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new york city health code: New York State Codes New York (State), |
new york city health code: Radiological Health United States. Food and Drug Administration, 1978 |
new york city health code: Retail Inequality Kenneth H. Kolb, 2021-12-14 What we got wrong -- A concept catches fire -- Food desert realities : perception, money, and transportation -- Food desert realities : social capital, household dynamics, and taste -- The Healthy food frame -- The problem solvers -- A path forward -- Epilogue -- Appendix : food desert media database. |
new york city health code: International Codes International Code Council, 1999 |
new york city health code: Index-catalogue of the Library of the Surgeon-General's Office, United States Army National Library of Medicine (U.S.), 1888 |
new york city health code: Communities in Action National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, Health and Medicine Division, Board on Population Health and Public Health Practice, Committee on Community-Based Solutions to Promote Health Equity in the United States, 2017-03-27 In the United States, some populations suffer from far greater disparities in health than others. Those disparities are caused not only by fundamental differences in health status across segments of the population, but also because of inequities in factors that impact health status, so-called determinants of health. Only part of an individual's health status depends on his or her behavior and choice; community-wide problems like poverty, unemployment, poor education, inadequate housing, poor public transportation, interpersonal violence, and decaying neighborhoods also contribute to health inequities, as well as the historic and ongoing interplay of structures, policies, and norms that shape lives. When these factors are not optimal in a community, it does not mean they are intractable: such inequities can be mitigated by social policies that can shape health in powerful ways. Communities in Action: Pathways to Health Equity seeks to delineate the causes of and the solutions to health inequities in the United States. This report focuses on what communities can do to promote health equity, what actions are needed by the many and varied stakeholders that are part of communities or support them, as well as the root causes and structural barriers that need to be overcome. |
new york city health code: Transportation of Hazardous Materials Through City Streets United States. Congress. House. Committee on Public Works and Transportation. Subcommittee on Surface Transportation, 1980 |
new york city health code: The Chicago Manual of Style University of Chicago. Press, 2003 In addition to books, the Manual now also treats journals and electronic publications. |
new york city health code: Radiation Control in the State of New York New York (State) Atomic Energy Coordinating Council. Committee on Licensing, 1963 |
new york city health code: Essential Readings in Health Policy and Law Joel Teitelbaum, Sara Wilensky, 2009 This compilation of carefully selected readings is meant to allow for deeper analysis of the issues covered in Essentials of Health Policy and Law, yet also serves as an excellent complement to any text on health policy. |
new york city health code: The Official Compilation of the Rules of the City of New York, with Annotations: Title 24. Dept. of Health and Mental Hygiene; NYC Health Code (Title 1, art. 1 to Title 4, art. 121) , 2012 |
new york city health code: S. 3128 : the National Uniformity for Food Act : hearing , |
new york city health code: Drug Industry Antitrust Act United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary, 1962 |
new york city health code: Medical Fee Schedule , 1995 |
new york city health code: Hearings United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Judiciary, 1962 |
new york city health code: Index Catalogue of the Library of the Surgeon-general's Office, United States Army Library of the Surgeon-General's Office (U.S.), 1888 |
new york city health code: Federal Register , 1981 |
new york city health code: Nuclear Waste Disposal United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. Subcommittee on Science, Technology, and Space, 1978 |
new york city health code: Regulating Tobacco, Alcohol and Unhealthy Foods Tania Voon, Andrew Mitchell, Jonathan Liberman, 2014-07-25 The need to reduce disability and premature deaths from non-communicable diseases (NCDs) is increasingly engaging international organisations and national and sub-national governments. In this book, experts from a range of backgrounds provide insights into the legal implications of regulating tobacco, alcohol and unhealthy foods, all of which are risk factors for NCDs. As individual countries and the international community move to increase targeting of these risk factors, affected industries are turning to national and international law to challenge the resulting regulations. This book explores how the effective regulation of tobacco, alcohol and unhealthy foods can be achieved within the context of international health law, international trade and investment law, international human rights law, international intellectual property law, and domestic laws on constitutional and other matters. Its contributors consider the various tensions that arise in regulating NCD risk factors, as well as offering an original analysis of the relationship between evidence and health regulation. Covering a range of geographical areas, including the Americas, the European Union, Africa and Oceania, the book offers lessons for health and policy practitioners and scholars in navigating the complex legal fields in which the regulation of tobacco, alcohol and unhealthy foods takes place. |
