Fromthe title you might realized I screwed up and tracked hours from one contract onto another. Luckily the contract to which I uploaded the hours is fixed price so no one was charged, and the contract to which I should have charged is a good long-term client and he will surely let me upload the hours manually (Ive already contacted him).
Unfortunately, there is no way to transfer the hours to a different contract. However, you can save images the App took for your own and the client's record and then ask the client to allow you to enter manual time.
If I had to track hours for ClientA, and by mistake, I tracked into ClientB's contract, ClientB would be charged. ClientA would NOT have to worry about allowing manual hours if I (as a contractor) can transfer the hours.
I am trying to create a table that only populates entries of a contact to a customer at a business number if they were NOT first contacted at a home number within 24 hours prior to the attempt at the business number.
I have tried adding a count to the ID but I'm not sure how I'd go about using that, or if there's a way to use a subquery within a proc sql to create a count of observations that have more than one in a 24 hour period.
So, your approach will work, but will be quite messy with large numbers - as you're doing a cartesian join within ID. If each ID has few records it's not so bad, but if each ID has many records you make a lot of connections.
This will be much faster than SQL on larger datasets, if for no other reason than it only passes the data once. SQL will necessarily do it multiple times, even if you don't separate HAVEA/HAVEB and do that within the SQL query.
Sometimes my .25mg xanax seems to lose its effect after a few hours. My prescription bottle says to take it twice daily but it gives no information on how long to wait between the doses. I just want to make sure that taking another dose or even a half of a dose will not harm me if I need it.
Normally when a prescription is prescribed for twice daily the dosages are usually AM & PM. If your doctor wanted you to take it 3 hrs apart the bottle would probably state that... or something like take 1 every so many hours as needed. & granted you would be fine if you took it how the others described but if i was you i would contact my doctor & ask just to make sure.
I'm not on any other medication i just feel like my dosage might be wrong because most of the time i feel almost nothing after taking it and the anxiety is still there. i talked to my doctor about when an appropriate time between doses is and he gave me a really confusing round-about answer. the only answer he could give me was that the longer i wait between doses the better but we didn't talk about it having almost no effect in the first place. the pills are perforated so i can take one and a half doses for a dose of .375mg but i'm just not sure if that's the right thing for me. the doctor did say that i could take up to 4 .25mg doses in the course of one day and be fine.
Yes, I was on 2mg three times a day. 0.25mg is a very low dose. Be careful I became extremely addicted to Xanax after several years, I was in the ICU pretty much psycotic for 2 weeks. 9 months later my anxiety is still much worse than it was going on Xanax.
Yes that is the very lowest dosage of Xanax (Alprazolam). Some people are prescribed up to 3mg per day of Xanax, without adverse side effects. So taking even all three of the 0.25mg Xanax at once would be fine. So in overview, yes 3 hours is completely safe to take another dose.
The practice of Mental Health Counseling and use of the titles "Mental Health Counselor" and "Licensed Mental Health Counselor" or any derivative thereof within New York State requires licensure as a Mental Health Counselor, unless otherwise exempt under the law.
Submit an Application for Licensure (Form 1) and the other forms indicated, along with the appropriate fee for licensure and first registration to the Office of the Professions at the address specified on each form. It is your responsibility to follow up with anyone you have asked to send us material.
The specific requirements for licensure are contained in Title 8, Article 163, Section 8402 of the New York State Education Law and Section 52.32 and Subpart 79-9 of the Regulations of the Commissioner of Education.
Fees are subject to change. The fee due is the one in law when your application is received (unless fees are increased retroactively). You will be billed for the difference if fees have been increased.
If you withdraw your application, obtain a refund, and then decide to seek New York State licensure at a later date, you will be considered a new applicant, and you will be required to pay the application fee and meet the licensure requirements in place at the time you reapply.
To meet the professional education requirement for licensure as a Mental Health Counselor, you must present evidence of receiving a master's or doctoral degree in counseling from a program that is:
To be considered substantially equivalent, your program must include at least 60 semester hours, or the equivalent, of graduate study that contains curricular content that includes but is not limited to the following areas:
Evidence of receipt of your degree(s) must be presented on Form 2 - Certification of Professional Education - and must be submitted directly to the Office of the Professions by the school(s) where you obtained your degree(s). In most cases, an official transcript is also needed.
A degree in school counseling, school psychology or another field that is not registered as leading to licensure in New York or accredited as a clinical mental health counseling program by CACREP may not meet the education requirements for Mental Health Counseling. An applicant with a degree in another field must be individually evaluated to determine what additional graduate coursework, including supervised internship/practicum, must be completed to constitute an equivalent degree.
The Department must conduct an individual transcript evaluation of an applicant for licensure as a Mental Health Counselor who graduated from a program that, at the time of graduation, was not a masters or higher degree in mental health counseling of 60 semester hours (or more) that was either:
In addition to verifying the required course content, the Department must determine if the applicant completed a supervised internship in mental health counseling and psychotherapy as part of the degree program. This evaluation requires information that is not on the transcript, so the applicant must ask the Chair or Director of the academic department to complete and submit a Certification of Supervised Internship and Practicum (Form 2INT). Failure to submit this form will delay the evaluation of the applicant's education and his/her eligibility for a limited permit and admission to the licensing examination. Please note that this form is not required for graduates of 60 semester hour CACREP accredited clinical mental health counseling or NYS registered licensure qualifying MHC programs.
In addition to the professional education requirement, every applicant for Mental Health Counseling licensure or a limited permit must complete coursework or training in the identification and reporting of child abuse in accordance with Section 6507(3)(a) of the Education Law. See additional information and a list of approved providers for this training.
Not less than 1,500 clock hours of such required experience must consist of direct contact with clients. The remaining experience may consist of other activities that do not involve direct client contact, including but not limited to, recordkeeping, case management, research, supervision and professional development.
When an applicant completes less than 3,000 hours in a setting, at least one-half of the hours must be direct; the remainder may be indirect. It is not acceptable to complete direct and indirect activities in different settings under different supervisors and attempt to combine these hours to meet the experience requirement.
Experience for licensure must be completed in a legal manner, under a qualified supervisor in a setting that is authorized to provide professional services. Hour calculations are based on a typical 40-45 hour work week to ensure that the applicant meeting the experience requirement obtains the appropriate supervision, client contact, and supervisor feedback in an educationally sound manner. Obtaining experience in an unreasonable amount of time is not acceptable as it compromises the learning process. In New York State, the experience must be under a limited permit issued by the Department for a specific setting under a qualified supervisor (see below). Experience in other jurisdictions will be evaluated to determined if the equivalent requirements have been satisfied in a legal manner.
Your supervisor must be licensed and registered in New York State to practice Mental Health Counseling, medicine, as a physician assistant, psychology, licensed clinical social work, or as a registered professional nurse or nurse practitioner and competent in the practice of Mental Health Counseling, or must have the equivalent qualifications as determined by the Department for experience completed in another jurisdiction.
The supervisor is responsible for the assessment, evaluation, and treatment of each patient and must delegate to the limited permit holder those activities the limited permit holder is competent to perform by education, training or licensure. The supervisor must provide an average of one hour per week or two hours every other week of in-person individual or group supervision.
The supervisor provides you with oversight and guidance in assessment and evaluation, treatment planning, completing psychosocial histories and progress notes, individual counseling, group counseling, psychotherapy, and consultation, and reviews your assessment and treatment of each client seen under his/her general supervision.
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