In your opinion, why is it difficult to integrate IT and medicine? In your opinion, should...

In your opinion, why is it difficult to integrate IT and medicine?

In your opinion, should all HIMS implement a "integrated management" approach? (Why or Why Not?) **Tip: First, I would define what an HIMS is, Second define what an "integrated management" system is, Third: I would explain why OR why not I believed integrated management is needed in health care information systems.

In: Computer Science

Required: Make necessary journal entries including the necessary adjusting entries, post them to their respective general...

Required: Make necessary journal entries including the necessary adjusting entries, post them to their respective general ledger accounts and prepare only an adjusted trial balance. 1. Using the following information, complete the accounting cycle.

Jan 1, 2010 Sold Common Stock to raise capital in the amount of $800,000. Jan 1 Purchased Factory machinery for $50,000. The machinery has a life of 10 years, residual value of $10,000, and the company uses double declining balance method of depreciation. Jan 1 Purchased Office Supplies for $10,000 for cash Jan 1 Purchased Office Building for $400,000, making a down payment of $200,000 and giving a promissory note to be paid at once at the end of 5 years. The market interest rate at the time of the purchase is 8%. The office building has a life of 20 years, salvage value of $50,000, and the company uses straight line method of depreciation. Jan 5 Purchased Materials from William Martin for $100,000, term 3/10, EOM, FOB shipping point. The transportation incurred and paid is $2,000. Jan 6 Requisitioned for $70,000 direct materials which were put into production process. Jan 6 Requisitioned for $15,000 Indirect materials which were put into production process. Jan 7 Returned $5,000 of the materials to William Martin for defectiveness. Jan 10 Paid William Martin the amount due. Jan 10 Paid direct labor cost of $15,000. Jan 15 Paid indirect labor cost of $18,000. Jan 12 Paid other factory overhead of $45,000. Jan 31 Make necessary entries for depreciation adjustments for both machinery as well as office building. Additional Information: Applied 90% of the actual factory overhead to the production process. The over or under-applied overhead is considered immaterial and this information should be considered in determining how the over-or under-applied overhead would be disposed off. Jan 31 Paid selling expenses of $6,000 and administrative expenses of $8,000. Jan 31. The unused office supplies is $2,000 and the work in process at the end of the period is $6,000. Jan 31. Sold 60% of the goods available for sale at 200% of their cost for cash.

In: Accounting

Kozma Company chart if accounts includes the following selected accounts: 101 Cash, 112 Accounts Receivable, 120...

Kozma Company chart if accounts includes the following selected accounts: 101 Cash, 112 Accounts Receivable, 120 Inventories, 301 Owners Capital, 401 Sales Revenue, 414 Sales Discounts, 505 Cost of Goods Sold

On April 1st the accounts receivable ledger of Kozma Company showed the following balances: Morrow 1550, Rose 1200, Jennings Co 2900, and Dent 2200. The April transactions involving the receipt of cash as follows :

April : Apr. 1 The owner, T. Kozma, invested additional cash in the business $7,200.

4 Received check for payment of account from Dent less 2% cash discount.

5 Received check for $920 in payment of invoice no. 307 from Jennings Co.

8 Made cash sales of merchandise totaling $7,245. The cost of the merchandise sold was $4,347.

10 Received check for $600 in payment of invoice no. 309 from Morrow.

11 Received cash refund from a supplier for damaged merchandise $740.

23 Received check for $1,000 in payment of invoice no. 310 from Jennings Co.

29 Received check for payment of account from Rose.(No Cash Discounts Allowed)

Instructions

a) Journalize the transactions above in a six-column cash receipts journal with columns for cash DR. sales discount DR. Accounts Receivable CR. Sales revenue CR. Other Accounts CR. AND cost of goods sold DR/ inventory CR. Foot and cross foot the journal.

a) Balancing Totals $25,452

b) Insert the beginning balances in the accounts receivable control and subsidiary accounts, and post the April transactions to these accounts.

c) Prove the agreement of the control account and subsidiary account balances.

c) Accounts Receivable $1,930

Journalize transactions in cash payments journal, post to control account and subsidiary ledgers.

In: Accounting

In C++ and their need to be 3 files please Instructions In this lab, you will...

In C++ and their need to be 3 files please

Instructions

In this lab, you will modify the Student class you created in a previous lab. You will modify one new data member which will be a static integer data member. Call that data member count. You also add a static method to the Student class that will display the value of count with a message indicating what the value represents, meaning I do not want to just see a value printed to the screen.

Change main so that it calls this new method towards the end of the program. Call the method using the static syntax; do not use one of the instances of the Student class.

You will also need to change the Student constructor so that it increments the new data member you added, count. In your post explain why you get the value it displays.

