Conflating Sex And Intimacy Is A Mistake In my NYC therapy practice,
I often see patients — both individuals and couples — who confuse sex and intimacy.
In my NYC therapy practice,
I often see patients — both individuals and couples — who confuse sex and intimacy.
But many therapists more
often see patients with cluster - C personality disorders, who are quite rigid in their avoidance and obsessional patterns.
Doctors
often see patients of different ages or those who speak limited English, so the MA must be able to build rapport with all of these different individuals.
All too
often we see patients who have simply outlived their teeth, or have suffered from systemic illnesses (heart disease, kidney failure, etc.) caused, or worsened by, dental disease.
Animal Altercations — We will
often see patients who were attacked by other animals.
I believe I do,
I often see patients who have been treated by many physicians (sometimes even by a dozen or more) and have treated many psoriasis patients who travel far and wide to seek out my services.
I believe I do,
I often see patients who have been treated by many physicians (sometimes even by a dozen or more) and have treated many patients who travel far and wide to seek out my services.
We often see patients that just haven't gotten the results they are looking for with conventional care.
Health is a dynamic process and
I often see patients for acute and chronic health conditions Read More
We often see patients frustrated by stubborn thyroid symptoms who've been told that according to blood work, they're «fine.»
I often see my patients get prescribed a drug to treat a particular health problem, only to come away with more health issues than when they started.
I often see patients who struggle with fatigue, many of whom experience a second wind in the afternoon.
As a functional medicine doctor,
I often see my patients» stress contribute to candida, or an overgrowth of yeast in the gut.
In regard to tummy tucks and liposuction, New York body contouring specialist Dr. Shain Cuber told INSIDER that
he often sees patients requesting to look like Jennifer Lopez or Beyoncé.
Not exact matches
A few years ago my mother considered filing for a patent on a health product to solve a problem she
often saw with her elderly
patients.
And doctors, who have little info about how
patients pay for drugs,
often prescribe what is
seen as the latest and greatest, even if the extra benefit is small.
And by that, he means rural America where
patients often have to drive for miles out of their way to
see a doctor.
In sum, in the argument that a PVS
patient ought to be sustained as long as possible I
see the unhappy fruits of the three technological seductions I described above: death by «starvation» has now become our fault, not nature's, if we omit treatment; the distinction between omission and commission is erased in the insistence that the stopping of artificial feeding is the same as killing the
patient and, as too
often happens, a new technology gets legitimated and routinized by an invocation of the sanctity of life.
According to Dr. Anita Swamy, Medical Director at he Chicago Children's Diabetes CEnter at La Rabida, there is a strong link between PCOS and diabetes: «While type 2 diabetes risk factors such as insulin resistance and glucose intolerance are
often seen in
patients with PCOS, PCOS itself confers a significant risk, up to 10-fold versus the normal population, for development of type 2 diabetes.»
I've
seen midwives change due dates so they don't have to refer out a 43 - week
patient (I
often have access to early u / s, so yes I do know).
Basically I didn't
see your last two paragraphs and I wanted to say that yes, I thought that the superiority evident in the posts I've read is all too
often present in many OB -
patient exchanges and that changing that would be helpful.
Currently I'm the one providing continuity of care to most of our obstetric
patients, and, as a GP, they can come and
see me as
often as they like, not just the fixed routine antenatal appointment schedule.
(the
patients we
see are
often breastfeeding even when there is no support from family members who want them to «just give her a bottle».
Sherry Tomasky, with the American Cancer Society, says it's a problem that
often plagues cancer
patients, who undergo many tests and
see numerous health care professionals during treatment.
Let me point to 10 things that I sketched out this morning: too much money spent on administration and bureaucracy and not enough on front - line
patient care; too little
patient - centric information to inform decision making; too little innovation; too little clinical input into decision making; too much inertia and hostility to reform, as we have
seen today; too much process - driven target culture distorting clinical decision making; falling productivity; poor outcomes across a range of clinical indicators; too
often, weak commissioning of servicing; and widening health inequalities in the past 10 years, in addition to the scandals that occurred in Staffordshire and Kent.
But studies
often rely on
patients who have electrodes implanted for something other than memory so it can take years and collaborations among several institutions to collect enough data to
see something meaningful.
«
Patients often start by
seeing their primary care physician, most of whom, understandably, aren't familiar with mitochondrial diseases, which can mimic other disorders.
Those
patients often face the stark choice of either paying out of pocket for an expensive in - person consultation or waiting for months to be
seen by the few specialists working at public hospitals, which receive government funding to help pay for
patient care, Komarneni says.
