International Trade is something that affects every individual in every country, daily Whatareproblemswithinternational trade? 1. Distance 2. Different languages 3. Difficult in transportation and communication 4. Risk in transit 5. Lack of information about foreign businessmen 6. Import and export restriction 7. Documentation 8. Study of foreign markets 9. Frequent market changes 10. Investment for long period 12. Intense competition
Why is international trade an issue? Trade issues dominate and continue of the international trade like the global market, sweatshops, child labor, trade deficits, the euro, sanctions, tariffs, embargoes. If international trade doesn't exist, then many countries might take that reason to anticipate each others. People'll live in poor life ( not develop).
Some important benefits of International Trade
1.Enhances the domestic competitiveness
2.Takes advantage of international trade technology
3.Increase sales and profits
4.Extend sales potential of the existing products
5.Maintain cost competitiveness in your domestic market
6.Enhance potential for expansion of your business
7.Gains a global market share
8.Reduce dependence on existing markets
9.Stabilize seasonal market fluctuations
Some bad part of International Trade
1.Lost jobs
2.Reduced Wages
3.Higher Foreign Debt
3.Rising Global Poverty
I think that no solutions for trade imbalances, competitive advantages, embargoes and tariffs.
A health system, also sometimes referred to as health care system or healthcare system, is the organization of people, institutions, and resources that deliver health care services to meet the health needs of target populations. On the world , there are four kinds of health care systems:
- Beveridge Model : government pay for it - single-payer model.
- Bismarck Model : company pay for it - multi-payer model.
- National Health Insurance Model : low prices - both private-sector providers and government-run insurance.
- Out-of-Pocket Model : people pay by themselves. This is some solutions for health care :
1. Enhance physicians’ ability to provide high-quality patient care. Poor design gets in the way of face-to-face interaction with patients because physicians are forced to spend more time documenting required information of questionable value. Features such as pop-up reminders, cumbersome menus and poor user interfaces can make far more time consuming than paper charts.
2. Support team-based care. Current technology often requires physicians to enter data or perform tasks that other team members should be empowered to complete. Systems instead should be designed to maximize each person’s productivity in accordance with state licensure laws and allow physicians to delegate tasks as appropriate.
3. Promote care coordination. Transitioning patient care can be a challenge without full interoperability and robust tracking. Systems need to automatically track referrals, consultations, orders and labs so physicians easily can follow the patient’s progression throughout their care.
4. Offer product modularity and configurability. Few systems are built to accommodate physicians’ practice patterns and work flows, which vary depending on size, specialty and setting. Making systems more modular would allow physicians to configure their health IT environment to best suit their work flows and patient populations. Allowing vendors to focus on specialized applications also would produce the tailored technology physicians need.
5. Reduce cognitive work load. Although physicians spend significant time navigating their systems, many physicians say that the quality of the clinical narrative in paper charts is more succinct and reflective of the pertinent clinical information. A lack of context and overly structured data capture requirements, meanwhile, can make interpretation difficult.
6. Promote interoperability and data exchange. Data “lock in” is a common problem. Systems should facilitate connected health care across care settings and enable both exporting data and properly incorporating data from other systems. The end result should be a coherent longitudinal patient record that is built from various sources and can be accessed in real time.
7. Facilitate digital patient engagement. Most systems are not designed to support digital patient engagement. But incorporating increased interoperability between systems and patients’ mobile technologies and tele health technologies would be an asset for promoting health and wellness and managing chronic illnesses.
8. Expedite user input into product design and post-implementation feedback. The meaningful use program requires physicians to use certified technology, but many of these products have performed poorly in real-world practice settings. Systems should give users an automated option to provide context-sensitive feedback that is used to improve system performance and safety.
Why are drugs a social problem? I think drugs are a social problem because when we use that we can not escape. No one can handle them, maybe they want to die,injure and cause harm to another people. So I think surely drugs break our lives.
Cocaine and Crack - Coke, Charlie, White, Snow, Sniff, White Lady
Cocaine is bought as a white powder. It is normally sniffed but can be prepared for injection. Crack comes in the form of 'small rocks' and can be smoked and injected. Read our article on how to talk to teens about drugs.
Effects - users feel confident and strong.
Problems - users become dependent on the drug and find themselves running into crime and violence due to the high price of it.
The law - Class A drugs possession means up to seven years in prison and a fine supplying can mean life imprisonment and a fine
Heroin - Smack, Junk, H, Brown, Gear, Skag
Comes as a white, greyish or brown powder. Often smoked it can also be injected or sniffed.
Effects - reduces physical and emotional pain and gives warm, drowsy feeling to allow users to forget their problems.
Problems - First time users are usually sick and it can take weeks/months to become 'hooked'. Overdosing on heroin is a major risk as street heroin is mixed with other substances. Overdose can mean falling into a coma or even death. Withdrawal symptoms can mean flu-like symptoms - sweating, shaking.
The law - Class A drug possession means up to seven years in prison plus a fine supplying can mean life imprisonment and a fine
LSD - Acid, Tabs, Trips
Sold as small squares of paper with cartoon designs. These are swallowed and take up to half an hour to have an effect. A trip can last for as long as 12 hours.
Effects - drug changes the way that users see and hear things. There is heightened self-awareness and users can hallucinate.
Problems - 'bad trips' can be frightening. Users might feel anxious and accidents can occur when users are not in control of their faculties.
The law - Khat is now controlled as a Class C drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act.
Tobacco - Ciggies, Fags, Tabs
5% of thirteen year olds smoke a cigarette or more a week. Around 1/3 of older teenagers smoke on average more than 10 cigarettes a day.
Effects - first time smokers often feel sick and dizzy. One or two cigarettes increase pulse rate and blood pressure.
Problems - users quickly become physically dependant on cigarettes. Long-term smoking can result in heart disease, blood clots, heart attacks and lung infections.
The law - selling any tobacco products to anyone under 18 is illegal.
Solutions
-Government should have more organization to make people understand more about the bad side of drugs.
-The law should have rule stricter for drugs.
- We should support parents to educated their children about drugs when they was a child.
Link : http://www.familylives.org.uk/advice/teenagers/drugs-alcohol/a-z-guide-to-common-drugs/