Sentences with phrase «just about hospitals»

It is not just about hospitals, but about embedding good practice across the range of provision.
Sadly, though, this is a particular way of thinking about things that is not uncommon enough, and not just about hospitals or doctors.

Not exact matches

«It's about time hospitals started worrying about computer viruses, not just ordinary germs,» said Moe.
Why just the atheists... and by the way, why not just go to your local maternity ward in your hospital... all of those babies are atheists... they haven't learned a thing about your god, or any of the other thousands of gods.
As a divinity school student, I had just started working as a student chaplain at a cancer hospital when my professor asked me about my work.
(See FactCheck.org — Also, having worked in PR for a local hospital myself, I personally designed brochures and wrote copy about «advanced directives» and end - of - life planning; it's just basic information about how to make a will, plan ahead, etc..
Whether it was Mr. Aoude prepping his pregnant wife for that hectic hospital trip, or newlyweds Jeff and Shadia worrying about how their families will get along, it has shown viewers the single most important truth that will change the perceptions of Muslims: We are just like everyone else.
and also if i have and your answer is yes then if there is a way to get the holy spirit back then please tell me and also please pray for me for a few days and i also want to know that really is the unforgivable sin unforgivable and really i swear on my mother that i don't want to go to hell forever and i am very scared of it please help me urgent and also i am sending a friend request to you on facebook and please accept it so that we can talk on this matter together and also i think you will like my page and i couldn't sleep properly because of this and in my half sleep in my dreams i was just visiting your website and finding my comment missing and i as pleasing god and the holy spirit but as i was receiving my spirit again and again as i mentioned this in my previous comment i was abusing in my mind i couldn't stop abusing and i have a very good mother she tried to wake me but i told her not to do and it was happening same things again and again and i told my mother again the half truth because i don't want to break her heart and she told me that there is nothing like ghosts and they are making me fools (you all) and i am telling you honestly before this i irritate my mother a lot i just watch tv and surf the internet or play games in my pc and i eat and brush late and also don't listen to my parents but after i saw your website i became obedient for a few days and again the same i am disobedient your webpage or article ruined my life but this is not your fault and now days i am buy searching about this topic and my father (Vivek Saraf) broke his hands on the 6th May while riding at a very high speed he normally don't go at a very high speed but he had a very important work so whole he was riding a dog was running on the way and to save his life he gave a very hard brake and he with his nebiour fall down and got injuries in his legs and broke his hands and at first he walked with difficulty and then the local people helped him on his way and took him to the local hospital but the doctor told that we need to go to Kollkata (the capital of west bengal, India) and so he went with his loyal staff because he is a business man and in the hospital he got cured but he still have the fracture in his hands so i request you to pray for him and his negibour also and i will tell you the rest in facebook bye and sorry for spelling mistakes in my previous comments.
She was a proclaimed athiest as well and about the only problem she had was when she was in the hospital from a major injury and the chaplain visited her... he was not entirely sure what to do and she said «just visit and talk, leave religion out of it» so they just had «social» visits.
If it were an accident, the first time it caused rashes and or nose bleeds and diarrhea, they would have written what caused it in my Medical Records to stop others from causing the adverse reactions, but no, they have to try to prevent a Law Suit and write that I am delusional about the adverse reactions so every Doctor after that forced the adverse reactions on me and or refused to give me the Medical Treatment actually need, while they make money off charging the government for the Toxic Harmful Drugs that a Judge ordered them not to give me, tut they just falsely called me delusional about the Court Orders, to made money poisoning me with Toxic Drugs and Rash Creams, but normally they do that to their suspecting Victims to make money off doing Kidney transplants like they did to my Uncle, but they will not replace mine, because that is what they planned to do to kill me, just ask their associate assassin Dr Kanter of the Minneapolis VA, of course he will say I am delusional after he assaulted me saying the other Hospital Labs were wrong about that Blood Test that show the harm they caused.
