Medical Conduct and Practice: A Guide to the Ethics of MedicineA. & C. Black, Limited, 1921 - 168 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 31
Página 27
... attends the door and admits the patients is polite , tidy and active ; patients do not like to be kept waiting at the door . When you become prosperous , or if you desire to make a deep impression on your patients , and more especially ...
... attends the door and admits the patients is polite , tidy and active ; patients do not like to be kept waiting at the door . When you become prosperous , or if you desire to make a deep impression on your patients , and more especially ...
Página 36
... attend- ants , then the ill - mannered man will soon become the ill - natured man because of his non - success . He sees his colleagues succeed and wonders why , with perhaps his known ability , he does not also attract patients . Even ...
... attend- ants , then the ill - mannered man will soon become the ill - natured man because of his non - success . He sees his colleagues succeed and wonders why , with perhaps his known ability , he does not also attract patients . Even ...
Página 43
... attending , nor try to acquire a reputation by recounting the number of cases of such and such a disease which you have cured . To do so is a form of self - adulation and is very bad taste . I have heard patients speak with contempt of ...
... attending , nor try to acquire a reputation by recounting the number of cases of such and such a disease which you have cured . To do so is a form of self - adulation and is very bad taste . I have heard patients speak with contempt of ...
Página 48
... attend to one's personal appearance . It is of equal importance to see that one keeps oneself clean and tidy . The medical profession has not always been remarkable for this virtue , and the many doctors whom Dickens describes did not ...
... attend to one's personal appearance . It is of equal importance to see that one keeps oneself clean and tidy . The medical profession has not always been remarkable for this virtue , and the many doctors whom Dickens describes did not ...
Página 50
... attended usually by a more or less untrained nurse or by some wholly untrained female relative . These people , therefore , send for the doctor , not indeed because there is any need , but because perhaps the parturient patient is ...
... attended usually by a more or less untrained nurse or by some wholly untrained female relative . These people , therefore , send for the doctor , not indeed because there is any need , but because perhaps the parturient patient is ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Medical Conduct and Practice; A Guide to the Ethics of Medicine; William George Aitchison Robertson Sin vista previa disponible - 2016 |
Medical Conduct and Practice: A Guide to the Ethics of Medicine (1921) W. G. Aitchison Robertson Sin vista previa disponible - 2008 |
Términos y frases comunes
able accident action for damages advice advisable allow amongst anesthetic assize court attend bed sores cause of death certificate of death character charge commence practice confidence consultant coroner country practice court of law cremation criminal deceased diagnosis disease doctor duty dying declaration ethics examination feel forceps former give hand hospital illness infirmary infrequently insure ledger locum tenens lunacy manner matter medical certificates Medical Council medical ethics medical practitioner medical witness medicine mental midwifery mind neglect never nurse one's oneself operation opinion paid payment perhaps person phthisis prac present procurator fiscal profession professional puerperium reason received regards registrar relatives remember result Scotland sick SOHO SQUARE specialist statement suffering summoned surgeon surgical syphilis tell the patient testator tion tioner titioner treat treatment truth unless usually vaccination visiting list woman young practitioner