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    Travel Tips To Get Through TSA Security
    Here are a few tips for traveling with golf gear since there is no better time than a vacation to hit the links. Fertilizers used on many golf courses can trigger explosive trace-detection equipment. Before flying, be sure to clean off clubs. Also remember to pack clubs in a travel bag and consider leaving it unlocked.Vacations are also a great time to go scuba diving, catch some fish or go camping. Scuba tanks are not allowed on commercial airlines for safety reasons. Ship scuba tanks or consider renting a tank at your destination. Fishing tackle and sports gear - such as bats and lacrosse sticks - must be checked.Outdoor enthusiasts will pack sun tan lotion, bug repellent and other skin care prod
    alization.
    * Half of 8 percent is 4 percent.
    * This is the expected death rate predicted by the CDC.


    The “devil in the details” is that these percentages are based on "the total population." Physicians, medical planners, and other pundits usually discuss percentages based on "those with the flu". We are not talking about “those with the flu” we are talking about a number three times that size.

    USA Today showed us how two third world countries are struggling and in some cases failing to deal with the crushing weight of a comparatively small outbreak of avian flu (H5N1). In Indonesia, the efforts are crippled at best. In Vietnam, the efforts are being met with greater success, but the disease rages on. The industrialized world relies on the fact that its health care is unmatched. The United States likes to believe that US health care exceeds all other. The numbers show that when this disease strikes the whole world is at peril.

    What are the answers? As with any impending disaster, the answers lie in preparation, p

    Simple Steps to a Winning Career in Video Game Design and Art
    Have you ever dreamed about how exciting it would be to make the next great game title, instead of just playing it. Would you like to be a video game designer working on the next big Xbox title or designing for the PS3, etc? Well, you’re not alone and the good news is that you can do it and succeed in this ever growing industry. You can be a game designer or game artist and turn it into a winning lucrative career.Video games are big business and big money. Let’s talk about this for a minute. Video games are not the Pong that your parents grew up on. Also, they are not just for kids anymore either. Producing games is getting a lot more complicated and cost a lot more to make. Video Game Design and Art
    The recent cover stories in USA Today, beautifully depict the potential spectrum of disease and the implications of human vulnerability to pandemic flu and specifically the H5N1 avian flu strain.

    But the real threat lies not in the obscure genetics of a common virus or in the family lineages of its victims. The true impact of this disease lies in the numbers. In 1918 100 percent of the entire world was exposed to what would later be called the Spanish Flu. This new strain of avian flu had never been encountered before by a human population, and as a result, there was no immunity to this particular strain. Of that world population, one third would ultimately fall ill, in fact, 50 to 80 percent of the youngest, healthiest, and strongest would fall ill when future generations would divide out the victims.

    Of those that fell ill, half ultimately required some assisted care. They were placed in infirmaries or makeshift hospitals in warehouses, wharfs, and military barracks. In today's world, they would qualify for hospital care or home health nursing.

    Of those hospitals and infirmaries, half suffer extreme respiratory difficulties as their lungs filled with fluid and blood, the result of their own bodies' counterattack on the viral invasion. Coughing and frothing at the mouth, occasionally spitting up blood, these individuals would have a disease that today’s medical professionals call ARDS, Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome. In the modern medical age, these patients would have a plastic tube placed into their lungs to assist their breathing and a ventilator would force air in and out of their lungs. Half of the ARDS patients 1918 died.

    But it's not percentages, but real numbers that portend the severity of this disease. There are over 300 million people in the United States and over 6 billion worldwide.

    One third of those will fall ill. One hundred million here at home and two billion across the planet.

    Half of those individuals will qualify for hospitalization. Unfortunately, in a survey performed by the American Hospital Association in 2005, there are only 955,768 hospital beds in the United States, far short of the 50 million that would be needed. To make this situation work, at the peak of cold and flu season in 2005, only four percent of these hospital beds were available and unoccupied. That means that there will be fewer than 40,000 hospital beds available for this onslaught of 50 million patients.

    Of the 50 million patients who qualify for hospitalization, half or more will need ventilators. Dr. Michael Olsterholm in a New England Journal of Medicine article in 2004 found that there were only 105,000 ventilators in the United States. Of these, a high percentage were either already in use for chronic ventilator-dependent patients such as small children and spinal cord patients, or were out of service for cleaning and repair, leaving just over 16,000 ventilators available nationwide to help 25 million flu related ARDS victims breathe.

