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More about proposals and presentations

Getting The Edge In Professional Selling
By Terence A. Hockenhull

AS WE MENTIONED last week, the person who asks for a proposal will very often attach a note to the front cover asking someone else in the organization to read, review, and make recommendations based on the contents.

So you want to run for President

A handy guide for candidates who may want to join the circus at COMELEC headquarters:

Net satisfaction with the national administration

Net Satisfaction (Admin) - SWS - Oct 2015
Click to enlarge.

PUBLIC SATISFACTION with the performance of the national government (NG) hit its highest point in one-and-a-half years last quarter, boosted by marked improvements in Luzon that offset a drop in the Visayas, according to results of the latest Social Weather Stations (SWS) survey.

>> Related story

Youth unemployment rates (2007-2019)

IOC ‘very satisfied’ with Tokyo 2020 preparations, say organisers

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Despite concerns about extreme heat, ballooning costs and accommodation shortages, organisers of the Tokyo 2020 Olympics and Paralympics are resolutely upbeat with one year to go until the opening ceremony – and not without some justification.

Asked about the biggest challenges organisers have overcome so far a spokesperson, Masa Takaya, said that “Tokyo 2020 has not really faced any major issues”, adding the International Olympic Committee and International Paralympic Committee are “very satisfied with our preparations”.

State of Philippine mental health care

Today, Oct. 10, is World Mental Health Day. Earlier this week, the World Health Organization (WHO) released its latest Mental Health Atlas (pdf), showing the state of mental health care in the world. BusinessWorld has visualized the WHO’s data on the Philippines below.

Click for the full version.
Click for the full version.

According to the WHO, one disability-adjusted life year (DALY) can be considered one year of “healthy” life lost. The Philippines’ 2,763 DALYs per 100,000 people “can be thought of as a measurement of the gap between current health status and an ideal health situation where the entire population lives to an advanced age, free of disease and disability.”

The Philippines’ country profile shows, besides the figures above, that the country’s mental health policy is only partially implemented and partially in line with human rights covenants. The Philippines also lacks a stand-alone law for mental health. Perhaps most troubling is the fact that the country lacks a suicide prevention strategy.

The profile suggests the Philippines’ mental health reporting is inadequate, as data in this area has been “compiled in [the] last two years for [the] public sector only”. Gaps in the data include the number of mental health outpatient visits and figures on inpatient admissions in the country.

The full WHO profile on the Philippine may be downloaded here (pdf).

Can you recommend local mental health resources in the comments?

Text: Katrina Paola B. Alvarez

PR: Truth or spin?

By Nickky Faustine P. de Guzman

While the perpetual crusade of the marketing industry is “truth in advertising,” a key criticism of marketers, advertisers, and public relations (PR) practitioners is that they are propagandists and panderers. “Spin doctors,” they are often called.

‘Peacocking’ men may boost pink iPhone as hue fades with women

LET’S FACE IT, the “rose gold” iPhone 6 is pink.

We all know it. It doesn’t even seem as if Apple tried very hard to replicate the salmony glint of a rose-gold piece of jewelry. It went all in with pink.

‘Gifts’ from Chinese herbal medicine

PARIS — Derived from a herb used to treat fevers some 1,700 years ago, the anti-malaria drug artemisinin is one of many treatments plucked from the treasure chest of ancient Chinese medicine and repackaged for a modern age.

Pan taps origins of Peter Pan’s 100-year pop culture adventure

NEW YORK — In the century since Scottish author J.M. Barrie created Peter Pan for a stage play then a book, the Neverland universe has inspired movies, books, TV shows, plays, videogames and even a pop psychology syndrome describing emotionally immature men.

For the latest iteration of the classic story involving Tinkerbell, Captain Hook and the Darlings, the focus is on the origins of the boy who famously wouldn’t grow up.

Warner Bros’ Pan is a live-action 3-D feature aimed at children that imagines the beginnings of Peter’s story: how he got to Neverland and learned to fly.

“I think Peter Pan has taken on a life of its own in the same way that Sherlock Holmes has,” said director Joe Wright, referring to Arthur Conan Doyle’s crime-solving British literary phenomenon.

“Peter has incredible courage and fun and so I think that reminds us of childhood in an honest and beautiful way. It’s no surprise that Barrie was writing at the same time as Freud. His story is somehow deeply psychologically accurate and acute,” Wright said.

For Wright, the appeal of Peter Pan had little to do with a reluctance to grow up — a complex embodied by the late singer Michael Jackson and his Neverland ranch in California with its carousel, animals and Peter Pan references.

“I always wanted to grow up. I hated childhood. I found it a really difficult period of life. I was bullied and I was quite scared a lot of the time. So Peter Pan offered an escape from all of that,” he said.

The theme of Pan is of a boy with a powerful imagination who is looking for the mother who abandoned him at birth just before World War II. He discovers his identity and confidence along the way.

Newcomer Levi Miller stars as young Peter, with Hugh Jackman as wicked pirate Blackbeard, Garrett Hedlund as (at this stage) friendly James Hook and Rooney Mara as a controversially white warrior princess Tiger Lily.

Underneath the video-game inspired pirate battles, multi-colored tree villagers and cavernous pixie dust mines, Wright says he wanted make a movie that “reconnected and validated the 11-year-old boy in myself.”

“I wanted to make a film from the point of view of a kid who saw the world as a fabulous extraordinary place, full of magic and wonder, without cynicism or irony.” — Reuters

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: 21st century screwball comedy

The Binge
By Jessica Zafra

FOURTEEN-YEAR-OLD Kimmy is abducted in front of her house by a cult leader.

DoH-Davao Region sets up data system

By Maya M. Padillo

DAVAO CITY — The Department of Health’s (DoH) Davao Region office is spending P2 million to set up a system for collecting complete, accurate, and timely information on health matters that will be used for drafting appropriate policies and programs.