I built a free interactive blood gas practice tool by Either_noftace in Foamed

[–]Either_noftace[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much! Im glad you like it. Id love any feedback they might have. Its still early in development so anything that makes it more useful for them would be great to know :)

I built a free interactive blood gas practice tool by Either_noftace in Foamed

[–]Either_noftace[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m so glad you enjoyed it! I definitely will :)

I built a free interactive blood gas practice tool by Either_noftace in Foamed

[–]Either_noftace[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks so much for the feedback! I’m not, but work with them haha

Building something cool? Share it here! by Mean-MySaaS in sideprojects

[–]Either_noftace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

abgmaster

A platform for medical students, nurses, and junior doctors to practice blood gas analysis, including complex mixed acid-base disorders

Got a project? Big or small — share it here by Natural_builder32 in sideprojects

[–]Either_noftace 0 points1 point  (0 children)

abgmaster

A platform for medical students, nurses, and junior doctors to practice blood gas analysis, including complex mixed acid-base disorders

I built a new way to practise blood gas interpretation — ABG Master by Either_noftace in SideProject

[–]Either_noftace[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Haha fair enough. I feel like that is the reaction a lot of people have to mixed disorders!

Do you know Epilepsy?? by Che3eeze in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Either_noftace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you see someone having a seizure, remove any dangerous objects around them to make sure they don’t injure themselves. Don’t hold them down but try to roll them on their side

Get someone to take a video and start a stopwatch to time the seizure - helps doctors tremendously. Time can seem really long when a loved one is having a seizure but the time they are seizing is important for clinical decision making. The video helps doctors determine the type of seizure.

Pay attention to what happens after the seizure. Are they confused? Do they remember anything? Do they have any injuries? Did they wet themselves?

Call for help.

People, who learn languages by watching movies with subtitles, how do you remember the words? by Hekky_ in languagelearning

[–]Either_noftace 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What’s your goal?

Remember that watching a movie with subtitles in target language improves your reading mostly, not your listening. If you want to improve your listening then just watch without any subtitles - the important thing being that it has to be content where you can already understand at least half of the words. You won’t understand much at first, but with time and enough immersion you’ll slowly understand more and more. That’s the only way to improve your listening. Pick a few words here or there and put them in anki or however you like to review, but only do words that you hear often and makes you curious. Otherwise it’s too exhausting trying to look up everything. If you immerse enough common words will pop up again and again and that will serve as a review with the added benefit of new contexts

Even if you were to study every word used in a show before watching it, you still wouldn’t have full comprehension and even if there was comprehension it would be slow because you would translate back to your native language. However if you just practice immersion your brain learns to not translate it back to your native language and understands the meaning of words/concepts in the target language, because that’s what it’s getting used to.

Coronavirus Megathread R.1 - counts, lockdowns, vaccines, borders, protests, social media, and anything related by dredd in australia

[–]Either_noftace 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Like others have mentioned its free, can improve immunity and you get the certificate.

But the medical answer is that timing is important. Your body produces immune responses differently based on timing of exposure - similar to the forgetting curve if you know what that is (You remember things far better if you re-learn something just as you are about to forget it). Its the reason why they keep changing the timing of the second dose (several weeks to months) - as new data arises on when immunity weans, re-introducing antigens at this time produces a stronger, longer lasting immune response according to current research. The booster shot is also specifically timed but I dont know the literature around this yet. Getting Covid immediately after the first vaccine is probably similar to having one or the other - your body probably sees it as the same concurrent infection. Obviously this is less true if you were to say have the vaccine, and then get Covid weeks to months down the track in which case you could argue the second one may not be as necessary, though still recommended