new york city health code: Congressional Record United States. Congress, 1976 |
new york city health code: Nuclear Safety , 1961 |
new york city health code: Radiation Data and Reports , 1963 |
new york city health code: Report of the Annual Scientific Meeting National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on Problems of Drug Dependence, 1971 |
new york city health code: Records & Briefs , |
new york city health code: The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook Deb Perelman, 2012-10-30 NEW YORK TIMES BEST SELLER • Celebrated food blogger and best-selling cookbook author Deb Perelman knows just the thing for a Tuesday night, or your most special occasion—from salads and slaws that make perfect side dishes (or a full meal) to savory tarts and galettes; from Mushroom Bourguignon to Chocolate Hazelnut Crepe. “Innovative, creative, and effortlessly funny. —Cooking Light Deb Perelman loves to cook. She isn’t a chef or a restaurant owner—she’s never even waitressed. Cooking in her tiny Manhattan kitchen was, at least at first, for special occasions—and, too often, an unnecessarily daunting venture. Deb found herself overwhelmed by the number of recipes available to her. Have you ever searched for the perfect birthday cake on Google? You’ll get more than three million results. Where do you start? What if you pick a recipe that’s downright bad? With the same warmth, candor, and can-do spirit her award-winning blog, Smitten Kitchen, is known for, here Deb presents more than 100 recipes—almost entirely new, plus a few favorites from the site—that guarantee delicious results every time. Gorgeously illustrated with hundreds of her beautiful color photographs, The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook is all about approachable, uncompromised home cooking. Here you’ll find better uses for your favorite vegetables: asparagus blanketing a pizza; ratatouille dressing up a sandwich; cauliflower masquerading as pesto. These are recipes you’ll bookmark and use so often they become your own, recipes you’ll slip to a friend who wants to impress her new in-laws, and recipes with simple ingredients that yield amazing results in a minimum amount of time. Deb tells you her favorite summer cocktail; how to lose your fear of cooking for a crowd; and the essential items you need for your own kitchen. From salads and slaws that make perfect side dishes (or a full meal) to savory tarts and galettes; from Mushroom Bourguignon to Chocolate Hazelnut Crepe Cake, Deb knows just the thing for a Tuesday night, or your most special occasion. Look for Deb Perelman’s latest cookbook, Smitten Kitchen Keepers! |
new york city health code: The Informal American City Vinit Mukhija, Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris, 2014-05-09 Every day in American cities street vendors spread out their wares on sidewalks, food trucks serve lunch from the curb, and homeowners hold sales in their front yards—examples of the wide range of informal activities that take place largely beyond the reach of government regulation. This book examines the “informal revolution” in American urban life, exploring a proliferating phenomenon often associated with developing countries rather than industrialized ones and often dismissed by planners and policy makers as marginal or even criminal. The case studies and analysis in The Informal City challenge this narrow conception of informal urbanism. The chapters look at informal urbanism across the country, empirically and theoretically, in cities that include Los Angeles, Sacramento, Seattle, Portland, Phoenix, Kansas City, Atlantic City, and New York City. They cover activities that range from unpermitted in-law apartments and ad hoc support for homeless citizens to urban agriculture, street vending and day labor. The contributors consider the nature and underlying logic of these activities, argue for a spatial understanding of informality and its varied settings, and discuss regulatory, planning, and community responses--Publisher's website. |
new york city health code: Knish Laura Silver, 2014-05-06 When Laura Silver's favorite knish shop went out of business, the native New Yorker sank into mourning, but then she sprang into action. She embarked on a round-the-world quest for the origins and modern-day manifestations of the knish. The iconic potato pie leads the author from Mrs. Stahl's bakery in Brighton Beach, Brooklyn, to an Italian pasta maker in New JerseyÑand on to a hunt across three continents for the pastry that shaped her identity. Starting in New York, she tracks down heirs to several knish dynasties and discovers that her own family has roots in a Polish town named Knyszyn. With good humor and a hunger for history, Silver mines knish lore for stories of entrepreneurship, survival, and major deliciousness. Along the way, she meets Minnesota seniors who make knishes for weekly fundraisers, foodies determined to revive the legacy of Mrs. Stahl, and even the legendary knish maker's granddaughters, who share their joie de vivreÑand their family recipe. Knish connections to Eleanor Roosevelt and rap music? Die-hard investigator Silver unearths those and other intriguing anecdotes involving the starchy snack once so common along Manhattan's long-lost Knish Alley. In a series of funny, moving, and touching episodes, Silver takes us on a knish-eye tour of worlds past and present, thus laying the foundation for a global knish renaissance. |
new york city health code: Authors and Subjects , 1880 |
