Although awake at times, she was aphasic and incommunicative, at least to the physicians. |
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In response to his rigidity and dictatorial nature, one of his assistants created his own professional group of physicians. |
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The expertise of physicians and psychologists in their respective fields is not always matched by their depth of knowledge of ethics. |
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A powerful defense against bioterrorism is accurate and timely information for physicians and patients. |
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Both patients and physicians are most interested in disease indicators that will best predict therapeutic responses and prognostic outcomes. |
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Administrators and public health academics are wary and mistrustful of physicians in the field. |
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In France, the 1994 bioethics law requires physicians to inform relatives before performing an autopsy. |
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Certain signs and symptoms can help physicians distinguish between delirium and a pre-existing psychiatric disorder. |
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The physicians kept misdiagnosing his illness until he became very sick and his blood count dropped. |
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Altogether, 34 of 75 of the clinically suspected episodes were misclassified by attending physicians at time of inclusion. |
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Several polls on euthanasia and assisted suicide have been conducted among physicians. |
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In practice, many physicians oppose assisted suicide and euthanasia, and hospitals have barred assisted suicide from their premises. |
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Currently, physicians use ERCP to diagnose and treat liver, gallbladder, bile duct, and pancreas problems. |
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Nevertheless, physicians have an obligation to make their at-risk patients aware of the options. |
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Most physicians recommend a total cholesterol level of 200 milligrams per deciliter of blood. |
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Queries on the database are checked immediately with the attendant physicians or nurses. |
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The proscription against physicians talking about themselves with patients comes from several different traditions. |
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Inspection, palpation, percussion and auscultation were virtually the only tools that physicians had to diagnose every medical condition. |
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How can physicians best promote the autonomy of minors while respecting parental autonomy? |
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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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Caretakers and physicians often project sensations of hunger and thirst onto severely demented patients with poor oral intake. |
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The area was also home to two cabinet makers, a carpenter, a tailor, a miller, and two physicians, as well as teachers, preachers, and farmers. |
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In their country, they were tradespeople and professionals such as teachers, lawyers or physicians. |
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It aims to increase the awareness and interest among hematologists, malariologists and tropical physicians. |
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We need physicians, lawyers, nurses, educators, technologists and skilled tradesmen. |
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These physicians enrolled 946 index patients and their household contacts in a three-month period. |
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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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I spent the evening half-expecting a horde of physicians to descend on me, but Mai was the only one who visited me. |
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By manipulating these pressure points, ancient Chinese physicians could treat the most complicated of disease. |
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Because most medieval physicians defended scholasticism, he was not a friend of the medical profession. |
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In the past, physicians attempted to relieve the symptoms of congestive heart failure by using rotating tourniquets and diuretics. |
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Patients and their physicians are familiar with acute pain or pain caused by injury. |
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Attending physicians or their designee also will speak with the patient or family members about injuries resulting from adverse events. |
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Performing sentinel lymph node biopsy requires coordinated expertise between nuclear medicine physicians, pathologists, and surgeons. |
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Because she had many remedies in court, all these remedies were checked and then tested and tasted by her physicians before she consumed them. |
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At least since the early 19th century, physicians have been concerned about the mental effects of industrial effluvia. |
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Family physicians should be able to team up with nurse practitioners, dieticians and other health experts to offer a wider range of services. |
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The questions to be answered are selected by groups of practicing family physicians who vote through an online ballot. |
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He noted that many young physicians were healing themselves with the same balms they prescribed for patients. |
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There is a similar knowledge gap about how physicians can optimize contraceptive counseling. |
|
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Medical schools recognized that for physicians to become better communicators, they need students to become better humanists. |
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In Britain temporary pacing is usually provided in district general hospitals by general physicians as part of an emergency service. |
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I typed a politely worded memo to his physicians, giving a bit of advice on how to care for him. |
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Family physicians should consider tick-borne diseases when patients present with influenza-like symptoms. |
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In public healthcare systems, physicians are often salaried employees with compensation plans that may act as disincentives for innovation. |
