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Punishments for unruly guests and a register of complaints are some suggestions Airbnb hosts made in calls for a shake-up to proposed rules for holiday homes. ....
According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, about one-quarter of IT workers in the United States do not hold a bachelor’s degree or higher. And while many businesses will interview only candidates with a certain level of education, most do not specify what type of degree is needed in their job descriptions, which range from software engineering to DevOps roles to software test automation engineers. This prompts the question, one that’s often heatedly debated online: Do you need a computer science degree to have a career in software or IT? To find out, we asked several hiring managers and team leaders. Here’s what you need to know. ....
Ryan McMahon appoints Cody Kelly to fill seat on Onondaga County Legislature syracuse.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from syracuse.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Simple monitoring system could reduce medication-related illness for people in care homes New research from Swansea University suggests that a simple nurse- or carer-led medicines monitoring system can help reduce medication-related illness for people living in residential care homes - and the process takes just a few minutes per patient. The research paper published in the PLOS ONE journal looked how the monitoring system, known as the Adverse Drug Reaction Profile (ADRe-p), can help nurses or carers identify medicines mismanagement or adverse drug reactions in patients prescribed multiple medicines, and can help avoid medication-related harm and improve prescribing. The problem presented by the scale and complexity of inadvertent harm from both use and misuse of medicines is very real, which is reflected in the World Health Organisation s (WHO) Third Global Patient Safety Challenge aiming to reduce avoidable medication-related harm by 50% by next year. ....
E-Mail New research from Swansea University suggests that a simple nurse- or carer-led medicines monitoring system can help reduce medication-related illness for people living in residential care homes - and the process takes just a few minutes per patient. The research paper published in the PLOS ONE journal looked how the monitoring system, known as the Adverse Drug Reaction Profile (ADRe-p), can help nurses or carers identify medicines mismanagement or adverse drug reactions in patients prescribed multiple medicines, and can help avoid medication-related harm and improve prescribing. Professor Sue Jordan, who led the study said: The problem presented by the scale and complexity of inadvertent harm from both use and misuse of medicines is very real, which is reflected in the World Health Organisation s (WHO) Third Global Patient Safety Challenge aiming to reduce avoidable medication-related harm by 50% by next year. ....