new york city health code: Theo-Politics? Kenpa Chin, 2021-10-25 Using the theological work of Karl Barth as a resource for present-day inquiry, the contributors discuss the complex interconnections between the religious and the political and address the contemporary challenges these interconnections pose for Western and Asian societies. |
new york city health code: Saving Gotham: A Billionaire Mayor, Activist Doctors, and the Fight for Eight Million Lives Tom Farley, 2015-10-13 The inside story of the most audacious public health campaign of the twenty-first century. In 2002, a dynamic doctor named Thomas Frieden became health commissioner of New York City. With support from the new mayor, billionaire Michael Bloomberg, Frieden and his health department team prohibited smoking in bars, outlawed trans fats in restaurants, and attempted to cap the size of sodas, among other groundbreaking actions. The initiatives drew heated criticism, but they worked: by 2011, 450,000 people had quit smoking, childhood obesity rates were falling, and life expectancy was growing. Saving Gotham is the behind-the-scenes story of the most controversial—and successful—public health initiative of our time. Thomas A. Farley, MD, MPH, who succeeded Frieden as health commissioner, introduces a team of doctors who accepted the challenge of public health: to care for each of New York City’s eight million inhabitants as their own patients. The biggest threats they faced were not cholera or chemical toxins or lack of medical care but instead habits like smoking and unhealthy eating. As these doctors pressed to solve these problems, they found themselves battling those who encouraged those habits, and they reshaped their own agency for a different sort of fight. Farley shows what happens when science-driven doctors are given the political cover to make society-wide changes to protect people from today’s health risks—and how industries exploit legislatures, the courts, the media, and public opinion to undermine them. With Washington caught in partisan paralysis and New York City’s ideas spreading around the world, Saving Gotham demonstrates how government—local government—can protect its citizens and transform health for everyone. |
new york city health code: Proofs from THE BOOK Martin Aigner, Günter M. Ziegler, 2013-04-17 The (mathematical) heroes of this book are perfect proofs: brilliant ideas, clever connections and wonderful observations that bring new insight and surprising perspectives on basic and challenging problems from Number Theory, Geometry, Analysis, Combinatorics, and Graph Theory. Thirty beautiful examples are presented here. They are candidates for The Book in which God records the perfect proofs - according to the late Paul Erdös, who himself suggested many of the topics in this collection. The result is a book which will be fun for everybody with an interest in mathematics, requiring only a very modest (undergraduate) mathematical background. For this revised and expanded second edition several chapters have been revised and expanded, and three new chapters have been added. |
new york city health code: New York Court of Appeals. Records and Briefs. New York (State)., |
new york city health code: Implementing Physical Activity Strategies Russell R. Pate, David Buchner, 2014-01-29 Developed through a partnership with the National Physical Activity Plan Alliance and the National Coalition for Promoting Physical Activity (NCPPA), Implementing Physical Activity Strategies profiles 42 physical activity programs that are helping people adopt more active and healthy lifestyles based on the U.S. National Physical Activity Plan (NPAP). This resource combines the expertise of editors Russell Pate and David Buchner as well as a host of respected researchers and practitioners well known for their long-term advocacy for a more physically active society. Implementing Physical Activity Strategies highlights innovative and proven physical activity programs under way in eight sectors: education; mass media; health care; parks, recreation, fitness, and sports; business and industry; public health; transportation, land use, and community design; and volunteer and nonprofit organizations. For each, readers will find an explanation of how the physical activity program was executed, how it aligns with the NPAP, the target population of the program, cross-sector collaborations and their benefits, and assessments of program effectiveness. A consistent presentation of information on each program makes this comprehensive reference easy to use. The text maintains a focus on topics such as cross-sector collaboration, tactics and troubleshooting tips, and how each program aligns with the NPAP. This ensures readers will find tools and information to bring success to their own initiatives. Many of the program profiles include sample press releases, ads, screen shots, photos, surveys, follow-up forms, and other hands-on materials to help readers more readily translate the ideas and materials of these programs into new physical activity initiatives. By sharing examples and case studies of proven programs, Implementing Physical Activity Strategies supports those seeking ways to bring the benefits of increased physical activity to their constituents: • Officials and managers in public health and health care • Volunteer and nonprofit organizations • Recreation, fitness, and sport leaders • Physical education teachers • Worksite health promotion advocates • Transportation, urban policy, and design workers Implementing Physical Activity Strategies offers a detailed look into exemplary programs that have brought about an increase in regular physical activity for individuals where they live, work, and play. Stimulate new ideas, inspire creativity and innovation, and set in motion new results-oriented physical activity initiatives with Implementing Physical Activity Strategies. |