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Most physicians have heard of the speech tics that can occur with Tourette's syndrome, but many other tics are more common. |
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Finally, I should tell you that not all physicians believe that breast self-examination is a good thing. |
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Contacting physicians and obtaining orders to medicate patients for pain in a timely manner frequently was a problem. |
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I believe that physicians and patients may be responding to how mechanistic the practice of medicine has become. |
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A new medical school curriculum, the first of its kind, will prepare physicians to take advantage of advances in the behavioral sciences. |
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Primary care physicians may also lack sufficient training and face financial disincentives to perform psychodiagnostic testing. |
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In-depth interviews of physicians from the surgical, orthopedic, obstetric and gynecology, and anesthesia department were conducted. |
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This new view could have medical importance if physicians learn how to prevent the rapid engulfment of seemingly dying cells. |
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Using this procedure, physicians can view these organs and inject dye into the bile and pancreatic ducts to make them visible by x-ray. |
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Therefore, physicians must provide more time for these patients to enhance communication and foster information exchange. |
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In spite of these positive references, the traditional attitude towards physicians in Israelite society was one of distrust. |
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In that case, the physicians argued that the trial judge had erred in preferring one responsible body of professional opinion to another. |
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Using these tools, physicians can revamp and refine tumor classification to enable more individualized treatments. |
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Isidore returned my grip and the physicians and servants flurried about as more blood washed out but no baby. |
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Curiously, family physicians were more likely than cardiologists to order transfusions. |
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The reserve physicians were surgically ambisinister, medically at the zero point, and lacking in discipline, military skill and temperance. |
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Salaried physicians indicated a greater willingness to engage in organizational citizenship behaviors. |
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Others come from remote sources such as the phone book or physicians who supply your name from a list. |
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George Bernard Shaw and William Shakespeare have used farce to highlight patient vulnerability to unscrupulous physicians. |
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Its unique pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics make methadone a valuable option, but physicians should be aware of possible side effects. |
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Numerous forces have been imposed on physicians to make them change their practice behaviours. |
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Many family physicians incorporate psychological support and modified cognitive therapy into care. |
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For decades, physicians have known about so-called factitious disorder, better known in its severe form as Munchausen syndrome. |
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An increasing number of physicians report finding coagulation abnormalities in these patients. |
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In the thirteenth century we read in old records that Pellitory of Spain was 'a proved remedy for the toothache' with the Welsh physicians. |
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Critically ill, morbidly obese patients present serious challenges to physicians treating them. |
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Post-menopausal women were required to obtain medical clearance from their physicians to participate in the study. |
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Family physicians should remind patients of the importance of hydration and leg movements during flights. |
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We randomised patients managed by general physicians and general practitioners, who care for most people with chronic heart failure. |
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Referred to as hospitalists, these physicians care for patients only during hospitalization. |
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As expected, surgery, emergency medicine, and obstetrics were the medical specialties of the physicians named in these suits. |
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When a fracture of the hook of the hamate is suspected, physicians should include the carpal tunnel and supinated oblique views. |
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Formerly, physicians were told simply to deal honestly with patients and colleagues. |
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Infants in these nurseries may be managed by family physicians and general pediatricians who later continue their care in the ambulatory setting. |
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Family physicians argue about whether pacifiers are good or bad for infants. |
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The recommendations should be read by all physicians who provide care to HIV-positive patients. |
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They thought physicians contributed to this dependence by overprescribing medication and supporting patients in excessive use of medications. |
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As a French bioethicist has recently argued, physicians have, first and above all, to respect the rights of the patients in their charge. |
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In Pennsylvania, New York and Minnesota, for example, the homeopathic practitioners outranked regular physicians. |
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Each was managed jointly at the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in London by tropical medicine physicians and otorhinolaryngologists. |
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They studied children brought to family physicians in southern England with acute otalgia. |
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Data mining capabilities will allow physicians to study the effects of environment, heredity and lifestyle on breast cancer. |
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Many osteopathic and chiropractic physicians perform spinal adjustments on patients with asthma, and symptomatic improvements are often noted. |
