Selling a phone made easy by recycler organizations

Posted on 7th January 2012 in Communication

With latest technology hike modern phone models are capable of internet access, sending and receiving photos and files, and some models are equipped with GPS technology, allowing for use in most locations around the world and allowing it to be found or the user located in the event of loss or emergency. As the new models arrived, the old models will be left ignored by any buyer in your area.

Advent of such innovations has always led people jump to ever growing new technology in cell phones. This has left behind the mass of numerous used cell phones. Destructive elements from used mobile phones have spread via the land and water when disposed inappropriately. Those destructive elements and substances can pollute surface and ground water. It can also be assimilated by the ground and crops and the flora might grow with the elements incorporated in it.

This is the reason why suppliers would constantly remind their customers to get rid old phones and its accessories appropriately.

You can do your part by reducing your “cell phone turnover” – the frequency that you purchase new phones. Selling used and buying refurbished phones keeps one more phone from our landfills and incinerators, which helps to lessen the environmental impact that these handy devices have. Even the “latest and greatest” phones can be found in used or refurbished condition. The additional benefit you get is you can sell used cell phones for cash.

Electronic Health Records – How they Effect Mental Health and Behavioral Healthcare Organizations

Posted on 12th April 2010 in Health Electronic

WHEN

In 2004, President Bush issued an executive order requiring fully operational EHR adoption throughout the healthcare industry by 2014. He also established the Office of the National Health Information Technology Coordinator and charged it with developing a “health information technology infrastructure” that “reduces healthcare costs resulting from inefficiency, medical errors, inappropriate care and incomplete information.” In November 2006, the Medicaid Commission completed its second and final set of recommendations to Congress, recommending that EHRs, including compatibility among different healthcare providers, be required for all Medicaid beneficiaries by 2012. Congress will focus on healthcare information technology during its 2007 legislative session.

Today, EHR adoption is slow among healthcare providers in general – one study shows that only eight percent of community health centers are using full electronic medical record systems. A September 2006 National Council quick poll of community behavioral health providers across the country indicates that just under eight percent have implemented the EHR with clinical components fully functioning, while 32 percent have implemented the EHR with billing components in place. Another 11 percent of providers are in the process of installing an EHR. Lack of funding and the complex demands of multiple payer and reporting systems are the biggest barriers to EHR adoption in behavioral and mental health patients.

WHY

EHR adoption is expected to reduce healthcare costs by up to 20 percent, significantly cutting back on the approximately 25 cents of every healthcare dollar that is now spent on record keeping and “administrivia” (according to James Kretz, MA, a senior survey statistician at SAMHSA’s Center for Mental Health Services).