: In this journal, you will research and explore data around acid reflux (GERD). You will make a determination as to what you believe the causes or GERD
are. GERD has increased in the cohort of 15- to 65-year-olds in the United States from almost one million in 1998, to three million in 2005, to 100 million in 2013.
There is a real controversy over whether the rise in GERD is influenced by lifestyle choices, such as overeating and resulting obesity, or other factors.
After reading Acid Reflux (GERD) Statistics and Facts and researching further on your own, explain whether you think GERD is more influenced by lifestyle
choices or other factors. What evidence exists to support your stance? What can be done to treat GERD, and how would you advise a patient who comes to you
complaining of GERD symptoms? Cite your sources.

PLEASE READ!

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Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is a chronic condition that affects the digestive system. While most people experience heartburn or indigestion from time to time, if you feel that burning sensation in your chest more than twice a week, you might have GERD.

The condition is a more serious and long-lasting form of acid reflux. Most people can manage GERD with over-the-counter (OTC) medications and a few lifestyle changes.

Who gets GERD?
Anyone can develop GERD. It occurs across every age group and ethnicity. However, youre more likely to have GERD if:

Youre overweight or obese.
Youre pregnant.
You take certain medications, including antihistamines, painkillers, and antidepressants
You smoke or are regularly exposed to secondhand smoke.
One of the biggest challenges in determining the number of people living with GERD is identifying who actually has the disease. Many people with GERD symptoms dont consult a healthcare provider. A 2014 systematic review estimates from 15.1 to 30 percent[DS1] of the U.S. population has GERD.

According to the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP), there were 995,402 hospitalizations for GERD in 1998. In 2005, there were 3.14 million, an increase of 216 percent. In both years, approximately 62 percent of all GERD hospital discharges involved women.

The same study showed that the number of adults hospitalized for GERD decreased by 2.4 percent between 1998 and 2005. During the same period, the rate increased by 42 percent for babies. It increased by 84 percent for children aged two to 17.

In 2010, 4.7 million hospitalizations and 1,653 deaths were a result of GERD, reports the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases.

What causes GERD?
GERD is a result of a weak lower esophageal sphincter. That weakness allows the contents of your stomach to flow back up into your esophagus.

There are a variety of factors that can weaken your esophageal sphincter, including:

overeating
being overweight
pregnancy
smoking or regular exposure to secondhand smoke
hiatal hernia (part of the stomach protrudes into the diaphragm muscle)
Certain foods and beverages can trigger GERD. Some of the more common food triggers include:

fried or fatty foods
citrus
chocolate
coffee
carbonated beverages
drinks containing alcohol
Some medications can cause GERD, too. Among them are:

alpha blockers
anti-inflammatories
sedatives
nitrates
If you take medication and have symptoms of GERD, speak to your doctor or pharmacist. They can discuss switching or stopping the medication with you. Dont stop taking a prescribed medication without consulting your doctor first, though.

Symptoms
The most common symptoms of GERD are acid indigestion and heartburn. You may frequently burp and feel bloated.

Acid in your esophagus can make it spasm. That causes pain and a feeling of tightness in the chest.

Other symptoms of GERD include:

nausea and vomiting
belching
difficulty swallowing
tooth erosion and bad breath
problems swallowing (dysphagia)
respiratory problems
abdominal pain
Some cases of heartburn may be a sign of a more serious condition. See your doctor if your heartburn:

occurs more frequently than once a week
becomes more severe
occurs at night and wakes you from sleep
Diagnosis and treatment
Seek immediate medical attention if you have difficulty swallowing or breathing.

Consider it an emergency if:

youre vomiting large amounts
you have projectile vomiting
your vomit contains green or yellow fluid
your vomit looks like coffee grounds
In most cases, doctors diagnose acid reflux by reviewing symptoms and medical history. If you often have heartburn or acid indigestion that wont go away, testing for GERD may be recommended.