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Aloe is included in the pharmacopeia of Indian Ayurvedic physicians and in the literature on Chinese herbal medicine. |
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He cautions against listening to physicians who advocate over-the-counter remedies. |
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Pennsylvania College's program will be based on a strong biomedical curriculum, similar to programs for physicians, dentists and optometrists. |
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After discussion within our large group of pulmonary physicians we selected topics under four broad headings. |
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First, physicians tend to be concerned about using opioids in terminal patients for fear of suppressing respiration and hastening death. |
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The decision to discontinue cardiopulmonary resuscitation is a difficult one for physicians. |
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Meeting these demands requires teamwork and harmonious relationships between nurses and physicians. |
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Heart palpitations and cardiac arrhythmias are common problems encountered by family physicians. |
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By combining several regional groups of physicians, they were able to negotiate capitation payments for large patient populations. |
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Obsessed with her health, she traveled with a retinue of surgeons, physicians, oculists, and apothecaries. |
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Family physicians and obstetricians need to be aware of this useful method of natural childbirth. |
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By the late 19th Century, teaching hospitals came up and were staffed by physicians, surgeons and obstetricians. |
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Second, it increases our sales and marketing resources to ob-gyn physicians. |
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Systems of procedural ethics used by nurses and physicians are built on the goods embedded in the practice of nursing and medicine. |
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If the patients switch physicians, record-keepers send patients simple questionnaires or call them for interviews. |
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I think physicians are being nudged back in that direction, and I am very encouraged by that. |
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Scan reading was qualitative, performed by two independent, experienced nuclear medicine physicians blinded to the results of the other tests. |
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Many physicians are unfamiliar with the disease, and heavy menstrual bleeding often is considered a gynecologic rather than hematologic problem. |
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I accept the evidence lead on behalf of the Defendants that, notwithstanding the form, many physicians did not complete this particular box. |
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Recently physicians have become more inclined to give slow-release morphine, which comes from the opium poppy. |
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I believe that there is indeed an important place for the type of care that general physicians provide. |
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This may be because the theory is non-specific, so that no individual physicians or institutions can be held responsible. |
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Evidence shows that the way results of clinical trials are presented influences both physicians and funders of health care. |
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These changes have paralleled dramatic changes in the assessment of practising physicians. |
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This will include treatment from specialist physicians, physiotherapists and psychologists. |
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We practicing physicians have to know what to do if a case walks into the office. |
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One is provided by dentists and physicians in private practice on a fee basis to those able to pay. |
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Medicine and physicians have had about all of the micromanagement that they can stand. |
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I think most physicians in practice feel that we can only be penalised by failing to test. |
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Disclosure of a diagnosis of cancer has on occasions caused conflict between physicians and family members. |
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A small proportion of the samples were referral samples sent by physicians in private practice. |
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Does the information have the potential to change the practice of many physicians? |
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We meet many wise patients in this book, because physicians learn medicine on and from their patients. |
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In most cases physicians prescribed requested medicines but were often ambivalent about the choice of treatment. |
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A total of 19 attending physicians were assessed for ability in measuring PP by sphygmomanometry and by palpation. |
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The literature is filled with recommendations to assist physicians with the management of noncompliant patients. |
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They are physicians, nurses, veterinarians, research scientists and others. |
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Many physicians in these specializations have a desire to collaborate with psychotherapists. |
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There was a time when Highland spaewives believed in microbes and infection while the qualified physicians laughed at their quaint superstitions. |
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For men with mild to moderate urinary symptoms or bother, management by primary care physicians is appropriate. |
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Apnea of prematurity is one of the most common and frustrating conditions that nurses, physicians and neonates face in the intensive care unit. |
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I recommend that all family physicians read this article for better awareness of this important, but sometimes neglected topic. |
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Thus physicians have to make clinical decisions about brain death wherever neurologists or neurosurgeons are not available. |
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In fact, after his stroke, his life was nearly terminated by his physicians, who believed he was brain-dead. |
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Nineteenth-century physicians emphasized again and again that all organic life operated under the same natural laws. |
