We found 84 results that contain "text"

Posted on: #iteachmsu
Wednesday, Sep 13, 2023
PRIMER: What is Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder? - ADDED
Primer text from The College of William & Mary

ADHD is one of the most commonly diagnosed conditions of children (Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, 2015).

In a 2016 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study, scientists found that 6.1 million children aged 2-17 years living in the U.S. had been diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), which is similar to previous en
Ages 6-11: Approximately 2.4 million children
Ages 12-17: Approximately 3.3 million children

The diagnostic term attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) refers to individuals who display patterns of inattention, impulsivity, and overactive behavior that interfere with daily functioning (American Psychiatric Association [APA], 2013).


The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) V (APA, 2013) criteria for diagnosing ADHD list
three types of ADHD and the accompanying characteristics.
Authored by: Super admin - R
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PRIMER: What is Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder? - ADDED
Primer text from The College of William & Mary

ADHD is one of the most commonly diagnosed conditions of children (Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, 2015).

In a 2016 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study, scientists found that 6.1 million children aged 2-17 years living in the U.S. had been diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), which is similar to previous en
Ages 6-11: Approximately 2.4 million children
Ages 12-17: Approximately 3.3 million children

The diagnostic term attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) refers to individuals who display patterns of inattention, impulsivity, and overactive behavior that interfere with daily functioning (American Psychiatric Association [APA], 2013).


The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) V (APA, 2013) criteria for diagnosing ADHD list
three types of ADHD and the accompanying characteristics.
Authored by: Super admin - R
Wednesday, Sep 13, 2023
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Posted on: #iteachmsu
Disciplinary Content
Monday, Sep 25, 2023
Kicking Off Class with a Plan! An overview of teaching.tools
Kicking off Class with a Plan!
A lesson plan can serve as an educator's road map... including what students need to learn and how that learning will be facilitated within the time span of the experience. Lesson plans can help you feel more confident while maximizing positive student outcomes. Class prep doesn't have to be a chore this semester! In addition to providing an easy-to-use framework for lesson design, this interactive workshop will introduce participants to an online tool for planning effective, inclusive class sessions... PLUS the new Brainstorming Tool for the first time! This tool uses expertly-prompted AI to generate effective lecture plans, discussion questions, case studies, and more. This is the perfect way to get hands-on practice with Teaching Tools' entire suite of applications that will revolutionize your class prep workflow. Participants will have the chance to explore the tool, ask questions, and leave the session with a new tool in their educator toolbox.


Setting the Stage...
When class prep is difficult and time consuming it…

Doesn’t happen at all
Doesn’t happen very often
Isn’t very effective
This results in…

Winging it
10-year old lesson plan (often inaccessible)
Decreased motivation
Teaching Tools (according to the site)
"We build technologies that promote effective, inclusive college teaching. By translating evidence-informed pedagogical research into easy-to-use online tools, we make good teaching practices more accessible to college instructors of all disciplines and experience levels. Our tools are designed to complement the services offered by Centers for Teaching and Learning, Instructional Technology units, and your LMS. We add value by providing innovative solutions tailored to the higher ed teaching and learning context. Launched in February 2022, Teaching Tools is a registered limited liability company in Maryland."

Anyone can access the three tools at https://teaching.tools by signing up for free [even with a google account].

1. ACTIVE LEARNING LIBRARY – discover new learning activities that fit your teaching context
https://teaching.tools/activities

Main column displays series of learning activities – huge variety from “traditional” (lectures) to more engaging (case study)
Click each activity for more details” engagement level, formative feedback, time, modality
Best practices for facilitations
Filters on the left allow educators to filter by facilitation difficulty level, prep time required, class size, active learning, formative feedback level, bloom’s taxonomy, inclusive learning (UDL principles), whole-person learning, activity time, class modality
2. LESSON PLANNING TOOL – build a cohesive lesson plan for based on series of activities

