osteopathic manipulative medicine to improve the body's functioning and ability to heal. Today, the majority of osteopathic physicians specialize in family/general practice, and while differences between DOs and MDs exist, their roles are becoming increasingly similar with both licensed in all 50 states.
Education About Medical Presentation Template
If you want to buy this presentation template, please visit http://madlis.com
Good design gets out of the way of the content you are sharing. It helps your audience focus on the content itself instead of the design.
But, it's no secret that most people dislike giving presentations. The dread of public speaking consistently ranks among the greatest fears in public surveys.
This presentation slides can help you reduce the anxiety involved with giving a presentation. Well-designed slides not only build your own confidence, they make your key points clearer to the audience.
Education About Medical Presentation Template
If you want to buy this presentation template, please visit http://madlis.com
Good design gets out of the way of the content you are sharing. It helps your audience focus on the content itself instead of the design.
But, it's no secret that most people dislike giving presentations. The dread of public speaking consistently ranks among the greatest fears in public surveys.
This presentation slides can help you reduce the anxiety involved with giving a presentation. Well-designed slides not only build your own confidence, they make your key points clearer to the audience.
1) Integrating biological and social data can help answer questions about how socioeconomic factors influence health through various pathways and help identify those most in need by using biomarkers to provide earlier and more precise measures of health.
2) Biomarkers measured in blood and other samples can provide objective measures of established disease risks, stress responses, and health over the lifecourse that complement self-reported measures and help understand illness behavior.
3) Combining biomarker and survey data on work status and health in Understanding Society showed that returning to work did not necessarily improve health as measured by allostatic load, suggesting not all work is good for health and personality may influence self-reported associations between work and health.
This document discusses 101 career options for those with a biology degree and provides examples in several categories, including research, healthcare, teaching, science writing, administration/management, government, and industry. It notes that while additional education is often required, a foundation in biology applies to many careers. Research opportunities are available at various levels from undergraduate internships to faculty positions. Healthcare careers mentioned include medical doctor, dentist, physical therapist, and epidemiologist. The document aims to help biology students and career counselors identify satisfying career paths.
role of physician in health care system.pptxDeepak Bansal
1: Learner should know 5 Roles of IMG(Indian Medical Graduate) as suggested by NMC correctly
Clinician
Leader and member of the healthcare team
Good Communicator
Lifelong learner
Professional.
2 : Learners should know some other Roles of physicians in the health care system correctly
Researcher
2. Teaching
3. Manager
4. Policy maker
This document provides training on the use of a stethoscope for biomedical equipment. It discusses the construction, functionality, and demonstration of a stethoscope. Key topics covered include how to use the device to listen to sounds in the heart and lungs. The training aims to help users understand the product and properly operate the important medical instrument.
An otoscope is a medical device used to examine the ear canal and eardrum. Health care providers use otoscopes during regular check-ups to screen for illnesses or investigate ear symptoms by providing a view of the inner ear. However, the presence of earwax, debris, or ear diseases can obstruct the view. Otoscopes come in three types - pocket, full-size, and video - to aid examination of the ear.
Biomedical equipment training provides instruction on how to properly operate and maintain various medical devices. The course covers topics such as electrocardiographs, defibrillators, ventilators, and other equipment used in patient care. Attendees will learn safety procedures, functional tests, preventative maintenance, calibration, and repair of biomedical devices.
Software Engineering and Project Management - Introduction, Modeling Concepts...Prakhyath Rai
Introduction, Modeling Concepts and Class Modeling: What is Object orientation? What is OO development? OO Themes; Evidence for usefulness of OO development; OO modeling history. Modeling
as Design technique: Modeling, abstraction, The Three models. Class Modeling: Object and Class Concept, Link and associations concepts, Generalization and Inheritance, A sample class model, Navigation of class models, and UML diagrams
Building the Analysis Models: Requirement Analysis, Analysis Model Approaches, Data modeling Concepts, Object Oriented Analysis, Scenario-Based Modeling, Flow-Oriented Modeling, class Based Modeling, Creating a Behavioral Model.
Software Engineering and Project Management - Software Testing + Agile Method...Prakhyath Rai
Software Testing: A Strategic Approach to Software Testing, Strategic Issues, Test Strategies for Conventional Software, Test Strategies for Object -Oriented Software, Validation Testing, System Testing, The Art of Debugging.
Agile Methodology: Before Agile – Waterfall, Agile Development.
Prediction of Electrical Energy Efficiency Using Information on Consumer's Ac...PriyankaKilaniya
Energy efficiency has been important since the latter part of the last century. The main object of this survey is to determine the energy efficiency knowledge among consumers. Two separate districts in Bangladesh are selected to conduct the survey on households and showrooms about the energy and seller also. The survey uses the data to find some regression equations from which it is easy to predict energy efficiency knowledge. The data is analyzed and calculated based on five important criteria. The initial target was to find some factors that help predict a person's energy efficiency knowledge. From the survey, it is found that the energy efficiency awareness among the people of our country is very low. Relationships between household energy use behaviors are estimated using a unique dataset of about 40 households and 20 showrooms in Bangladesh's Chapainawabganj and Bagerhat districts. Knowledge of energy consumption and energy efficiency technology options is found to be associated with household use of energy conservation practices. Household characteristics also influence household energy use behavior. Younger household cohorts are more likely to adopt energy-efficient technologies and energy conservation practices and place primary importance on energy saving for environmental reasons. Education also influences attitudes toward energy conservation in Bangladesh. Low-education households indicate they primarily save electricity for the environment while high-education households indicate they are motivated by environmental concerns.
