Showing posts with label sexual attractiveness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sexual attractiveness. Show all posts

John Abraham - The sexy man of bollywood

John Farhan Abraham nickname John born on December 17, 1972 in Mumbai is an Model turn Film actor of Bollywood. John Abraham is one of the most successful male models in India. John's father is a Malayali Syrian Christian architect, from Alwaye, Kerala in India. His mother, Phiroza Irani, is part of Mumbai's Parsi community. John's Parsi name is “Farhan” to which his father being a catholic added “Abraham” as a respect for bible and named him “John“. He has one younger brother, Alan.

John Abraham new movies is a Yash Raj Banner 'New York' starring with Katrina kaif and Neel Nitin Mukesh. "New York” is a contemporary story of friendship set against the larger than life backdrop of a city often described as the centre of the world. For most of us, larger events in the world are just headlines in the newspapers but these events can change our lives… forever. “New York” is one such story of 3 young friends whose beautiful lives are turned upside down by larger events beyond their control. John has been dating actress Bipasha Basu since 2002. The couple is considered a Supercouple in India. John Abraham loves wearing jeans and his own brand (JA) clothes.

John Abraham loves doing social work. He associates himself deeply in the social causes and urges youngsters also to join hands in this humanity mankind. In 2008 John Abraham became the first Indian ever to feature in the '25 Sexiest Men' list compiled by E! News and was ranked as the 7th sexiest man in the world. In the same year, UK magazine Eastern Eye named Abraham the "Sexiest Man In Asia". John Abraham is half Irani and half Catholic. John Abraham started out as a media planner in Enterprises-Nexus, an ad agency. John Abraham won the Gladrags Manhunt Contest in March 2008. 

John Abraham loves modeling and feels " it's a fantastic industry with the nicest people." John Abraham hates eating out at five-star restaurants. John Abraham works out in the gym for about two hours to keep fit and healthy. John Abraham is surprisingly traditional when it comes to love and says "Love is limitless and it is giving. There should be no expectations in love". John Abraham truly have a lover heart. idea of the perfect date is to take his woman out for a candle light dinner; with soft,soothing music playing in the background. John Abraham believes in Amar Prem.

Evidence-Based Practices to Behavioral Health

The Chronic Care Model (CCM) has also been adapted by The National Program Office for Depression in Primary Care (http://www.wpic.pitt.edu/dppc/), to develop a clinical framework for all partnering organizations to follow. Its Flexible Blueprint was developed after a review of published interventions used to treat depression, interviews with a variety of primary care physicians, mental health specialists and other experts in the field, and selected site visits to view elements of the Chronic Care Model in action.

The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) is supporting the Implementing Evidence Based Practices Project. This project is focused on people who have severe mental illness; these people are most frequently served in the public mental health system (http://www.mentalhealthpractices.org/).

There are six areas that have been researched. Toolkits have been developed based on the multi-state demonstrations that have been underway. The six areas are described below, based on the website materials:

Illness Management and Recovery -

This is a program of weekly sessions where specially trained MH practitioners help people develop personal strategies for coping with mental illness and moving forward in their lives. The program emphasizes helping people set and pursue personal goals and become better able to realize their vision of recovery.

Medication Management Approaches In Psychiatry (Medmap) -

This focuses on using medication in a systematic and effective way, providing guidelines and steps for decision-making based on current evidence and outcomes, monitoring and recording information about medication results, and involving consumers in the decision-making process.

Assertive Community Treatment (ACT) -

This program is for people who experience the most severe symptoms of mental illness. The goal is to help people stay out of the hospital and develop skills for living in the community. Services are provided by a team of practitioners, are available whenever and wherever needed, 24-hours a day, and are provided for as long as they are wanted and needed.

Family Psychoeducation -

This involves a strong partnership between consumers, families and supporters, and practitioners. People work toward recovery by developing better skills for overcoming everyday problems and illness-related issues, developing social support, and improving communication with treatment providers.

Supported Employment -

This is a well-defined approach to helping people with mental illness find and keep competitive employment. These programs are for anyone who expresses the desire to work. The programs are staffed by employment specialists who work with the treatment team to integrate services. They help people look for jobs soon after entering the program, and provide support as long as consumers want the assistance.

