Mix 96 launched on 15 April 1994 broadcasting on 96.2FM, it was the first radio station to gain a permanent licence to serve Aylesbury and the surrounding towns including Thame, Princes Risborough, Tring and Leighton Buzzard. The launch slogan was 'Bucks Best Music' but the station now uses the strapline "Bucks Best Mix of Music". The first song to be played on the radio station was 'Dancing Queen' by ABBA, played at 7:45am on the opening morning, 15 April 1994.[1]

Originally an independent, it was solely owned by local group Bucks Broadcasting Ltd. The original Chairman of Mix 96 was Richard Morris-Adams, Managing Director was Mark Flanagan, Sales Director was Erika Sorby-Firth and the Programme Controller was Keri Jones. In 1995, Erika Sorby-Firth took on the role of MD until Bucks Broadcasting was divested to Radio Investments in 2001. The current Managing Director is Max Hailey who returned to the radio station in 2013.


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PILOT has developed a state-of-the-art AM and FM radio test bed that is available for hire. This facility is located in Washington, DC in the NAB Technology Lab, located on the fifth floor of the NAB headquarters building.

Methods:  pragmatic, parallel-arm, individual randomised controlled trial of bed and bedside chair pressure sensors using radio-pagers (intervention group) compared with standard care (control group) in elderly patients admitted to acute, general medical wards, in a large UK teaching hospital. Primary outcome measure number of in-patient bedside falls per 1,000 bed days.

Results:  1,839 participants were randomised (918 to the intervention group and 921 to the control group). There were 85 bedside falls (65 fallers) in the intervention group, falls rate 8.71 per 1,000 bed days compared with 83 bedside falls (64 fallers) in the control group, falls rate 9.84 per 1,000 bed days (adjusted incidence rate ratio, 0.90; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.66-1.22; P = 0.51). There was no significant difference between the two groups with respect to time to first bedside fall (adjusted hazard ratio (HR), 0.95; 95% CI: 0.67-1.34; P= 0.12). The mean cost per patient in the intervention group was 7199 compared with 6400 in the control group, mean difference in QALYs per patient, 0.0001 (95% CI: -0.0006-0.0004, P= 0.67).

Conclusions:  bed and bedside chair pressure sensors as a single intervention strategy do not reduce in-patient bedside falls, time to first bedside fall and are not cost-effective in elderly patients in acute, general medical wards in the UK.

On this Newsbuzz edition of River to River, host Ben Kieffer speaks with Des Moines Register Health Care Reporter Michaela Ramm about the state of psychiatric beds and mental health in Iowa. IPR reporter Grant Gerlock joins the show to give an update on the 2024 legislative session, and Des Moines Register Statehouse Reporter Stephen Gruber-Miller breaks down a state bill that would bar a 14th Amendment ballot challenge for former President Donald Trump.

An influx of federal COVID-19 relief dollars has helped the state more than double the number of shelter beds since 2020. But that funding has dried up, and providers worry the state lacks a concrete plan for how to fill the gap.

At a House Finance Committee hearing in March, state Housing Secretary Stefan Pryor said funding for shelter beds and related services could drop to pre-pandemic levels, even as the state has seen at least a 370% increase in unsheltered people since 2019.

Rhode Island uses a mechanism called the Consolidated Homeless Fund to pay for shelter beds and adjacent services, like helping people experiencing homelessness find housing, hiring street outreach workers, and running coordinated entry, the system unhoused Rhode Islanders have to use to access shelter and housing. Less funding could have an impact on all of those services.

Traditionally, the state has relied on federal funding to cover the cost of shelter beds and associated services. Advocates say given the growing numbers of people living outside the state should step in.

"Between all of those factors, the nursing load is actually increased because of COVID-19. So, while we normally staff about 2,000 beds, and we have adequate staff to do that, because of COVID-19. And because those factors I just mentioned, we actually need more staff and that's where we're running into a fairly critical situation right now."

I was in residential school as a child. I slept in a dorm with rows of bunk beds that we would climb into at night after saying our prayers. I recall the sheets being itchy against my skin. I remember the lumpy mattress. The blankets didn't smell like the sunshine, like the blankets back home did.