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Even allowing for individual variability, physicians have a wealth of information about the usual natural history of most conditions. |
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Many physicians recommend walking as a natural treatment to relieve depression. |
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Family physicians frequently see patients who have abdominal pain and altered bowel habits. |
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The SAP physicians were far more rigorously quantitative in their craniometry. |
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The experience of physicians shows that there are a number of infecund or sterile married couples in the population. |
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The appellate court affirmed 51 acquittals and 19 findings of medical negligence by defendant physicians. |
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The basis of acupuncture and acupressure has been understood and utilized by oriental physicians for over 2,000 years. |
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Current policies and procedures for credentialing family physicians in colonoscopy vary markedly from site to site. |
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Some physicians have advocated the use of heel lifts to shorten the gastrocnemius muscle. |
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In the third quarter of 1993, he initiated an analysis of the errors made by emergency physicians in interpreting radiographs at his hospital. |
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These can provide transplant physicians with stem cells from unrelated but matched donors. |
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My father's family are descended from the Wends, a nomadic people from the Slav lands who were gypsies, musicians and physicians. |
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In the 20th century, physicians administered electroshock therapy or injected high doses of insulin to induce seizures. |
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At the time, most physicians and climbers accepted that humans could not survive above 8,600m without bottled oxygen. |
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New technologies for cytology screening have been promoted to physicians and the public. |
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However, when performing any part of the physical examination, family physicians should be alert for suspicious nevi. |
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To this day the Aesculapian snake forms part of the symbols representing physicians and veterinarians. |
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The clinic, with more than 300 physicians, is affiliated with St. Luke's Hospital. |
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On Feb. 7, the Afghan Ministry of Defense flew a team of Afghan physicians and medical supplies to the town. |
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Four versions of the questionnaire were written, comprising one each for physicians, pharmacists, community key workers, and patients. |
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But paradoxically, as the power of medicine to do good has grown to previously unimagined levels, public trust in physicians has plunged. |
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None of the very skilled physicians in the royal palace had been able to cure him of whatever had ailed him, or even find out what it was. |
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Professional physicians often prescribe folk therapies such as herbal teas or tinctures and mustard plasters. |
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In the United States, physicians routinely prescribe multivitamins to pregnant women. |
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While more female physicians are turning up, most are either too mannishly tough or too womanishly sweet. |
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Medicare Part B and Medicaid payments to physicians generally are unaffected by a gainsharing arrangement. |
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This interchange highlights the challenges physicians face in caring for uninsured and underinsured patients. |
|
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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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Family physicians should feel free to provide specific advice to patients and families wrestling with these difficult decisions. |
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In true gainsharing arrangements, physicians are directly paid a portion of the savings. |
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Crisis intervention makes intuitive sense to physicians and surgeons used to myocardial infarcts and obstructed hernias. |
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With the development of new basal and prandial insulins, physicians and patients have more options and a chance for added dosing flexibility. |
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Family physicians should advocate the use of appropriate mouthguards and face shields in organized sports. |
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Moreover some of these physicians often issue a certificate of death before making a check up and ascertaining the cause of death. |
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Studies indicate that many physicians demonstrate poor compliance with recommended tuberculosis treatment guidelines. |
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Because most physicians work independently, we modified the good supervision scale and relabelled it as the supportive-receptive climate scale. |
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This could be complemented by careful design of payment mechanisms aligning the financial incentives faced by physicians. |
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In addition, the family employed traditional remedies and treatment strategies of which the physicians were unaware. |
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It is preposterous to ask seasoned physicians to acquire necessary qualifications to carry on with the legacies of yore. |
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Each survey was conducted among a nationally representative, random sample of office-based physicians who provide ambulatory patient care. |
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The majority of ambulatory older patients who visit primary care physicians are without severe disability. |
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Before initiating treatment of latent tuberculosis infection, physicians must ensure that active disease is not present. |
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We see the toll in the conflict between nurses and physicians when there is disagreement about the goals of care. |
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Some physicians may have limited patience with staff members they view as insubordinate or who do not understand their routine. |