    Of the 25 million with ADRS, with or without ventilator care, half would be expected to die. This 12.5 million people will pass away in waves as pandemic influenza spread over a span of only 12 to 18 months.

    Now, admittedly, these are the most dire numbers. The pandemic flu could prove to be far less deadly, far less contagious. On the other hand, H5N1 has already proven to be a formidable foe with death rates initially greater than 70 percent and now still hovering around 50 percent.

    The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) have given optimistic sounding percentages but as the old adage goes, the "devil is in the details". Let's look at the percentages and the details.

    * One third of 100 percent is 33 percent.
    * This is the “attack rate”.
    * Half of 33 percent is 16.5 percent.
    * This is the number of people who qualify for hospitalization, but the CDC knows that in the event of a pandemic, only the most sick will actually be placed in the hospital. Clearly the most sick will be those with ARDS.
    * Half of 16.5 percent is 8.25 percent.
    * These are the sickest of the sick, those with ARDS. Rounded off, this is 8 percent, the number that the CDC says to expect for hospitalization.
    * Half of 8 percent is 4 percent.
    * This is the expected death rate predicted by the CDC.


    The “devil in the details” is that these percentages are based on "the total population." Physicians, medical planners, and other pundits usually discuss percentages based on "those with the flu". We are not talking about “those with the flu” we are talking about a number three times that size.

    USA Today showed us how two third world countries are struggling and in some cases failing to deal with the crushing weight of a comparatively small outbreak of avian flu (H5N1). In Indonesia, the efforts are crippled at best. In Vietnam, the efforts are being met with greater success, but the disease rages on. The industrialized world relies on the fact that its health care is unmatched. The United States likes to believe that US health care exceeds all other. The numbers show that when this disease strikes the whole world is at peril.

    What are the answers? As with any impending disaster, the answers lie in preparation, p

    Making Money on the Web: The Truth Revealed
    I am an avid internet user; I love the fact that there is information on almost any topic that you could think of at the tips of your fingers. Through my journeys on the information highway, I have several times come across “Make money on the internet!” “Free and easy program, make over $2100 a day”. They trickled in slowly, but lately I have noticed them more and more. Ads, banners, and junk e-mail as far as the eye can see filled with promises of making huge amounts of money, working part time hours from home.So what is the truth? What is a scam and what is legitimate work that you can make real money with? Through some countless hours I have found some answers and insight into making money on line.
    sing.

    Of those hospitals and infirmaries, half suffer extreme respiratory difficulties as their lungs filled with fluid and blood, the result of their own bodies' counterattack on the viral invasion. Coughing and frothing at the mouth, occasionally spitting up blood, these individuals would have a disease that today’s medical professionals call ARDS, Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome. In the modern medical age, these patients would have a plastic tube placed into their lungs to assist their breathing and a ventilator would force air in and out of their lungs. Half of the ARDS patients 1918 died.

    But it's not percentages, but real numbers that portend the severity of this disease. There are over 300 million people in the United States and over 6 billion worldwide.

    One third of those will fall ill. One hundred million here at home and two billion across the planet.

    Half of those individuals will qualify for hospitalization. Unfortunately, in a survey performed by the American Hospital Association in 2005, there are only 955,768 hospital beds in the United States, far short of the 50 million that would be needed. To make this situation work, at the peak of cold and flu season in 2005, only four percent of these hospital beds were available and unoccupied. That means that there will be fewer than 40,000 hospital beds available for this onslaught of 50 million patients.

    Of the 50 million patients who qualify for hospitalization, half or more will need ventilators. Dr. Michael Olsterholm in a New England Journal of Medicine article in 2004 found that there were only 105,000 ventilators in the United States. Of these, a high percentage were either already in use for chronic ventilator-dependent patients such as small children and spinal cord patients, or were out of service for cleaning and repair, leaving just over 16,000 ventilators available nationwide to help 25 million flu related ARDS victims breathe.

    Of the 25 million with ADRS, with or without ventilator care, half would be expected to die. This 12.5 million people will pass away in waves as pandemic influenza spread over a span of only 12 to 18 months.

