Asthe title says. I am just wondering how can I get Valor / Honor points faster?
It seems all the NPC sets for the Valor / Shop is for end game purposes.
Thanks in advance?
Valor is for PvM and Honor is for PvP. There are repeatable quests on all four planets that reward with valor points. You also earn valor points from doing dungeons once you are the correct level. Honor points are earned in the PvP games in the Game Arena.
Check this topic for a list of (at least most of) the quests in the game. Many of the valor point quests will require killing the same monsters so you can take several quests and do them all at the same time.
When you out level the quests they reward less valor. About half the valor as they did when you were in the level range for them. If between 120-170 the quest gave 12 valor you would get 6 when above level 180. There is a cap at some point where the valor reward from quest gets reduced.
Welcome to the Division of Medical Quality Assurance online service portal. The portal was established to provide healthcare practitioners 24 hours a day access to the division's licensing services, including the ability to apply for a license or permit online, check the status of your application, and manage your licensure record. You can also search for approved counterfeit-proof prescription pad vendors and request certification of your Florida license.
The Division of Medical Quality Assurance online service portal provides direct access to the division's online License Verification tool, which allows users to search the Division's database by licensee name or license number. You may also search disciplinary actions, view practitioner profiles, request public records, download data, file a complaint or report unlicensed activity.
The information contained in the Public Data Portal link is for organizations or individuals who want to obtain general license information about multiple practitioners under specific board regulation.
Summary:
The bill expands eligibility for ordering Medicaid home health services to include advanced practice registered nurses (APRNs) and physician assistants (PAs).
The bill allows Medicaid to pay for home health services ordered by an APRN or a PA who is not employed, under contract with, or otherwise affiliated with the home health agency rendering the services. The APRN or PA must have examined the recipient within the 30 days preceding the request for home health services. When ordering home health services, the APRN or PA must also include their national provider identifier, Medicaid identification number, or medical practitioner license number on the written prescription for the services. The APRN or PA must also include such information on all claims for home health reimbursement and prior authorization requests.
Summary:
The bill revises existing standards for the practice of dentistry to include a definition for digital scanning and establishes new requirements that specifically apply to providers using telehealth to provide dental services to patients.
The bill establishes the requirement that a dentist perform an in-person examination of a patient, or review records of an in-person examination of the patient performed within the last 12 months, before making an initial diagnosis and correction of a malposition of teeth or the initial use of an orthodontic appliance. Further, the bill provides that failing to adhere to this requirement constitutes grounds for discipline.
The bill amends the standards of practice by expressly prohibiting a physician from performing a liposuction procedure where more than 1,000 cc of supernatant fat is temporarily or permanently removed, a Level II office surgery, or Level III office surgery procedure in any setting other than a registered office surgery setting or a facility licensed under Chapters 390 or 395, F.S. The bill revises the fine for violating this prohibition from $5,000 a day to $5,000 per incident.
Summary:
The bill creates the Health Care Innovation Council (the Council) within the Department of Health to convene health care experts for the purpose of exploring innovations in technology, workforce, and health care delivery models. The bill tasks the Council with developing best practice recommendations and submitting annual reports to the Governor and the Legislature, among other responsibilities.
The bill also creates a revolving loan program for the implementation of innovative solutions. The Council will review applications and recommend prioritized lists of funding applications. Applicants may be certain licensed providers, with priority for rural hospitals or nonprofits that accept Medicaid patients in rural or medically underserved areas.
The bill creates the Training, Education, and Clinicals in Health (TEACH) Funding Program to offset lost revenue while clinical preceptors are mentoring medical, dental, nursing, and behavioral health students. The program seeks to increase the availability of clinical opportunities, improve the quality of the training sites, and promote the clinical training that prepares students for work as health care professionals.
The bill directs the Agency for Health Care Administration (AHCA) to seek federal approval to include hospital at home as a reimbursable service in Medicaid, so Floridians on Medicaid can receive hospital care at home, if appropriate.
The bill expands the Telehealth Minority Maternity Care Program statewide by expanding the capacity for positive maternal health outcomes. The program may enlist county health departments to assist with program implementation and requires annual reporting by the Department to the Governor and the Legislature on program effectiveness.
Summary:
The bill removes the scheduled repeal of exemptions from public records requirements for secure login credentials held by the Commission on Ethics and certain information entered into the electronic filing system for financial disclosure.
Summary:
The bill amends Florida Statutes to authorize public and private school students with asthma to carry and use short-acting bronchodilators and their components and allows public and private schools to acquire, stock, and administer these medications under specific protocols. The bill defines terms related to asthma, short-acting bronchodilators, and their administration.
The bill permits authorized health care practitioners to prescribe short-acting bronchodilators and components in the name of a public or private school for use under this act, authorizes licensed pharmacists to dispense short-acting bronchodilators and components pursuant to a prescription issued in the name of a public or private school, exempts a dispensing health care practitioner or pharmacists from disciplinary action under any professional licensure statute or rule, and provides immunity from civil or criminal liability for school personnel and health care practitioners involved in prescribing or administering these medications in accordance with the act.
The bill authorizes schools to acquire and maintain a stock of short-acting bronchodilators and components for emergency use and requires schools to adopt protocols for the administration of short-acting bronchodilators to students, developed by a licensed physician. The bill requires schools to notify parents about the adopted protocols and obtain prior permission to administer these medications to their children. The bill allows trained school personnel to administer short-acting bronchodilators to students in respiratory distress, with or without a prior asthma diagnosis or prescription.
Summary:
The bill expands current law on emergency prescription refills by authorizing a pharmacist to dispense an emergency refill of insulin and insulin-related supplies or equipment to treat diabetes up to three nonconsecutive times per calendar year if the pharmacist is unable to readily obtain refill authorization from a prescriber.
Summary:
The bill authorizes certified pharmacists to screen adults for HIV exposure and provide results to such adults, with advice to seek further medical consultation or treatment from a physician. Licensed pharmacists may also dispense preexposure prophylaxis drugs pursuant to a valid prescription.
The bill allows certified pharmacists to order and dispense HIV postexposure prophylaxis drugs under a written collaborative practice agreement with a licensed physician and details specific requirements for these agreements. The bill details the certification process for pharmacists to dispense postexposure drugs, including educational and liability coverage requirements.
The bill requires participating pharmacies to submit an annual access-to-care plan to the Board of Pharmacy and the Department of Health to ensure patients have access to primary care, specifies requirements for access-to-care plans, and authorizes penalties for non-compliance.
Summary:
Providing that certain acts of dispensing controlled substances in specified facilities are not required to be reported to the prescription drug monitoring program; authorizing the designee of a health care practitioner, pharmacist, pharmacy, prescriber, or dispenser or an impaired practitioner consultant to receive certain information from the prescription drug monitoring program.
3a8082e126