Lynn says it helps that a number of nurses and midwives have trained in the courses. |
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The oral rinses were dispensed by pharmacists and were administered by staff nurses. |
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Elsewhere overseas, female nurses in military field hospitals worked near the front line of battle, and many served with allied forces. |
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There are patients who are appreciative of nurses helping them through their stay in hospital. |
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The health industry recruits nurses, midwives, radiographers and mammographers. |
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Anyone whose life has been touched by cancer will be aware of the vitally important work of Macmillan nurses. |
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He needed an oxygen machine to help him breathe and a team of nurses to roll him over in bed. |
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The standards provide a benchmark for RN practice and provide support and guidance for nurses in their everyday practice. |
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About 5000 nurses in rural clinics and district hospitals qualified for the special grants, and would receive backpay from April, he said here. |
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But NHS officials insist that developing countries are not being drained of nurses. |
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Patients sitting in the comfort of their armchairs are having vital signs monitored in a hi-tech link up with nurses. |
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Her rosy pink skin was perfect against the pink blanket that the nurses had put her in. |
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Alberta's Public Service Employee Relations Act prohibits strikes and lockouts of workers in public services, including nurses. |
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She glanced up and down the hallway, checking for night nurses making their rounds. |
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They carted me off to Emergency, where the doctors and nurses, once they determined I wasn't likely to die abruptly on them, ignored me. |
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Dedicated nurses will let the patient know how long they could be waiting for treatment. |
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He was a royal pain to the nurses because he bossed them around just like he did his employees. |
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Patients will be treated on a day care basis and be looked after by a team of specialist eye nurses. |
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Many perioperative nurses report that new providers and clinicians have a limited understanding of medical versus surgical asepsis. |
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Only nurses commonly ascribed nappy rash, feeding problems, pulling ears, loose stools, cold symptoms, and smelly urine to teething. |
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The book will be useful to ancillary health care personnel, including nurses and laboratory technologists as well as physicians. |
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The nurses can give your child medicine to make them feel better and lotion for their dry skin. |
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We don't have managers and assemblers, editors and secretaries, surgeons and nurses. |
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If doctors and nurses go from the rural sector then farmers and workers will follow, and that will mean a run-down of our productive sector. |
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Calls are supposed to be dealt with by nurses who assess the seriousness of cases before advising callers what to do. |
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Through mentorship, nurses can help others grow, while encouraging each mentee toward self-actualization and autonomy. |
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The service provides nurses, care assistants, locum doctors, teachers and social workers. |
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New laws could be passed in a bid to tackle the increasing levels of violence against nurses and hospital staff. |
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Robert speeded over to the hospital that Clara was just at and practically yelled at the nurses. |
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The nurses had worked day and night for two weeks to get this ship ready to receive wounded. |
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Effective teamwork between doctors and nurses need not entail one group taking over the work of the other. |
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My mother and grandmother had been nurses, and I had become a medical writer at a teaching hospital after graduating from college. |
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The father-of-two also wants to contact the woman who found him, and any other nurses who cared for him. |
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Failure to recruit enough doctors and nurses has been criticised in a report attacking west Wiltshire health bosses. |
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Queries on the database are checked immediately with the attendant physicians or nurses. |
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A female gives birth to only one baby at a time, and nurses it attentively until the next mating season. |
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In his final days he was cared for by doctors and nurses who went beyond the call. |
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We have seen our skilled nurses and teachers packing up as a result of the lure of more attractive overseas packages. |
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We need to get the resources where we can to tide us over until the nurses come through the system. |
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A six-month course for 10 nurses will be held at the hospital under the auspices of the University of Essex. |
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My doctor believed I was finally going to die regardless of how well he and the nurses took care of me. |
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These nurses work with local family doctors and public health nurses bringing vital care and support. |
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Reliance on folk medicine has been lessening, and modern medicine with physicians, nurses, clinics, pharmacies, and sanatoria is the norm. |
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I was X-rayed, and had lots of nurses and doctors coming in and out of the room. |
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He went on to stress that nurses and auxiliary staff would not lose their jobs as a result of the closure. |
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Why is he not listening to the consultants, doctors, nurses and auxiliary staff who work at the hospital? |
