Be Careful With My Heart Full Episode 445

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Kellye Tunks

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Aug 4, 2024, 12:48:22 PM8/4/24
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BeCareful with My Heart is the longest-running morning drama series and one of ABS-CBN's most successful programs due to its immense popularity and critical acclaim, spawning albums, concerts and worldwide tours. The series has been aired in regions of Africa, around Asia, the Middle East and South America.[1][2][3] It is the fourth Philippine television series to be shot in high definition format after Rounin, Minsan Lang Kita Iibigin, and Budoy.[4][5]

Maya dela Rosa (Jodi Sta. Maria), her older sister Cristina, and Cristina's son Cho are introduced as tour guides in their hometown of San Nicolas, with their mother running a souvenir shop. They often make less than what their living expenses and household repairs require. Cristina hopes to work at sea, while Maya dreams of becoming a flight attendant. One rainy night after trying to fix the roof, Cristina breaks her leg and cannot complete her schooling to become a seafarer. With a large medical bill, Maya decides to work overseas for two years to help her family. Upon arrival in Manila, she discovers that the woman who offered her a job abroad swindles her. Maya is stuck in Manila with no money or place to go. Relentless, she allows no one to stop her, not even the handsome, wealthy widower Richard Lim (Richard Yap), who reminds her of her shortcomings.


Ironically, Richard is her last hope because of his influence in the airline industry. He offers Maya a temporary job as his youngest daughter's (who has selective mutism) nanny in exchange for his help. Maya agrees to become his maid and nanny. Upon entering the Lim home, she gets involved in the private lives of Richard and his three problematic children: Luke (Jerome Ponce), Nikki (Janella Salvador) and Abby (Mutya Orquia).


Maya realizes that since Richard's wife died, the family's joy died with her, hence their problems. Maya is tasked bringing Richard closer to his children and eventually rebuilding the family. However, in repairing their broken hearts, Maya encounters bigger challenges that test her determination and, more importantly, her heart. While doing her job, she falls in love with the children and their father.


After ABS-CBN launched exclusive behind-the-scenes channels for Walang Hanggan and Princess and I, Be Careful With My Heart also featured its own exclusive interviews of the cast and crew in the network's website.


The drama's pilot episode garnered a 15.2% nationwide rating, considerably high for a 'morning' drama, and dominated its competitor, GMA7's Chef Boy Logro: Kusina Master which got 8.8% according to data released by Kantar Media.[8] Be Careful with My Heart premiered strongly on July 9, 2012, on the pre-noontime block, and ended in 2014 with a final rating of 19.6%. Be Careful With My Heart's ratings peaked during one of its airings in January 2013, reaching 31.3% nationwide rating, marking the all-time highest rating on daytime Philippine television by any non-sports or non-live show.[9]


On June 18, 2013, Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA) announced the 8 entries competing for the 2013 Metro Manila Film Festival (MMFF), which includes the Be Careful With My Heart movie. Jodi Sta. Maria and Richard Yap will reprise their roles for the movie, which will premiere on December 25, 2013. The film is said to be the continuation of where the chapter of the series will end shortly before MMFF, by early December 2013.[10][11][12] In several recent interviews and appearances, Yap and Sta. Maria also mentioned that the only time their show will not air on television is during the time that the MMFF movie is being shown in cinemas. The show would however be back on air after the movie to continue the story.[13]


In September 2013, the Be Careful With My Heart movie entry was pulled out from the Metro Manila Film Festival due to schedule conflicts of Yap and Sta. Maria.[14] The head of the MMFF wrote a letter to the producer of the show to bring back the movie and even gave them an extension for the submission of the film.[15] But the production team declined and instead continued the series.


Dr. Bren Brown is a research professor at the University of Houston, where she holds the Huffington Foundation Endowed Chair at the Graduate College of Social Work. She also holds the position of visiting professor in management at the University of Texas at Austin McCombs School of Business.


BB: So for me, a title leader, or the description leader, has nothing to do with corner offices and shoulder pads and pen stripes and money, and it has nothing to do with that. I define a leader as anyone who takes responsibility for finding the potential in people and processes, and who has the courage to develop that potential.