Integrated Dual Disorders Treatment -

This treatment approach is for people who have mental illness and addiction disorders, offering mental health and substance abuse services together, in one setting, at the same time. A wide variety of services are offered in a stage-wise fashion because some services are important early in treatment, while others are important later on.

The EBPs described above are intended for use in the public mental health system, serving people with severe mental illness; they are not diagnosis specific. The American Association of Community Psychiatrists (http://www.wpic.pitt.edu/aacp/default.htm) has released guidelines, such as Guidelines for Recovery Oriented Services that also address this target population rather than a diagnosis specific population.

The American Psychiatric Association has developed diagnosis specific practice guidelines (http://www.psych.org/) that are applicable in a wide variety of settings, as have other professional groups. The following list of behavioral healthcare guidelines and protocols is from the National Guideline Clearinghouse:
  • Adjustment Disorders
  • Anxiety Disorders
  • Delirium, Dementia, Amnestic, Cognitive Disorders
  • Dissociative Disorders
  • Eating Disorders
  • Factitious Disorders
  • Impulse Control Disorders
  • Mental Disorders Diagnosed in Childhood
  • Mood Disorders
  • Neurotic Disorders
  • Personality Disorders
  • Schizophrenia and Disorders with Psychotic Features
  • Sexual and Gender Disorders
  • Sleep Disorders
  • Somatoform Disorders
  • Substance-Related Disorders

Applying the 4 Quadrant Healthcare Model

The examples used in the diagram of the Four Quadrant Integration model are for adult populations; the same template can be used to create models that are specific for children and adolescents, or older adults, reflecting the unique issues of serving those populations (for example, the role of schools and school based services in serving children). 

Older adults, particularly, have been shown to utilize primary care settings for psychosocial, non-organic somatic complaints and to be underrepresented in specialty behavioral health populations -- research suggests they are willing to receive behavioral health services in a primary care setting and that targeted interventions can make a difference in depression symptoms. Ethnic, language and racial groups also have unique issues in receiving language and culturally appropriate behavioral health services. Primary care based behavioral health services can improve access for these populations and lead to appropriate engagement with behavioral health specialty services as needed. For example, the Bridge Program in metropolitan New York has been successful in reaching the Asian-American community via their primary care settings.

There are also differences between rural and urban environments and among regional markets in terms of the resources available and ease or difficulty of access to services. The Four Quadrant Integration model provides a template for considering the resources locally available and developing alternative methods of coordination (for example, telemedicine) that may be required when specialty care (either physical or behavioral health) is delivered in another community.

The Four Quadrant Clinical Integration model is not diagnosis specific; it looks at degree of clinical complexity and risk/level of functioning. Further, the evidence-base is at different levels of development in each of the Quadrants. The model is intended to provide a conceptual construct for how to integrate services. Diagnosis specific guidelines should be used to provide detailed guidance for the scope of the primary care provider, the primary care based behavioral health provider, and the specialty behavioral health provider.

In the healthcare system, there are numerous evidence-based practice guidelines that are diagnosis/condition specific. The National Guideline Clearinghouse (NGC) is a public resource for evidence-based clinical practice guidelines. NGC is sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, in partnership with the American Medical Association and the American Association of Health Plans. There are over 1000 disease/condition guidelines that can be accessed through their website (www.guideline.gov).

The Chronic Care Model (CCM) (http://www.improvingchroniccare.org/change/index.html) was developed under the Improving Chronic Illness Care Program. The CCM is in use in a variety of healthcare settings, providing a structured approach for clinical improvement. The CCM has been used to develop specific approaches for serving patients with diabetes, cardiovascular disease, asthma and depression in a project sponsored by the Bureau of Primary Health Care (BPHC) with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), a not-for-profit organization driving the improvement of health by advancing the quality and value of health care. The Health Disparities Collaboratives (http://www.healthdisparities.net/) are a multi-year national initiative to implement models of patient care and change management in order to transform the system of care for underserved populations.