Allows educators to build out timetable for learning experience
Saves in database and can be duplicated and edited over time.
3. BRAINSTOMING TOOL – generate new content ideas for lectures, discussions, cases, etc.
https://teaching.tools/brainstorm
Authored by: Viju
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Posted on 1: #iteachmsu
Kicking Off Class with a Plan! An overview of teaching.tools
Kicking off Class with a Plan!
A lesson plan can serve as an educator's road map... including what students need to learn and how that learning will be facilitated within the time span of the experience. Lesson plans can help you feel more confident while maximizing positive student outcomes. Class prep doesn't have to be a chore this semester! In addition to providing an easy-to-use framework for lesson design, this interactive workshop will introduce participants to an online tool for planning effective, inclusive class sessions... PLUS the new Brainstorming Tool for the first time! This tool uses expertly-prompted AI to generate effective lecture plans, discussion questions, case studies, and more. This is the perfect way to get hands-on practice with Teaching Tools' entire suite of applications that will revolutionize your class prep workflow. Participants will have the chance to explore the tool, ask questions, and leave the session with a new tool in their educator toolbox.


Setting the Stage...
When class prep is difficult and time consuming it…

Doesn’t happen at all
Doesn’t happen very often
Isn’t very effective
This results in…

Winging it
10-year old lesson plan (often inaccessible)
Decreased motivation
Teaching Tools (according to the site)
"We build technologies that promote effective, inclusive college teaching. By translating evidence-informed pedagogical research into easy-to-use online tools, we make good teaching practices more accessible to college instructors of all disciplines and experience levels. Our tools are designed to complement the services offered by Centers for Teaching and Learning, Instructional Technology units, and your LMS. We add value by providing innovative solutions tailored to the higher ed teaching and learning context. Launched in February 2022, Teaching Tools is a registered limited liability company in Maryland."

Anyone can access the three tools at https://teaching.tools by signing up for free [even with a google account].

1. ACTIVE LEARNING LIBRARY – discover new learning activities that fit your teaching context
https://teaching.tools/activities

Main column displays series of learning activities – huge variety from “traditional” (lectures) to more engaging (case study)
Click each activity for more details” engagement level, formative feedback, time, modality
Best practices for facilitations
Filters on the left allow educators to filter by facilitation difficulty level, prep time required, class size, active learning, formative feedback level, bloom’s taxonomy, inclusive learning (UDL principles), whole-person learning, activity time, class modality
2. LESSON PLANNING TOOL – build a cohesive lesson plan for based on series of activities

Allows educators to build out timetable for learning experience
Saves in database and can be duplicated and edited over time.
3. BRAINSTOMING TOOL – generate new content ideas for lectures, discussions, cases, etc.
https://teaching.tools/brainstorm
DISCIPLINARY CONTENT
Authored by: Viju
Monday, Sep 25, 2023
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Posted on: #iteachmsu
Tuesday, Sep 26, 2023
FBC
Department of Haematology
Notes
Full blood counts are performed on automated equipment and provide haemoglobin concentration, red cell indices, white cell count (with a differential count) and platelet count.
The presence of abnormal white cell and red cell morphology is flagged by the analysers.
Blood films may be inspected to confirm and interpret abnormalities identified by the cell counter, or to look for certain specific haematological abnormalities.
Grossly abnormal FBC results and abnormal blood films will be phoned through to the requestor.
There is no need to request a blood film to obtain a differential white count. It is, however, important that clinical details are provided to allow the laboratory to decide whether a blood film, in addition to the automated analysis, is required.
Under some circumstances a differential is not routinely performed, e.g. pre-op, post-op, antenatal and postnatal requests.
Full Blood Counts are performed at CGH and GRH
See also: Reticulocyte Count
The FBC comprises the following tests

Standard

Haemoglobin (Hb)
White Blood Count (WBC)
Platelet Count (Plt)
Red Cell Count (RBC)
Haematocrit (HCT)
Mean Cell Volume - Red cell (MCV)
Mean Cell Haemoglobin (MCH)
Differential White Cell Count (where applicable)

Neutrophils
Lymphocytes
Monocytes
Eosinophils
Basophils
And if appropriate

Blood Film
Sample Requirements
2ml or 4ml EDTA sample or a Paediatric 1ml EDTA sample.

