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What line of work are you in? harga ubat terramycin And there has been a lot of it. Hospitals have significantly boosted their readiness for disaster since Sept. 11, 2001, and the anthrax attacks that began just a week later. Those two events served as a vivid reminder that the country's overtaxed emergency departments needed to somehow get ready to cope at a moment's notice with "an influx of patients with any number and any type of injury," says Craig DeAtley, director of the Institute for Public Health Emergency Readiness at the MedStar Washington Hospital Center in Washington, D.C. Hurricane Katrina and the fear of a pandemic sparked by SARS and bird flu only added to the sense of urgency. The Institute of Medicine and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have increasingly urged hospitals to prioritize preparedness. And emergency management standards from the Joint Commission, which accredits hospitals, now require them to perform two practice exercises per year.
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Holland bounds into the British Museum’s Greek rooms with enthusiasm. A classicist by training but not an academic (he is also the author of a series of vampire novels), he worked for three years improving his Greek before embarking on his mammoth translating task. He shows me arrowheads found on the battlefield at Marathon and a triumphal Greek vase decorated with a Persian soldier riding a donkey backwards. “Herodotus was a religious man who believed strongly in the idea of hubris and nemesis,” Holland says. “The Persians overreached themselves and were struck down by the gods.” But that idea can also be translated into human terms: the idea that cocky empires eventually get their comeuppance is hardly foreign to us.