You don't write off all hospitals just because you hear about one quack doctor, and you shouldn't write off all charities just because a few get caught spending funds poorly.
(If you're straight you can just lie to the hospital, anyway... it's not like they ask you for the marriage license...) The real challenge for gays is not really being able to check off that box, but getting it to be socially unacceptable to be a «male genital» about gays in general.
The group makes contributions on a weekly basis to all types of charities ranging from schools, hospitals, police and fireman associations, food pantries and just about any charity one can imagine.
I've been beyond excited about his impending arrival but the emotional flood gates were opened as I made a mad dash to the hospital to meet him — just hours after he was born — before visiting hours ended.
This was also the hospital where I complained about the heat in my room for 24 hours, and the nurses just made sympathetic sounds (I was in pressure boots due to edema and couldn't get up, and they blamed the boots for the heat).
Education during pregnancy rarely has anything serious to do with breastfeeding, and since breastfeeding is perceived by most pre-parenthood women to be a natural, instinctive thing instead of a learned behavior (on both mom & baby's part) if it doesn't go absolutely perfectly from the first moments they may feel something is wrong with THEM and clam up about it while quietly giving the baby the hospital - offered bottle along with the bag of formula samples they give out «just in case» even if you explicitly tell them you're breastfeeding (which was my experience with my firstborn in 2004 and one of the many highly informed reasons I chose to birth my next two at home).
It is heartbreaking when I hear of the terrible advice given in hospitals by people that are not lactation consultants, by paediatricians who know barely anything about human lactation, and by well - meaning family and friends who just don't have the correct information.
Certainly the argument is not that no babies should be born in the hospital or that all guns should be removed from the home, but rather, decisions about birthing at home should be made by the individual, just as the decisions about bringing a gun into the home belongs.
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) shared just today what I think is their first policy statement specific to homebirth, and as one would anticipate, they concur «with the recent statement of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists affirming that hospitals and birthing centers are the safest settings for birth in the United States while respecting the right of women to make a medically informed decision about delivery» (2013, 1016, abstract).
I had a hospital bag lightly packed with the essentials just in case, but I didn't have to worry about loading up and hauling everything with me.
That's okay — just don't make the decision at the hospital as you're about to give birth.
Yesterday we wrote about a somewhat similar story about Jessica Rotter and Briana Guerrero, a mother - daughter pair in Illinois who gave birth to baby boys just six hours apart — also in adjoining hospital rooms.
So, trying to feed in motion but baby wearing really just puts the baby that skin - to - skin connection that we've so much talked about in the hospital; but my older child — baby wearing.
I know this was posted a while ago but I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to put in my 2 agurot:) When my first child (now 11) there was much less awareness about breastfeeding in general in this country and unfortunately I myself knew little about it and got ZERO support from the hospital.
I plan to do some writing about questions to ask midwives, but I'll throw out a couple of ideas: Ask her if giving birth at home is just as safe as giving birth in the hospital.
A large teaching hospital has in house staff ready for just about anything at a moment's notice.
My husband and I got to the hospital just after 7 a.m. Within about 45 minutes I was wheeled up through the private elevators we all saw on the Prentice Hospital tour and taken into my labor and delivehospital just after 7 a.m. Within about 45 minutes I was wheeled up through the private elevators we all saw on the Prentice Hospital tour and taken into my labor and deliveHospital tour and taken into my labor and delivery room.
To be honest, just about everyone gets the amount of blood lost in a PPH wrong, both in hospital and at home.
Now that just about anybody can give birth in a hospital, the new trend is birth centers and home births.
I tried explaining that the information about hospitals isn't negative, it isn't scary, it's just neutral and helpful, but I could tell my words were just rolling off her because she was blocking out the «negativity» of thinking about hospitals.
I truly hope you all understand how unethical it is to post a story like this without permission, regardless of how strongly you feel about home birthing or your convictions to prove whatever point (although this story can hardly be generalized to all home birthing just as hospital mistakes can't be generalized).
