Bryony is a huge belt bundle that includes beautifully vintage yet modern belt style to elevate your outfits. Pair with your dresses, blouses and skirts to elevate your outfit and create different fashion aesthetics. The pattern is designed in a Mix & Match style, so you can combine different elements to create hundreds of different designs!
When Victoria's not studying or volunteering, she loves spending time with friends and having fun! This bundle features an array of poses, outfits, expressions, animations, and more to take Victoria on new adventures. Take her classic yet edgy style and her outgoing personality across the city, and watch her interactions in ASL with everyone along the way.
Victoria Pretzer (@our.pretzer.home), a member of our Home Stylist Collective, created this luxurious bedding bundle for her own home. This bundled set includes one Crinkle Textured Dobby Comforter Set and one Cable Soft Knitted Blanket/Coverlet.
Victoria loves creating warm and inviting spaces with a focus on neutrals. This new bedding bundle in her name is simply perfect for that. Choose the white comforter with gray blanket the way she designed it, or go for a monochromatic look. The choice is yours!
Background: The ventilation bundle has been used in adult intensive care units to decrease harm and improve quality of care for mechanically ventilated patients. The ventilation bundle focuses on prevention of specific complications of mechanical ventilation; ventilator-associated pneumonia, sepsis, barotrauma, pulmonary oedema, pulmonary embolism, and acute respiratory distress syndrome. The Institute for Healthcare Improvement ventilation bundle consists of five structured evidence-based interventions: head of the bed elevation at 30-45; daily sedation interruptions and assessment of readiness to extubate; peptic ulcer prophylaxis; deep vein thrombosis prophylaxis; and daily oral care with chlorhexidine.
Methods: This is a 3-month prospective observational study in two intensive care units. Patient medical records were reviewed on days 3, 4, and 5 of mechanical ventilation using a prevalidated ventilation bundle checklist.
Results: A total of 96 critically ill patients required mechanical ventilation for more than 2 d. Patients had a mean age of 64.50 y (standard deviation = 14.89), with an Acute Physiology, Age, Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) III mean score of 79.27 (standard deviation = 27.11). The mean ventilation bundle compliance rate was 88.3% on the three consecutive mechanical ventilation days (day 3 = 79.4%, day 4 = 91.1%, and day 5 = 96.7%). There was a statistically significant difference in the mean APACHE III score between patients who had head of bed elevation and those without head of bed elevation, on days 3 (p =
Conclusion: The ventilation bundle elements were used in Australian intensive care units. The likelihood of having all ventilation bundle elements on day 3 was low if the patient's APACHE III score was high. However, the ventilation bundle compliance rate increased with mechanical ventilation days.
From July 2019, the Victorian government will offer first-time parents and carers a bundle of nursery essentials containing key parenting information and resources to support the health, development and wellbeing of their babies.
All first-time Victorian families are eligible for a baby bundle, provided your first baby is born during or after July 2019. First-time foster and adoptive parents/carers with babies up to three months of age are also eligible to receive a baby bundle.
Baby bundles will be provided in hospitals at the time of birth. First-time parents who give birth at home, interstate or overseas, but who live in Victoria, may ask their Maternal and Child Health nurse to provide them with one. Please visit the Maternal and Child Health web page or contact the Maternal and Child Health Line on 13 22 29 (24 hours, 7 days) to find your local MCH centre if you are not sure who your nurse is.
The baby bundle includes a passport-booklet of useful information designed to assist parents in navigating this time of change and transition with their new baby, with content licensed from the Raising Children Network. It includes information on sleep and settling, safety, reading and sharing books with your baby, and a list of emergency contacts.
A Ministerial Advisory Panel of experts in child health, wellbeing, learning, safety, development and literacy was established to provide expert advice on the contents of the bundle, develop specifications for items and the approach for book selection and approve the final selection of books for the baby bundle. The contents of the bundle meet Australian Safety standards.
Members of the public were invited to nominate early childhood books for the baby bundle via the Engage Victoria website during March 2019, which were then reviewed by an independent panel of experts in early childhood literacy. A total of 332 unique titles were identified from the 1199 nominations received, and 118 of these were from Victorian authors.
Parents: Victorian first-time parents who did not receive their baby bundle in hospital can ask their local MCH nurse to order a baby bundle for them. If you are not already connected to your local MCH nurse please visit the MCH web page or contact the MCH Line on 13 22 29 (24 hours, 7 days) to find your local MCH centre.
Clarus Victoria Bundle is a bundle available to download and play for $8.57 which is a 77% discount off its base price. It includes 4 apps and 4 packages. Clarus Victoria Bundle can be played and ran on Windows, Mac, and Linux systems. At the moment, there is no confirmed information regarding Steam Deck support for this bundle.
Pay TV offers a slightly broader bundle. You subscribe to a package from Foxtel and you get access to more channels, and hence can choose between a wider range of content, but it is still a bundled offering. You pay through a subscription rather than by watching advertisements, which makes the business model slightly different, but you are still offered a bundle.
The challenge so far has been gradual as technology has allowed consumers progressively more control. Technology has worked to undercut the pre bundled business models: videos allowed people alternatives as to how to be entertained in their homes, time-shifting gave them greater control over when they watched programs, and the web gave them news whenever they wanted.
Where does it all end? It seems likely that a range of offerings will survive. Some completely bundled products like newspapers will survive at one end, and some smorgasbord offerings like Netflix and Spotify will be at the other. In between they will probably be a range of partly bundled services of the sort Foxtel offers. Just as restaurants exist which offer a diversity of product mixes so entertainment is likely to finish up in the same place.
aa06259810