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Joe's workplace has eight nurses plus several doctors and auxiliary staff on duty at any one time. |
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Several people would have to be included, such as doctors, nurses, physiotherapists, and auxiliary staff. |
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The nursery nurses and auxiliary staff spend a lot of one-to-one time with him. |
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Perioperative nurses must be knowledgeable about the risk associated with self-medication with herbal remedies. |
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They are being trained as auxiliary nurses and many are being adopted as grandmothers in families. |
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My nurses are beginning to comment that my countenance reflects a certain lack of sangfroid normally found neatly stacked within. |
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The trainers were medical doctors, nurses, and health and sanitary officers from the same area. |
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Generally Brill focuses his rock-steady handheld camera on the faces of the doctors, nurses and Gillies himself. |
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Her mother was brought up by ayahs, Indian nurses, and spoke Urdu as her first language. |
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Possible adverse events were detected by two nurses in medicine and surgery and two midwives in obstetrics. |
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Working together Alabama nurses can strive for the goal that all children have the right to grow up in a smoke-free and healthy environment. |
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Somewhere far off, she could hear the nurses talking to her, and feel as her ankle was prodded and treated, medicated and wrapped. |
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They include a surgeon, an emergency physician, intensive care specialists, nurses and medics. |
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The ship's operating theatre and 36-bed hospital saw doctors, nurses and medics stream aboard and become a hive of activity. |
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For the next two and a half days, the boy remained in the intensive care ward while doctors, nurses and medics helped him recover. |
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Apparently there were stories about him telling the nannies, you know, and the nurses and things, how to bathe the children and so forth. |
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The next morning, the nurses bathe her, feed her a tasty breakfast, and set her in a chair at a window overlooking a lovely flower garden. |
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Later he went mad and spent three or four years in a bath chair spitting and making inappropriate suggestions to the nurses. |
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In perioperative and gastroenterology settings, nurses can lobby to replace mercury-containing bougies. |
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However, the massive demand for such nurses has led to a need for unpaid volunteers, mostly women on moderate incomes with children of their own. |
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The throughput and the movement and what nurses have to do now in the ward area is just incredible, and the beds are never cold. |
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Even as he basks in the glory of his school's achievement, he nurses a grudge. |
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Doctors and nurses worked rapidly around her speaking in clipped phrases and abbreviations. |
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That's a question we will all be debating this year when contract negotiations open between unionized nurses and the government. |
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Many ICUs do not have private rooms near waiting rooms where doctors and nurses can consult and inform family members in confidence. |
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The NDP's so-called commitment to health care has lead to longer wait lists, lots of out-dated medical equipment, and a shortage of nurses. |
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Parliament must have been aware of these methods and cannot have had in mind a process where abortifacient agents were administered by nurses. |
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Politely, proudly and quietly, she slipped away while the doctors and nurses watched. |
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There was Sara being held down by nurses as she thrashed around, desperate to get back to her husband. |
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Forty-eight nursing assistants now are taking classes at the Kane centers to eventually qualify as higher-paid licensed practical nurses. |
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Randomised controlled trial of usual care compared with intervention delivered on hospital wards by cardiac rehabilitation nurses. |
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You will then be taken back to the hospital ward where nurses will continue to monitor you until you leave the hospital. |
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Galindo devilishly liked to stun nurses by jackknifing himself into a completely folded hospital bed. |
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We all talked about how washing the hair allows nurses to provide acceptable touching and that massaging the head can be relaxing. |
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But another problem has been a chronic shortage of permanent staff in an unglamorous field of nursing, which has led to the use of agency nurses. |
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The foundation operates a 24-hour freephone helpline, run by trained staff and nurses, to give information and answer queries on the disease. |
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For the moment it will have to be a honeymoon in hospital, but nurses hope that Linda may be able to go home. |
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Nursery nurses claim the council has provoked the action by ignoring their arguments for an increase in their hourly rate. |
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Oncology nurses help educate each patient and family about the radiation treatment, and they provide emotional support to the patients. |
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The pilot project is expected to increase patient access by adding the services of nurses and nurse practitioners to physicians' offices. |
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The nurses brought him food, but he had refused to eat it because it included cheese. |
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And it all adds up to 150,000 more local nurses, local teachers or local police officers. |
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The room filled with nurses and doctors and I was jostled back into the hallway. |
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The older nurse clucked in a matronly manner and the two nurses, together, hurried the girl into the back room to find a doctor. |
