What's the difference between bulletin and notification?

Bulletin


Definition:

  • (n.) A brief statement of facts respecting some passing event, as military operations or the health of some distinguished personage, issued by authority for the information of the public.
  • (n.) Any public notice or announcement, especially of news recently received.
  • (n.) A periodical publication, especially one containing the proceeding of a society.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The issue of the Schizophrenia Bulletin is devoted to articles representing this full range of conceptual and empirical work on first-episode psychosis.
  • (2) Russia's most widely watched television station, state-controlled Channel One, followed a bulletin about his death with a summary of the crimes he is accused of committing, including the siphoning of millions of dollars from national airline Aeroflot.
  • (3) The aim of this paper is to evaluate the quality of the Death Certificates by means of the Death Statistics Bulletins, in their NEOPLASIC aspect in the year 1985 in the Province of Soria, determining the histopathologic confirmation of the deaths by means of the neoplasic patients' records in the two existing Pathology Services.
  • (4) Labor is trying to push this story into tonight's TV news bulletins.
  • (5) It was the lead on every television and radio news bulletin, and front-page news from Alaska to Auckland.
  • (6) Ukip have been handing out a bulletin warning: "From January 1 2014 Britain's borders will open to 29m Bulgarians and Romanians."
  • (7) And had he not escaped and then skipped from continent to continent, Biggs would never have ended up on so many front pages and leading so many bulletins.
  • (8) Ben Bradshaw, the culture secretary, announced the decision today, inviting bids from those wanting to form independently funded news consortiums to provide regional ITV1 news bulletins and other content for the area and other pilots in Scotland and Wales.
  • (9) Geoff Crothall, of Hong Kong-based campaign group China Labour Bulletin, said Foxconn's new measures were an attempt to ameliorate the problem but did not go to the root of the issue.
  • (10) Odemwingie had made no secret of his desire to leave the Hawthorns and link up with Redknapp in London, giving regular bulletins from his Twitter account as QPR had offers for him rejected.
  • (11) It is referred to in the latest issue of Statewatch, the London-based bulletin which monitors threats to civil and human rights in Europe.
  • (12) Bradby has made much of the bulletin’s conversational tone while ITV has stressed a return to the serious news provision of earlier years.
  • (13) The corporation received 43 complaints after Robinson used the phrase on BBC1's 6pm bulletin on Wednesday, hours after the savage machete attack that killed a serving soldier in London .
  • (14) The facility stresses self-care, and a bulletin board located near the vending machine provides numerous health education brochures.
  • (15) This bulletin marks the beginning of a cycle dealing with the structure, function, innervation and quantitative analysis of jaw muscles as well as postnatal cranial growth and dentition in the miniature pig MINI-LEWE.
  • (16) I mean, it’s interesting; last year I was here there was a Ukip town councillor who said derogatory things about gay marriage, it was a national news story, it led on some of the BBC bulletins.
  • (17) News bulletins have since recommenced, with the most recent telling Malians the situation is under control.
  • (18) Fulham were furious in 2012 when Liverpool's attempt to take Clint Dempsey from them saw the Merseyside club deliver clumsy bulletins.
  • (19) Yet use of these tapes is growing so rapidly that it may be time to redesign the tape-producing systems, with ease of tape use for SDI services and retrospective searching as the primary consideration, and with publication of abstract and index bulletins or title listings relegated to secondary importance (49).
  • (20) The breadth and depth of services that ninety-two medical school libraries offer to individual users were ascertained by interviewing the heads of these libraries, employing a standardized inventory procedure developed earlier (Bulletin 56:380-403, Oct. 1968).

Notification


Definition:

  • (n.) The act of notifying, or giving notice; the act of making known; especially, the act of giving official notice or information to the public or to individuals, corporations, companies, or societies, by words, by writing, or by other means.
  • (n.) Notice given in words or writing, or by signs.
  • (n.) The writing which communicates information; an advertisement, or citation, etc.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) These findings indicated that notifications from the clinic were being made in accordance with internationally accepted practice.
  • (2) A survey of all notifications of tuberculosis in children (aged less than 15 years) in England and Wales in 1983 showed a decline of 35% in the estimated annual number of previously untreated children notified since the previous survey in 1978-9.
  • (3) To have a blanket rule of pre-notification really concerns me in terms of the crucial importance for journalists to go out there and investigate wrongdoing," he said.
  • (4) Of these 361 notifications, 59 (16%) patients have had concurrent mycobacterial infection.
  • (5) For these 578 cases there were 884 notifications coming principally from the control services of the Social Security and public hospitals.
  • (6) The EAW is one of 35 measures the government is seeking to opt back into after having opted out of a raft of more than 100 EU policies relating to justice and home affairs last year, when Cameron wrote to the EU council presidency to give formal notification of the government’s intention to exercise the block opt-out.
  • (7) However, she was also clear that she was sticking to the mantra of the EU27 when it came to Brexit – that there would be no negotiation without notification , even on the issue of EU citizens.
  • (8) Accidents were identified using the notification system from accident and emergency departments to health visitors.
  • (9) Cases were selected from notifications of tuberculosis and controls were selected from child health or school health records in 14 English health districts.
  • (10) In 1990, the Norwegian Directorate of Health recommended that victims of rape and violence all over the country--independent of police notification--be offered a medical and a medico-legal examination and follow-up.
  • (11) Accurate notification of the underlying cause of death and associated diseases is required for the precise monitoring of trends in mortality from AIDS and possible identification of unrecognised conditions associated with HIV infection.
  • (12) The Paediatric Association is not in favor of a central registry or any form of notification, and decisions should not be delegated to ethical committees.
  • (13) On Wednesday, the director of the charity said the US military did not give prior notification of the airstrike, in an apparent violation of the Pentagon’s own instructions on the rules of war.
  • (14) Central Command also said at the time Iran had provided only 23 minutes of advance notification of its intention to fire rockets.
  • (15) They have only introduced about half of the national standard … it’s bloody incredible.” Harris and others pushed for Western Australia to copy New South Wales, which has had a mandatory custody notification scheme since 2000.
  • (16) Evaluation of the official notifications from 1971 to 1983 shows that viral disease represented only 2.7% of the diseases with public health impact in Transkei, and that measles and poliomyelitis are prevalent.
  • (17) The Aboriginal Legal Service in New South Wales has a 24-hour custody notification service – a measure recommended by the 1991 royal commission but enacted in no other states or territories.
  • (18) However, cancer screening and risk notification might have adverse psychologic and social consequences as well.
  • (19) The much greater reduction in the rate of decline in the Indian ethnic group is due to the substantial decline between the surveys in the proportion of recent immigrants, the group with the highest annual notification rate, in that population.
  • (20) Extrapulmonary tuberculosis (TB) remains a major health problem in Australia, with 24.3% of all new tuberculosis notifications in 1984 of extrapulmonary origin.