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Thesis Info

Author

Talha Hassan

Supervisor

Umer Iqbal

Department

Department of Computer Science

Program

BCS

Institute

COMSATS University Islamabad

Institute Type

Public

City

Islamabad

Province

Islamabad

Country

Pakistan

Thesis Completing Year

2016

Thesis Completion Status

Completed

Subject

Computer Science

Language

English

Added

2021-02-17 19:49:13

Modified

2023-01-06 19:20:37

ARI ID

1676719973683

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تری نظر میں رہوں، باوقار ہو جائوں

تری نظر میں رہوں، با وقار ہو جائوں
قسم خدا کی میں رشک بہار ہو جائوں

فدا میں جان کروں تیرے ہر اشارے پر
تری رضا پہ میں ایسے نثار ہو جائوں

فنا مَیں ہو کے تری ذات میں، اے جانِ جاں!
میں کیوں نہ باقی رہوں پائیدار ہو جائوں

ہے میرے پاس یہ نسخہ قرارِ دل کے لیے
کسی کو یاد کروں بے قرار ہو جائوں

مجھے یہ خوف ہے تائبؔ کہ درد ہے جتنا
چھلک پڑوں نہ کہیں زار زار ہو جائوں

شاہ ولی اللہ کی تعلیمات کی روشنی میں خانگی نظام: ایک تحقیقی جائزہ

Every Human being needs family system to live with dignity. There is joint family system, and separate family system in practice in Muslim Societies. Shah Waliullah gave concept of ideal family system. The ingredients of ideal family system of Shah Waliullah are Nikāḥ, Siblings, Property, Love and Society. People faced many problems for living respectfully, and born grave losses due to war. Shah Waliullah not only taught us religious teachings but also guided us how to make our socio- economic system strong as well as family system. In this article, his teachings and thoughts about family system have been discussed.

Hospital-Acquired Malnutrition in Children in a Tertiary Care Hospital

Introduction: Hospital-acquired Malnutrition occurs as a result of reduction in food intake, increased dietary loss and/or increased calorie requirements as a result of disease-induced high catabolic state. A child's nutritional status often deteriorates after admission to the hospital resulting in longer duration of hospital stay and increased risk of complications, which also increases treatment cost. Hospital-acquired Malnutrition is usually assessed using anthropometric measurements and/or serum pre-albumin. Objectives: This study sought to investigate the incidence of Hospital-acquired Malnutrition using anthropometric measurements and to determine diagnostic utility of serum pre-albumin in predicting weight change. A secondary objective was to identify factors associated with Hospital-acquired Malnutrition in children admitted at Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi. Methodology: This was a hospital-based, short follow up longitudinal survey carried out on children admitted to Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi. One hundred and eighty children were enrolled into the study. Weight and height were taken at admission and discharge. Serum pre-albumin levels were taken at admission and repeated after 48-96 hrs. Data Analysis: The incidence of Hospital-acquired Malnutrition was estimated from the total number of children showing a decrease in weight-for-height/length or BMI Z-scores from the time of admission to discharge. Sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values of serum pre-albumin were calculated to determine its diagnostic utility in screening for Hospital-acquired Malnutrition. Levels of serum pre-albumin were summarized using a Pre-albumin Risk Stratification model by Bernstein et al. Logistic Regression Analysis, with calculation of odds ratio, was done for selected variables to look for any association with loss of weight during hospitalization. Results: The study showed that 103 (60.6%) children lost weight from admission to discharge, giving a mean weight decrease of 0.5kg (SD±3.37), p=0.055. Of the 170 children studied, 109 who were ≤60 months of age, demonstrated a mean decrease in weight-for-height/length Z-score of 0.145 (SD±0.73), p=0.042, and 61 children aged >60 months demonstrated a mean decrease in BMI Z-score of 0.152 (SD±0.39), p=0.004. Nine percent (10/109) of children ≤60 months and 3.0% (2/61) of children >60 months had worsening of nutritional status as determined by WHO classification. The greatest frequency of weight loss was observed among children diagnosed with gastroenteritis (81.2%), gastritis (64.3%) and pneumonia (55.6%). LOS was demonstrated to be the most significant risk factor for weight loss (OR 1.37, p=0.003, C.I 1.11-1.69). Children who had a hospital stay of 5-7 days had about 4.5 fold risk for weight loss (OR 4.67, 95%