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For example, your question might be whether it is ethical for nurses to administer placebo medication. |
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This boiled down to trained nurses being available to administer to the health care needs of prison inmates. |
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When war broke out, Japan started sending Taiwan's doctors and nurses to Southeast Asia to administer to wounded soldiers. |
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The performance of these tasks exposes nurses to increased risk for work-related musculoskeletal disorders. |
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Increased Irish emigration to Britain during the 1940s supplied navvies, nurses, clerks, policemen and munition workers. |
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With doctors and nurses too scared to report to hospitals in Swat, injured civilians are flooding under equipped hospitals outside the region. |
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In the past, upper-class women sent their children to wet nurses until they were weaned. |
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The nurses had uncovered him and his body had appeared completely naked, covered by bruises and scratches. |
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Five nurses were attacked when a man went on the rampage through a South Yorkshire hospital, a judge heard. |
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Her skin had an uncanny translucence relieved by large dark blotches where nurses had tried to find a vein and she had bled under the surface. |
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Several nurses bustled around wheeling carts of medicine or copying data from the displays into notebooks. |
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In the observation room of the Angel Grove Hospital two nurses and one doctor wheeled a young man in to have X-rays taken. |
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While a group of nurses wheeled the young woman into a hospital room, Dresers noticed that the woman's eyelids were fluttering. |
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Williams insisted there had been no adversarial relationship between the ministry and the nurses. |
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Although being a team player was the most important trait to students, nurses ranked it ninth. |
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It also must have rankled with the Scottish Parliament because nurses themselves are usually barred from speaking to the press. |
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He assaulted nurses who tried to calm and restrain him and left other workers cowering as he ranted at them. |
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A staff of doctors, nurses and aestheticians work together to make you look and feel your best. |
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The stores are staffed with naturopathic doctors, nurses, and aestheticians. |
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Nurses also may not report other nurses for fear of being perceived as snitches or labeled as whistle-blowers. |
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When considering whistle-blowing, both nonunion and union nurses must consider how serious they perceive the harm is for their patients. |
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Like nurses they are white knights in a society over-dominated by people obsessed purely with their own needs. |
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We have a group of nurses who take it in turn weekday mornings and afternoons, also one evening a week so I can go out. |
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They brought her in a Moses basket and we filled it with teddy bears which the nurses said they would keep with her. |
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Female nurses busied themselves lifting the patient and cutting off his clothes. |
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Red Fox, to the girl nurses, is just another whorish psycho that needs to stay away from their man and enter jail. |
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Community workers, nurses, medical and paramedical staff are also in danger of aggression and violence. |
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Isabella was there for five weeks and the doctors and nurses were fantastic with her. |
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Even with the best will in the world, the shortage of intensive care nurses will not be fixed overnight. |
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The diplomats will be on hand to offer their condolences and reassurances to the grief-stricken nurses. |
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Doctors, nurses and teachers in the productive public sector have had their pension rights compromised by the mushrooming of public sinecures. |
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Fortunately, one of the nurses at the surgery has a deaf relative and has picked up some sign language along the way. |
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The nurses, anesthesiologists, medical technicians and aides who assist the surgeon are paid. |
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His analysis holds that nurses have the greatest knowledge and least authority when it comes to patient care. |
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The nurses want a significant increase in their flat fee for agreeing to be on call. |
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The doctor and nurses have been in and out all afternoon, rechecking his heart rate and blood pressure. |
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The Royal College of Nursing's research shows that one in four of registered nurses are set to retire in the next five years. |
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The nurses at the geriatric hospital kindly shared his care with the family. |
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He spent ten weeks there and emerged with a vicious loathing of the legal system that he nurses still. |
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America wants to recruit 1m nurses by 2010 and has launched a recruitment drive in Britain. |
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Doctors and nurses ducked out of sight while Klein woozily plopped himself on the edge of a chair in the middle of the room. |
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I know that there is a shortage of nurses and speech therapists but because of the rules we are unable to help out. |
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The WSWS does not propose that doctors, nurses and other health care workers not be paid. |
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But at least, they assume, the reward will be a grateful NHS with no trouble from shroud-waving nurses and doctors. |
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Louisiana perioperative nurses redoubled their efforts by reenergizing their members. |