Having a baby is expensive, and I'm not just talking about $ 20,000 hospital bills (one of the few times you'll be glad to have expensive health insurance).
In some states, no matter when you leave the hospital, they'll ask you to come back and have your baby's tests repeated at about 2 weeks of age, just to make sure nothing was missed.
Its easy to say you are informed and you «know» the risks, and nasty things like «some babies aren't just meant to live»... but man, when you are living that statistic, or that emergency, you know that all that garbage about «how» natural out of hospital birth is so much better... is just that, garbage.
Getting back to birth, though, what I would like to see is more birth centers, more midwives like the one in the NPR story, and less of both the «classic» hospital birthing experience and also less of NCB madness like «power birthing» (shudder) that I just this morning learned about from a comment on this blog.
CHRISTINE STEWART - FITZGERALD: Well you know talking about the sort of the delivery actually kind of taking a step back when moms are you know just arriving getting at the hospital from the kind of the point of active labor, how do you approach the delivery process?
I just found out about Burt's Bees Hive with Heart Campaign to benefit Lipstick Angels, a nonprofit organization that provides hospital patients and seniors with individualized makeup services by skilled professionals in a supportive setting to uplift their spirits!
But just about every one of those plans fell apart when she gave birth nearly 7 weeks before her due date — and wound up camping out in the hospital parking lot while her newborn daughter remained in the neonatal intensive care unit.
There is nothing like turning on the nightly news to hear about a pregnant woman who gave birth on the side of the road en route to the hospital, or a mom to be who gave birth just outside the hospital.
robe / comfy clothes: If you've ever had to stay in a hospital before or let alone just been inside one, you know it is just about always freezing!
If you are unsure about the choices you would like to make surrounding your birth options, or just want to know a little more when it comes to hospital birth practices, epidurals, c - sections, then The Thinking Woman's Guide to a Better Birth by Henci Goer and Rhonda Wheeler is the book for you!
My husband and I have a compromise list — he has a horrible feeling about home birth but can accept a midwife is a trained professional and natural birth plan has benefits so the hospital just in case of emergency is our compromise.
At about 3 p.m. I felt deep down that something was wrong, I just KNEW I had to get to the hospital.
They're losing weight and you're all kind of obsessed about that initial birth weight and then so to hear like ones to you, like all my babies were born in a hospital, so once I left the hospital, it's kind of like, well, they weighed less now and I really did have that 10 % in my head a lot because I didn't want to have to do formula, and so I just felt like it was, this weird challenge with my body like, can my body create enough colostrum to be able to support this, and what's going to happen over the next couple of weeks, you know, they going to tell me if this first pediatrician appointment that I've got a supplement.
My ex-husband he wasn't you know it is not like he had anything against breastfeeding or had anything negative to say about it, he wasn't just very supportive and my son was kind of small when he was born, he was four pounds fourteen ounces when he left the hospital so they were concerned that he wasn't gaining weight fast enough and they were pushing the formula and my ex-husband was like yes we should probably just do the formula.
Just after Nell's birth we had hired a hospital - grade double pump and our breastfeeding plan involved waking Nell for a breastfeed and supplementary «top up» every four hours (which took about an hour), expressing for 15 minutes after each feed and doing a ten - minute «power - pump» between feeds.
So if she doesn't want to be breastfeed I say: «How about breastfeed in the hospital or how about just breastfeed for the first couple of weeks or until you go back to work?»
And we are having a hospital birth and I just have to say my husband is very excited about this episode.
It does matter when you have someone spouting ridiculous canards about how OBs don't care what their patients want and just want to «perform MAJOR surgery so they can make it home on time,» and is essentially saying that's all you'll find in a hospital.
I have thought about this stuff for years but accepted I would just have to «deal with the consequences» of having a hospital birth, epidural, formula - feeding, etc etc..
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