Colours
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Google books | books.google.com |
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Originally published | September 2007 |
Authors | Satoshi Kitamura |
Illustrators | Satoshi Kitamura |
Cast | Venessa Scott |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2280955 |
About Colours
Teaches young children about colour and helps them learn more about objects associated with these colours, explores the deeper meanings of each colour, and summarises each colour with a specially written poem.
Shop owners hope that tech can deter thieves
... We make all our own gold alloys, in 28 different Colours - grey, gold, green-gold, peach...
Clampdown on unproven fertility treatment add-ons
... Support group Fertility Network UK welcomed the new HFEA ratings system, which uses five Colours - ranging from green to red - to indicate the amount of evidence an add-on is effective at improving the chances of having a baby...
The enduring call of Local Hero 40 years on
... The sunset seemed to be changing Colours - it wasn t the Northern Lights - but it was whatever that was, and to see it every night...
Five ways to save money on your packed lunch
... " It can make a sandwich look much more appetising - different textures, Colours...
Holi 2023: What you need to know about the festival of colours
...Holi: A festival of Colours It s a celebration of love and new beginnings - and it s also quite messy...
Colourful songbirds could be traded to extinction
... Now a study has revealed that particular Colours of plumage put birds at greater risk of being taken from the wild and sold...
Boohoo ad banned by regulator for objectifying women
... Set the tone with new season hues" to market a range of clothes in skin tone Colours...
Big Ben will bong again to see in the new year
... But the clock face - restored to its original Colours - is now on show, and from spring next year, Big Ben and the four quarter bells will once again play the " Westminster Quarters" melody and bong on the hour throughout the day...
Clampdown on unproven fertility treatment add-ons
Fertility treatment " add-ons" offered to patients in The UK do not always improve their chances of having a baby, according to a new ratings system from The fertility regulator.
It Follows concerns clinics are offering unproven treatments costing hundreds or thousands of pounds.
Clinics must give clear information on costs and success rates, experts say.
Support groups hope The ratings will improve The stressful process of buying private fertility treatment.
Add-ons are optional, non-essential treatments that may be offered in addition to proven fertility treatments, such as IVF (in-vitro fertilisation), in private clinics.
Support Group Fertility Network UK welcomed The new HFEA ratings system, which uses five Colours - ranging from green to Red - to indicate The amount of evidence an add-on is effective at improving The chances of having a baby.
Examples include:
None of those listed on The regulator's website had been rated green, Fertility Network UK pointed out, encouraging patients to look at all The Information provided before making decisions.
" For defined patient groups, there are particular treatment add-ons that may be potentially beneficial - But we know that for The vast majority of patients, more rounds of proven treatment could be more effective, " Prof Tim Child , who chairs The Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) Scientific and Clinical Advances Advisory Committee , said.
'Difficult decisions'" These emotionally and financially difficult decisions often centre on whether to try expensive fertility treatment add-ons and are typically made when patients are at their most Vulnerable - Desperate to try anything if there is a chance it may help them become parents, " head of policy at Fertility Network UK Dr Catherine Hill said.
The HFEA said patients should not be left in The Dark - and add-ons with no strong evidence of safety or effectiveness should be offered only as part of research.
" Clinics must give patients a clear idea of what any treatment add-on will involve, how likely it is to increase their chance of a successful pregnancy and how much it will cost, and link to The HFEA ratings system, " chief executive Peter Thompson said.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com