122,390 research outputs found
The Role of Cook-Chill and Cook-Freeze Methods as Indicators of Quality of Nutrition Services in Hospital
An outbreak of COVID-19 cases among food and nutrition department employees at a hospital kitchen occurred because it was difficult to maintain physical spacing between staff. There is a lack of people during self-isolation. However, the kitchen hospital must still operate 24 hours to provide meals. This study aimed to comprehensively evaluate plate waste, and patient satisfaction, associated with cook-serve methods compared to cook-chill and cook-freeze methods. The first stage of this study is to determine nutritionally appropriate, microbiologically safe foods stored after the cook-chill and cook-freeze process and customer preferences through sensory aspects using CATA. The menu that has been chosen is three protein dishes and one vegetable dish. The second stage was an experimental study conducted in a general ward at an Indonesian private hospital. Two hundred ten patients (expected admittance ≥ two days) were served meals from cook-serve, cook-chill, and cook-freeze. Patients\u27 satisfaction and food waste were measured. Intake at mealtimes was assessed through a visible portion size assessment method. Conclusion: The results show no significant difference in satisfaction and food waste in hospitalized patients between cook-serve and cook-c, hill, and cook-freeze methods for protein dishes and a significant difference for vegetable dishes. Cook-chill and cook-freeze potential to be implemented in a hospital kitchen
Maktabat Al Muthanna Baghdad Feb-May 1962
On the same date, Ali Al-Mansouri issued an official financial statement confirming that the Al-Khanji Foundation owed a total of 11.375.أصدر علي المنصوري بيانًا ماليًا رسميًا بتاريخ 25 نيسان 1962 يُفيد بأن مؤسسة الخانجي مدينة بمبلغ إجمالي قدره 11,375
CLSM method for the dynamic observation of pH change within polymer matrices for oral delivery
RRS James Cook Cruise JC064, 10 Sep - 09 Oct 2011. RAPID moorings cruise report
This cruise report covers scientific operations conducted during RRS James Cook Cruise JC064. Cruise JC064, departed from Falmouth on Thursday 1st September 2011 arriving Santa Cruz de Tenerife Saturday 10th September to pick up extra members of the scientific party and arriving again in Santa Cruz on the 9th October. The purpose of the cruise was the refurbishment of an array of moorings on the mid-Atlantic Ridge and off the Moroccan Coast at a nominal latitude of 26.5°N. The moorings are part of a purposeful Atlantic wide mooring array for monitoring the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation and Heat Flux. The array is a joint UK/US programme and is known as the RAPID-WATCH/MOCHA array. Information and data from the project can be found on the web site hosted by the National Oceanography Centre Southampton http://www.noc.soton.ac.uk/rapidmoc and also from the British Oceanographic Data Centre http://www.bodc.ac.uk.
The array as deployed in 2011-2012 consists of a total of 17 moorings, 16 landers and a single inverted echo sounder. The moorings are primarily instrumented with self logging instruments measuring conductivity, temperature and pressure. Direct measurements of currents are made in the shallow and deep western boundary currents. The bottom landers are instrumented with bottom pressure recorders (also known as tide gauges), measuring the weight of water above the instrument.
The RAPID naming convention for moorings is Western Boundary (WB), Eastern Boundary (EB) and Mid‐Atlantic Ridge (MAR) indicating the general sub‐regions of the array. Numbering increments from west to east. An L in the name indicates a bottom lander, M indicates a mini‐mooring with only one instrument, H indicates a mooring on the continental slope. During JC064 we recovered: MAR0, MAR1L4, MAR1, MAR2, MAR3, MAR3L4, EB1, EB1L7, EBHi, EBH1, EBH1L7, EBH2, EBH3, EBH4, EBP2, EBH5, EBM5. We did not recover EBM1, EBM4, EBM6, EBH1 and MAR3. We deployed: MAR0, MAR1L7, MAR1, MAR2, MAR3, MAR3L6, EB1, EB1L7, EBHi, EBH1, EBH1L8, EBH2, EBH3, EBH4, EBP2, EBH5. A sediment trap mooring NOGST was also recovered and redeployed for the Ocean Biogeochemistry and Ecosystems Group at the NOCS.
CTD stations were conducted at convenient times throughout the cruise for purposes of providing pre and post deployment calibrations for mooring instrumentation and for testing mooring releases prior to deployment.
Shipboard underway measurements were systematically logged, processed and calibrated, including: waves (spectra of energy and significant wave height), surface meteorology (air pressure, temperature, wind speed and direction and radiation (total incident and photosynthetically active), 6m‐depth sea temperatures and salinities, water depth, navigation (differential GPS measurements feeding two independent and different receivers, heading, pitch and roll, gyro heading and ships speed relative to the water using an electromagnetic log). Water velocity profiles from 15m to approximately 800m/300m depth were obtained using a ship mounted 75/150 kHz acoustic Doppler current profiler. Seawater samples from CTD stations and of the sea-surface were obtained for calibration and analysed on a salinometer referencing these samples against standard sea water. For velocity data (wind and currents) measured relative to the ship considerable effort was made to obtain the best possible earth referenced velocities.
