Saturday, December 01, 2007

Beer trouble

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Thought of the day

clipped from www.city-data.com
Handle every situation like a dog.





If you can't Eat it or Chew it.



Pee on it and Walk Away.








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Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Windows bugs

Hey guys, I got this in an email today and thought it was interesting, so do try it out yourself and see what happens. And enjoy! :)

Magic #1
It was discovered that nobody can create a FOLDER
anywhere on the computer which can be named as “CON”.
This is something pretty cool…and unbelievable. ..
At Microsoft the whole Team, couldn’t answer why this
happened!
TRY IT NOW ,IT WILL NOT CREATE ” CON ” FOLDER

MAGIC #2(this one is the best out of the three)

For those of you using Windows, do the following:

1.) Open an empty notepad file
2.) Type “Bush hid the facts” (without the quotes)
3.) Save it as whatever you want.
4.) Close it, and re-open it.

Is it just a really weird bug? Confused?

MAGIC #3

This is something pretty cool and neat…and
unbelievable. .. At Microsoft the whole Team,
including Bill Gates, couldn’t answer why this
happened! It was discovered by a Brazilian. Try it out
yourself…

Open Microsoft Word and type
=rand (200, 99)
And then press ENTER.

Monday, June 18, 2007

NORMAL LABS

http://www.mtworld.com/tools_resources/lab_values.html

WHO Causality Classification

WHO Causality Classification
Term Definition Source

Certain A clinical event, including laboratory test abnormality, occurring in a plausible time relationship to drug administration, and which cannot be explained by concurrent disease or other drugs or chemicals. The response to withdrawal of the drug (dechallenge) should be clinically plausible. The event must be definitive pharmacologically or phenomenologically, using a satisfactory rechallenge procedure if necessary. WHO letter ref.: M1O/372/2 (A) (1991)
Probable A clinical event, including laboratory test abnormality, with a reasonable time sequence to administration of the drug, unlikely to be attributed to concurrent disease or other drugs or chemicals, and which follows a clinically reasonable response on withdrawal (dechallenge). Rechallenge information is not required to fulfill this definition.
Possible A clinical event, including laboratory test abnormality, with a reasonable time sequence to administration of the drug but which could also be explained by concurrent disease or other drugs or chemicals. Information on drug withdrawal may be lacking or unclear.
Unlikely A clinical event, including laboratory test abnormality, with a temporal relationship to drug administration which makes a casual relationship improbable, and in which other drugs, chemicals or underlying disease provide plausible explanations. Would be not reportable
Not Related Any reaction that does not meet the criteria above. Add on . Not reportable

Smoking


Causality

Causality reportable

Verbatim causality by To be entered
Health professional


Related - Certainly

Likely - Probable

Very likely - Probable

Dubious - Possible

Cannot be excluded - Possible

Unknown - Unable to determine

Remote - Not likely

Doubtful - Not likely

Excluded - Not related

Naranjo Algorithm

The Naranjo algorithm can be used to assess the liklihood that a change in clinical status is the result of an ADR rather than the result of other factors such as progression of disease. Answer each of the ten items in the assessment and enter the value of the answer in the column labelled Score. Sum the scores of the ten items to determine the total score, and apply the interpretation rules that appear at the bottom of the page.

Interpretation of the Total Score

Total scores of 9 or more mean that an ADR is highly probable.
Scores from 5 to 8 mean that an ADR is probable.
Scores from 1 to 4 that an ADR is possible.
Scores of zero or less mean that an ADR is doubtful.