I had a bad moment when I was making the bed up. As I was folding the sheet at the end of my bed into a perfect corner, I had a flashback to residential school. We had to make our beds perfectly and I always struggled because I was so little. The older girls would have to help me so I wouldn't get yelled at.

Just curious as to who receives EMS radio reports at your facilities. At the hospital I work in, the triage nurse is responsible for communicating with the EMS units but I've heard of other hospitals assigning this to the charge nurse or even another nurse. What's the process like at your hospital?

When I worked as an ER Nurse the radio was at the charge nurses' desk, so they were primarily responsible for answering it; however if they were busy any RN could answer. I think the only rule was it was preferred that an RN answer the radio or MD.

I work in the northeast and entry notes into Boston Hospitals are not made if it is a BLS patient. N.E. CMED, which is our radio link to various hospitals has also recently decided that they will not make BLS entry notes into hospitals, so it is now optional for hospitals covered in that area for BLS calls. We can surprise them, although we try and call ahead.

Anyone that is ACLS can answer ours, just depends on who gets to it first. We use EPIC and can put a hold on open rooms and tag them with the EMS unit number that they can see on a screen when they walk in the door. As the charge RN, I typically assign the beds, but if I'm not available my nurses can do it.

46 beds in the main ER, 110k visits per year. Any RN, PA, or Physician who takes "the class" can take EMS consults. Usually the RNs staffed closest to the "ems box" takes the calls, but since the doc sits closest to the "box" which is in one section of the main ER, the doc may take the consult if all the RNs are busy in rooms. We always ask if they need a physician for orders up front when taking the call. We fill out the consult form sign it and bring it out to triage. The consult can be heard in the pediatric ER, triage, and at one other place in the main ER.

In the first ER that I worked in (38 beds), the EMS radio sat by the charge nurse and typically they would be responsible for answering it. If they were unavailable, then any available nurse or medic could also do so.

The recall impacts several different models and sizes of upholstered low profile standard and platform beds from Home Design, Inc. The Silver Lake, Indiana-based furniture wholesaler says it has received 128 reports of these beds "breaking, sagging or collapsing" when used, including 36 unspecified injuries to date.

Using radar to measure things is also referred to as radio-echo sounding (RES), because we transmit a radio wave and listen for the echo reflected from layers within and beneath the ice. It works really well in glacier ice, meaning that the glacier bed can be mapped at depths of up to 4 km.

The Corrections Board also approved on Friday a request to add 124 new beds at the Barbara Ester Unit near Pine Bluff. The facility primarily houses incarcerated people who are within six months of release and provides job training and educational opportunities.

Payne told the board the additional beds at McPherson would require 12 more correctional officers and four sergeants; the Max Unit beds will require 10 correctional officers, four sergeants and one lieutenant.

Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled beds and contact Home Design for free replacement slats and side rails. Consumers must send an image of the bed and the law label, or proof of purchase, to recall@homedesign-us.com to receive the free repair. Home Design is contacting known purchasers directly.

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A.  I recently did a story about hugelkultur, building raised beds out of fallen wood debris such as logs and branches, but I suspect Tracey wants the more conventional solution, which is what I have used to grow vegetables in my garden the last 20-plus years.

Ever since getting an iPhone SE on iOS 14 (previously iPhone 6 on iOS 12) whenever I get in my car, the phone automatically connects to bluetooth, as it should, but then starts playing Heart Radio via "TuneIn". Now, I don't have a TuneIn app installed and never have, and when I tap the "now playing" in control centre it opens the iOS Music app. I've never asked it to do this, never had TuneIn installed, never selected or listened to Heart Radio and I don't live in or near Luton, Beds (which is a place in the UK for those that don't know) so I really have no idea why it's doing it but I'd really love to know how to stop it. Prior to this, it would often start playing either that last app I was using for music (usually the Planet Rock radio app, or the Music app with either the last song playing or it'll start on a random song), which is fine - I'm happy for that to continue. But I don't want whatever this this is. 0852c4b9a8

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