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Diabetes physicians and diabetes specialist nurses will find this a reflective read capable of changing their attitudes and clinical practice. |
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The results demonstrated that trained nurses and lay screeners achieved similar accuracy rates administering the two automated refractors. |
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Inexperienced nurses are often out of their depth when caring for a patient who has been transferred from intensive care. |
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The buzzers would go off in the night and when the nurses came to see what was wrong they would find the patients fast asleep. |
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The family wants to thank everyone for their visits and support, as well as the nurses with whom he joked and bantered. |
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When this happens, the theatre nurses can relax and enjoy their work with the pressure off temporarily. |
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The basic monthly take-home salary of Zambia's teachers and nurses is 300,000 kwacha. |
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Doctors, nurses and patients alike have a right to expect rather more than that. |
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One change for the nurses is that it is now acceptable for them to show their own emotions. |
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In addition to doctors, the bill also fails to protect registered nurses and midwives who are out on call. |
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Before, nurses had come and gone, but no one had mentioned trying alternate birthing positions. |
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Mrs West said the Trust should encourage existing health care assistants to train as nurses. |
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Senior medical students, junior doctors, registrars, nurses, and allied health professionals are all potential teachers. |
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The nurses were a mixed bunch too, some wouldn't talk to me, others were fantastic, especially the one who came and held my hand while I cried. |
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The regulatory bodies cover most professionals who work in health care including nurses. |
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In between, we hauled freight, carried troops and VIPs, and served as a hospital ship with wounded and nurses aboard. |
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As previously mentioned, five of the nurses who participated in this study worked primarily in theatre. |
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A week of treatment for his ailments had nurses marvelling at his improved appearance and he is now surviving well on anti-viral therapy. |
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Understanding and utilizing the principles of bioethics will enable nurses to do just that. |
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A group of nurses and soldiers in camouflage carrying stretchers rushed towards the scene. |
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More than 500 students and nurses will be housed in a huge new accommodation block situated in the heart of the city centre. |
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I sincerely believe the hospital nurses were totally misinformed as to what was going on. |
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She admits remonstrating with nurses but said she was careful to avoid being offensive or being seen as threatening. |
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All compression bandaging was performed by specialist nurses and community nurses using a standard technique. |
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It was suggested that the executive nurses should be those with a higher educational level, extraversion or ambiversion. |
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Doctors scrambled around hurriedly requesting tools and pushing nurses out of the way. |
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On the day of surgery, the patient registers at the ambulatory care unit, where nurses prepare him or her for surgery. |
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Another group of nurses who had been certified but let their certification lapse, cited several reasons for their lapsed certification. |
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They feel management have reneged on an agreement to have two nurses on night shift in emergency. |
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Physicians and some nurses are educated at universities, and tertiary education is expensive. |
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We are staffed by a multidisciplinary team consisting of clinicians, medical information scientists, nurses, pharmacists and a teratologist. |
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But he said he did not think he had Lassa fever because his severe thigh-muscle aching was a symptom the nurses had escaped. |
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Public Health nurses visited the Maori communities and attended to babies and school children. |
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Records do show that free Black women served during the Civil War as nurses, laundresses and cooks. |
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Many of them provided indispensable services as laundresses, cooks and nurses. |
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Five nurses were found guilty of professional misconduct, four were censured and one was removed from the register. |
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This team may include a neonatologist, a pediatric anesthesiologist, or pediatric surgeon, as well as neonatal nurses and nurse practitioners. |
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The learner audience would include surgeons, nurse anesthetists, anesthesiologists, perioperative nurses, technicians, and RN first assistants. |
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I will work throughout the biennium to encourage nurses to submit consents to serve for elective and appointed positions. |
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The medical personnel were nurses, doctors, anaesthetists, surgeons and critical-care specialists from across Australia. |
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We also thank all the nurses in the 3 sexually transmitted disease clinics for participating in the study. |
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Doctors, surgeons, nurse anesthetists, nurses and medical technicians work like a well-oiled machine, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. |
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Certified registered nurse anaesthetists are advanced practice nurses with graduate level education. |
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There are mineworkers hoping to become nurses, police officers, prison officers, driving instructors and yacht skippers. |
