Results 211 to 220 of about 2,857,621 (269)
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The Care of the Patient

New England Journal of Medicine, 1956
IT is a great pleasure to have the privilege of representing the physicians of Boston in making these brief remarks at the opening of this distinguished meeting.
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Will the patient care?

Public Health, 1973
Summary Administrative changes in the National Health Service must be mirrored by operational changes. Such operational changes should be aimed at enhancing the health of the community and therefore at changing the basic work attitudes of the primary care team.
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Caring for the Patient

New England Journal of Medicine, 1964
IN choosing the title "Caring For the Patient," I bear in mind the closing sentence of Dr. Pea-body's poignant Gay Lecture, in which he stated, "The secret of the care of the patient is in caring f...
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Taking Care of Patients and Caring for Patients Are Not the Same

AORN Journal, 2004
THERE IS A SIGNIFICANT difference between taking care of patients and caring for patients. TAKING CARE OF PATIENTS emphasizes objective, professional care, such as the medical and psychological aspects of nursing. CARING FOR PATIENTS, on the other hand, is a humanistic way of interacting with patients that demonstrates sincere care and concern for ...
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PATIENT CARE: Perioperative Patient Care

AORN Journal, 1993
PATIENT CARE: Perioperative Patient Care, second ed, By Julia A. Kneedler, Gwen H.
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Care of the TIA patient

Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery, 2013
I read with interest Al-Khaled et al. [1] study on the prognostic mpact of the stroke unit (SU) concept in patients presenting after transient ischemic attack (TIA). They found no significant impact f SU care as compared to conventional care (CU) in TIA patients. heir study raises some interesting observations. The conventional eaching is that patients
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Care of the Cirrhotic Patient

Infectious Disease Clinics of North America, 2012
The clinical manifestations of cirrhotic liver disease encompass a broad spectrum of conditions that reflect the consequence of high portal pressures that result from fibrosis and diminished hepatic synthetic reserve. Patients with cirrhosis are at heightened risk for the development of infection, and although the use of prophylactic antimicrobial ...
Syed-Mohammed, Jafri, Stuart C, Gordon
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Care of Dying Patients

Clinics in Geriatric Medicine, 1988
Caring for a patient during the last phase of his or her life is a demanding obligation and a privilege for the physician. The physician has the responsibility to be knowledgeable about the natural history of disease processes and the body's changing physiology.
B J, Scheel, J, Lynn
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Care of Patients with Ascites

New England Journal of Medicine, 1994
Ascites is the pathologic accumulation of fluid in the peritoneal cavity. The condition develops most frequently as part of the decompensation of previously asymptomatic chronic liver disease (Table 1). Ascites is the most common complication of such disease, occurring in 50 percent of patients within 10 years of a diagnosis of compensated cirrhosis ...
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Caring for the Patient With AIDS

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1988
ACQUIRED immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is emerging as one of the most dreadful of human diseases. The way in which the disease recurrently savages its victims before killing them is now well known. So are the feelings of profound depression, anger, loneliness, and hopelessness so often seen in those afflicted with this miserable malady.
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