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At 7:33pm on January 28, 2009, bülent bülent said…
slm nasılsın nigar hn
At 10:55am on December 4, 2008, Rüfət said…
Slovenia totaly looks like a chicken
At 7:17pm on September 11, 2008, Rüfət said…
100 Useful, Free Web Tools for Lifelong Learners
At 12:47pm on September 10, 2008, Admin said…
At 12:25am on August 17, 2008, Rüfət said…
ID (see the comments even they are vulgar)
At 2:14pm on August 15, 2008, Rüfət said…
DIVERSITY | Offering a place for everyone
At 12:54pm on August 14, 2008, Rüfət said…
The 14 Turning Points in 60 years of India's Independence
At 9:31am on August 8, 2008, Admin said…
10 mispronunciations
At 5:37pm on August 7, 2008, Admin said…
Guess Who's Building Nuclear Power Plants
see the comments here
At 2:15pm on August 5, 2008, Rüfət said…
Sorry We Are Closed
At 10:48am on August 1, 2008, Rüfət said…
Milan Kundera - The Unbearable Lightness of Being
At 10:52am on July 26, 2008, Admin said…

At 2:15pm on July 10, 2008, Admin said…
At 10:07pm on July 5, 2008, quplay said…
Nigar bir Farscə ad dir.
mənası:
"Negaştən" =gözəlliklə rəsm çəkmək və yazmaq. xətt ya şəkil ya fərş ya xalça.
Nıgaristan= sərgi
At 8:41pm on June 27, 2008, Admin said…

World's most expensive paintings.ppt - Get more Creative Writing
At 12:22pm on June 19, 2008, Araz said…
www.araztm.org
The Bloody Memory of the South

The Azerbaijanis living in Iran have kept their resembling to insect (cockroach) in mind very firmly. The strong protest happened in 2006 on the 22nd of May proved that the national self-cognition feelings of the Azerbaijanis not only destroyed from the Persian chauvinism, but also showed the greatest of the nation to the world community. Just after this incident the Iran government has begun to afraid of the power of Azerbaijanis although don’t show it. It is fact that Iran government try to prevent it with the strong repressions, in the same way the arresting but the process of the events shows that the blood memory of the Azerbaijanis living in Iran is not dropped out of memory. Now with the ceremonies held by the Azerbaijanis annually (“remembering Babeks’ funeral rites”, “the visiting of the grave of Sattarxan”, “the international mother language”) have been added “the anniversary of the 22nd may events. As the same last year Azerbaijanis have being prepared for it very seriously.
At 9:28am on June 12, 2008, Rüfət said…

At 11:16pm on June 2, 2008, Rüfət said…
http://www.thedieline.com/blog/2008/04/askinosie-choco.html
At 11:41pm on June 1, 2008, Rüfət said…

At 2:37pm on May 27, 2008, Admin said…
In theory, a year of human life is priceless. In reality, it's worth $50,000.

That's the international standard most private and government-run health insurance plans worldwide use to determine whether to cover a new medical procedure. More simply, insurance companies calculate that to make a treatment worth its cost, it must guarantee one year of "quality life" for $50,000 or less. New research, however, would argue that that figure is far too low.

Stanford economists have demonstrated that the average value of a year of quality human life is actually closer to about $129,000. To get to that number, Stefanos Zenios and his colleagues at Stanford Graduate School of Business used kidney dialysis as a benchmark. Every year dialysis saves the lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans who would otherwise die of renal failure while waiting for an organ transplant. It is also the one procedure that Medicare has covered unconditionally since 1972 despite rapid and sometimes expensive innovations in its administration. To tally the cost-effectiveness of such innovations Zenios and his colleagues ran a computer analysis of more than half a million patients who underwent dialysis, adding up costs and comparing that data to treatment outcomes. Considering both inflation and new technologies in dialysis, they arrived at $129,000 as a more appropriate threshold for deciding coverage. "That means that if Medicare paid an additional $129,000 to treat a group of patients, on average, group members would get one more quality-adjusted life year," Zenios says. Based on patient surveys, one "quality of life" year is defined as about two years of life on dialysis.

Zenios's conclusions arrive amidst mounting debate over whether Medicare, the U.S. government health plan for seniors, ought to use cost-effectiveness analysis in determining coverage of procedures. Nearly all other industrial nations — including Canada, Britain and the Netherlands — ration health care based on cost-effectiveness and the $50,000 threshold. Medicare, on the other hand, decides whether to pay for new technology based on whether a treatment is "medically necessary and appropriate." But as health care expenses rise and entitlement programs grow fiscally strapped — at least one part of Medicare is now expected to be bankrupt by 2019 — more and more academics have called for this approach to be reconsidered, and for cost to become a factor. Such a move would mean that "if the incremental cost of a new technology was more than the threshold," Zenios says, "then the recommendation would be that Medicare not cover that new technology."

Assigning a dollar figure to Medicare patients' lives may sound crass, but such valuations are routine in Americans' daily lives. Take, for example, the $500,000 death benefit the government pays families when a soldier is killed in Iraq or Afghanistan. Or the cost calculations that for-profit health insurers make to determine how much coverage they'll give customers. In fact, at least some Americans seem at ease with allowing money to play a prominent role in health care decisions. In a 2007 survey of New Yorkers, 75% of participants felt "somewhat" to "very" comfortable with allowing cost to inform Medicare treatment decisions, once they understood how the system worked. "Americans understand and are prepared to engage the issues that arise when setting priorities and limits for their public programs," Marthe Gold, the City University of New York Medical School professor who conducted the study, wrote with colleagues this past fall in the journal Health Affairs.

The Stanford researchers caution that if Medicare fully adopted a cost-benefit analysis model, too many patients could be denied life-saving treatment. They return to the example of dialysis patients. Their study showed that for the sickest patients, the average cost of an additional quality-of-life year was much higher — $488,000. "It is difficult to justify the burden and expense of dialysis when persons have other serious health conditions such as, for example, advanced dementia or cancer," says co-author Glenn Chertow, a nephrology professor at the Stanford School of Medicine. "In these settings, dialysis is unlikely to provide any meaningful benefit." But with organs including kidneys for transplant so scarce, is it justifiable to deny these patients a chance to live through dialysis? It is a question, Zenios says, everyone should approach with trepidation. "What is the true value of a human life? That's what we're asking people," he adds. "I wouldn't pretend to know."

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