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Medical and critics
The chairman of the British Medical Association, Hamish Meldrum, said he was dismayed by the ‘ jaw-droppingly untruthful attacks ’ made by American critics.

Medical and routine
While one will occasionally see a physician with an ambulance crew on an emergency call, this is much more likely to be the Medical Director or an associate, inducting newly trained paramedics, or performing routine medical quality assurance.
" Dalton's delivery was slated as a routine Cesarean birth at Ogden Regional Medical Center in Utah.
The WHO, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the American Academy of Family Physicians, the British Medical Association and the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain currently recommend routine vaccination of children against mumps.
Jennings Medical Clinic hosts 2 physicians and 2 mid-level providers, alongside qualified support staff, for routine primary care practice.
Clinical training at the San Juan Bautista Medical Center brings the student into contact with a patient population drawn from many different socio-economic groups whose health problems represent all categories of medical conditions requiring complex tertiary care to routine and preventive care.

Medical and cord
Recently, doctors at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences discovered a new pathway in the spinal cord relatively specific for visceral pain-the pain that originates from visceral organs such as the colon, bladder and pancreas.
The title refers to the firm Medical Defence Australia, a team of lawyers and doctors who defend doctors charged with malpractice, ranging from Botox injections gone wrong to spinal cord injuries.
* 1988: Recognized by the City's Emergency Medical Services as a head and spinal cord injury center.

Medical and blood
Medical terms related to blood often begin with hemo-or hemato-( also spelled haemo-and haemato -) from the Greek word ( haima ) for " blood ".
** The Royal Army Medical Corps first successful blood transfusion using blood that had been stored and cooled.
In 1994 Robert D ' Amato at Harvard Medical School discovered thalidomide was a potent inhibitor of new blood vessel growth ( angiogenesis ).
Medical attendants thus intentionally removed more than half of the patient's normal blood supply — in addition to the initial blood loss which caused the sergeant to faint.
According to a 2006 study in the Journal of the American Medical Association ( JAMA ), some babies who die of SIDS have abnormalities in the brain stem ( medulla oblongata ) of underdeveloped serotonin receptors ( which help control functions like breathing, blood pressure and arousal ) and abnormalities in serotonin signaling.
A study by a Harvard Medical School team found the two sacs in the inner ear, the utricle and the saccule, affect brain blood flow ; thus inner ear problems, which increase with old age, may be involved in orthostatic hypotension.
Two weeks later, the Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center reported that eight of 69 Iraqi prisoners of war whose blood was tested showed a current immunity to smallpox, which had not occurred naturally in Iraq since 1971 ; the same prisoners had also been inoculated for anthrax.
* Medical management ( anti-anginal medications plus statins, antihypertensives, smoking cessation, tight blood sugar control in diabetics )
These costs are further increased as, according to Jan Hoffman ( an administrator for the blood conservation program at Geisinger Medical Center in Danville, Pennsylvania ), hospitals must pick up the tab for the first three units of blood infused per patient per calendar year.
Geisinger Medical Center began a blood conservation program in 2005 and reported a recorded savings of $ 273, 000 in its first six months of operation.
In 1900 he was made Assistant Professor of Pathology in the Army Medical School, and described a method of staining blood for malaria and other parasites — a modification and simplification of the existing Romanowsky method using a compound of Methylene Blue and eosin, which became known as Leishman's stain.
Medical technologists examine blood film via a microscope for some CBCs, not only to find abnormal white cells, but also because variation in the shape of red cells is an important diagnostic tool.
Individuals experiencing orthostatic intolerance, a cardiovascular condition that results in reduced blood pressure and blood flow to the brain when a person stands, may experience a worsening of symptoms when taking melatonin supplements, a study at Penn State College of Medicine's Milton S. Hershey Medical Center suggests.
* Medical grafting, a surgical procedure to transplant tissue without a blood supply
In June 2007, Rocard was admitted at Calcutta Medical Research Institute, Kolkata, India where doctors found he had a blood clot in the brain and was operated.
Medical witnesses said this could result in low blood sugar.
* Medical laboratory equipment automates or helps analyze blood, urine and genes.
Medical tests were also carried out, including experiments to measure blood flow to the brain.
* January 1-The British Royal Army Medical Corps carries out the first successful blood transfusion using blood that had been stored and cooled.