«Identifying the correct, specific diagnosis
often can be challenging for physicians who do not
see a high volume of
patients with spinal cord impairment,» says Nicholas Zalewski, M.D., a clinical fellow in the Department of Neurology at Mayo Clinic and first author on the study.
This finding also indicates other potential benefits for treating extra bone growth
often seen in trauma and surgery
patients.
«What's interesting is that this variability in lesion formation is also
seen in humans, where
patients with the same genetic mutation
often have dramatically different disease courses.»
I know this because I more
often than not
see a
patient in the office with tooth agony.
Hepatic encephalopathy occurs when the liver can not remove certain toxins and chemicals, such as ammonia, from the blood.1 These toxins and chemicals then build up and enter the brain.1 Hepatic encephalopathy is one of the major complications of cirrhosis (scarring of the liver), and a leading cause of hospital re-admission due to its recurrence, despite treatment.1 It can occur suddenly in people with acute liver failure, but is
seen more
often in those with chronic liver disease.1 Symptoms of hepatic encephalopathy include mild confusion, forgetfulness, poor concentration and personality or mood changes, but can progress to extreme anxiety, seizures, severe confusion, jumbled and slurred speech and slow movement.1 The first step in treatment is to identify and treat any factors that cause hepatic encephalopathy.2 Once the episode has resolved, further treatment aims to reduce the production and absorption of toxins, such as ammonia.1 Generally, there are two types of medication used to reduce the likelihood of another hepatic encephalopathy episode — lactulose and rifaximin.2 However, it remains a leading cause of hospitalisations and re-hospitalisations in cirrhotic
patients, despite the use of the above - mentioned standard of care treatment.
It's also the kind of pain that I
often see in my
patients with advanced cancer.
«This aligns with what we
see in the clinic, that newly - diagnosed ovarian cancer
patients most
often already have widespread disease,» says Velculescu.
The combo is then injected into people who have been declared brain dead — M. D. Anderson
patients who
often wished to be organ donors but weren't eligible, so their families agreed to this study instead — to
see which blood vessels the peptide hooks up to.
«With head and neck cancer, we
often clear
patients of cancer only to
see it come back with deadly consequences a few years later,» said lead author Julie Bauman, M.D., M.P.H., co-director of the UPMC Head and Neck Cancer Center of Excellence.
Adults
often suffer complications as a result of diabetes, smoking - related respiratory problems or coronary disease — comorbidities a surgeon wouldn't
often see in a pediatric
patient.
«Our team is studying high - risk
patient populations to
see how
often and how early we can identify a sleep disorder,» says lead author Renée Shellhaas, M.D., M.S., a pediatric neurologist at Mott.
«As residents
seeing patients in the hospital, there are
often times when we are not allowed to dilate
patients — neurosurgery
patients for example,» said Dr. Bailey Shen, a second - year ophthalmology resident at the UIC College of Medicine.
In regions where Medicare
patients see doctors more
often or get more tests, one study found
patients accumulate more diagnoses, even though the increased, accumulated diagnoses did not track with mortality rates, raising questions about the accuracy of a diagnosis - based risk adjustment method.
The same pattern was
seen when the researchers looked at groups of
patients according to the extent of the spread of the disease to other parts of the body (metastases), and whether the
patients were aged less that 65, between 65 and 75, and 75 and older (older
patients can
often be less able to cope with the side effects of treatments).
«There needs to be not only greater awareness and acceptance of this minority group but also improved accessibility to care for youth with gender dysphoria, to decrease the problems
often seen in
patients who are transgender,» she said.
Although hair loss is common among American - American women, Dr. Lenzy says, this problem
often goes undiagnosed because
patients don't know they should visit a dermatologist for evaluation; the vast majority of survey respondents (81.4 percent) indicated that they had never
seen a physician about hair loss.
Another idea is that the functional faults in the nucleus could be involved in the development and manifestation of speech disorders, which are
often seen in
patients after strokes, those who have a tumor or are suffering from neurodegenerative diseases.
Often, he said, he
sees cancer
patients who have had a healthy lifestyle and are looking for an explanation for their disease.
[25]
Seeing that in metastatic
patients the only available tumor is
often core biopsies rather than whole tissue blocks, we next attempted to determine whether the degree of heterogeneity varies between primary and metastatic sites, using the TMA cores as surrogates for core biopsy specimens.
Autoimmune conditions are
seen in millions of
patients throughout the world as a family of more than 80 chronic and
often disabling illnesses including:
Studies confirm what I've
seen in my own practice:
Patients with moderate to severe asthma
often have gut issues like intestinal permeability (more commonly called leaky gut).