EDTA with cap

1ml Paediatric EDTA
Sample Storage and Retention
Pre analysis storage: do not store, send to laboratory within 4 hours.
Sample retention by lab: EDTA samples are retained for a minimum of 48 hours at 2-10°C
Transport of samples may affect sample viability, i.e. FBC results will degenerate if exposed to high temperatures, such as prolonged transportation in a hot car in summer.
This test can be added on to a previous request as long as there is sufficient sample remaining and the sample is less than 24 hours old.

Turnaround Times
Clinical emergency: 30 mins
Other urgent sample: 60 mins
Routine: within 2 hours
Reference Ranges
If references ranges are required for paediatric patients please contact the laboratory for these.

Parameter Patient Reference Range Units Haemoglobin Adult Male 130 - 180 g/L Adult Female 115 - 165 g/L Red Cell Count Adult Male 4.50 - 6.50 x10^12/L Adult Female 3.80 - 5.80 x10^12/L Haematocrit Adult Male 0.40 - 0.54 L/L Adult Female 0.37 - 0.47 L/L Mean Cell Volume Adult 80 - 100 fL Mean Cell Haemoglobin Adult 27 - 32 pg White Cell Count Adult 3.6 - 11.0 x10^9/L Neutrophils Adult 1.8 - 7.5 x10^9/L Lymphocytes Adult 1.0 - 4.0 x10^9/L Monocytes Adult 0.2 - 0.8 x10^9/L Eosinophils Adult 0.1 - 0.4 x10^9/L Basophils Adult 0.02 - 0.10 x10^9/L Platelet Count Adult 140 - 400 x10^9/L
Authored by: Super admin - R
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Posted on 1: #iteachmsu
FBC
Department of Haematology
Notes
Full blood counts are performed on automated equipment and provide haemoglobin concentration, red cell indices, white cell count (with a differential count) and platelet count.
The presence of abnormal white cell and red cell morphology is flagged by the analysers.
Blood films may be inspected to confirm and interpret abnormalities identified by the cell counter, or to look for certain specific haematological abnormalities.
Grossly abnormal FBC results and abnormal blood films will be phoned through to the requestor.
There is no need to request a blood film to obtain a differential white count. It is, however, important that clinical details are provided to allow the laboratory to decide whether a blood film, in addition to the automated analysis, is required.
Under some circumstances a differential is not routinely performed, e.g. pre-op, post-op, antenatal and postnatal requests.
Full Blood Counts are performed at CGH and GRH
See also: Reticulocyte Count
The FBC comprises the following tests

Standard

Haemoglobin (Hb)
White Blood Count (WBC)
Platelet Count (Plt)
Red Cell Count (RBC)
Haematocrit (HCT)
Mean Cell Volume - Red cell (MCV)
Mean Cell Haemoglobin (MCH)
Differential White Cell Count (where applicable)

Neutrophils
Lymphocytes
Monocytes
Eosinophils
Basophils
And if appropriate

Blood Film
Sample Requirements
2ml or 4ml EDTA sample or a Paediatric 1ml EDTA sample.

EDTA with cap

1ml Paediatric EDTA
Sample Storage and Retention
Pre analysis storage: do not store, send to laboratory within 4 hours.
Sample retention by lab: EDTA samples are retained for a minimum of 48 hours at 2-10°C
Transport of samples may affect sample viability, i.e. FBC results will degenerate if exposed to high temperatures, such as prolonged transportation in a hot car in summer.
This test can be added on to a previous request as long as there is sufficient sample remaining and the sample is less than 24 hours old.

Turnaround Times
Clinical emergency: 30 mins
Other urgent sample: 60 mins
Routine: within 2 hours
Reference Ranges
If references ranges are required for paediatric patients please contact the laboratory for these.