Diagnostic testing may include:

Endoscopy. A fiber-optic tube is passed down your throat so your doctor can view your esophagus and stomach. Tissue samples can be taken for biopsy.
Upper GI series X-rays. These are taken after you drink a barium solution. This procedure can find ulcers, hiatal hernias, and other abnormalities.
Esophageal monitoring. This is a way to measure acid levels in your lower esophagus for 24 hours.
Manometry. A manometry measures the rhythmic muscle contractions that occur in your esophagus when you swallow.
GERD can usually be managed with OTC medications, such as the following:

Antacids can neutralize stomach acid.
An H2 receptor blocker, like cimetidine, treats excess stomach acid.
Proton pump inhibitors reduce the amount of acid your stomach produces.
If OTC drugs arent working well, your doctor can prescribe alternative medications:

Sucralfate forms a protective film on the surface of your esophagus and stomach.
Metoclopramide helps your esophagus contract efficiently and your stomach to empty faster.
Lifestyle changes to ease symptoms
You may be able to ease your symptoms by making a few simple changes:

Avoid smoking and being around secondhand smoke.
Maintain a healthy weight, and avoid tight clothing around your middle.
Eat smaller meals. Keep a food diary so you can pinpoint and avoid the foods that trigger your symptoms.
Try to move around a little after you eat, staying upright for three hours after meals. A short walk may go a long way.
If you dont find relief from medication and lifestyle changes, surgery may be an option. The most common surgical treatment options include:

Fundoplication. This is the most common surgery for GERD. Your surgeon wraps the top of your stomach around the lower esophageal sphincter to tighten the muscle and prevent reflux. Fundoplication is usually done with a minimally invasive (laparoscopic) procedure.
LINX reflux management system. A ring of tiny magnetic beads is wrapped around the junction of the stomach and esophagus. The magnetic attraction between the beads is strong enough to keep the junction closed to refluxing acid, but weak enough to allow food to pass through. The LINX system can be implanted using minimally invasive surgery. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the LINX system in 2012 for people with GERD who havent been helped by other treatments.

Living with GERD
For most people, GERD is a manageable condition. If left untreated, though, GERD can lead to serious complications.

Scar tissue can cause the esophagus to become too narrow (esophageal stricture). This can make swallowing difficult and painful.

Stomach acid entering into your lungs can cause serious harm. Lung damage can make you more likely to have chest congestion and wheezing. This puts you at increased risk for recurrent pneumonia or asthma.

Long-term inflammation of the esophagus (esophagitis) increases the risk of precancerous cells in the esophagus. Severe cases of GERD can lead to a condition called Barretts esophagus. Thats when your esophagus grows tissue resembling the tissue found in the lining of your intestine. Barretts esophagus increases your risk of esophageal adenocarcinoma, a rare type of cancer.

According to the HCUP, 4.2 percent of GERD hospitalizations involved an esophageal disorder in 2005. Cases of dysphagia grew by 264 percent between 1998 and 2005. Esophageal adenocarcinoma rose by 195 percent. Esophagitis increased by 94 percent.

If you need to be hospitalized, GERD can be costly. In 1998, a hospital stay for GERD averaged $5,616 in the United States, reports HCUP. By 2005, it had risen to $6,545.

Nationally, total hospital costs for GERD were $509 million in 1998. By 2005, costs rose to $622 million, an increase of 22 percent.

In the United States alone, overall spending on all gastrointestinal diseases was estimated to be $142 billion per year in direct and indirect costs in 2009, notes a 2015 reviewTrusted Source. Researchers note GERD accounts for approximately $15 to $20 billion of these direct and indirect costs.

Use read both, No exit by Jean Paul and Commentary 2017 by Lehman and answer the following questions. I have attached both reading. Answers should only take about 1 page.  Please read and answer the questions correctly.

1.    Early in her essay (p. 50), Lehmann distinguishes between pleasure and reward.  Later (p. 51) she expands on the idea, saying:  . . . this new technology [smartphones] seems to activate the reward centerbut does not induce states of contentment, satisfaction, or meaning.

Question:  In your own words, can you meaningfully describe the difference between pleasure and reward?  Specifically, what is Lehmann trying to get at in distinguishing mere reward from the other things she lists?  Can you maybe give an example of what shes talking about?