    Now, admittedly, these are the most dire numbers. The pandemic flu could prove to be far less deadly, far less contagious. On the other hand, H5N1 has already proven to be a formidable foe with death rates initially greater than 70 percent and now still hovering around 50 percent.

    The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) have given optimistic sounding percentages but as the old adage goes, the "devil is in the details". Let's look at the percentages and the details.

    * One third of 100 percent is 33 percent.
    * This is the “attack rate”.
    * Half of 33 percent is 16.5 percent.
    * This is the number of people who qualify for hospitalization, but the CDC knows that in the event of a pandemic, only the most sick will actually be placed in the hospital. Clearly the most sick will be those with ARDS.
    * Half of 16.5 percent is 8.25 percent.
    * These are the sickest of the sick, those with ARDS. Rounded off, this is 8 percent, the number that the CDC says to expect for hospitalization.
    * Half of 8 percent is 4 percent.
    * This is the expected death rate predicted by the CDC.


    The “devil in the details” is that these percentages are based on "the total population." Physicians, medical planners, and other pundits usually discuss percentages based on "those with the flu". We are not talking about “those with the flu” we are talking about a number three times that size.

    USA Today showed us how two third world countries are struggling and in some cases failing to deal with the crushing weight of a comparatively small outbreak of avian flu (H5N1). In Indonesia, the efforts are crippled at best. In Vietnam, the efforts are being met with greater success, but the disease rages on. The industrialized world relies on the fact that its health care is unmatched. The United States likes to believe that US health care exceeds all other. The numbers show that when this disease strikes the whole world is at peril.

    What are the answers? As with any impending disaster, the answers lie in preparation, p

    Case Study; Cleaning of Rental Car Agencies as a Mobile Carwash Market Niche
    Many mobile car wash companies are a little wet behind the ears when they start and they have trouble choosing target clients to propel their business. We have found that there is significant market potential in used car lots. The best used car lots are those of Rent-A-Car Agencies who own used dealership divisions to maximize their profits on selling of their cars.In previous times the Rent-A-Car Agencies sent the cars to auctions, yet this is not a good idea any longer with used car prices so low. For the first time in 2001 Avis started a used car lot in New Jersey to maximize their profits on sales of cars coming off the rental lines. It used to be considered dumb for a consumer to buy used and abuse
    ospital beds in the United States, far short of the 50 million that would be needed. To make this situation work, at the peak of cold and flu season in 2005, only four percent of these hospital beds were available and unoccupied. That means that there will be fewer than 40,000 hospital beds available for this onslaught of 50 million patients.

    Of the 50 million patients who qualify for hospitalization, half or more will need ventilators. Dr. Michael Olsterholm in a New England Journal of Medicine article in 2004 found that there were only 105,000 ventilators in the United States. Of these, a high percentage were either already in use for chronic ventilator-dependent patients such as small children and spinal cord patients, or were out of service for cleaning and repair, leaving just over 16,000 ventilators available nationwide to help 25 million flu related ARDS victims breathe.

    Of the 25 million with ADRS, with or without ventilator care, half would be expected to die. This 12.5 million people will pass away in waves as pandemic influenza spread over a span of only 12 to 18 months.

    Now, admittedly, these are the most dire numbers. The pandemic flu could prove to be far less deadly, far less contagious. On the other hand, H5N1 has already proven to be a formidable foe with death rates initially greater than 70 percent and now still hovering around 50 percent.

    The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) have given optimistic sounding percentages but as the old adage goes, the "devil is in the details". Let's look at the percentages and the details.

    * One third of 100 percent is 33 percent.
    * This is the “attack rate”.
    * Half of 33 percent is 16.5 percent.
    * This is the number of people who qualify for hospitalization, but the CDC knows that in the event of a pandemic, only the most sick will actually be placed in the hospital. Clearly the most sick will be those with ARDS.
    * Half of 16.5 percent is 8.25 percent.
    * These are the sickest of the sick, those with ARDS. Rounded off, this is 8 percent, the number that the CDC says to expect for hospitalization.
    * Half of 8 percent is 4 percent.
    * This is the expected death rate predicted by the CDC.


    The “devil in the details” is that these percentages are based on "the total population." Physicians, medical planners, and other pundits usually discuss percentages based on "those with the flu". We are not talking about “those with the flu” we are talking about a number three times that size.