Seven APEX argo floats supplied by the Met Office were deployed at preassigned locations, filling gaps in the network
From 'follow the thing: papaya' to followthethings.com
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is freely available from Ethical Consumer Research Association via the link in this record.What follows is a reflection on ‘Follow the thing: papaya’ which was first published in 2004 in Antipode: a Radical Journal of Geography (Cook et al 2004). It takes the form of an interview about its making and reception, how the spoof shopping website followthethings.com emerged from this (Cook et al 2011-date), and the approach this work has taken to academic research and activism in relation to consumer ethics. I asked the questions
Qilādat al-jawāhir fī dhikr al-Ghawth al-Rifāʻī wa-atbāʻih al-akābir
A book on Sufism on the Rifa'i way, in which the author collects virtues, conditions, dignity, sayings, behavior, method, and the realizations of the truth of Sheikh Ahmed Muhyi al-Din Abu al-Abbas al-Kabeer al-Rifa'i. Furthermore, the user talked about the widespread support he receives from his followers and the key aspects of his method
A Visual Analysis of Meet … Captain Cook (2011) – a Modern Australian Picture Book
This article analyses how images and text have been used in the children’s picture book Meet … Captain Cook (2011) by using the Ideational, Interpersonal and Textual metafunctions developed by Clare Painter et al. (2013). The metafunctions operate simultaneously and are about something (ideational), enable communicative interaction with others (interpersonal), and make sense in relation to previous understandings (textual). An examination of the images and texts using this framework will facilitate an insight into how the author and illustrator of Meet … Captain Cook explore Cook and his legacy, notably his first encounter with the First Nations peoples of Australia, and how it contrasts with the historical record. The metafunctions developed by Painter reveal an often-precarious balancing of a long-standing and often uninterrogated respect for Cook and the colonial legacy of white possession and Indigenous dispossession
Baiba Kundrats nee Berzins father working in kitchen at Princess Patricia Mine
Baiba Berzins nee Kundrats at work as cook in Princess Patricia Mine4.0 LatvianImmigration into Canada, 4.1.9 Manditory one year employmen
Bharatalbia Cook 1967
Genus Bharatalbia Cook, 1967 Bharatalbia: Cook, 1974 a, pp. 363–364, figs. 1605–1612. Bharatalbia: Smith, 1991, pp. 487–496, figs. 31–41. Bharatalbia: Smith & Cook, 1991, p. 577. Bharatalbia: Smith et al., 2001, p. 613, figs. 378, 379. Bharatalbia: Smith et al., 2010, p. 554, figs. 15.379, 15.380. Diagnosis. Larva: Unknown. Adults (modified from Smith 1991): Idiosoma elliptical in shape. Dorsal and ventral shields separate from one another, with ventral shield extending well onto dorsal surface of idiosoma anteriorly and completely surrounding dorsal shield. Dorsal shield with surface reticulate or with an embossed appearance; ventral shield with surface coarsely reticulate and with rough, scaly edges. Dorsal shield bearing one pair of glandularia and lacking or bearing one pair of well-defined longitudinal ridges. Dorsal furrow bearing no glandularia, one pair of glandularia and one pair of setae on pair of anterolateral platelets, or two pairs of glandularia on two pairs of platelets, one anterolateral and other posterolateral. Fourth coxal plate bearing coxoglandularium II, and bearing large projection associated with opening for insertion of fourth leg. Ventral shield bearing one pair of glandularia in region posterior to fourth coxal plates. Genital field subterminal and bearing sixteen to twenty pairs of acetabula; excretory pore borne dorsally on ventral shield; acetabular plates fused with ventral shield in females. First leg of males with distal segments unmodified or slightly modified; third leg of males with tibia bearing or lacking a ventral projection; fourth leg of males with distal segments unmodified or slightly modified. Pedipalp with all segments, but especially femur and tibia, extremely slender and long; tibia lacking ventral projection and bearing two sessile, slender setae distoventrally. Type species. Bharatalbia sucirapalpis Cook. Species included. Bharatalbia (s. s.) sucirapalpis Cook (India), B. (Bharatalbiella) talinapalpis Cook (India), B. (Japonalbia) ibarakiensis Imamura (Japan), B. (J.) cooki Smith (western North America), B. (J.) ohitaensis Imamura (Japan), B. (J.) longipalpis Imamura (Japan), B. (J.) tsugaruensis Imamura (Japan), B. (J.) rotunda Imamura (Japan), B. (J.) surensis Smith (western North America). Distribution. Holarctic (India, Japan, western North America). Discussion. Cook (1974 a) and Smith (1991) considered Bharatalbia to be a distinct genus. Smith & Cook (1991) and Smith et al. (2001, 2010) followed this treatment, as we do here. See Smith (1991) for a discussion of the subgeneric classification of this genus.Published as part of Smith, Ian M., Cook, David R. & Gerecke, Reinhard, 2015, Revision of the status of some genus-level water mite taxa in the families Pionidae Thor, 1900, Aturidae Thor, 1900, and Nudomideopsidae Smith, 1990 (Acari: Hydrachnidiae), pp. 111-156 in Zootaxa 3919 (1) on page 132, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3919.1.6, http://zenodo.org/record/24458
Ash-Shuo'a" the UNDIVIDED by Imam Omar Bin Abdulaziz Al-Boukhary in the Hanafi School
This research treating a study and investigation of the book titled "Ash-Shuo'a" THE UNDIVIDED by Imam Omar Bin Abdulaziz Al-Boukhary in the Hanafi school. It contains an Introduction and two chapters, the introduction displays the reasons for choosing the research title, it's important, the previous studies, its objectives, its methodology and the abstract. The first chapter: the theoretical contains two themes. The first identify the author, the second identify the investigated book. The second chapter: the investigation which includes the methodology followed in the investigation of manuscript, the photos and the investigation of the book. Finally, I have showed the most important results and recommendations. Also, I mentioned the index of resources and references used in study and investigation
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