new york city health code: Supreme Court of the State of New York Appellate Division First Department , |
new york city health code: Hearings United States. Congress. House. Committee on Banking and Currency, |
new york city health code: Hearings, Reports and Prints of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, 1978 |
new york city health code: Science and Politics Brent S. Steel, 2014-04-21 Recent partisan squabbles over science in the news are indicative of a larger tendency for scientific research and practice to get entangled in major ideological divisions in the public arena. This politicization of science is deepened by the key role government funding plays in scientific research and development, the market leading position of U.S.-based science and technology firms, and controversial U.S. exports (such as genetically modified foods or hormone-injected livestock). This groundbreaking, one-volume, A-to-Z reference features 120-150 entries that explore the nexus of politics and science, both in the United States and in U.S. interactions with other nations. The essays, each by experts in their fields, examine: Health, environmental, and social/cultural issues relating to science and politics Concerns relating to government regulation and its impact on the practice of science Key historical and contemporary events that have shaped our contemporary view of how science and politics intersect Science and Politics: An A to Z Guide to Issues and Controversies is a must-have resource for researchers and students who seek to deepen their understanding of the connection between science and politics. |
new york city health code: Drugs in Our Schools United States. Congress. House. Select Committee on Crime, 1972 |
new york city health code: Hearings, Reports and Prints of the House Select Committee on Crime United States. Congress. House. Select Committee on Crime, 1972 |
new york city health code: Conditions and Problems in the Nation's Nursing Homes: New York City, N.Y., August 2 and 3, 1965 United States. Congress. Senate. Special Committee on Aging. Subcommittee on Long-Term Care, 1965 |
git - Create a new branch - Stack Overflow
Nov 9, 2022 · Create new branch git checkout -b At this point I am slightly confused about where you want to commit your current branch. I am assuming that you are …
Creating a new column based on if-elif-else condition
Lets say above one is your original dataframe and you want to add a new column 'old' If age greater than 50 then we consider as older=yes otherwise False. step 1: Get the indexes of …
Move the most recent commit (s) to a new branch with Git
Oct 27, 2009 · git checkout -b newbranch # switch to a new branch git branch -f master HEAD~3 # make master point to some older commit Old version - before I learned about git branch -f. …
Difference between 'throw' and 'throw new Exception ()'
throw new Exception(ex.Message); is even worse. It creates a brand new Exception instance, losing the original stack trace of the exception, as well as its type. (eg, IOException). In …
Replace new lines with a comma delimiter with Notepad++?
Apr 1, 2013 · This answer repeats the accepted answer and this answer refers to an antique version of Notepad++, version 7.4.x is now available. Welcome to Stack Overflow but please …
python - Create new column based on values from other columns …
As long as the necessary logic to compute the new value can be written as a function of other values in the same row, we can use the .apply method of the DataFrame to get the desired …
New lines inside paragraph in README.md - Stack Overflow
When editing an issue and clicking Preview the following markdown source: a b c shows every letter on a new line. However, it seems to me that pushing similar markdown source structure …
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Here are the commands you can use to add a new project to GitHub using VS Code: git init git add . git commit -m "Initial commit" git remote add origin git push -u origin …
Creating new file through Windows Powershell - Stack Overflow
Aug 1, 2017 · Create a touch command to act as New-File like this: Set-Alias -Name touch -Value New-Item This new alias will allow you to create new files like so: touch filename.txt This …
Power BI, IF statement with multiple OR and AND statements
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git - Create a new branch - Stack Overflow
Nov 9, 2022 · Create new branch git checkout -b At this point I am slightly confused about where you want to commit your current …
Creating a new column based on if-elif-else condition
Lets say above one is your original dataframe and you want to add a new column 'old' If age greater than 50 then we consider as older=yes otherwise False. …
Move the most recent commit (s) to a new branch with Git
Oct 27, 2009 · git checkout -b newbranch # switch to a new branch git branch -f master HEAD~3 # make master point to some older commit Old version - before …
Difference between 'throw' and 'throw new Exception ()'
throw new Exception(ex.Message); is even worse. It creates a brand new Exception instance, losing the original stack trace of the exception, as well as its type. (eg, …
Replace new lines with a comma delimiter with Notepad++?
Apr 1, 2013 · This answer repeats the accepted answer and this answer refers to an antique version of Notepad++, version 7.4.x is now available. Welcome to …