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A doctor from Tameside Hospital is joining a team of physicians on a mercy mission to help earthquake victims. |
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The senior physicians had finished their residency and had at least 2 years of ICU experience as senior physicians. |
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Many physicians need years of medical school and residency to even get a slight grasp of the problem. |
|
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For stations involving physicians, fourth-year medical students or physician residents were used. |
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Florida ranks 45th in the nation in number of medical residents, or physicians in training. |
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Currently, physicians are able to diagnose many more birth defects than they are able to treat prenatally. |
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This was in concert with their belief that sleep was the greatest of all physicians and the most powerful consoler of humanity. |
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In addition a number of practicing pharmacists and physicians accepted the challenge of supervising the interns at their working places. |
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Keep in mind, your problem is a recognized diagnostic condition among all respectable physicians. |
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Patients with restless legs syndrome who give blood regularly are advised to see their physicians about possible adverse effects. |
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The physicians attending the President have announced that he is sinking fast. |
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Annual presentations of the popular memorial lectureships celebrate the legacy of these fine physicians. |
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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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The majority of physicians fail a simple critical appraisal pretest we give before our teaching programs. |
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The blood test could identify certain chromosomal changes that guide physicians to prescribe certain anticancer drugs. |
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In this setting of our core beliefs, the fact is many scientists and physicians are not worth reasoning with about Morgellons. |
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In addition, physicians may not anticipate predictable side effects of narcotics and may not educate their patients about them. |
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Both patients and their physicians are willing to accept a high risk of toxicity if there is a definite chance of cure. |
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These SOBs use any excuse to bleed physicians dry and you have no recourse to fight because it is their game with their rules. |
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Many physicians make a presumptive diagnosis of allergic rhinitis based on the medical history. |
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Stimulants should be prescribed judiciously and monitored carefully by specialists in close liaison with primary care physicians. |
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During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, consumption was considered incurable by most people, patients and physicians alike. |
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Primary care physicians must be diligent in assessing the immunization status of geriatric patients and providing the recommended vaccines. |
|
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Family physicians need to be more effective at helping patients adopt healthy lifestyle habits. |
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The 17 person committee that writes the standards includes at least four transsexuals, including physicians. |
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Traditionally, physicians have estimated prognosis using their clinical experience. |
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There was no need for physicians to bleed residents of this part of Ohio because the mosquitoes did the job. |
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In the middle of the spectrum were naturalists and physicians who supported the unity of the human species, though almost all assumed racial hierarchy. |
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Use of muscle relaxant medication was more prevalent for two physicians. |
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We need physicians and food-and-drug regulators to advise us, up to a point. |
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Similarly, a parallel slope envisaging a slide from physicians performing voluntary euthanasia to engaging in involuntary euthanasia requires empirical support. |
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It was much funnier than it sounds, and the four physicians that showed up to create this cast that inspires my weird flights of fancy and I were all howling. |
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Aeromedical physicians found that blood pooled in the lower body at high altitudes and thus was not forced back toward the heart and recirculated to the head. |
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The method of credentialing health care professionals employed by physicians or independent practitioners is handled through the individual facility's credentialing committee. |
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Both cities were renowned for their schools and libraries, musicians and poets, physicians and astronomers, mullahs and heretics, and also for their taverns and dancing girls. |
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Medical education has responded to these changes by increasingly using community-based physicians to provide preceptorships throughout the four-year medical curriculum. |
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Although physicians are gatekeepers to almost all medical resources, their role in managing referral to specialists has been the most controversial aspect of gatekeeping. |
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The expensive and effective marketing of pharmaceutical companies has made a generation of physicians well versed in the prescription of antidepressants. |
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If physicians have not concurrently screened for chlamydial infection, the CDC recommends presumptive treatment for chlamydia at the time of treatment for gonorrhea. |
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Using an organized approach to the varied aspects of geriatric health, primary care physicians can improve the care that they provide for their older patients. |
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Because CFS lacks definitive organic causes, it is often dismissed by physicians as either a psychosomatic illness or a manifestation of clinical depression. |