2.    Lehmann cites several statistics indicating that anxiety and suicide are increasing at a faster rate for girls than for boy

Question:  Why do you think that is?  Does it tell us something about a basic difference between males and females?  Do you think smartphones are part of the problem?  Why?

3.    Relate all this back to No Exit and our discussion of it.  If Sartre is right and we really are self-defining (i.e., we are whatever we say we are), and if self-definition requires us to define/dictate to others how they respond to our self-definition, then it would seem that Hell really is other people since others will resist our efforts to define them, just as we would resist their efforts to define us.  It turns out that self-definition is really definition-by-Other; viz., we are only what others will allow us to be.

Question:  So, whats the solution?  If self-definition boils down to definition-by-Other, can we ever really be happy?  If we are not self-defining/defined-by-other, how else might we be defined?

Instructions: after you have completed the reading for this module, spend some time comparing and contrasting the Holbein and Drer portraits yourself. Answer the following discussion prompt in at least a paragraph, and be sure to also post either a response to a peer or a question in the QotW thread.

What similarities or differences do you notice in these two portraits? What aspects of these paintings support the idea that they reflect the “invention” of the individual? Lastly, does the fact that Drer’s painting is a self-portrait change how you interpret it?

Module reading:
Please read Jerry Brotton, “Introduction,” (in The Renaissance: A Very Short Introduction, p. 16-27), and Jason Farago, Seeing Our Own Reflection in the Birth of the Self-Portrait.

Overview: Brotton’s chapter splits roughly into two parts: the first half introduces the main themes of the Renaissance through the painting The Ambassadors (Holbein, 1533), while the second explores the different historical approaches to the Renaissance. The Farago piece likewise focuses on a portrait, this one a self-portrait from Drer (1500). It explores the rise of individualism through careful analysis of this painting.

2 Keys:
Artifacts are Evidence. In addition to the specific information they convey, both of these readings show how artifacts serve as primary evidence in the humanities. Summing up a massive historical period is seemingly impossible, but Holbein’s painting can be used to do it elegantly. Likewise, discussing “individualistic conceptions of the self” might seem to be almost impossible. (How can we know anything about this? People rarely sit down and declare: “this is my self-conception!”) But careful attention to the Drer painting grounds Farago’s discussion such that it becomes both clear and convincing. Both show the value of engaging artifacts as practiced by the humanities disciplines: doing so helps us get at issues that otherwise might seem either too close to us or to abstract to observe.
Historical Origins. It can be easy to assume that the categories we use to understand the world are constant and unchanging. However, the humanities regularly demonstrate that even ideas that might seem to be obvious or ahistorical often arise in very specific historical conditions. The unique individual, the idea of the European, even the term ‘Renaissance’ itself are all what we might call “historically emergent.” Or, as the Farago article puts it: they “had to be invented.”

Link for Book:
https://ebookcentral-proquest-com.vortex3.uco.edu/lib/ucok-ebooks/reader.action?docID=430697

An essay is a required part of the application process. The essay should distinguish you as a unique candidate for admission. For example, you may want to provide information on the personal experiences that have shaped your academic abilities, or give us a more thorough insight on your exceptional achievements. The information you provide in the essay will be considered in the admission decision so please use the essay as a means to establish yourself as a unique candidate. Include in your essay the reason why you have selected your major and why it is important for you to attend Texas A&M University at Qatar.

**Answer the challenge question below using 300-400 words (maximum).
Treat this writing assignment as a business work product, ensuring that you proof your work and correct all spelling/grammatical errors before submitting, use citations when necessary and be sure to address every aspect of the challenge question.  Ensure ALL aspects of the challenge question are answered in your submission.

Challenge Question:
Have you ever had to adapt to a supervisor’s negative emotional state? What emotions/moods occurred, identify the source of the emotion/mood (if applicable) and explain how you regulated your emotion in this situation?

