1. Public health Nursing
Public health nursing is a nursing specialty focused on public health. Public health nurses "integrate community involvement and knowledge about the entire population with personal, clinical understandings of the health and illness experiences of individuals and families within the population."
2. Environmental Health Officers
Environmental Health Officers (also known as Public Health Inspectors) are responsible for carrying out measures for protecting public health, including administering and enforcing legislation related to environmental health and providing support to minimize health and safety hazards. They are involved in a variety of activities, for example inspecting food facilities, investigating public health nuisances, and implementing disease control. Environmental health officers are focused on prevention, consultation, investigation, and education of the community regarding health risks and maintaining a safe environment.
3. EMT (Paramedics)
The paramedic is a healthcare professional who works in emergency medical situations. A paramedic may be best defined as a medical professional who provides medical care at an advanced life support level in the prehospital environment, usually in an emergency, at the point of illness or injury. This includes an initial assessment, a diagnosis and a treatment plan to manage the patient's particular health crisis. Treatment can also be continued en-route to a hospital if more definitive care for the patient is required. Paramedics provide advanced levels of care for medical emergencies and trauma. The majority of paramedics are based in the field in ambulances, emergency response vehicles, or in specialist mobile units such as cycle response. Paramedics provide out-of-hospital treatment and some diagnostic services, although some may undertake hospital-based roles, such as in the treatment of injuries.
4. Audiology Technician
Audiology (from Latin audīre, "to hear"; and from Greek -λογία, -logia) is t
In addition to testing hearing, audiologists can also work with a wide range of clientele in rehabilitation (cochlear implants and/or hearing aids), pediatric populations and assessment of the vestibular system.
he branch of science that studies hearing, balance, and related disorders. Its practitioners, who treat those with hearing loss and proactively prevent related damage are audiologists. Employing various testing strategies (e.g. hearing tests, otoacoustic emission measurements, videonystagmography, and electrophysiologic tests), audiology aims to determine whether someone can hear within the normal range, and if not, which portions of hearing (high, middle, or low frequencies) are affected and to what degree. If an audiologist determines that a hearing loss or vestibular abnormality is present he or she will provide recommendations to a patient as to what options (e.g. hearing aid, cochlear implants, surgery, appropriate medical referrals) may be of assistance.
5. Medical Image process
Medical imaging is the technique and process used to create images of the human body (or parts and function thereof) for clinical purposes (medical procedures seeking to reveal, diagnose, or examine disease) or medical science (including the study of normal anatomy and physiology). Although imaging of removed organs and tissues can be performed for medical reasons, such procedures are not usually referred to as medical imaging, but rather are a part of pathology.
As a discipline and in its widest sense, it is part of biological imaging and incorporates radiology (in the wider sense), nuclear medicine, investigative radiological sciences, endoscopy, (medical) thermography, medical photography, and microscopy (e.g. for human pathological investigations
6. Dispensing Optics
An optician is a specialized practitioner who designs, fits and dispenses lenses for the correction of a person's vision. Opticians determine the specifications of various ophthalmic appliances that will give the necessary correction to a person's eyesight. Some registered or licensed Opticians also design and fit special appliances to correct cosmetic, traumatic or anatomical defects. These devices are called shells or artificial eyes. Other registered or licensed Opticians manufacture lenses to their own specifications and design and manufacture spectacle frames and other devices.
7. Anaestheic Technician
Anesthesiologists (anaesthetists in the UK) are physicians who provide medical care to patients in a wide variety of (usually acute) situations. These can include delivering anesthesia during surgical procedures, caring for critically ill patients in an Intensive Care Unit (ICU), managing medical emergencies such as cardiac arrests and traumas either in-hospital or in the public domain (termed 'pre-hospital medicine'), the inter-hospital transfer of unwell patients, and the management of acute and chronic pain conditions. Anesthesiologists are responsible for ensuring the delivery of anesthesia safely to patients in virtually all health care settings, including all major medical and tertiary care facilities. This includes a preoperative evaluation, consultation with the surgical team, creating a plan for the anesthesia tailored to each individual patient, airway management, intraoperative life support and provision of pain control, intraoperative diagnostic stabilization, and proper post-operative management of patients. Preparation of patients for emergency surgery are mandatory, essential, and critical skills that anesthesiologists have been trained to employ. Because anesthesiologists are physicians, in contrast to other anesthesia providers, they are able to utilize their extensive knowledge of human physiology and diseases to guide their decision making.