DEEP LEARNING FOR SMART GRID INTRUSION DETECTION: A HYBRID CNN-LSTM-BASED MODELijaia
As digital technology becomes more deeply embedded in power systems, protecting the communication
networks of Smart Grids (SG) has emerged as a critical concern. Distributed Network Protocol 3 (DNP3)
represents a multi-tiered application layer protocol extensively utilized in Supervisory Control and Data
Acquisition (SCADA)-based smart grids to facilitate real-time data gathering and control functionalities.
Robust Intrusion Detection Systems (IDS) are necessary for early threat detection and mitigation because
of the interconnection of these networks, which makes them vulnerable to a variety of cyberattacks. To
solve this issue, this paper develops a hybrid Deep Learning (DL) model specifically designed for intrusion
detection in smart grids. The proposed approach is a combination of the Convolutional Neural Network
(CNN) and the Long-Short-Term Memory algorithms (LSTM). We employed a recent intrusion detection
dataset (DNP3), which focuses on unauthorized commands and Denial of Service (DoS) cyberattacks, to
train and test our model. The results of our experiments show that our CNN-LSTM method is much better
at finding smart grid intrusions than other deep learning algorithms used for classification. In addition,
our proposed approach improves accuracy, precision, recall, and F1 score, achieving a high detection
accuracy rate of 99.50%.
Supermarket Management System Project Report.pdfKamal Acharya
Supermarket management is a stand-alone J2EE using Eclipse Juno program.
This project contains all the necessary required information about maintaining
the supermarket billing system.
The core idea of this project to minimize the paper work and centralize the
data. Here all the communication is taken in secure manner. That is, in this
application the information will be stored in client itself. For further security the
data base is stored in the back-end oracle and so no intruders can access it.
Blood finder application project report (1).pdfKamal Acharya
Blood Finder is an emergency time app where a user can search for the blood banks as
well as the registered blood donors around Mumbai. This application also provide an
opportunity for the user of this application to become a registered donor for this user have
to enroll for the donor request from the application itself. If the admin wish to make user
a registered donor, with some of the formalities with the organization it can be done.
Specialization of this application is that the user will not have to register on sign-in for
searching the blood banks and blood donors it can be just done by installing the
application to the mobile.
The purpose of making this application is to save the user’s time for searching blood of
needed blood group during the time of the emergency.
This is an android application developed in Java and XML with the connectivity of
SQLite database. This application will provide most of basic functionality required for an
emergency time application. All the details of Blood banks and Blood donors are stored
in the database i.e. SQLite.
This application allowed the user to get all the information regarding blood banks and
blood donors such as Name, Number, Address, Blood Group, rather than searching it on
the different websites and wasting the precious time. This application is effective and
user friendly.
Home security is of paramount importance in today's world, where we rely more on technology, home
security is crucial. Using technology to make homes safer and easier to control from anywhere is
important. Home security is important for the occupant’s safety. In this paper, we came up with a low cost,
AI based model home security system. The system has a user-friendly interface, allowing users to start
model training and face detection with simple keyboard commands. Our goal is to introduce an innovative
home security system using facial recognition technology. Unlike traditional systems, this system trains
and saves images of friends and family members. The system scans this folder to recognize familiar faces
and provides real-time monitoring. If an unfamiliar face is detected, it promptly sends an email alert,
ensuring a proactive response to potential security threats.
Generative AI Use cases applications solutions and implementation.pdfmahaffeycheryld
Generative AI solutions encompass a range of capabilities from content creation to complex problem-solving across industries. Implementing generative AI involves identifying specific business needs, developing tailored AI models using techniques like GANs and VAEs, and integrating these models into existing workflows. Data quality and continuous model refinement are crucial for effective implementation. Businesses must also consider ethical implications and ensure transparency in AI decision-making. Generative AI's implementation aims to enhance efficiency, creativity, and innovation by leveraging autonomous generation and sophisticated learning algorithms to meet diverse business challenges.
https://www.leewayhertz.com/generative-ai-use-cases-and-applications/
2. Biomedical Research
Biomedical research is the broad area
of science that involves the investigation
of the biological process and the causes
of disease through careful
experimentation, observation,
laboratory work, analysis, and testing.
5. Wages
The median annual wage
for biomedical scientists or
microbiologists was $1,65,900 in
2019, according to BLS. The top 10% in
the field earned in excess of $215,000
per year.
6. Medical doctors must have medical
qualifications, biomedical scientists need not do
so
Medical doctors are usually not scientists
Most medical doctors (in the UK, at least) do
not have a doctorate (the title doctor is
honorary)
Most senior biomedical scientists have a
doctorate usually a PhD.
Biomedical scientist and Doctor