The organizing principles for each of Health Disparities Manuals follows the key elements of the CCM; many of the components apply to each disease entity (e.g., diabetes, asthma, depression), while specific tasks and tools are unique to the specific disease entity. The key change concepts found in the Depression Collaborative manual include:

Organization of Health Care/Leadership -
  • Make sure senior leaders and staff visibly support and promote the effort to improve chronic care
  • Make improving chronic care a part of the organization's vision, mission, goals, performance improvement, and business plan
  • Make sure senior leaders actively support the improvement effort by removing barriers and  providing necessary resources
  • Assign day-to-day leadership for continued clinical improvement
  • Integrate collaborative models into the quality improvement program

Decision Support -
  • Embed evidence-based guidelines in the care delivery system
  • Establish linkages with key specialists to assure that primary care providers have access to expert support
  • Provide skill oriented interactive training programs for all staff in support of chronic illness improvement
  • Educate patients about guidelines

Delivery System Design -
  • Identify depressed patients during visits for other purposes
  • Use the registry to proactively review care and plan visits
  • Assign roles, duties and tasks for planned visits to a multidisciplinary care team. Use cross training to expand staff capability
  • Use planned visits in individual and group settings
  • Make designated staff responsible for follow-up by various methods, including outreach workers, telephone calls and home visits

Clinical Information System -
  • Establish a registry
  • Develop processes for use of the registry, including designating personnel to enter data, assure data integrity, and maintain the registry
  • Use the registry to generate reminders and care planning tools for individual patients
  • Use the registry to provide feedback to care team and leaders

Self- Management -
  • Use depression self management tools that are based on evidence of effectiveness
  • Set and document self management goals collaboratively with patients
  • Train providers and other key staff on how to help patients with self management goals
  • Follow up and monitor self management goals
  • Use group visits to support self management

Community -
  • Establish links with organizations to develop support programs and policies
  • Link to community resources for defrayed medication costs, education and materials
  • Encourage participation in community education classes and support groups
  • Raise community awareness through networking, outreach and education
  • Provide a list of community resources to patients, families and staff

Big is Beautiful With Plus Size Lingerie!


Let’s get one thing straight – large women are sexy. Contrary to what the mainstream corporate media has been trying to sell to the western world for the past few decades, the fact is that most of the world’s cultures find voluptuous, curvy and even plump women to be far more desirable than pencil-thin females for whom anorexia is an alternative lifestyle. Consider the immortal pin-up girls of the 1940s – these were not thin women! For centuries, the great artists of Europe such as Gustave Courbet and Pieter Rubens have given us wonderfully erotic images of full-figured women. Even the earliest statues from the Stone Age are of women with generous thighs, hips and breasts. So...if you’ve got it, flaunt it with plus size lingerie!


It’s an Attitude

You may have heard that men are more visually aroused than women. There is some truth to this, but more often, men are drawn to women who are firmly convinced of their own sexual attractiveness and behave accordingly. It’s why popular celebrities such as Queen Latifah and Roseanne Barr in the U.S. and Dawn French in the U.K. have such appeal.

Sexy plus size lingerie is a good way to show a man that you consider yourself a sex goddess – and when you do, chances are good that he will as well. Fortunately, you’ll have little problem finding just the right sexy plus size lingerie for every occasion – you can even build a collection!


Sheer Lingerie and More

Show off your figure to best advantage with form-fitting sheer lingerie that hugs every luscious curve and profile. Or, if you find tight-fitting garments uncomfortable, consider exotic lingerie that is loose and flowing – revealing just enough to tease, but not quite enough to please. Exotic plus size lingerie may also mean costumes designed to fulfill a man’s equally exotic fantasies.

In fact, some men who appreciate large women want to be dominated. Why not oblige him with real studded leather topped with a lady cop’s hat for an “arresting” experience.

Other men may simply want to “play doctor.” If this is the case, exotic lingerie such as the “naughty nurse” may be in order as he enjoys giving you a “hands-on” exam.


Exotic plus size lingerie for Every Occasion

As you’ve probably realized by now, sexy is as sexy does – 90% of it is in the mind. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t take advantage of the wide variety of exotic lingerie that is available out there.

Generally, plus size lingerie is thought of as something for men to enjoy looking at on a woman’s figure. This is partially true, but exotic plus size lingerie is just as much for the woman who wears it. When she things of herself as sexy and acts in a sexy way, men notice. Plus size lingerie isn’t magical, but it will definitely do a few things for the wearer as well as the object of her desire.