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A less toxic but similar compound, digoxin from another species of foxgloves, replaced digitoxin and is still preferred by many physicians for relieving the condition. |
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Contemporary physicians can use highly refined technologies, such as stethoscopes, electrocardiograms, and encephalograms, to detect minimal life signs. |
|
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To close superficial wounds, physicians can accelerate epithelialization, generally using an occlusive dressing that creates a warm, moist, environment, he said. |
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It is true that the majority physicians are duteous to their patients. |
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This question has plagued ethicists and physicians throughout the years. |
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From such examination, physicians considered that they could identify problems ranging from jaundice to dropsy, diphtheria, pregnancy, and anxiety. |
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We are looking forward to publishing what promises to be an excellent series from this dedicated group of family physicians, teachers, and academicians. |
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One drug that most physicians frequently recommend is acetaminophen. |
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Wolfe and associates examined the current practice patterns of analgesia administration among emergency department physicians when caring for a patient with an acute abdomen. |
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Montgomery is part of a small but growing group of conventionally trained physicians disillusioned with traditional medical care. |
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Despite general good intentions, however, even good physicians can deliver care that falls short. |
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The decision to attempt percutaneous chordotomy is made by the patient and physicians experienced in pain-relieving procedures at the department of algology. |
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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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Heap praise, not scorn, on physicians who are brave and caring enough to recommend cannabis when appropriate. |
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They're also looking for report cards on physicians and hospitals. |
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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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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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Myocardial infarction with angiographically normal coronary arteries is a life-threatening event with many open questions for physicians and patients. |
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Once considered a symbol of the practices of medieval physicians, medical leeches have emerged as a useful component of certain modern therapeutic protocols. |
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They are totally benign, although occasional patients or physicians become concerned about them or misdiagnose them as, for example, thrush or lichen planus. |
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In the field of medicine, physicians were familiar with Louis Pasteur's germ theory and knew of Joseph Lister's discoveries in the fields of bacteriology and antisepsis. |
|
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In this world, once-proud physicians are over-prescribing and over-ordering, grinning and pretending, stepping and fetching. |
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The standard method for cardiac risk assessment used by most physicians is based on the National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines, which are summarized below. |
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Some physicians find the alcohol-based rub to be more convenient. |
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Many chest physicians advise patients who are taking steroids to swallow their tablets in the morning because morning dosing is thought to minimise adrenal suppression. |
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In 1939, membership was broadened to include physicians with an interest in tuberculosis who did not work in sanatoria, and the name was changed to American Trudeau Society. |
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Films that were not interpreted by emergency physicians, such as specialised scans, ultrasound scans, and intravenous pyelogram studies, were not included in the data. |
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If abortion was illegal, many women would be forced to have abortions from unqualified physicians in backstreet clinics, risking their own health. |
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In addition, his support for the growing claims of the clergy as professionals was in tension with his opposition to similar claims by physicians and lawyers. |
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Previously, Eminent sent 150-to 500-page study-protocol documents to participating physicians and regulators, who marked them up and mailed them back. |
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For several bacterial diseases, such as diphtheria and tetanus, physicians can prevent the illness by immunizing people against the microbes' toxins. |
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In Sierra Leone, the group reported less than 10 physicians per 100,000 inhabitants. |
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Before initiating testosterone treatment, physicians should discuss the potential and theoretic risks, and individual risk and benefit assessments with the patient. |
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Medieval physicians created even more elaborate theriacs to dose a plague-dreading populace, for whom the possibility of a cure-all didn't seem too wild a notion at all. |
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However, other physicians favor using insulin secretagogues with insulin. |
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The fact that we were dealing with professionals, including RNs, physicians, architects, and designers, did not mean that their behaviors were without bias or partiality. |
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Another fat melting technique that has enjoyed years of popularity in Europe and elsewhere but is only just coming to the attention of American physicians is mesotherapy. |
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Injection of joints, bursae, tendon sheaths, and soft tissues of the human body is a useful diagnostic and therapeutic skill for family physicians. |
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This can make physicians in small practices loathe to take on deaf patients, as they may lose money once they have billed insurance and paid for an interpreter. |