8. Plaster Technician (Orthopedic cast)
An orthopedic cast, body cast, plaster cast, or surgical cast, is a shell, frequently made from plaster, encasing a limb (or, in some cases, large portions of the body) to hold a broken bone (or bones) in place until healing is confirmed. It is similar in function to a splint
9. Biomedical Engineering Technology
Biomedical engineering (BME) is the application of engineering principles and design concepts to medicine and biology for healthcare purposes (e.g. diagnostic or therapeutic). This field seeks to close the gap between engineering and medicine: It combines the design and problem solving skills of engineering with medical and biological sciences to advance healthcare treatment, including diagnosis, monitoring, and therapy
registration ends 05/06/13 and exam is 13/06/13
all the causes listed above requires minimum of 5 credits in SSCE, NECO, not more than 2 sittings
maths, english, physic, chemistry and biology
READERS:
the above article is not wrritten by a medical person, but the research as the time of publishing was believed to be accurate
author: FELIX G GALASI
company; SAINTCITY INC
phone: +2348032858545
SAiNTCITY EVENTS
Sunday, 19 May 2013
Wednesday, 29 August 2012
Origin of the HUMAN
The human being consists of two aspects -
of an immortal spirit and of a mortal body. The flesh comes
like a gift of the mother Earth and the spirit of the father
God. We dedicate excessively big attention to the first one, but nearly nothing
to the latter one; and sometimes we even forget that it exists. However, there
is a saying that a shirt is always closer to the body than
a coat.
Our planet was developed within the
process of evolution - step by step. Millions of suns originate in
the nebula and disperse into the space. When we see them on the night sky, we
call them the stars. On their long way across the space planets were created
from the stardust around them, like around our Sun. Millions of years
passed until life could be developed on our Earth. First, it was born in water;
only then did it arise up on the surface and gradually populated it. Within
many thousands of years, miscellaneous genera of animals were
developed as well as several hundred thousands sorts of plants. By
adaptation in various climatic conditions every area got its individual,
non-repetitive look. This did not happen by itself - but everything, even the
smallest flower, was created... by someone... And this work had lasted for
ages.
When the perfect one among the
animals - the Primate came to life during the "evolution" with
a sufficiently perfect body, then it was time to furnish this body with
a spirit - a human spirit. Man learned to handle it well and took
care of it. The monkey's body got flatter by the human spirit's conduct
and it became nicer - it transformed into a gentle shape. Thus, the first
records of our human body appeared.
To explain the origin of the
human spirit, we have to try to describe the Divine Creation at least in
a metaphoric way. It's far greater than it is possible to imagine. The
whole material universe is only a slight part of it on its border.
The Creation has innumerable quantity of levels and the range between each
of them is colossal. Perhaps we might compare it to a temperature
change, if we could travel from Earth to the Sun. And every extra level
containing the whole worlds is even more admirable; the God's emanation is even
stronger. But God is much greater than His Creation. He is like a painter
and His Creation is like a picture He made. But the painter is more then
a picture. The Love emanating from Him creates and nourishes the whole
Creation all the time. The divine beings were formed first with closest touch
with the Creator. The divine emanation cools itself off by being more and more
distant and it gives prospects for creation of other forms of beings,
which could otherwise not exist in such strong vibrations. From the cooled
emanation other and other divine beings are formed and the emanation gets even
cooler again. Thus, other levels of beings originate, as well as the
realms of angelical worlds. Each of those beings was created as a perfect
and conscious entity. But the emanation is, even after multiple cooling
periods, yet very strong and it still gives a possibility to produce
another life. It is a niche of the human spirit's origin, which was
not created as the awaken one, but to whom a possibility was given to
achieve this. Each spiritual spark that wanted to achieve this awakeness
received a spiritual body from the Creator and hence independent beings
came to life. However, the spiritual spark contained the full knowledge and
perfection, the being that had been created from it was unconscious, because it
didn't live its own life, it didn't know anything about its primeval
perfection.