Medical and collection
The Medical Illustration Service is responsible for the collection, publication, exhibition, and file of medical illustration material of medico-military importance to the Armed Forces.
Bissell's saddlebags are today in the collection of the Yale Medical School's Historical Society.
* Guide to collection of Dr. Papanikolaou's Papers at Weill Cornell Medical Center Archives.
* Medical data collection
The American Psychiatric Association and American Medical Association condemn such practices, whether they are formally called " Recovered Memory Therapy " or simply a collection of techniques that fit the description.
Medical fetishism refers to a collection of sexual fetishes for objects, practices, environments, and situations of a medical or clinical nature.
In January 2009, Churchill wrote a ten minute history of Israel, ending with the Israeli attack on Gaza, to be performed free at the Royal Court Theatre, with a collection for Medical Aid for Palestinians.
The combined business, named Scientific, Technical, Medical, and Scholarly ( also known as Wiley-Blackwell ), publishes, in print and online, 1, 400 scholarly peer-reviewed journals and an extensive collection of books, major reference works, databases, and laboratory manuals in the life and physical sciences, medicine and allied health, engineering, the humanities, and the social sciences.
In the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutes Archives, Sabin's collection of papers and medical records from 1903-1941 are stored and some even released upon request.
The collection was originally housed in Western Reserve University Medical School ; in a new medical building that was built.
* The Australian term for a collection of Medical Services on the same site, such as the services of a General Practitioner dealing in Family medicine, Pharmacist, Pathology, Radiology, Dentist etc.
The University of Puerto Rico Medical Sciences Campus Library is the main health sciences information resources on the Island and is considered to have the most complete collection of its kind in the Caribbean.
Purchased after World War Two, with money from the Royal Air Force Pilots and Crews Fund, a public collection as a tribute to the deeds of the RAF, Headley Court is now the Defence Services Medical Rehabilitation Centre ( DMRC ), which aims to return all those service personnel injured or seriously ill to full fitness.
) ( 1984 ) Some Manchester Doctors: a biographical collection to mark the 150th anniversary of the Manchester Medical Society, 1834-1984.
Maclagan's original microscope is in the collection of the Tayside Medical History Museum.
The MLA Oral History Project is an ongoing collection of audio interviews, focused on the history of health sciences librarianship and the history of the Medical Library Association.
She has been engaged in residencies at the Gifford Medical Center in Randolph, Vermont, and Real Artways in Hartford, CT. which resulted in a published collection of her poems titled " Listening Out Loud.
) The Collections Gallery also holds the Museum of Questionable Medical Devices, which the museum acquired in 2002 when its original owner Bob McCoy retired and donated the collection.
The collections on display include uniforms and insignia, medical, dental and veterinary equipment, ambulances, an ambulance train ward coach and a large medal collection including 23 of the 29 Victoria Crosses awarded to the Army Medical Services.
Lovell's office began the collection of medical literature which was to become the Library of the Surgeon General's Office, later called the Army Medical Library, the Armed Forces Medical Library, and finally transformed in 1956 into the National Library of Medicine.
His third ( posthumous ) book, On Sham, Vulnerability and other forms of Self-Destruction ( 1973 ) is a collection of essays, among them his famed eight-page essay on " Sham ," originally prepared for the 1966 Conference on Society and Psychosis at the Hahnemann Medical College ( now Drexel University Medical School ) in Philadelphia.
The high school also houses the Law Enforcement Public Safety Academy ( LEPS ), in which students undergo a vigorous course load learning about such fields as criminal justice, first responder procedures, evidence collection, first aid certifications, investigative procedures, civics, Homeland Security, Fire Science & Safety, and Emergency Medical Technicians.

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