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Healthcare Solutions Case Manager, Patricia Angus, Wins A Case In Point Platinum Award

02:21 in Presse & PR von OPEL eTuning


Atlanta, GA (PRWEB) May 15, 2013

Healthcare Solutions, the parent company of Cypress Care, ScripNet and Procura Management, today announced that Patricia Angus, RN, BSN, MS, CRC, medical case manager, received the Case In Point Platinum Award from Dorland Health in the workers compensation case manager category. Angus was honored for her exceptional service at the fourth annual Case In Point Platinum Awards luncheon on Tuesday, May 7, 2013. The Awards recognize the most successful and innovative programs and individuals working to improve healthcare across the care continuum.

Angus was recognized for her remarkable work in assisting injured workers in reaching their maximum potential and returning to gainful employment. She has been in case management for 14 years and is an integral part of Healthcare Solutions case management department. Angus draws on her in-depth experience in workers compensation disability and medical case management and takes a proactive approach to care coordination, patient advocacy and health care cost containment.

This prestigious award is a testament to Patricias dedication and leadership in the field of medical case management, said Tina Downey, senior vice president of managed care services for Healthcare Solutions. Her ongoing commitment to providing high-quality health care services and the positive outcomes she consistently achieves for injured workers and our customers is outstanding.

This is the companys third consecutive year being recognized by Dorland Health. Healthcare Solutions also received honorable mention for the companys Transitional Employment Program in the workers compensation case management category at the 2013 awards luncheon. In previous years, Healthcare Solutions received honorable mention for in the rehabilitation case management category for the companys Catastrophic Case Management Program and in the discharge planning category for the companys home healthcare program, Concierge Care. These programs work to reduce workers compensation costs and expedite the injured workers optimum recovery and return to work.

For more information, please contact Kellie Jackson at pr(at)healthcaresolutions(dot)com or 678.730.0452.

# # #

About Healthcare Solutions

Healthcare Solutions, Inc. is the parent company of Cypress Care, ScripNet and Procura Management. Through its subsidiary companies, Healthcare Solutions delivers integrated medical cost management solutions to over 750 customers in workers compensation and auto/PIP markets. The companys clinical- and technology-based services include pharmacy benefit management, specialty healthcare services, PPO networks, medical bill review, case management and Medicare Set-Aside services. With over 30% compounded annual growth rates, Healthcare Solutions has twice been recognized as one of the Fastest Growing companies in Georgia by Georgia Trends magazine and has received recognition by the Technology Association of Georgia for technology innovation. Utilizing market-leading technology, Healthcare Solutions delivers demonstrated benefits and savings complemented by deep industry expertise. For more information, please visit http://www.healthcaresolutions.com.

About Dorland Health

Dorland Health, a division of Access Intelligence LLC, is a leading healthcare publisher and media company providing education, training, tools, information resources, guidance and practical advice for practitioners and specialists in the healthcare field. Dorland Health services and products include the Case In Point Learning Network, Professional Patient Advocate Institute, Case In Point, Case In Point Weekly, OR Manager, Patient Advocate Report, industry-specific resource directories and reports, conferences and events, webinars, award programs and special reports. Dorland Health also offers continuing education credits.







Left-Hand Side of the “Seasons Greetings: Holiday Cards” Exhibit Case

09:09 in Tipps, Trends & Highlights von OPEL eTuning

Einige tolle german inventions Bilder:

Left-Hand Side of the “Seasons Greetings: Holiday Cards” Exhibit Case
german inventions
Bild von Special Collections Research Center, Swem Library
Shown here is a picture of the left-hand side of the "Seasons Greetings: Holiday Cards" exhibit case on display inside the front door on the 1st floor of Swem Library at the College of William and Mary. The exhibit features Christmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa cards from the late 19th century through the 1960s.

The following is from the labet text for the exhibit:

Christmas cards are modern inventions rooted in old traditions. Ancient Romans and medieval Europeans sent New Year’s greetings. By the early 1800s in both England and America, people used illustrated notepaper to send Christmas letters to distant loved ones and gave out New Year’s calling cards. The first Christmas card dates to 1843, when Englishman Henry Cole commissioned painter John Calcott Horsley to design one. By the 1860s, the development of color printing made Christmas cards readily available in England, and Americans eagerly imported them. A Boston-based lithographer, Louis Prang, in 1875 began printing and selling his own card. By 1882, he was printing five million Christmas cards annually. The growing popularity of Christmas cards resulted from the spread of free mail delivery and the invention of a traditional American Christmas in the late 1800s. Buffeted by industrialization and urbanization, threatened culturally by mass immigration from Europe, and distanced from loved ones by Americans’ geographic mobility, wealthy and middle-class Americans created a modern Christmas full of acts and rituals that harkened back to an imaginary simpler time.