    USA Today showed us how two third world countries are struggling and in some cases failing to deal with the crushing weight of a comparatively small outbreak of avian flu (H5N1). In Indonesia, the efforts are crippled at best. In Vietnam, the efforts are being met with greater success, but the disease rages on. The industrialized world relies on the fact that its health care is unmatched. The United States likes to believe that US health care exceeds all other. The numbers show that when this disease strikes the whole world is at peril.

    What are the answers? As with any impending disaster, the answers lie in preparation, p

    Entrepreneurs - What Can You Learn From Dolly Parton?
    Dolly Parton is an extremely well known and very recognizable business women. She has built an international multi dollar business from her great singing voice. What can we learn from the way she does business?Well let's have a look at the Dolly Parton Dinner Show experience and my visit there one Christmas.First of all thought that it was a little expensive, but had been before so I knew what great value it was. When I entered the massive building I was immediately immersed in the Dolly Parton experience and funneled through to get my photo taken. No mention that it would cost me $10 to buy the photo (no sale by the way!).The funnel then took us through the gift shop into the saloon where
    ead over a span of only 12 to 18 months.

    Now, admittedly, these are the most dire numbers. The pandemic flu could prove to be far less deadly, far less contagious. On the other hand, H5N1 has already proven to be a formidable foe with death rates initially greater than 70 percent and now still hovering around 50 percent.

    The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) have given optimistic sounding percentages but as the old adage goes, the "devil is in the details". Let's look at the percentages and the details.

    * One third of 100 percent is 33 percent.
    * This is the “attack rate”.
    * Half of 33 percent is 16.5 percent.
    * This is the number of people who qualify for hospitalization, but the CDC knows that in the event of a pandemic, only the most sick will actually be placed in the hospital. Clearly the most sick will be those with ARDS.
    * Half of 16.5 percent is 8.25 percent.
    * These are the sickest of the sick, those with ARDS. Rounded off, this is 8 percent, the number that the CDC says to expect for hospitalization.
    * Half of 8 percent is 4 percent.
    * This is the expected death rate predicted by the CDC.


    The “devil in the details” is that these percentages are based on "the total population." Physicians, medical planners, and other pundits usually discuss percentages based on "those with the flu". We are not talking about “those with the flu” we are talking about a number three times that size.

    USA Today showed us how two third world countries are struggling and in some cases failing to deal with the crushing weight of a comparatively small outbreak of avian flu (H5N1). In Indonesia, the efforts are crippled at best. In Vietnam, the efforts are being met with greater success, but the disease rages on. The industrialized world relies on the fact that its health care is unmatched. The United States likes to believe that US health care exceeds all other. The numbers show that when this disease strikes the whole world is at peril.

    What are the answers? As with any impending disaster, the answers lie in preparation, p

    Obstacles to Lasting Change
    Change is the key to our success and to our financial future. Often in our own lives, however, change is something we fiercely resist. We can only become who we want to become through change.In spite of knowing this, we still often wallow in our comfort zone. Even when achievement sits on our doorstep, we're still too comfortable to make an adjustment. The irony is that if you want anything to change in your life, the only place to begin is with yourself. You are the only one who can exert complete control over and alter your destiny. Most people wish for things to change, but instead of doing anything to make that change happen, they sit back hoping and waiting for luck
    alization.
    * Half of 8 percent is 4 percent.
    * This is the expected death rate predicted by the CDC.


    The “devil in the details” is that these percentages are based on "the total population." Physicians, medical planners, and other pundits usually discuss percentages based on "those with the flu". We are not talking about “those with the flu” we are talking about a number three times that size.

    USA Today showed us how two third world countries are struggling and in some cases failing to deal with the crushing weight of a comparatively small outbreak of avian flu (H5N1). In Indonesia, the efforts are crippled at best. In Vietnam, the efforts are being met with greater success, but the disease rages on. The industrialized world relies on the fact that its health care is unmatched. The United States likes to believe that US health care exceeds all other. The numbers show that when this disease strikes the whole world is at peril.

    What are the answers? As with any impending disaster, the answers lie in preparation, planning, and practice; Repeated, Relentless, and Rigorous practice. It is the responsibility not just of government but of private health care institutions, hospitals, health care professionals, businesses, corporations, and yes, even individuals, to prepare now for the worst while hoping for a reprieve. We can no longer afford to prepare for the best and then stand awestruck when the worst occurs.

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