Parameter Patient Reference Range Units Haemoglobin Adult Male 130 - 180 g/L Adult Female 115 - 165 g/L Red Cell Count Adult Male 4.50 - 6.50 x10^12/L Adult Female 3.80 - 5.80 x10^12/L Haematocrit Adult Male 0.40 - 0.54 L/L Adult Female 0.37 - 0.47 L/L Mean Cell Volume Adult 80 - 100 fL Mean Cell Haemoglobin Adult 27 - 32 pg White Cell Count Adult 3.6 - 11.0 x10^9/L Neutrophils Adult 1.8 - 7.5 x10^9/L Lymphocytes Adult 1.0 - 4.0 x10^9/L Monocytes Adult 0.2 - 0.8 x10^9/L Eosinophils Adult 0.1 - 0.4 x10^9/L Basophils Adult 0.02 - 0.10 x10^9/L Platelet Count Adult 140 - 400 x10^9/L
Authored by: Super admin - R
Tuesday, Sep 26, 2023
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Posted on: #iteachmsu
Wednesday, Dec 6, 2023
NLP tasks
Human language is filled with ambiguities that make it incredibly difficult to write software that accurately determines the intended meaning of text or voice data. Homonyms, homophones, sarcasm, idioms, metaphors, grammar and usage exceptions, variations in sentence structure—these just a few of the irregularities of human language that take humans years to learn, https://byjus.com/biology/flower/ but that programmers must teach natural language-driven applications to recognize and understand accurately from the start, if those applications are going to be useful.
https://byjus.com/biology/flower/ https://byjus.com/biology/flower/

Several NLP tasks break down human text and voice data in ways that help the computer make sense of what it's ingesting. Some of these tasks include the following:

Speech recognition, also called speech-to-text, is the task of reliably converting voice data into text data. Speech recognition is required for any application that follows voice commands or answers spoken questions. What makes speech recognition especially challenging is the way people talk—quickly, slurring words together, with varying emphasis and intonation, in different accents, and often using incorrect grammar.
Part of speech tagging, also called grammatical tagging, is the process of determining the part of speech of a particular word or piece of text based on its use and context. Part of speech identifies ‘make’ as a verb in ‘I can make a paper plane,’ and as a noun in ‘What make of car do you own?’
Word sense disambiguation is the selection of the meaning of a word with multiple meanings through a process of semantic analysis that determine the word that makes the most sense in the given context. For example, word sense disambiguation helps distinguish the meaning of the verb 'make' in ‘make the grade’ (achieve) vs. ‘make a bet’ (place).
Named entity recognition, or NEM, identifies words or phrases as useful entities. NEM identifies ‘Kentucky’ as a location or ‘Fred’ as a man's name.
Co-reference resolution is the task of identifying if and when two words refer to the same entity. The most common example is determining the person or object to which a certain pronoun refers (e.g., ‘she’ = ‘Mary’), but it can also involve identifying a metaphor or an idiom in the text (e.g., an instance in which 'bear' isn't an animal but a large hairy person).
Sentiment analysis attempts to extract subjective qualities—attitudes, emotions, sarcasm, confusion, suspicion—from text.
Natural language generation is sometimes described as the opposite of speech recognition or speech-to-text; it's the task of putting structured information into human language.
Authored by: Super Admin - R
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Posted on 1: #iteachmsu
NLP tasks
Human language is filled with ambiguities that make it incredibly difficult to write software that accurately determines the intended meaning of text or voice data. Homonyms, homophones, sarcasm, idioms, metaphors, grammar and usage exceptions, variations in sentence structure—these just a few of the irregularities of human language that take humans years to learn, https://byjus.com/biology/flower/ but that programmers must teach natural language-driven applications to recognize and understand accurately from the start, if those applications are going to be useful.
https://byjus.com/biology/flower/ https://byjus.com/biology/flower/

Several NLP tasks break down human text and voice data in ways that help the computer make sense of what it's ingesting. Some of these tasks include the following:

Speech recognition, also called speech-to-text, is the task of reliably converting voice data into text data. Speech recognition is required for any application that follows voice commands or answers spoken questions. What makes speech recognition especially challenging is the way people talk—quickly, slurring words together, with varying emphasis and intonation, in different accents, and often using incorrect grammar.
Part of speech tagging, also called grammatical tagging, is the process of determining the part of speech of a particular word or piece of text based on its use and context. Part of speech identifies ‘make’ as a verb in ‘I can make a paper plane,’ and as a noun in ‘What make of car do you own?’
Word sense disambiguation is the selection of the meaning of a word with multiple meanings through a process of semantic analysis that determine the word that makes the most sense in the given context. For example, word sense disambiguation helps distinguish the meaning of the verb 'make' in ‘make the grade’ (achieve) vs. ‘make a bet’ (place).
Named entity recognition, or NEM, identifies words or phrases as useful entities. NEM identifies ‘Kentucky’ as a location or ‘Fred’ as a man's name.
Co-reference resolution is the task of identifying if and when two words refer to the same entity. The most common example is determining the person or object to which a certain pronoun refers (e.g., ‘she’ = ‘Mary’), but it can also involve identifying a metaphor or an idiom in the text (e.g., an instance in which 'bear' isn't an animal but a large hairy person).
Sentiment analysis attempts to extract subjective qualities—attitudes, emotions, sarcasm, confusion, suspicion—from text.
Natural language generation is sometimes described as the opposite of speech recognition or speech-to-text; it's the task of putting structured information into human language.
Authored by: Super Admin - R
Wednesday, Dec 6, 2023
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Posted on: #iteachmsu
Tuesday, Jan 2, 2024
Five-second testing%
In a five-second test, you present your users with a design and give them five seconds to look at it, then ask them questions. This method can be used to test landing page copy, UI content, and more. You’re testing to see if the information on your page can be quickly absorbed, perceived, or understood.

The questions you ask can range from broad, like “What do you think of the page?” or “What do you remember seeing?” to more specific ones, like “Which of the items are on sale?”.

It’s best to start the test with broad questions to get general feedback and thoughts from your participants, then asking more specific questions to see what information stuck with them.

Preference testing
Preference testing consists of showing research participants two to three versions of your design—in this case, with variations in the content—to get an idea of which they prefer and why. It can help you understand the user’s perception of your content, how it makes them thin
Authored by: Super Admin - R
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Posted on 1: #iteachmsu
Five-second testing%
In a five-second test, you present your users with a design and give them five seconds to look at it, then ask them questions. This method can be used to test landing page copy, UI content, and more. You’re testing to see if the information on your page can be quickly absorbed, perceived, or understood.

The questions you ask can range from broad, like “What do you think of the page?” or “What do you remember seeing?” to more specific ones, like “Which of the items are on sale?”.

It’s best to start the test with broad questions to get general feedback and thoughts from your participants, then asking more specific questions to see what information stuck with them.

Preference testing
Preference testing consists of showing research participants two to three versions of your design—in this case, with variations in the content—to get an idea of which they prefer and why. It can help you understand the user’s perception of your content, how it makes them thin
Authored by: Super Admin - R
Tuesday, Jan 2, 2024
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Posted on: #iteachmsu
Tuesday, Jan 2, 2024
Five-second testing%
In a five-second test, you present your users with a design and give them five seconds to look at it, then ask them questions. This method can be used to test landing page copy, UI content, and more. You’re testing to see if the information on your page can be quickly absorbed, perceived, or understood.

The questions you ask can range from broad, like “What do you think of the page?” or “What do you remember seeing?” to more specific ones, like “Which of the items are on sale?”.

It’s best to start the test with broad questions to get general feedback and thoughts from your participants, then asking more specific questions to see what information stuck with them.

Preference testing
Preference testing consists of showing research participants two to three versions of your design—in this case, with variations in the content—to get an idea of which they prefer and why. It can help you understand the user’s perception of your content, how it makes them thin
Authored by: Super Admin - R
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Posted on 1: #iteachmsu
Five-second testing%
In a five-second test, you present your users with a design and give them five seconds to look at it, then ask them questions. This method can be used to test landing page copy, UI content, and more. You’re testing to see if the information on your page can be quickly absorbed, perceived, or understood.