Nineteenth-century Christmas cards rarely featured religious scenes. The early cards depicted flowers, trees, and birds. By the late 1800s, images grew more seasonal with greens such as ivy or holly; winter scenes such as a snow-covered church or ice skaters; or children sledding, playing with dolls, or engaged in similar activities.

By 1900, many Americans despaired over just how commercial Christmas had become and how materialistic the emphasis on gift-giving made the holiday. People turned to cards as a substitute for presents. Most popular were Christmas postcards, usually imported from Germany, depicting typical modern Christmas images such as Santas or Christmas trees. They sometimes also pointed to new technology such as cars or telephones. The first decade of the 1900s saw the establishment of major American greeting card firms, including Hallmark, Gibson, and Rust Craft. They often produced folded greeting cards with a picture and some text on the outside, lengthier text inside, and a blank page for the sender to personalize.

World War I was a milestone for Christmas cards. Anti-German feeling in the country led many Americans to boycott German goods even before the U.S. entered the War and helped end the dominance of German cardmakers in the U.S. market. Religious scenes remained uncommon. Many cards simply wished the recipient "Season’s Greetings" rather than mentioning Christmas. One observer complained that the cards "might have been designed by the President of the Moscow Society of the Godless, so far as any suggestion of the Nativity was concerned." During the 1920s, "Olde English" motifs associated the senders with the upper class and with a traditional Christmas. Also popular, however, were modern cards with sleek Art Deco graphics. During the Depression of the 1930s, cards typically were small and relatively simple in color and design.

World War II brought patriotic cards and special cards from military units. During the postwar period into the 1960s, cards depicted traditional images such as Santa Claus and snowmen. Personalization continued to be popular, with photographs adding another personal touch. The 1960s witnessed an explosion of cards sold to benefit good causes, such as UNICEF and other charities and museums.

The late 1900s also saw two other types of year-end cards. Hanukkah became more prominent as a Jewish holiday, and Hanukkah cards soon followed. In 1966, Maulanga Ron Karenga created Kwanzaa, a seven-day African American celebration highlighting principles such as unity and self-determination and sometimes people send Kwanzaa cards.

Christmas cards, meanwhile, have moved in both new directions and old. Religious cards now constitute more than 25% of sales. Humorous cards also claim a share of the market. At the same time, many people now send printed letters full of news—the letter on display here is extraordinarily early—bringing us back full circle to the Christmas letters of the early 1800s.

All material is from the Special Collections Research Center, Earl Gregg Swem Library. Curator: Beatriz Hardy, Director; Exhibit Design and Installation: Chandi Singer, Warren E. Burger Archives Specialist.

Right-Hand Side of “Seasons Greetings: Holiday Cards” Exhibit Case
german inventions
Bild von Special Collections Research Center, Swem Library
Shown here is a picture of the right-hand side of the "Seasons Greetings: Holiday Cards" exhibit case on display inside the front door on the 1st floor of Swem Library at the College of William and Mary. The exhibit features Christmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanzaa cards from the late 19th century through the 1960s.

The following is from the labet text for the exhibit:

Christmas cards are modern inventions rooted in old traditions. Ancient Romans and medieval Europeans sent New Year’s greetings. By the early 1800s in both England and America, people used illustrated notepaper to send Christmas letters to distant loved ones and gave out New Year’s calling cards. The first Christmas card dates to 1843, when Englishman Henry Cole commissioned painter John Calcott Horsley to design one. By the 1860s, the development of color printing made Christmas cards readily available in England, and Americans eagerly imported them. A Boston-based lithographer, Louis Prang, in 1875 began printing and selling his own card. By 1882, he was printing five million Christmas cards annually. The growing popularity of Christmas cards resulted from the spread of free mail delivery and the invention of a traditional American Christmas in the late 1800s. Buffeted by industrialization and urbanization, threatened culturally by mass immigration from Europe, and distanced from loved ones by Americans’ geographic mobility, wealthy and middle-class Americans created a modern Christmas full of acts and rituals that harkened back to an imaginary simpler time.

Nineteenth-century Christmas cards rarely featured religious scenes. The early cards depicted flowers, trees, and birds. By the late 1800s, images grew more seasonal with greens such as ivy or holly; winter scenes such as a snow-covered church or ice skaters; or children sledding, playing with dolls, or engaged in similar activities.

By 1900, many Americans despaired over just how commercial Christmas had become and how materialistic the emphasis on gift-giving made the holiday. People turned to cards as a substitute for presents. Most popular were Christmas postcards, usually imported from Germany, depicting typical modern Christmas images such as Santas or Christmas trees. They sometimes also pointed to new technology such as cars or telephones. The first decade of the 1900s saw the establishment of major American greeting card firms, including Hallmark, Gibson, and Rust Craft. They often produced folded greeting cards with a picture and some text on the outside, lengthier text inside, and a blank page for the sender to personalize.