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The EMT workers and the nurses who evaluated her upon arrival at the emergency room concluded it was probably a TIA or transient ischemic attack. |
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Overseas nurses might work as ancillaries while they adapted to British ways. |
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Each ward will have three senior sisters, sisters, staff nurses and healthcare assistants in the team on hand to help and advise patients. |
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We are involved in the education of residents, medical students, and nurses. |
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Since leaving the hospital the care has continued at home with some wonderful treatment by the district nurses and sisters. |
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Not to be outdone, the nurses looked for a banner carrier whose image would evoke even greater resonance. |
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With so much emotional baggage attached to their professions, doctors and nurses make perfect subjects for romantic drama. |
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But nurses and doctors are well trained to deal with those who are suffering. |
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Both nurses and doctors are working under intense pressure in a service that has been appallingly under-resourced and badly managed. |
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We need physicians, lawyers, nurses, educators, technologists and skilled tradesmen. |
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It would be interesting to do a restudy now among both female and male nurses and the increasing number of women physicians. |
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Periodically, nurses will be resurveyed to see if department improvement efforts are strengthening the work environment. |
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At the same time, the government was encouraging the training of young women as nurses with a bias toward midwifery and village work. |
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The doctors and nurses will provide you with a prescription for medicines to help control the nausea and vomiting called anti-emetics. |
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Until my fever broke on the evening of my first full day the nurses would take my temperature and change my ice packs every few hours. |
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The study of its principles is now part of the registration requirement for nurses and midwives. |
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Junior nurses have no backup or support and become disillusioned and leave. |
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He announced that nurses and midwives would also be trained to counsel patients and administer the drug. |
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Physicians, nurses, midwives, and pharmacists, among others, are to be roped in for the campaign. |
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Jeering nurses yesterday gave Health Minister John Denham a rough ride over some of Labour's most controversial health policies. |
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The real reason is that she is ashamed of New Labour's backstairs manoeuvres to starve the nursery nurses back to work. |
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On entering WW II, the US faced a critical shortage of registered nurses. |
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Several nurses working under the direction of this doctor have made complaints. |
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Most are senior nurses, but some are doctors or biomedical scientists. |
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In some cases, such as those of Dallas nurses Nina Pham and amber Vinson, the body figures out how to fight back. |
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And this meant that the nurses who now cared for her had no way of being sure they were safe. |
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The doctors and nurses in the emergency room were fast, caring, and highly professional. |
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Hundreds of patients, doctors and nurses were trapped for days at New Orleans Charity Hospital, surrounded by waist-deep water without power, food or medical supplies. |
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As more women opt for medical terminations, using the abortion pill, rather than surgical abortions, nurses in gynaecology wards are more involved in the treatment. |
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Maybe it's just me, but I'm somewhat reassured that medication mistakes were committed by nurses and not the janitorial staff or the people who come in to pick up the laundry. |
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These repeated checks added up to considerable amounts of time and fragmented work, particularly as nurses had to log on to the computer each time. |
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I manage to cope with the indignity well, despite the patients and nurses almost wetting themselves with laughter at the sight of me squirming as the needle is inserted. |
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The women went away, too, to work as wet nurses in Paris and elsewhere. |
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The fourth type of wet-nursing developed when the Church and the State employed wet nurses to suckle foundlings in institutions created for saving souls and lives. |
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The drugs are collected from the pharmacy by the specialist chemotherapy nurses and handed to the consultant or to juniors in the consultant's presence. |
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Proof of education is not required for nurses with an advanced degree. |
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Angie is cramping, which she expected, but gushes to me that she loved the nurses. |
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The nurses all had a ready smile and nothing was too much trouble. |
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The hospital is filthy, without drugs, and women who used to be nurses sit in the corner doing embroidery while patients suffer agonies without pain relief. |
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The government also intends to sell off surplus publicly owned land to build low-cost starter homes, particularly for key workers such as nurses and teachers. |
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Care in hospital, care at home, respite care, and education all need to be coordinated, and community paediatric nurses often do this as key workers. |
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Clearly, some of the nurses are in the noble calling for the money. |
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Systems led by nurses are safe and effective in out of hours settings. |
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I explained that it was for my swollen hand, politely refraining from mentioning that it was their fellow nurses who had necessitated the elusive pillow. |