In order to let human spirits come
to the point of their consciousness - awakeness, they must descend down
into the material world, which was created from the emanation of the
Divine Creation. By going through every level, the human spirit puts on other
bodies, which make it possible for it to stay in the new environment. In the
present time, we are able to take a photo of the heaviest bodies. We
call them astral bodies and their emanation is called aura. Depending on the
situation that attracts the human spirit and what sorts of experience it
wants, it chooses such parents that it deems best for its purpose. It happens in
the middle of a pregnancy when the spirit enters into the material
body. As a child - after the birth, it learns ways how to command the body
and it gradually becomes familiar with the world around. When the child grows
up, a spiritual strength opens up in him (or her) and he enjoys life in
its fullness.
Having experienced various life
situations in the material world, the spirit develops its knowledge and, in
fact, recreates itself. It becomes what it learned through its experience. To
make this possible, the oneness of the material world is separated into
a duality of contradictions: pleasure - sorrow, happiness -
misfortune, good - evil, warm - cold, a lot of - a little... For
the total knowledge it is necessary to take a look at both these
contradictions. How could we otherwise realise the feeling of success if
we have never encountered a failure? Or how can we know what is nice if we
have never met an ugly thing? The depth of our laughter shelters the
innermost profundity of our biggest sorrow. Without it, our laughter has
a low bottom. We encounter pain in order to learn to forgive; we encounter
misery only to be thankful for moments of affluence... Thus, we are slowly
able to feel and wake up the spirits in us.
The difference between the spirit
and the body is similar to the difference between the player and a figure
in a computer game, with which the player plays. The figure dies, but the
player does not. On the contrary, the player's abilities expand by the
knowledge he learns throughout the game. Our lives are similar to such
a game. Everyday we pass through various such game „levels" -
situations of various difficulties; the way we solve them contributes to
our strength, or reduces it. The more „points" we obtain, the better is
our ability to solve more difficult situations.
Whoever already has something, the
more be given to him; and whoever does not have anything, even the little that
he has will be taken away from him. If man will not recognise his spiritual
source and will identify himself only with the material body and intellectual
knowledge, if his desires will only cover the material level, he will forever
stay attached to the material world. And unless he does not know anything about
his spirit (of which he is actually formed), he remains spiritually blind and
deaf, unable to return to lighter spheres. Even in case he graduated from three
universities and is a reputable expert, it does not matter. The knowledge
he learned will be lost with death of the body, because it is dependent on
the material brain. Only those spheres will stay behind which human beings
spiritually experienced and became aware of with their feelings.
Do not be like the one who went to
study an expensive education only to obtain important knowledge and in
cheap amusement forgot the reason why he had left and never returned home.
Treasures of the whole world, too, cannot be compared with home
of the human spirit. Please do not imagine the divine worlds to be
too earthly like a heaven where there is nothing to do except sitting
on a cloud and drink calyx of immortality and enjoy doing it with
family and friends who came back to life. It would be absurd! Now we live in
the three-dimensional world, which has its height, width and depth. The fourth
dimension is time. In the world of higher levels the time does not exist
and the past and the future exist simultaneously in the presence. In the world
of even much higher levels neither the time nor space do exist,
although they are latently present in the whole omnipresent oneness. The origin
of human spirit belongs, however, to even higher levels, but it is not
easy to profoundly describe this by our human language. It's impossible. And
each higher level is far more perfect than any lower one and it has
an incomparable quality of higher sorts.
If these words say nothing to you,
you will surely understand them when we explain the difference among dimensions
on lower levels. Let us compare our three-dimensional world with the
two-dimensional one, which has only the height and width. It is like
a picture with one area only. You can explain anything to a figure
of man drawn in this two-dimensional world - it will never understand you.
Likewise, our three-dimensional human brain cannot comprehend a more
dimensional divine world of the spirit. That can be only done if it is
perceived by the spirit, which is a more natural way to do for human
beings, although they probably forgot it. So let's recognize the fact that our
rational limitations are tight; let's get rid of all those naive ideas and
let's live awaken like spirits and let's remember - we are the spirits!
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