World War I was a milestone for Christmas cards. Anti-German feeling in the country led many Americans to boycott German goods even before the U.S. entered the War and helped end the dominance of German cardmakers in the U.S. market. Religious scenes remained uncommon. Many cards simply wished the recipient "Season’s Greetings" rather than mentioning Christmas. One observer complained that the cards "might have been designed by the President of the Moscow Society of the Godless, so far as any suggestion of the Nativity was concerned." During the 1920s, "Olde English" motifs associated the senders with the upper class and with a traditional Christmas. Also popular, however, were modern cards with sleek Art Deco graphics. During the Depression of the 1930s, cards typically were small and relatively simple in color and design.

World War II brought patriotic cards and special cards from military units. During the postwar period into the 1960s, cards depicted traditional images such as Santa Claus and snowmen. Personalization continued to be popular, with photographs adding another personal touch. The 1960s witnessed an explosion of cards sold to benefit good causes, such as UNICEF and other charities and museums.

The late 1900s also saw two other types of year-end cards. Hanukkah became more prominent as a Jewish holiday, and Hanukkah cards soon followed. In 1966, Maulanga Ron Karenga created Kwanzaa, a seven-day African American celebration highlighting principles such as unity and self-determination and sometimes people send Kwanzaa cards.

Christmas cards, meanwhile, have moved in both new directions and old. Religious cards now constitute more than 25% of sales. Humorous cards also claim a share of the market. At the same time, many people now send printed letters full of news—the letter on display here is extraordinarily early—bringing us back full circle to the Christmas letters of the early 1800s.

All material is from the Special Collections Research Center, Earl Gregg Swem Library. Curator: Beatriz Hardy, Director; Exhibit Design and Installation: Chandi Singer, Warren E. Burger Archives Specialist.

von Jep Biden

Online Insurance Marketplace Offers Advice on How to Organize Your Finances in Case of Deployment

10:43 in Politik & Wahlen von Jep Biden


(PRWEB) March 07, 2013

Online Insurance Marketplace has announced that they created tips on how to organize your finances in case of deployment!

The online tips explained in the blog explain that the military personnel should take advantage of the Savings Deposit Program (SPD). It is a simple savings program that offers a 10% rate of interest and it is available to anyone. They also can apply by allocating up to 100% of their basic pay, up to a total of $ 10,000. If they have any debts, they can use the Service Members Civil Relief Act (SCRA) to reduce the interest of any debt they have to 6%.

Russell Rabichev, Marketing Director of Internet Marketing Company states, “With so many people being deployed overseas, we are thrilled to be able to provide useful tips to our consumers.”

Online Insurance Marketplace is an online provider of life, home, health, and auto insurance quotes. It is unique in that this website does not simply stick to one kind of insurance carrier, but brings the clients the best deals from many different online insurance carriers. This way, clients have offers from multiple carriers all in one place, this website. On this site, customers have access to quotes for insurance plans from various agencies, such as local or nationwide agencies, brand names insurance companies, etc.

For more information, please contact http://www.onlineinsurancemarketplace.com.







von buzhidao

barbecue everywhere case eat and drink with style Essen und Trinken mit Stil Schmaus Esskultur Geschmackserlebnis Kochkunst Essgenuss Feinkost aus Italien Tropföl Food art contest berlin Ognigiorno de shop blog

03:16 in Essen & Trinken von buzhidao

Schöne trinken Bilder:

barbecue everywhere case eat and drink with style Essen und Trinken mit Stil Schmaus Esskultur Geschmackserlebnis Kochkunst Essgenuss Feinkost aus Italien Tropföl Food art contest berlin Ognigiorno de shop blog
trinken
Bild von Ognigiorno shop
Emergency Barbecue case

Essen und Trinken mit Stil Schmaus Esskultur Geschmackserlebnis Kochkunst Essgenuss Feinkost aus Italien Tropföl Food art contest berlin Ognigiorno.de shop and food art contest facebook page
www.ognigiorno.de

Trinken mit Strohhalm
trinken
Bild von Axel V
moritz-abenteuer.blogspot.com/2007/06/hirschtrnke.html

ab der Flasche trinken funktioniert noch nicht so recht
trinken
Bild von emil_eumel

von

Exo iPhone Video by Brenthaven; More Than Just an iPhone Case

01:36 in Social Media Marketing von


Seattle, Washington (PRWEB) February 18, 2013

The Brenthaven Exo iPhone Case for iPhone 5 employs the unique BX2 foam protection system offering innovative, sculpted protection where it’s needed the most. The fun and informative commercial produced by Hand Crank Films of Bellingham, WA showcases the features of the Exo case in a way never seen before. Direct link to the video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yj6Ko0nEhuI

Available in multiple colors, these contoured and custom fit cases provide unparalleled corner protection, while leaving the ports and camera available for in case use. A convenient push release stand offers both horizontal and vertical viewing options, perfect for using FaceTime. When not in use, the stand snaps back into place and lays flat against the back panel of the Exo iPhone 5 Case.

