Friday, March 8, 2019

Basic Life support and First Aider Training can save lives


My First Aider at Work card

Call me paranoid or overly sensitive, I have always been a believer that We must be prepared for dangers of life. What better way to prepare ourselves and make a useful contribution to the lives of people around us than get Basic life support training!

I had the first stint while I was a lecturer at COMSATS University Islamabad, in 2012/13. I developed a habit of keeping ready to use the first-aid box at home (wherever I lived in the last 10-15 years) within reach, and even while travelling. I remember while I was a PhD student at the Jeju National University, Pakistani students planned to go to the Udo Island, a wonderfully beautify island to  BBQ and camp overnight in the open air. I was laughed at for keeping the first aid in the bag. It turned out that when one of our friends got injured, all we had was this first aid kit.

Anyway, today I completed my First aider at Work training through University of Manchester.
It was a 6-hour long rigorous training

Aim of Qualification


The aim of the qualification is to enable learners to attain the knowledge and competencies needed to deal with a range of emergency first aid situations. Learners should be able to demonstrate the practical administration of safe, prompt, effective first aid in emergency situations with an understanding of the role of the first aider. The Emergency First Aid at Work (EFAW) qualification is designed to offer appropriate training for those who will be offering First Aid cover in lower hazard working environments such as offices, shops and libraries.

The certificate is valid for three years, and the course will need to be repeated to maintain the qualification.

Course Content

  1. The role of the Emergency First Aider
  2. Preventing cross-infection
  3. Recording incidents and actions
  4. Use of available equipment
  5. Emergency Procedure
  6. Unconscious casualty
  7. Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation
  8. Choking
  9. Bleeding
  10. Shock
  11. Minor injuries (small cuts, grazes, bruises, minor burns and scalds, small splinters)

Assessment Method

1. Practical Assessment completed throughout the course
2. Multiple choice question paper

EDIT: 


I also completed a lifesaver course
An estimated 60,000 people each year in the UK have an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest and, sadly, less than 10% of those people will survive. Yet, if someone starts CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) before an ambulance arrives, they can double a person's chances of survival. In addition, if an automated external defibrillator (AED) is used, this can further improve the person's chances.

The Resuscitation Council (UK) has combined forces with production company UNIT9, to develop Lifesaver – a revolutionary new way to learn CPR.

Teaching Staff and Students CPR and how to use an AED has the potential to save numerous lives.

Lifesaver focuses on those CPR skills most likely to save a life:

  • Recognizing cardiac arrest
  • Calling for help
  • Starting chest compressions
  • Giving rescue breaths if able to do so
  • Using an AED (automated external defibrillator) located across the campus

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Thank you Mendeley

I would like to thank Mendeley, for acknowledging my efforts to popularize the use of Mendeley. They have sent merchandise for future attendees of my Mendeley workshops in the twin cities.
It is a free reference manager and academic social network. It has been acquired by Elsevier and can help you organize your research, collaborate with others online, and discover the latest research:
  • Automatically generate bibliographies
  • Collaborate easily with other researchers online
  • Easily import papers from other research software
  • Find relevant papers based on what you're reading
  • Access your papers from anywhere online
  • Read papers on the go,

Monday, January 2, 2017

Daggar [Pakistan], becomes Lightning hotspot on Earth

Daggar the lightning hotspot on earth

In early childhood nothing is more frightening than lightning followed by roar of thunder.
Daggar a small town roughly 100 km from the capital Islamabad has become one of the top 10 lightning hotspots across globe.
Daggar Buner, from Islamabad, Pakistan
Six out of top 10 hotspots are located in content Africa.The Congo Basin in Africa used to hold the lightning title, and it still has the most hotspots of anywhere in the world.lightning map

Sunday, January 1, 2017

Google translate AI invents its own language

Google AI evolving

Stepping into unchartered, untrained language, Google Translate AI based on neural network  can now translate a complete sentence on languages it was not even trained for.
Google Translate AI evolving 

During my PhD in Korea, where English was not an extensively used language among the locals, I translated text through Google translate from korean to english. But students from Indonesia, Russia, VietNam, Egypt or Mongolia for whom, English was not primary medium of communication, had to translate between from Korean to English and then English to their language and off course vice versa.  This new capability would work wonders.
As stated by article  in recent issue of Scientific American, if for example neural network was trained to translate between English and Japanese, and English and Korean, it can also translate between Japanese and Korean without first going through English. This new capability would accelerate the ability of Google translate system to translate between a large number of languages without the need to translate to a popular common language first.
Currently, Google Translate is being used for translating a whopping 140 billion words from 103 languages every day.
More at
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2114748-google-translate-ai-invents-its-own-language-to-translate-with/

Friday, December 30, 2016

20 Foods to eat and avoid on empty stomach

20 item EDIT to breakfast menu 

20 Foods you should consider adding to your breakfast and those you must avoid on empty stomach

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Elsevier unavailable for Germany, Taiwan Peru from 2017

Elsevier unavailable for Germany, Taiwan Peru from 2017

Scientists in Germany, Peru and Taiwan would most likely lose access to Elsevier journals, after negotiations between governments/funding agencies for the trio and the Dutch journal failed.

“It’s very unpleasant,” says Horst Hippler, spokesperson for the DEAL consortium of state-funded universities and research organizations, which is overseeing negotiations in Germany. “But we just cannot accept what Elsevier has proposed so far.”

More at http://www.nature.com/news/scientists-in-germany-peru-and-taiwan-to-lose-access-to-elsevier-journals-1.21223

Book mentioned by Imran Khan about Lost Islamic History

Imran Khan in his tweet today mentioned reading books about Islam. I really appreciate a Pakistani PM actively quoting Islamic on internati...