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A wider perspective is needed to achieve clarity of roles and a better balance of registered nurses, physicians, other health professionals, and support workers. |
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The National Care Standards Commission, an independent body based in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, confirmed that six registered nurses had been suspended pending an investigation. |
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The focus groups comprised consultants and specialist registrars in medicine for elderly people, nurses, general practitioners, and hospice staff. |
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When she checks out the position vacancy board at a large local hospital, on a board full of positions advertised for nurses, only five are regular full-time. |
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Then schilling landed the lead in the NBC medical drama Mercy, about nurses in a fictional Jersey City hospital. |
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Perioperative nurses must be aware of current tissue handling practices when they participate in procedures to implant tissue and bone allografts. |
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Five nurses are pictured in the 1947 Roswell Air Field yearbook. |
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Black women were signed on as nurses instead of laundresses or cooks only when they were to serve in all-black hospitals or relegated to nurse infectious white patients. |
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We presented the flow chart to nurses and physicians in orthopaedics, anaesthesiology, and intensive care during small group teaching sessions of about 15 minutes' duration. |
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The operation used two theatres, involving four surgeons, four anaesthetists, one anaesthetic nurse, one operating department assistant and six other theatre nurses. |
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It is packed with medical equipment and a relatively big staff, consisting of surgeons, anesthetists, doctors, nurses, physiotherapists and so on. |
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In its infant mortality program, Richmond's public health nurses provided not only milk and ice to their patients, but also provided the layette when needed for newborns. |
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Errors were committed by physicians, residents, RNs, and charge nurses. |
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It will only be open one day a week and will not employ qualified nurses or physicians. |
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Linda believes nurses must be sensitive, have good personal resources, including humour, and have grasped their own perspective on death and dying. |
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Earlier in the month, the nurses had picketed the rest home as part of an industrial campaign for a collective work agreement, including minimum staffing levels. |
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These initiatives will improve our retention of nurses, have a positive domino effect on recruitment, and, over time, reduce dependency on agency and overseas nurses. |
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Junior nurses and healthcare assistants more involved in physical care seemed able to recognise that there was more to care than drugs, surgery, and invasive procedures. |
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Use of antimicrobial soaps and lengthy scrubs required by presurgical hand antisepsis protocols may put perioperative nurses at high risk of developing hand irritation. |
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While in the water he removed his lifebelt and tied it around one of the nurses and helped her stay afloat until they were rescued by British and French ships. |
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A group of nurses from Manchester were today limbering up for a trek up Mount Snowdon to raise money for a new breast cancer centre at their hospital. |
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A continuous background hum of machines and the soft voices of nurses was punctuated occasionally by the shrill of a telephone, or shoes padding across the lino floor. |
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Allow the students to role play as the doctors, nurses and patients. |
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As nurses, we need to be knowledgeable about the legal implications of advance directives, living wills, health care agent, and conservator of person. |
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Now is the time to use existing knowledge and skills to empower patients as well as arming the all important asthma nurses with the tools for the job. |
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Student nurses will benefit from the book's logical flow, which allows readers to assimilate information presented by the content and exhibits in each chapter. |
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But what about the nurses and the care assistants and the nursery workers? |
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In an assured performance, he unveiled a number of initiatives to improve the working lives of nurses, although they failed to address the central issue of pay. |
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All 3 nurses were college graduates, had experience translating English into Tagalog, had been raised in the Philippines, and now reside in the United States. |
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A team of 28 dedicated nurses and auxiliary staff are expected to lose their jobs following the shock announcement of the closure of a key Birch Hill Hospital ward. |
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To date, a quarter of the 1268 people with severe acute respiratory syndrome in Hong Kong are nurses, doctors, radiographers, and auxiliary staff. |
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She said the SNP would award pay increases to nurses as well as implement a new consultants' contract which increases the level of NHS work consultants carry out. |
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By 1753 you could find Indians employed as servants and ayahs, nurses for children, in the households of a significant number of the British elite. |
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In addition, she interviewed a range of medical practitioners including doctors, nurses, and ayahs in governmental and non-governmental organisations. |
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Equally, many of the shortages in public services such as the health service from nurses to radiographers and laboratory technicians will disappear. |
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They had served in the field as nurses and ambulance drivers and performed military support roles as cooks and orderlies, clerical workers, telephonists, and signallers. |
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I've often witnessed this back-stabbing phenomenon among nurses in the hospital, and each time I do I say a silent prayer of thanks that the majority of my colleagues are men. |