The BX2 protection system incorporates a high performance foam, which offers an extremely high degree of shock absorption and energy dispersion, providing unparalleled drop and impact protection. The BX2 protection system absorbs maximum impact and maintains shape and performance for the life of the product. The new Exo case from Brenthaven provides peace of mind when carrying an iPhone 5.

“We chose Hand Crank Films for this project because they have done work for us in the past, and we knew they would knock it out of the park,” says Linda Nguyen, Marketing Manager for Brenthaven. “The video shows off our new Exo iPhone case in a really fun and versatile way, and we expect to share it with all our retail and distribution partners, as well as through our social media channels with great results. Plus, it has a flying cat, which is always a bonus!”

“This project was a blast to shoot. The Exo iPhone case has a lot of cool features that we did our best to highlight in this fun commercial,” says Hand Crank Films Director Chris Koser. “Even the cat seemed to enjoy working on this one, and now we can’t wait to see what happens next.”

Join the fun and tell us how you use the Brenthaven Exo Case for iPhone 5 case on Facebook or Twitter pages (@brenthavennews). For those on instagram, use the hashtag #myexocase for a chance to win an Exo case. More information about the Exo case here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yj6Ko0nEhuI







Related Using Social Media Press Releases

von Jep Biden

In Case of Epidemic

21:33 in Film, TV & Kino von Jep Biden

Einige tolle kino film Bilder:

In Case of Epidemic
kino film
Bild von optheatrefilms
Website \ About Us \ Facebook \ Twitter

While an infection spreads across mainland Britain turning people violent with minutes of contamination, the police have problems of their own.

Inspired by ‘Protect & Survive’ (nuclear war survival films from the 80′s), this story is told from the aspect of the authorities ‘in control’ of the situation.

The trailer can be seen at www.optheatre.com/epidemic/

In Case of Epidemic

05:33 in Film, TV & Kino von Jasmin Well

Schöne kino film Bilder:

In Case of Epidemic
kino film
Bild von optheatrefilms
Website \ About Us \ Facebook \ Twitter

While an infection spreads across mainland Britain turning people violent with minutes of contamination, the police have problems of their own.

Inspired by ‘Protect & Survive’ (nuclear war survival films from the 80′s), this story is told from the aspect of the authorities ‘in control’ of the situation.

The trailer can be seen at www.optheatre.com/epidemic/

In Case of Epidemic
kino film
Bild von optheatrefilms
Website \ About Us \ Facebook \ Twitter

While an infection spreads across mainland Britain turning people violent with minutes of contamination, the police have problems of their own.

Inspired by ‘Protect & Survive’ (nuclear war survival films from the 80′s), this story is told from the aspect of the authorities ‘in control’ of the situation.

The trailer can be seen at www.optheatre.com/epidemic/

von Rico

BUCH – Public Relations Case Studies – Hans, Ralf

14:21 in Presse & PR von Rico

Public Relations Studies auf eBay:

BUCH - Public Relations Case Studies - Spiller Ralf, Scheurer Hans

EUR 29,99
Angebotsende: Dienstag Jun-18-2013 20:23:30 MESZ
Sofort-Kaufen für nur: EUR 29,99
Sofort-Kaufen | Zur Liste der beobachteten Artikel hinzufügen

BUCH - Public Relations Case Studies - Ralf Spiller
EUR 29,99
Angebotsende: Mittwoch Mai-29-2013 11:35:38 MESZ
Sofort-Kaufen für nur: EUR 29,99
Sofort-Kaufen | Zur Liste der beobachteten Artikel hinzufügen

BUCH - Public Relations Case Studies - Ralf Spiller
EUR 29,99
Angebotsende: Samstag Jun-1-2013 9:09:04 MESZ
Sofort-Kaufen für nur: EUR 29,99
Sofort-Kaufen | Zur Liste der beobachteten Artikel hinzufügen

von Rico

Case IH Patriot 4430 Sprayer Wins 2012 CropLife IRON ShowStopper Award at Midwest Ag Industries Exposition

09:10 in Mobilität & Verkehr von Rico


Racine, WI (PRWEB) October 04, 2012

Case IH is excited to announce the selection of the Case IH Patriot

von Rico

Case Study: Audi Q3 Trans China Tour 2011

20:21 in Presse & PR von Rico

Case Study: Audi Q3 Trans China Tour 2011

Pure Perfection schickt Journalisten 5.700 Kilometer quer durch China. Ein einzigartiges Presse-Event für die AUDI AG.