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This conference was prompted in part by a survey that indicated most physicians believe sepsis is misdiagnosed or diagnosed too late because of lack of a clear definition. |
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The diagnosis of mass psychogenic illness shares many characteristics with sick building syndrome and other such illnesses, further obscuring the issue for physicians. |
|
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Finally, with the new risks of bioterrorism, emergency physicians need to lead in the early diagnosis of illnesses such as anthrax, smallpox, plague, tularaemia, and botulism. |
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That's another kettle of fish entirely and I despair of physicians and others who confuse and muddle invalidity and melancholy as being one and the same thing. |
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A numerical data set helps physicians and other doctors know when to order scans of any kind. |
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These relationships can also bolster trial enrollment by providing better access to both the targeted patients and the referring physicians for the study. |
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A recent VOX article, which calls to reduce doctor pay, struck many physicians as particularly off the mark. |
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Not only botchers are concerned but also physicians of all clinical subjects, especially malpractice charges claiming a malpractice leading to death. |
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Family physicians should maintain a high index of suspicion for necrotizing external otitis in immunocompromised patients who have external otitis. |
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So from sexy vampires to philandering physicians, we count down the most seemingly inappropriate Sesame Street spoofs. |
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Patient preferences for nondisclosure of medical information and family-centered decision making may be disorienting initially to American-trained physicians. |
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As such, it could not be prescribed by physicians and could not be dispensed by pharmacies. |
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Witchcraft, including Afro-Brazilian practices and Kardecist spiritism, threatened the claims of physicians and the state to authority over Brazilians' bodies and actions. |
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In most countries, treatment is provided by some clinics or physicians. |
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Women placed great faith in their physicians and the medical care system. |
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Group medical visits are best with teams of physicians and nurses. |
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During this time, physicians began to produce case studies of patients whose inability to read was puzzling. |
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The country has the ability to react very quickly because of the experience of the physicians and the political will to do so. |
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He further concluded that these cadaverous particles could adhere to the hands of physicians and thus be transferred to the women, thereby transmitting puerperal fever. |
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The physicians can work fewer hours, both in the office and on call, and as they are able to delegate many tasks they can provide better services. |
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Checking by physicians and pharmacy and nursing staff was all manual. |
|
Certainly, the relentlessly negative press coverage of physicians sets the tone. |
|
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A new ovarian tumor index to help physicians accurately diagnose ovarian tumors as cancerous or benign has been developed by researchers in Dallas. |
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In rural areas, family physicians are more likely to attend births, due to a lack of specialists, obstetricians, and anaesthesiologists in these areas. |
|
Some physicians are also getting sick and tired of the hard sell. |
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When the weight that physicians know to be hazardously overweight is considered normal weight by the general public, major health problems are on the horizon. |
|
Many Americans regularly see their dentists, physicians and optometrists. |
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In a study of otoscopes used by 96 private practice physicians, approximately one third of the devices were found to have a suboptimal output of light. |
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Most physicians would agree that narcotics are inappropriate for patients with chemical dependency, significant character pathology, and psychiatric illness. |
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As project leader, Hawass is in charge of archaeologists, conservators, paleopathologists, epidemiologists, radiologists, and physicians from around the world. |
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The 66 physicians who were surveyed had referred patients to the study. |
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Researchers analyzed swabs taken from 42 neckties worn by physicians and medical staff as well as 10 neckties from security staff at the medical center. |
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Then, around Christmastime, physicians in Pennsylvania threatened a massive work stoppage, which was averted only by special intervention by the Governor. |
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He looked both hunted and even haunted, as you look at those photographs, the images of him being examined by physicians to determine his state of health. |
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Meperidine or pentazocine are recommended by some physicians. |
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Although ADHD can account for hyperactivity or inattentiveness, physicians should remember that these symptoms can also be caused by other disorders. |
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Trent Lamb and Kimberly Whicker have been hired as physicians in the Emergency Department of the White River Health System of Batesville. |
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More and more physicians are considering opting out of Medicare, as well as many other payment plans. |
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Easterling and his team have been actively engaging our physicians in this technology deployment throughout the company. |
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Data was extracted from reports of factory inspectors, physicians, trade unions, economists, and social workers. |
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This may provide physicians with a greater opportunity to obtain more information from an echocardiogram. |
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Here are the best techniques from those who successfully manage large numbers of the young, including young physicians. |
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