QIS - meaning and definition. What is QIS
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What (who) is QIS - definition

ACTIVE PRINCIPLE FORMING PART OF ANY LIVING THING IN TRADITIONAL CHINESE CULTURE
Ch'ih; Ch'i; Qì; Chi healing; Qis; Prana Shakti; Ki ball; Chi master; 氣; Chi energy; Qi flow; Chi (force); Qi (force); Energy qi

QIS         
Quality Information System
qi         
[ki:]
¦ noun variant spelling of chi2.
QIS College of Engineering and Technology         
Qiscet
QIS College of Engineering and Technology is located in Vengamukkapalem], [[Ongole, Andhra Pradesh. It was established in 1998 by The Nidamanuri Educational Society.

Wikipedia

Qi

In traditional Chinese culture and the East Asian cultural sphere, qi, also ki or chi in Wade–Giles romanization ( CHEE ), is believed to be a vital force forming part of any living entity. Literally meaning "vapor", "air", or "breath", the word qi is often translated as "vital energy", "vital force", "material energy", or simply as "energy". Qi is the central underlying principle in Chinese traditional medicine and in Chinese martial arts. The practice of cultivating and balancing qi is called qigong.

Believers in qi describe it as a vital force, the flow of which must be unimpeded for health. Qi is a pseudoscientific, unverified concept, and is unrelated to the concept of energy used in science (vital energy itself being an abandoned scientific notion). The historian of medicine in China Paul U. Unschuld adds that there "is no evidence of a concept of 'energy' – either in the strictly physical sense or even in the more colloquial sense – anywhere in Chinese medical theory."

Examples of use of QIS
1. "Do you think that prompt corrective action in the leverage capital requirements could be maintained if risk–based capital levels fell significantly below the leverage ratio?" Bernanke replied: "I guess the good news about QIS 4 is that it led the regulators to stop, take stock, to try to understand the results." It‘s doubtful one in 100,000 Americans would know Basel II from sweet basil or QIS 4 from the QEII.
2. But the Scottish health watchdog, QIS Scotland, has launched an inquiry into regional rates of Ritalin prescription after finding they varied from 1,2'8.8 per 10,000 of population in Fife, to 68.4 per 10,000 in the Western Isles.
3. The QIS statistics also revealed that hospital admissions for Scots suffering from high levels of intoxication increased by 40 per cent for men and 30 per cent for women between 1''6 and 2004.
4. This latest evidence of Scotlands booze culture follows evidence last week from the NHS Quality Improvement Scotland (QIS) organisation which showed that eight out of every ten admissions from accident and emergency to a hospital bed at weekends in Scotland is now down to an alcohol–related condition.