Library

Posted by simple - September 28th, 2010

Hi all! This is a brief article about the library. A library is a room or building where a collection of books is kept for the purpose of reading or for reference. There are different kinds of general libraries ; the personal library, the public library, the school library, the college library, the circulating library, the lending library, the reference library. The personal library is kept by a man in his own house. The public library contains books which the public can borrow to read without payment. This library is supported by the subscription collected for the library service. The reference library has books which are to be consulted. These books are never lent out. The school library contains books on all subjects, chiefly, the books which can be read by the students of the school. Story books are to be kept in it. The college library should have books in English and in Regional language. The reference book should also be there. The students should borrow the books on their library tickets. Public library should be located the centre of the city. Borrowers should be warned against damaging the books. As Ruskin says only the best books in all subjects should be found in a library. Peoples should make use of the library and develop their knowledge.

Learn it enjoy it…

Posted by simple - September 25th, 2010

Hello friends, we are going to see about sports. Sports are real. It’s the place were skills and talents are exposed. Each ane every person will like atleast one sport on his favour. Sports makes to feel you thirst. The hunt is always on in sports. Becoming a sportsman is not easy as others think. It is not that you know a game and you can go and hit for a championship. Its not the way you think it, it has lots other things as how to win and how to use the skill at a particular time. Lots of knowledge along with talent is required to become a sports person. Its also deals with mind practise. Learning from others is the only way to make you the best and complete sportsman. Experience makes you to learn from each and every situation. It’s a life for the person who love it. It has the other effect too. It’s the life for the person who also watch it. To you it’s the sport. To other it’s an entertainment. You are not only cheered by your own surroundings, when the world watches you through media you are supported by them. That’s the power of sport in this world.

Olympics is true sport

Posted by simple - September 23rd, 2010

Sports, otherwise sometimes referred to as Olympics. Such an impact it has created in sports and people. It bought a revolution in sports. The Olympic Games are the world’s biggest sporting spectacle. They are divided into a summer and winter Games, held every four years by a single city. Athletes with disabilities compete at the Paralympics. More than 10,000 athletes take part in the summer events alone. Baron de Coubertin is said to have seen the five rings on an ancient Greek artifact. The rings symbolize the unity of the world’s five continents (Europe, Asia, Africa, Oceania, and the Americas). Every national flag in the world contains at least one of the five colors. Great athletes,
like all great sports competitors, require fitness, dedication, natural ability, and luck. What lifts some athletes above others is a relentless will to win, psychological strength, and the capacity to produce their best performance under any circumstances. With sponsorship, athletes have more resources and time to devote to sports. High-tech running tracks, clothing, and shoes have improved performance. So have new techniques such as the flop in high jumping.
However, performance-enhancing drugs damage the Olympic ideals and the competitors’ health. The Olympic code promotes amateurism, or performance without payment, and professionals are allowed to participate only under certain rules.

Millenium development goals in health industry

Posted by simple - September 22nd, 2010

When it comes to healthy living, healthy systems which administer the needs of millions of people needs to be framed such that it addresses the living conditions of the people in a proper manner. The meetings were moved each year to a new venue. That allowed field workers, students, community physicians and academics in some of the world’s poorest countries to attend. There were a few large plenary sessions and many small group sessions that encouraged interaction. Even people without computers could be part of this network. Impressive young people from poor countries sat in discussion groups next to rich entrepreneurs, respected academics and government decision-makers, all talking about problems held in common. I listened with growing optimism that progress in global health could come through collaboration that reached across the divides of poverty, borders, and politics. The meetings’ official programmes highlighted the Millennium Development Goals; combating disease and poverty; equitable access; capacity building and health systems; and innovation. Their explanations or lack of them will affect the credibility not only of the forum, but of any existing or future organisation seeking the trust of researchers and of those depending on them, when they come to core discussions in forums conducted across the people fraternities.

goal by 2015

Posted by simple - September 17th, 2010

When it comes to healthy living, improving nutrition in the developing world has never been more important. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization, more than a billion people one sixth of the global population have a diet so poor they may be severely underweight, have stunted growth, or lack the vitamins and minerals they need for good health (all are aspects of severe malnutrition, or undernutrition). And as populations grow and local climates change, this number is sure to rise. As a result, meeting the Millennium Development Goal of halving the proportion of people who suffer from
hunger by 2015 seems increasingly unlikely. Nutritional problems are not confined to the world’s poorest countries. Rapidly developing countries increasingly face a dual burden of undernutrition and ‘overnutrition’, as people adopt less nutritious (but calorie-rich) diets and less active lifestyles. nutrigenomics — which studies interactions between genes and nutrients — could potentially help to tailor nutritional policies for specific populations, so making them more effective. But he also warns that nutrigenomics is unlikely to deliver practical solutions any time soon. More frequent droughts and floods will reduce food security, while rising atmospheric carbon dioxide will also make many staple crops less nutritious. These opinion articles show that researchers vary in their specific recommendations for action against malnutrition. Yet all agree that action is urgently needed. With more than a billion lives in the balance, both international donors and national governments in the developing world must act now. They must strive to implement proven measures that will
ensure nutrition security for their populations as soon as possible.

Seriousness of tuberculosis

Posted by simple - September 8th, 2010

When it comes to healthy living tuberculosis programmes can be successful, but only with a massive increase in research to equip healthcare workers with the appropriate tools, and colleagues in Medicine. Drug-resistant TB is a man-made problem, resulting from weak TB control measures such as using inadequate drugs and regimens, poor case management and allowing preventable transmission. But there are many challenges in scaling up from pilot projects to TB control
programmes. Both biological and clinical issues need to be addressed first. Drug susceptibility testing, alongside the development of laboratory support, needs to be improved to give patients the correct drugs. Better second-line drugs some are already in the pipeline are needed, and treatment strategies should be tested and standardised in large clinical trials. Epidemiological studies are also required to identify areas of high risk. Strategies therefore need to be developed
that maximise treatment adherence in a sustainable way, and factors that affect adherence need to be studied, including the role of adverse events and levels of patient support. Tuberculosis needs to be attended with much care without any further delay because it is an epidemic disease. There will be high casualities when it is not taken care of in a serious manner.

role of anitmalarial community

Posted by simple - September 3rd, 2010

When it comes to healthy living the antimalarial drug community needs to develop joint action plans to help funding agencies make the best use of the available resources in the coming years. The challenge is to eliminate malaria in the next 50 years, rather than merely controlit. This will require new tools, including drugs to replace those that have succumbed to the development of resistance. In the current poor economic climate, donor fatigue and financial pressures mean that the current level of funding for research and development R&D may not be sustained. It is therefore important that those involved inantimalarial drug R&D come together to send clear messages to funders on R&D priorities, with details of what exactly is needed. But the antimalarial drug R&D community is currently fragmented and uncoordinated. This risks wasteful duplication of efforts in some areas, with others being neglected. The consortium has started to bring together malaria researchers and experts from related fields outside malaria to develop research priorities in a coordinated fashion. The external expertise enables lateral thinking and outside-the-box ideas to be considered. Five key priority areas that could prevent rapid progress in antimalarial drug development in the next few years have been identified.