The questions you ask can range from broad, like “What do you think of the page?” or “What do you remember seeing?” to more specific ones, like “Which of the items are on sale?”.

It’s best to start the test with broad questions to get general feedback and thoughts from your participants, then asking more specific questions to see what information stuck with them.

Preference testing
Preference testing consists of showing research participants two to three versions of your design—in this case, with variations in the content—to get an idea of which they prefer and why. It can help you understand the user’s perception of your content, how it makes them thin
Authored by: Super Admin - R
Tuesday, Jan 2, 2024
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Posted on: #iteachmsu
Tuesday, Jan 2, 2024
Five-second testing%
In a five-second test, you present your users with a design and give them five seconds to look at it, then ask them questions. This method can be used to test landing page copy, UI content, and more. You’re testing to see if the information on your page can be quickly absorbed, perceived, or understood.

The questions you ask can range from broad, like “What do you think of the page?” or “What do you remember seeing?” to more specific ones, like “Which of the items are on sale?”.

It’s best to start the test with broad questions to get general feedback and thoughts from your participants, then asking more specific questions to see what information stuck with them.

Preference testing
Preference testing consists of showing research participants two to three versions of your design—in this case, with variations in the content—to get an idea of which they prefer and why. It can help you understand the user’s perception of your content, how it makes them thin
Authored by: Super Admin - R
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Posted on 1: #iteachmsu
Five-second testing%
In a five-second test, you present your users with a design and give them five seconds to look at it, then ask them questions. This method can be used to test landing page copy, UI content, and more. You’re testing to see if the information on your page can be quickly absorbed, perceived, or understood.

The questions you ask can range from broad, like “What do you think of the page?” or “What do you remember seeing?” to more specific ones, like “Which of the items are on sale?”.

It’s best to start the test with broad questions to get general feedback and thoughts from your participants, then asking more specific questions to see what information stuck with them.

Preference testing
Preference testing consists of showing research participants two to three versions of your design—in this case, with variations in the content—to get an idea of which they prefer and why. It can help you understand the user’s perception of your content, how it makes them thin
Authored by: Super Admin - R
Tuesday, Jan 2, 2024
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Posted on: #iteachmsu
Monday, Jan 8, 2024
Playlist: Good food is a key to good development and a good mood as well. A healthy body nurtures a
Good food is a key to good development and a good mood as well. A healthy body nurtures a healthy mind. Fortunately, my daughter is not a picky eater but there are days when she gives me a hard time.

A balanced nutritious diet is essential. Vegetables, seasonal fruits, eggs, pulses are all building blocks for a proper diet. Milk with #Junior Horlicks is also a great choice as it includes nutrients that support brain development, such as choline, iron, and iodine. It also contains nutrients that support physical growth, such as calcium, Vitamin D, Vitamin K, and proteins, and also nutrients to support healthy immune function such as Vitamin E, A, Selenium & Copper. You can design a wholesome diet with roti, rice, whole-grain bread, wheat pasta, curd, cheese and maybe a scoop of ice cream and some sweets once in a while.
Authored by: Super Admin - R
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Posted on 1: #iteachmsu
Playlist: Good food is a key to good development and a good mood as well. A healthy body nurtures a
Good food is a key to good development and a good mood as well. A healthy body nurtures a healthy mind. Fortunately, my daughter is not a picky eater but there are days when she gives me a hard time.

A balanced nutritious diet is essential. Vegetables, seasonal fruits, eggs, pulses are all building blocks for a proper diet. Milk with #Junior Horlicks is also a great choice as it includes nutrients that support brain development, such as choline, iron, and iodine. It also contains nutrients that support physical growth, such as calcium, Vitamin D, Vitamin K, and proteins, and also nutrients to support healthy immune function such as Vitamin E, A, Selenium & Copper. You can design a wholesome diet with roti, rice, whole-grain bread, wheat pasta, curd, cheese and maybe a scoop of ice cream and some sweets once in a while.
Authored by: Super Admin - R
Monday, Jan 8, 2024
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playlist iconbusy