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In an impassioned call to action, he urged American doctors, nurses, and health care professionals to join Africa in its fight. |
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Insufficient protocols or incompetent practices for and by the nurses in the hospital hot zone. |
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Perioperative nurses should screen all patients for herbal medication use. |
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During his stay at an Italian hospital he charmed nurses and bribed porters into bringing him a steady stream of cognac, Cinzano vermouth, Marsala and Chianti. |
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Former nurses say there was a reluctance on the part of medical staff to enter the unit and all staff were made to scrub up carefully to prevent infection. |
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During the clinical phase with preceptors, one of the new nurses pointed out that a scrub nurse was using suture packages to rectify an incorrect needle count. |
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For example, advanced neurosurgery requires a neurosurgeon, an anesthesiologist, a neurophysiologist, a scrub nurse, and various nurses assuming other roles. |
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Our nurses will join families in hymn singing or prayer at the bedside, or make masses of toasted sandwiches for relatives who would rather not leave. |
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A national survey was used to collect data on institutional policies and on individual practices related to airway management among nurses and respiratory therapists. |
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Doctors said that she should be re-assessed by the speech and language therapist, although, as we were approaching a weekend, the nurses could assess her. |
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They want circulating nurses to administer propofol for moderate sedation. |
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Mr Hughes was critical of the Government for the way in which foreign nurses have been sought out and employed at times of crisis, only to be let go again a short time later. |
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With statistics like these, it is imperative that nurses educate their patients regarding cancer prevention, self-examination, early warning signs, and actions to take. |
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Beyond the door Matron was ticking Bentham off for leaving Thomas alone and the other nurses were gathering, quizzing each other and expressing dismay. |
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Through the years he mentored many young doctors and nurses. |
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Sheehan and a team of architects have spent months shadowing doctors, nurses, and patients at Northwest as they plan a new emergency room and inpatient wing. |
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The doctors, sister and nurses and ambulance staff were wonderful to me. |
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There were 6,000 other prisoners in the camp, and the nurses used an old mimeograph machine to start a public health campaign on the dangers of disease. |
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As we move into the next biennium, it is very important that we promote the Nurses Association as the organization that speaks for all nurses in Illinois. |
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The triage nurses inside the homeless shelter had already initiated a referral form for a surgery consultation prior to sending the young man to the mobile clinic. |
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Although this study did not focus on perioperative bioethical dilemmas, the results provide a framework to analyze issues perioperative nurses face. |
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With two Dallas nurses hospitalized with Ebola and one patient dead, the city is undoubtedly worried. |
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Too crabby and distracted to pay attention to where he's walking, Greg barely manages to sidestep a pair of nurses wheeling a gurney down the hall. |
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He had to rouse himself and run for his life through the hospital, hiding with the terrified nurses behind locked doors. |
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We must provide more doctors, nurses and hospital beds, more NHS dentists, free personal care for the elderly and free prescriptions, eye tests and dental checks for all. |
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This applies to schoolteachers, nurses, typists and clerks, anybody who's employed by the government, so it's not special to me, so I won't worry about it. |
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There have been wet nurses and nannies for generations, for centuries. |
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A few weeks later nurses held a number of protest gatherings and sit-ins. |
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The nurses are brilliant and because it's so small everyone just mucks in. |
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Vera Brittain talks about this, about the sense in which she sees the professional nurses as a de-sexed figure, an unfeminine, hard, uncompassionate person. |
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One in eight patients admitted to the region's hospitals is undernourished and their condition is ignored by doctors and nurses, according to new research. |
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They do their best, it is not the fault of the doctors, physchiatrists, physchologists, nurses, etc., that the mental health service is under-resourced. |
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Now Pham and Vinson have Ebola and are in the care of nurses as brave as themselves. |
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Bellybuttons tied by nurses at British hospitals within the last 32 years have favored a knot which is now known to be non-secure and liable to unknot itself over time. |
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So, it's the nurses fault that he is such a successful sneak? |
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While nurses and aides will clean visibly soiled surfaces, too many germy spots go uncleaned. |
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The NLRB determined that the nurses should be in the bargaining unit and denied the employer's request for additional review. |
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These problems are exacerbated by the shortage of trained doctors and nurses and health facilities. |
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They raped nurses and teachers, slaughtered doctors, in the most brutal manner. |
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We also know that we, as a profession, do not have the nurses from underrepresented minority groups to match these shifts in population. |
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