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heart valve and adjacent structures operations nos
heart valve and adjacent structures operations nos
Last Update: 2014-12-09
Usage Frequency: 8
Quality:
Warning: This alignment may be wrong.
Please delete it you feel so.
rheumatic aortic valve disease nos
rheumatic aortic (valve) disease nos
Last Update: 2014-12-09
Usage Frequency: 14
Quality:
Warning: This alignment may be wrong.
Please delete it you feel so.
as for most medical conditions, investigation is guided by symptoms and signs.
as for most medical conditions, investigation is guided by symptoms and signs.
Last Update: 2016-03-03
Usage Frequency: 1
Quality:
there it is. clues and signs everywhere.
but there it is.
Last Update: 2018-02-13
Usage Frequency: 1
Quality:
technological backwardness in the eighties and signs of an important restructuring in the nineties; y tncs and industrial modernization in brazil.
technological backwardness in the eighties and signs of an important restructuring in the nineties; and tncs and industrial modernization in brazil.
Last Update: 2016-11-30
Usage Frequency: 1
Quality:
it is actually more dangerous because there are no alarming symptoms and the results - impairments in bone, cardiovascular health, and other disease of aging – might be severe.
it is actually more dangerous because there are no alarming symptoms and the results - impairments in bone, cardiovascular health, and other disease of aging – might be severe.
Last Update: 2016-03-03
Usage Frequency: 1
Quality:
abstract this editorial considers how healthcare systems should approach the problems associated with ongoing, persistent symptoms and limitations on a person’s ability to undertake activities. it starts from the premise, established in the first editorial, that the current reliance on the biomedical model of health and illness is no longer ‘fit for purpose’, and is one major cause of current difficulties within the health service. among other problems, it may lead to the marginalisation of rehabilitation services, especially when resources are limited. this editorial describes and then highlights the implications of the holistic, biopsychosocial model of illness. it also outlines the rehabilitation process, demonstrating its similarity to the process used by medical services, with the primary difference being the centre of attention: disease for medical service, disability for rehabilitation services. the model of rehabilitation emphasises: the importance of being patient-centred and goal-directed in rehabilitation; the need for liaison by the team and learning by the patient; and that the patient needs to be encouraged and enabled to practice wanted activities.
rehabilitation – a new approach. part two: the underlying theories abstract this editorial considers how healthcare systems should approach the problems associated with ongoing, persistent symptoms and limitations on a person’s ability to undertake activities. it starts from the premise, established in the first editorial, that the current reliance on the biomedical model of health and illness is no longer ‘fit for purpose’, and is one major cause of current difficulties within the health service. among other problems, it may lead to the marginalisation of rehabilitation services, especially when resources are limited. this editorial describes and then highlights the implications of the holistic, biopsychosocial model of illness. it also outlines the rehabilitation process, demonstrating its similarity to the process used by medical services, with the primary difference being the centre of attention: disease for medical service, disability for rehabilitation services. the model of rehabilitation emphasises: the importance of being patient-centred and goal-directed in rehabilitation; the need for liaison by the team and learning by the patient; and that the patient needs to be encouraged and enabled to practice wanted activities.
Last Update: 2017-02-01
Usage Frequency: 1
Quality:
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