. Consider Flex-N-Gate, the manufacturer of bumpers for Toyota trucks, and a specific bumper, type A

. Consider Flex-N-Gate, the manufacturer of bumpers for Toyota trucks, and a specific bumper, type A, it manufactures. We wish to determine the number of Kanban between Shearing (cutting) and Blanking (punching) work centers. In order to reduce the no. of setups, Shearing starts cutting As after 3 Kanban are accumulated. A Kanban represents 20 bumpers. Demand for As in Blanking is 40 units per hour. a. Show that it takes approx. 1.5 hours for 3 Kanban to accumulate at Blanking. Suppose that setup time at Shearing is 15 minutes and production rate is 80 units per hour. Assuming safety factor of 100%, how many Kanban does Flex-N-Gate need between Shearing and Blanking for As? Assume that a batch of As is moved to Blanking as soon as it is produced in Shearing. b.

Week 3 discussion Dq1 Bond Valuation and Risk What are some of the most important risks associated..

Week 3 discussion
Dq1
Bond Valuation and Risk
What are some of the most important risks associated with bonds?
Dq2
In the News Class,
It’s important to me that we understand how the topics we discuss actually play out in the real world. As a professor, I want you to be able to see how your participation in this class increases your understanding of the complex business world and how your college experience is adding to your business acumen.
In this section, chose an article online that discusses this week’s topics (a Google search of any keyword will get you there). Share the link and summarize the article. Be sure to comment on two of your classmates’ articles to earn full credit.
 

232. Follow the requirement to finish 5pages(1250words) NewYork City Energy Case Study Project.

Follow the requirement to finish 5pages(1250words) NewYork City Energy Case Study Project.
The topic is:
Parks and Public Space and Energy.
Your project should be based on 2 reports which are uploaded onto dropbox:https://www.dropbox.com/sh/hboy46zr4dagge9/AADwvHK…
You must also find and read at least three outside sources of information that relate to the topic of your individually assigned PlaNYC Update of April 2011 chapter.
Please read all requirements very carefully.
All the work has to be 100 per cent ORIGINAL!! It is very necessary.
Any kind of plagiarism will not be accepted!

Using the CDC Risk communication resources provided in your required readings section.

Step 1. Go to the website and, under risk communication click on Emergency Preparedness and response.
Step 2. Read through the information on this page and then click on information on Specific Types of Emergencies.
Step 3. Next, browse through this information and click on Recent Outbreaks and accidents
Step 4. Under select a year click any from 2015 to the present
Step 5. Choose one of the recent outbreaks for your investigation.
In your paper
1. Identify the incident/outbreak you selected for which risk communication was essential
2.Describe the situation that occurred and provide some statistics to display the severity of the incident
3. What types of communication/procedures were used during this incident? Provide examples on the information that was disseminated and how it aided in resolving the situation

A Comprehensive Wellness Program for a Special Population: Obesity

Part I: Review special population

Determine the selected population you will be working with. Analyze current available research and complete an overview of the selected population. The following information must be included in the overview:
Describe your chosen group. Include details on this target population including statistics on the condition.
Analyze lifestyle factors that positively impact the special condition.
Analyze lifestyle factors that negatively impact the condition.
Explain one program that has been successful in supporting lifestyle factors that positively impact the special condition (i.e. Yoga classes for women who are pregnant or pulmonary rehabilitation classes for individuals with lung disease).

Part II: Apply skills

Counseling techniques

Explain how you would make personal contact with the client and develop a working alliance.

Health history

List the questions you would ask during the initial health history assessment.
Explain if this client needs clearance from a medical doctor.

Exercise

Describe what initial assessments you would complete on the client and explain your rationale for selecting these assessments.
Explain any risks of exercise for your client.
Identify two safety tips and guidelines the client should follow due to his or her condition.
Choose one of the following components of exercise: cardiovascular, muscular strength, muscular endurance, or flexibility and create a plan for your client. Use a chart to show initial assessment and a second chart to show progression.
Suggest two motivational strategies you could use with this client.
Explain how you would evaluate your client’s progress.

Stress Management

Explain how you would assess the stress level of your client.
Assume your client requires stress management. Describe two techniques you would suggest your client try.
Explain when and how you would determine this stress management technique is being effective or not.

Dietary Guidelines

Describe how you would assess your client’s dietary patterns.
Suggest dietary guidelines for your client based on current recommendations for his or her special condition. Provide detail such as caloric intake and serving sizes.
Elaborate on how you would evaluate your client’s progress with his or her dietary plan.

Cultural Competence

Assume the client has a different cultural background than your own. How would you employ cultural competence in working with this individual?

Psychological considerations

Explain two psychological methods or principles that may help the special population manage and/or cope with illness or current health status

6 scholorly resorces

Strategic Planning Framework Evidence Collection Table

Continue working with the case described in week 3. Prepare a table (freestyle) addressing the following:
1. Identify what information and evidence you have to apply to the strategic process steps.
2. Identify appropriate evidence you still need to correctly use the strategic planning process. (HINT: make sure to list all types of evidence you need)
3. Identify the sources of the needed evidence. Offer the stakeholders able to provide you with the evidence you are seeking.

Positioning and Differentiation Review | Nursing School Essays

Choose two existing health care organizations or companies in the same discipline, such as hospital-hospital, insurance company-insurance company, med spa-med spa, and so forth.
Compare each organization’s positioning and differentiation strategies in a 1,400- to 1,750-word review.
*******Please be detailed in the Positioning and Differentiation**********

Click the Assignment Files tab to submit your assignment.

Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology Wing Structure Assembly Design Project

Wing assembly (6/8 Marks): Generate the new wing structure assembly based on the assembly drawing attached (i.e.: WSA-A001_Wing_Structure_Assembly).

– Students must generate full wing assembly using the combination of the parts they created and the parts provided with this assignment (i.e. Rear Wing Channel, MiddleRib 1 and Rear Rib)
– All components must be fully constrained (i.e. Block 6 DOF).
– Save the assembly file as WSA-YourStudentID.3dxml.

Complete assembly (2/8 Marks): Create the new full assembly of the T240 based on theassembly drawing attached (i.e.: CA-A001_Complete_T240_Assembly

– The wing structure must be added as a sub-assembly.
– The left wing must be created using assembly features tools in assembly designworkbench.
– The provided CAD components (i.e.; fuselage, stabilizer, etc.) must be re-dimensioned to your scale factor prior to the assembly.
– All components must be fully constrained (i.e. Block 6 DOF).
– Save the assembly file as CA-YourStudentID.3dxml.3. Free Design (2 Marks)

Free Design: Modify the T-240 aircraft structure to demonstrate how you would perceive the new metal wing to be attached. Schematically describe the assembly/disassembly steps for the components added to this stage. Save the file as FD- YourStudentID.pdf.
Note: A tension strut brace must be included.
I will upload the rest of the attachments.
17 hours ago

Using the following Web sites, additional sites listed on the links page for Chapter 3, or a general

Internet Activity: Locating Information on Professional Help for Psychological ProblemsUsing the following Web sites, additional sites listed on the links page for Chapter 3, or a general Web search, find out more about the different types of professional help available for psychological problems and about how to identify when such help may be needed.
General Sites
American Association of Suicidology 
APA Consumer Help Center
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) 
Psych Central: Dr. John Grohol’s Mental Health Page 
Student Counseling Virtual Pamphlet Collection   
National Associations of Mental Health Professionals
American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy 
American Psychiatric Association
American Psychiatric Nurses Association 
American Psychoanalytic Association
American Psychological Association
First, list five potential signs of serious psychological problems that may indicate the need for professional help:
Site(s) visited (URL):
Signs/symptoms (list at least five):
Next, choose one type of mental health professional and briefly describe their training and scope of treatment. Also describe how an individual could locate such a professional (for example, local or national association, physician referral, and so on). 
Site(s) visited (URL):
Type of mental health professional:
Training/treatment:
How to locate:
For more on identifying symptoms of a serious mental disorder, read the story of David.
David: A True Story
When a person begins to act strangely in public or with friends or family, others rarely agree about what the behavior means. Opinions vary, based on levels of education and conflicting viewpoints. Conflicts between the models of psychological health are not just theoretical but have practical results, as this case history illustrates. Only the subject’s name and a few details have been changed to maintain confidentiality.
  David was a 20-year-old junior at a large, competitive university, majoring in humanities. He had been the best all-around student in his high school class. The high school principal remembered him as brilliant and caring. In college, David maintained an outstanding academic record. Students in his dorm said he was cheerful, outgoing, and “laid back.” For six months he had been attending meditation classes, had become a vegetarian, and had started to jog daily. He avoided all drugs, including alcohol. Shortly before spring vacation, he told a friend he had been hearing voices and seeing “real” visions. He was convinced that the end of the world—the “Last Judgment”—was coming. He talked of taking his own life because he felt unworthy, and said that his death would help humanity. In contrast to his usual cheerfulness, he became withdrawn and isolated. The worried friend called David’s father, who lived far away. The father talked to his son several times by phone and arranged to fly up to see him in a week. The day before they were to meet, David jumped off a high bridge and drowned.
  How did different people make sense of what happened? In his father’s opinion, David’s suicide was a result of spiritual striving—a deep interest in Eastern religions—combined with a drive for perfection in everything he attempted. According to his father, David was totally committed in life and in death. The problem his son had faced was trying to live simultaneously in both a world of reality and a world devoted to spirituality.
  His friend took a medical point of view. He thought David’s visions and voices sounded like signs of schizophrenia. The father agreed only partially. From his phone conversations, he felt something had temporarily snapped in David’s mind. Perhaps a biochemical change had altered his mental state. But during the last phone call, the day before the suicide, his son seemed to have become completely lucid and calm again. David assured him he was OK now, that his father could stop worrying. They would see each other soon. His father found consolation in the thought that his son had found a kind of peace at the end. Yet to many who knew David, the story was only a tragedy—a talented, kind young person with most of his life in front of him died before the seriousness of his problems was recognized and treatment could begin.
  There is often a temptation to lay blame in cases such as David’s. Was his father spiritualizing a schizophrenic disorder? Of all people, the father, who had known his son for all of his 20 years, should have recognized that something was wrong. But his father lived far away and was empathetically supporting his son’s spiritual quest. Religious impulses and spiritual crises are usually not signs of mental illness; they can have positive outcomes. And why didn’t his friend intervene more actively? He could have contacted a dean, faculty member, or someone at the student health service and insisted that someone in authority step in. Perhaps his respect for David made him hesitate. David might have felt betrayed if he had been hospitalized. And what kind of university was it, where a student could become so troubled yet so few people notice it? But many large universities do not watch students very closely, because they believe students should be treated as adults, with a right to privacy and to living with few rules. Troubled students often keep to themselves; not allowing them to do so would be forcing them to conform.
  Thus, we cannot convincingly lay blame, but we can hope that in the future, better informed students, parents, and college administrators will be more sensitive to warning signs like the ones in this case: hearing voices and seeing visions, a major and sudden change in personality, suicidal thoughts, and the ominous false calm that can follow a firm decision to commit suicide.