Download Source Lab 7 Files:

File 1.) Source.cpp

#include

#include "Student.h"

using namespace std;

int main()

{

Student rich(2);

rich.DisplayStudent();

Student mary(3);

mary.DisplayStudent();

return 0;

}

File 2.) Student.cpp

#include "Student.h"

Student::Student(int numGrades)

{

quanity = numGrades;

grades = new int[numGrades];

name = "rich";

grades[0] = 88;

grades[1] = 96;

}

Student::~Student()

{

delete[] grades;

}

void Student::DisplayStudent()

{

cout << "Grades for " << name << endl;

for (int index = 0; index < quanity; index++)

{

cout << *(grades + index) << endl;

}

}

File 3.) Student.h #pragma once

#include

#include

using namespace std;

class Student

{

public: Student(int numGrades);

~Student();

void DisplayStudent();

private: string name;

int* grades;

int quanity;

};

In: Computer Science

When one company buys another company, it is not unusual that some workers are terminated. The...

When one company buys another company, it is not unusual that some workers are terminated. The severance benefits offered to the laid-off workers are often the subject of dispute. Suppose that the Laurier Company recently bought the Western Company and subsequently terminated 20 of Western’s employees. As part of the buyout agreement, it was promised that the severance packages offered to the former Western employees would be equivalent to those offered to Laurier employees who had been terminated in the past year. Thirty-six-year-old Bill Smith, a Western employee for the past 10 years, earning $32,000 per year, was one of those let go. His severance package included an offer of 5 weeks’ severance pay. Bill complained that this offer was less than that offered to Laurier’s employees when they were laid off, in contravention of the buyout agreement. A statistician was called in to settle the dispute. The statistician was told that severance is determined by three factors: age, length of service with the company, and pay. To determine how generous the severance package had been, a random sample of 50 Laurier ex-employees was taken. For each, the following variables were recorded:Number of weeks of severance pay,Age of employee,Number of years with the company,Annual pay (in thousands of dollars),

A. Determine the regression equation.

B.Comment on how well the model fits the data.

***USE EXCEL, or xlstat***

Weeks SP Age Years Pay
13 37 16 46
13 53 19 48
11 36 8 35
14 44 16 33
3 28 4 40
10 43 9 31
4 29 3 33
7 31 2 43
12 45 15 40
7 44 15 32
8 42 13 42
11 41 10 38
9 32 5 25
10 45 13 36
18 48 19 40
17 52 20 34
13 42 11 33
14 42 19 38
5 27 2 25
11 50 15 36
10 46 14 36
8 28 6 22
15 44 16 32
7 40 6 27
9 37 8 37
11 44 12 35
10 33 13 32
8 41 14 42
5 33 7 37
6 27 4 35
14 39 12 36
12 50 17 30
10 43 11 29
14 49 14 29
12 48 17 36
12 41 17 37
8 39 8 36
12 49 16 28
10 37 10 35
11 37 13 37
15 44 19 33
5 31 6 37
8 42 9 36
11 40 11 32
15 35 15 30
11 46 13 40
6 25 5 33
6 40 7 33
13 40 14 48
9 38 10 37

In: Math

Calculation of individual costs and WACC - Dillon Labs has asked its financial manager to measure...

Calculation of individual costs and WACC - Dillon Labs has asked its financial manager to measure the cost of each specific type of capital as well as the weighted average cost of capital The weighted average cost is to be measured by using the following weights: 30% long term debt, 20% preferred stock, and 50% common stock equity.

Debt - the firm can sell for $1010 a 15-year, $1,000 par value bond paying annual interest at a 6.00% coupon rate. A flotation cost of 3.5% of the par value is required.

Preferred stock - 9.50% (annual dividend) preferred stock having a par value of $100 can be sold for $98. An additional fee of $6 per share must be paid to the underwriters.

Common stock - The firm's common stock is currently selling for $59.43 per share. The stock has paid a dividend that has gradually increased for many years, rising from $2.70 ten years ago to the $4.40 dividend payment D0, that the company just recently made. If the company wants to issue new new common stock, it will sell them $1.50 below the current market price to attract investors, and the company will pay $3.50 per share in flotation costs.

a. calculate the after-tax cost of debt.

b. calculate the cost of preferred stock.

c. calculate the cost of common stock (both retained earnings and new common stock).

d. calculate the WACC for Dillon Labs.

In: Finance

Java This is background information First, code this project. Write a program that determines the change...

Java

This is background information First, code this project. Write a program that determines the change to be dispensed from a vending machine. An item in the machine can cost between 25 cents and a dollar, in 5-cent increments (25, 30, 35, ..., 90, 95, or 100) and the machine only accepts a single dollar bill to pay for the item. For example, a possible dialogue with the user might beEnter price of item(from 25 cents to a dollar, in 5-cent increments): 45You bought an item for 45 cents and gave me a dollar,so your change is 2 quarters,0 dimes, and 1 nickel.

You can write this program based on the program or with if statements. After getting it to work, include input checking. Display the change only if a valid price is entered (no less than 25 cents, no more than 100 cents, and an integer multiple of 5 cents). Otherwise, display separate error messages for any of the following invalid inputs: a cost under 25 cents, a cost that is not an integer multiple of 5, and a cost that is more than a dollar.

