Includes a contact management system and a sales lead tracking system, which lists potential customer lists. A software product by Virgosys Software
Posts made by Little_Girl
-
Sales force automation-sfa
-
RE: Myelofibrosis
Progressive fibrosis of the bone marrow, typically associated with pancytopenia and with myeloid metaplasia in other organs.
-
Pegasus legal register
Customized, multi-lingual, online legal register service for multi-site, multi-national companies in heavily-regulated industries. A software product by Antaris Consulting
-
RE: Grappling
A Southern U.S. expression meaning to fish by hand. (A synonym for [noodling].) A [grappler] goes into the water, feels for a hole which may be occupied by a catfish, and entices [the catfish] to bite his hand. The grappler then wrestles the catfish to the surface.
-
Seekom ibex
Property management systems, booking systems, channel manager, automated revenue management, website design. The total solution. A software product by Seekom
-
Cauli-dick
The end [your dick] looks like a [cauliflower]...from so many [STDs].
-
RE: Korfball
A game similar to basketball, played by teams each consisting of four men and four women.
-
Schedulebee
Allows business owners and staff members to effortlessly manage their work schedules online. A software product by ScheduleBee
-
Trustimpact
An integrated platform that enables leaders and people managers leverage actionable insights to craft actions plans and measure impact. A software product by Great Place IT Services
-
Socialbee
Social media management solution that offers content categorization, post scheduling, bulk editing, multi-channel posting, and more. A software product by SocialBee
-
RE: Biathlon
The greatest drinking game that people may also know has [bobsled] or tobongo. There are two teams lined up facing each other across two ends of a beer pong-sized table. Set up beer pong cups on each end. Player 1 shoots while a person on their team, player 2, stands across from them relaying the ball back until player 1 makes a cup. Player 2 drinks then hands to player 3 to flip (like in [flip cup]) and to x many other players to flip, and the last person [the flip], lets say Player 4, takes Player 1s spot to shoot next. Player 1 moves to Player [2s] spot to relay. And continue all the way through until one team makes all the cups.
-
Evaluation of pain
Neither examinations nor tests can prove that a person is in pain (see also Overview of Pain). Consequently, doctors ask the person about the history and characteristics of pain. The person’s answers help them identify the cause and develop a treatment strategy. Questions can include the following:
Where is the pain? What is the pain like?
When did the pain start? Was there any injury?
How did the pain start? Did it begin suddenly or gradually?
Is the pain always present, or does it come and go?
Does it occur predictably after certain activities (such as meals or physical exertion) or in certain body positions? What else makes the pain worse?
What, if anything, helps relieve the pain?
Does pain affect the ability to do daily activities or to interact with other people? Does it affect sleep, appetite, and bowel and bladder function? If so, how?
Does pain affect mood and sense of well-being? Is the pain accompanied by feelings of depression or anxiety?To evaluate the severity of pain, doctors sometimes use a scale of 0 (none) to 10 (severe) or ask the person to describe the pain as mild, moderate, severe, or excruciating. For children or for people who have difficulty communicating (for example, because of a stroke), drawings of faces in a series—from smiling to frowning and crying—can be used to determine the severity of pain.
Doctors always try to determine whether a physical disorder is causing the pain. Many chronic disorders (such as cancer, arthritis, sickle cell anemia, and inflammatory bowel disease) cause pain, as do acute disorders (such as wounds, burns, torn muscles, broken bones, sprained ligaments, appendicitis, kidney stones, and a heart attack).
Doctors use specific techniques to check for sources of pain. Doctors move the person’s arms and legs through their normal range of motion to see if these motions cause pain. Injury, repetitive stress, chronic pain, and other disorders can make certain areas of the body (called trigger points) become hypersensitive. Doctors touch various spots to see whether they are trigger points for pain. Different objects (such as a blunt key and a sharp pin) may be touched to the skin to check for loss of sensation or abnormal perceptions.
Doctors also consider psychologic causes. Psychologic factors (such as depression and anxiety) can worsen pain. Because depression and anxiety may result from chronic pain, distinguishing cause and effect may be difficult. Sometimes in people with pain, there is evidence of psychologic disturbances but no evidence of a disorder that could account for the pain or its severity. Such pain is called psychogenic or psychophysiologic pain.
Doctors ask about which drugs (including over-the-counter drugs) and other treatments the person has used to treat the pain and whether they are effective.
Few people exaggerate the pain they feel. Nonetheless, doctors usually also ask questions to make sure there are no ulterior motives for reporting pain, such as time off from work with pay or extra attention from family members. Such questions are routine. -
RE: Crunchtime
A moment or period when decisive action must be taken or work completed.
-
Fatal insomnia
Fatal insomnia is a rare prion disease that interferes with sleep and leads to deterioration of mental function and loss of coordination. Death occurs within a few months to a few years.
(See also Overview of Prion Diseases.)
Fatal insomnia has two forms:Familial: This form, called fatal familial insomnia, is inherited. It is due to a specific mutation in the gene for a normal protein called cellular prion protein (PrPC).
Sporadic: This form occurs spontaneously, without a genetic mutation.Fatal familial insomnia and sporadic fatal insomnia differ from other prion diseases because they affect predominantly one area of the brain, the thalamus, which influences sleep.
In fatal familial insomnia, symptoms may begin in a person -
Overview of stroke
A stroke occurs when an artery to the brain becomes blocked or ruptures, resulting in death of an area of brain tissue due to loss of its blood supply (cerebral infarction) and symptoms that occur suddenly.
Most strokes are ischemic (usually due to blockage of an artery), but some are hemorrhagic (due to rupture of an artery).
Transient ischemic attacks resemble ischemic strokes except that no permanent brain damage occurs and the symptoms typically resolve within 1 hour.
Symptoms occur suddenly and can include muscle weakness, paralysis, abnormal or lost sensation on one side of the body, difficulty speaking, confusion, problems with vision, dizziness, loss of balance and coordination, and, in some hemorrhagic strokes, a sudden, severe headache.
Diagnosis is based mainly on symptoms, but imaging and blood tests are also done.
Recovery after a stroke depends on many factors, such as the location and amount of brain damage, the person’s age, and the presence of other disorders.
Controlling high blood pressure, high cholesterol levels, and high blood sugar levels and not smoking help prevent strokes.
Treatment may include drugs to make blood less likely to clot or to break up clots and sometimes various procedures to treat blocked or narrowed arteries or surgery to remove a clot (such as angioplasty).A stroke is called a cerebrovascular disorder because it affects the brain (cerebro-) and the blood vessels (vascular) that supply blood to the brain.
Worldwide, stroke is the second most common cause of death. In the United States, strokes are the fifth most common cause of death and the most common cause of disabling nervous system damage in adults. In the United States, about 795,000 people have a stroke, and about 130,000 die of stroke each year.
Strokes are much more common among older people than among younger adults, usually because the disorders that lead to strokes progress over time. Over two thirds of all strokes occur in people older than 65. Stroke is more common among women than among men, and nearly 60% of deaths due to stroke occur in women, possibly because women are on average older when the stroke occurs.
Blacks, Hispanics, American Indians, and Alaska Natives are more likely than non-Hispanic whites or Asians to have a stroke. The risk of having a first stroke is nearly twice as high for blacks as for whites. Blacks are also more likely to die of a stroke than whites. -
Mugs
A slang term used often to [identify] someone as being [extremely] [ugly].