Pricing Strategies

          Any business can utilize a pricing strategy when marketing a product or service. The price can be set to maximize profitability for each unit sold. It can be used to defend an existing market from new entrants (increasing the barriers to entry for new competitors), to increase market share within a market or to enter a new market.

Review the Pricing strategies defined in module 3 and match the strategy to the scenarios provided. Provide a justification for your answers.

PLEASE SEE THE ATTACHED/UPLOADED DOCUMENTS FROM LECTURE REGARDING PRICING DISCUSSION:
    Premium Pricing / Price Skimming

    Penetration Pricing   

    Economy Pricing

    Bundle Pricing 

    Psychological Pricing   

A fine dining restaurant has priced its offerings substantially higher than its closest competition.

A quick-service restaurant has decided to use odd pricing i.e  $3.47, $6.99 etc

A new caterer has intentionally priced themselves lower than their nearest competitors.

A sports bar has priced a weekly special that includes 1 lb of wings, a pitcher of beer and a dessert for one price

A grocery store has decided not to spend much on marketing, but they offer their products at a consistently lower price

Assignment 3
Chapter 5:  Critical Thinking Questions (page 146) Be sure to use textbook as a means to support your position(s).  Use APA guidelines in your writing, which include a title page, a reference page, 1′ margins (top, bottom, left and right), subheadings/headings (bold).

1.  Four-drive theory is conceptually different from Maslows needs hierarchy in several ways. Describe these differences. At the same time, needs are based on drives, so the four drives should parallel the seven needs that Maslow identified (five in the hierarchy and two additional needs). Map Maslows needs onto the four drives in four-drive theory.

4.  You just closed a deal with an organizational client, and this helps you achieve the target that was set for you by the unit. Use expectancy theory to discuss how the events that will follow may increase your motivation and engagement.

7.  Most people think they are worth more than they are paid. Furthermore, most employees seem to feel that they exhibit better leadership skills and interpersonal skills than others. Please comment on this human tendency.

This is a discussion board reply. You will reply to the attached  paper. Please read the Grading rubric before starting this reply.  The reply must include 3 peer reviewed source citations in current APA 7 format, the text, and the integration of 1 biblical principal as outlined in the Discussion Board Rubric which is attached.

Readings: Merida: Entire Book (attached)
Scott: pp 35-106 (attached)

Please read Grading Rubric before starting.

In the Replies include the following:
Everything mentioned in the Reply expectations.

In the Introduction section, you must quote or specifically refer to what and to whom you are responding. There is no need to cite a fellow Learner in the DB assignments, unless in a separate thread or a reply in which you are responding to something very specific. Do not be afraid to disagree with a fellow Learner’s perspective, just do so politely and always cite and source why.

You need to cite in support of your argument and use APA 7 format.  Also, in discussions do not be afraid to use a little appropriate humor. “A smiling reader is one whos paying attention and eager to read on.” Not to mention your prof enjoys a good laugh while reading so much content!

You will not bash the writer in this post, you will add knowledge to their findings.

1) In the research paper, you will conduct a study using a LOGISTIC REGRESSION statistical technique. You will need to obtain the data necessary to conduct the study.

                                    *SPSS Software is REQUIRED

2) The Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research at the University of Michigan maintains a variety of datasets on criminal justice and other topics. These datasets are in SPSS format.

3) Should be organized in the following sections: abstract, background, data, results, conclusion, and references.

Just remember that while published articles have tables and figures integrated into the text of the manuscript, you submit a manuscript to a journal with the tables and figures after the references. Tables are first and then figures. You place (Insert Table 1 about here) in the manuscript to alert the editor where the table should be placed. A table is typically placed after you finished discussing it in the manuscript. It is the same with figures.

This source analysis is a miniature version of your final project: It contains both a written analysis and an annotated bibliography and requires you to analyze both primary and secondary sources to understand a historical event. Your paper will 1) provide a thesis driven analysis that answers each question in the prompt and 2) analyze the sources themselves in an annotated bibliography. A source analysis paper is not an
opinion paper and should not contain your opinion on the events, but rather a thorough analysis of the information and your response to the questions provided.
Support your response with appropriate research and citations.