Write comments

In: Computer Science

What you think a historian's job is, what skills a historian needs to do that job,...

What you think a historian's job is, what skills a historian needs to do that job, and how those skills might be applicable to your career and/or major goals.

In: Economics

A bullet with mass m = 0.1 kg grams hits a ballistic pendulum with length L...

A bullet with mass m = 0.1 kg grams hits a ballistic pendulum with length L = 3 meters and mass M = 2 kg and lodges in it. When the bullet hits the pendulum it swings up from the equilibrium position and reaches an angle 15 degrees at its maximum. In this problem, you will determine the bullet’s velocity. First, I want to ask you a couple of questions:

  1. While the bullet is embedding into the block, is energy conserved? Why or why not?

B.While the bullet is embedding into the block, is momentum conserved? Why or why not?

C. When the pendulum swings up to its maximum angle, is energy conserved? Why or why not?

D.When the pendulum swings up to its maximum angle, is momentum conserved? Why or why not?

E. Find the velocity of the bullet.

In: Physics

a) Explain how a sodium ion (Na+ 1) is created, its stability and why it takes...

a) Explain how a sodium ion (Na+ 1) is created, its stability and why it takes on this charge. List the following values to help you answer this question: the size of the sodium ion; atomic size of the neutral atom and the Effective nuclear charge; each ionizations potential for each electron in the atom; the electron affinity and the electronegativity. Reference your source for this information.

b) Explain atomic size, ionization potential, electronegativity and the general periodic trend for each of these properties. Arrange the following atoms: O, Se, C, Si, F in order of increasing atomic radius, in order of increasing electronegativity and in order of increasing ionization energy. Explain how you developed your list and explain the similarities or differences between the lists.

In: Chemistry

**Python** 4. Running total of product and sum of integers input by a user Write a...

**Python**

4. Running total of product and sum of integers input by a user

Write a function ProdSum that asks a user to input a number from one to 99. If the input number is less than or equal to 25, then calculate the running product of each number inputted by the user that is less that or equal to 25. If the number is greater than 25, then calculate the running sum of each number inputted by the user that is greater that 25. If the user enters zero as input, then print out the total running product calculated and the total running sum calculated and end the function.

Assume the user can input as many numbers as desired until inputting a zero. Make sure you test the number inputted by the user to ensure it is in the range from zero to 99 and inform the user if the number is not in the range and to try again. Also print the appropriate labels for the two calculations in your print statements, as well as the number inputted by the user..

For Example:

Enter a number from 1 to 99 or 0 to Exit: 5

Enter a number from 1 to 99 or 0 to Exit: 83

Enter a number from 1 to 99 or 0 to Exit: 21

Enter a number from 1 to 99 or 0 to Exit: 55

Enter a number from 1 to 99 or 0 to Exit: 13

Enter a number from 1 to 99 or 0 to Exit: 64

Enter a number from 1 to 99 or 0 to Exit: 0

The product of the numbers [5, 21, 14] is 1470

The sum of the numbers [83, 55, 63] is 201

In: Computer Science

The Beer’s Law calibration curve for this experiment was obtained at the appropriate wavelength and gave...

The Beer’s Law calibration curve for this experiment was obtained at the appropriate wavelength and gave the following linear regression equation:
Absorbance = 4898 (Concentration) + 0.055

Suppose 5.0 mL of 0.0020 M Fe(NO3)3 dissolved in 0.50 M HNO3 are mixed with 5.0 mL of 0.0020 M HSCN dissolved in 0.50 M HNO3, and the absorbance of the solution is measured to be 0.30. What is the equilibrium constant for the following reaction? Assume that the H+ concentration stays constant at 0.50 M.

Fe3+(aq) + HSCN(aq) ⇌ FeSCN2+(aq) + H+(aq)

In: Chemistry

Complete combustion of 3.60 g of a hydrocarbon produced 11.6 g of CO2 and 3.95 g...

Complete combustion of 3.60 g of a hydrocarbon produced 11.6 g of CO2 and 3.95 g of H2O. What is the empirical formula for the hydrocarbon?

In: Chemistry

A friend approaches you about a nutritional product and ask you if it is worth it....

A friend approaches you about a nutritional product and ask you if it is worth it. He shows you a HGH cream called Somaderm that is a homeopathic human growth hormone, meant to penetrate the skin and reduce wrinkles, improve sleep, experience vivid dreams, promote muscle and bone growth, and reduce fat.

Use: concentration gradients, diffusion, active or passive transport, layers of the skin, what substances can or cannot pass through the skin and why.. to explain if the supplement is beneficial or if it is a scam.

In: Anatomy and Physiology

The one rate that truly represents the interest earned in a year is the annual effective...

The one rate that truly represents the interest earned in a year is the annual effective yield. (or effective annual interest rate).

True

False

Market interest rates are supposed to reflect any anticipated changes in earning power as well as purchasing power in the economy.

True

False

When you pay cash for a car, you lose the opportunity to earn interest on the money you spend.

True

False

In: Finance