BB: So I think I may not personally ever get over that, just because courage is one of my two values, and understanding the skill building and the muscle building that I needed to do, to not just have that as an aspirational value, but a lived value, has changed everything in my life. I think the other reason is this was the first time in my 20-year research career where I asked a primary research question and every single one of the participants gave me the same answer.


Bren Brown Education and Research Group, LLC, owns the copyright in and to all content in and transcripts of the Unlocking Us and Dare to Lead podcasts, with all rights reserved, including right of publicity.


You are welcome to share an excerpt from the episode transcript (up to 500 words but not more) in media articles (e.g., The New York Times, LA Times, The Guardian), in a non-commercial article or blog post (e.g., Medium), and/or on a personal social media account for non-commercial purposes, provided that you include proper attribution and link back to the podcast URL. For the sake of clarity, media outlets with advertising models are permitted to use excerpts from the transcript per the above.


A quivery heartbeat and a flutter in your chest are two telltale signs you could be in atrial fibrillation, or AFib. That means your heart is beating out of sync. As weird or scary as an episode may feel, AFib isn't usually deadly by itself.


There are types of AFib, some can come and go on their own while others require treatment with medications or procedures. You may be able to take some steps to help ease symptoms when they start, such as a combination of prescribed medication and deep breathing.


Try a class if your doctor says it's OK. Studios often have no- or low-cost introductory offers for new students. Make sure it's a beginner-friendly class and a gentle style of yoga. Get there early and let the teacher know about your AFib.


Working out regularly may help ease your AFib symptoms. Exercise can also help you keep your weight under control and lower your blood How to Stop an AFib Episodepressure. Both things help ease the load on your heart and lower your AFib risk. Talk to your doctor to see if this is a good option for you.


You may need to be more careful with certain activities though. Most people with AFib can drive, for example. But if you have symptoms, such as feeling dizzy or lightheaded, don't get behind the wheel, or pull over right away.


To get started, make a list of their health conditions and the medications they take. That way, you can share the list with medical professionals during any emergency. If your loved one takes blood thinners, they should wear a medical bracelet or tag saying so.


Although the broader health care reform debate has sidestepped in-depth discussion of provider payment reform, a consensus has emerged among health policy experts that fee-for-service payments contribute to:


For example, bundling payment for hospital readmissions into the inpatient diagnosis-related group (DRG) payment would encourage hospitals to reduce infections and improve care transitions for patients from the hospital to the community. A more ambitious intermediate model would be accountable care organizations (ACOs), where fee-for-service payment is augmented by bonuses or penalties based on the efficiency and quality of care for all services a patient population attributed to the ACO receives during a predetermined period.


The Medicare program has experimented with some forms of bundled payment. In the 1990s, Medicare conducted a demonstration to bundle physician and hospital payment for coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG). The demonstration produced cost reductions of between 12 percent and 27 percent across the participating hospitals.6 Despite this early success, Medicare did not broaden bundled payments to other major inpatient episodes until the 2009 Acute Care Episode (ACE) demonstration, which bundles payment for hospital and physician services for a select set of inpatient episodes of care for orthopedic and cardiovascular procedures.


As with all significant payment reforms, paying on the basis of episodes requires many design decisions, some of which have received more research and policy focus than others.7 Indeed, the effectiveness of the strategy will depend in large part on the wisdom reflected in these decisions. This analysis addresses the following design issues related to developing episode-based payments:


There are different ways to define an episode of care, and any given approach has more potential pitfalls for certain types of care episodes than others. Once the episodes are defined and those most suitable for bundled payment are selected, payment rates must be established. To thread the needle by setting payments in a way that is both fiscally sustainable and motivates providers to behave in desirable ways is a particularly thorny issue, technically and politically.


Another design issue is deciding which providers should be paid on the basis of an episode. This involves decisions regarding which providers to attribute an episode to and whether to spread the incentives broadly across the providers or to concentrate the incentives on a smaller number of providers.

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