「physicians」の共起表現一覧(2語左で並び替え)
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After a consultation, | Physicians will prescribe appropriate medications. |
A multi-specialty | physicians group, Harvard Vanguard Medical Associates p |
Aboard were | physicians, medical supplies, and activists, including |
igin of the conversation on the advantage of | physicians travelling among barbarous nations. |
ion have asserted that direct advertising to | physicians, free samples, and research stipends encoura |
One of the few African American | physicians in Mississippi, he established a medical pra |
ida law imposes penalties against noninsured | physicians who fail to satisfy adverse judgments arisin |
here is greater awareness of HIV / AIDS, and | physicians practice early intervention. |
a paperless clinical workflow for all their | physicians. |
system, including a focus on allowing family | physicians to practice medicine rather than become enta |
Netcare allows authorized | physicians to view the medical records of patients. |
ised three children, two of whom also became | physicians. |
ace of Medicine: Celebrating America's Women | Physicians, National Institutes of Health |
Among other | physicians who were in practice during the first half o |
e locations where most female anatomists and | physicians were active. |
Dr. Peck and other | physicians raised $5,000 to renovate a vacant school bu |
ad of building cardiac hospitals and seeking | physicians to invest in them, MedCath began partnering |
gists were trained to image nerves, and most | physicians believed it simply could not be done usefull |
ed form the opinions of the Greek and Arabic | physicians concerning diseases and their treatment. |
enteen trustees include ten clergy and three | physicians. |
Full-time faculty and community | physicians make up the hospital medical staff. |
ural record of Presidents, Fellows and other | physicians associated with it from its foundation in 15 |
pital opened its doors with 250 beds and 250 | physicians. |
The hospital and its | physicians participate on numerous managed care and oth |
n offers comprehensive coverage and personal | physicians who provide care for the whole family; inter |
e most respected neurological and orthopedic | physicians in the market. |
ical students, residents, fellows, and other | physicians from various institutions around the world, |
f sufficient for up to 72 hours and includes | physicians, canine search dogs, heavy rescue firefighte |
ier University, Dalhousie University and the | Physicians and Surgeons College in Baltimore. |
ically connected to Hopedale Hospital and to | physicians' offices by a common corridor for the conven |
he free treatment of the poor and encouraged | physicians in the development of Unani medicine. |
it refers transplant patients, and exchanges | physicians for cross-training. |
sing to adequately investigate and prosecute | physicians. |
then interpreting these results and advising | physicians how to adjust a drug's dosage to achieve an |
pital with 17 sisters, 171 lay people and 60 | physicians has grown into a facility licensed for 376 b |
remedical students, residents and practicing | physicians, AMSA is committed to improving medical trai |
edical field comprising internists and other | physicians who specialize in the care of hospitalized p |
and employs more than 850 employees and 285 | physicians. |
(now part of Triad Hospitals) and OrthoLink | Physicians Corporation (now part of United Surgical Par |
is threatened, her family seeks answers from | physicians -- who suggest that her illness's origins ar |
d primarily by pharmacists, apothecaries and | physicians. |
It appeared in | physicians' waiting rooms, libraries, and schools, as w |
certain degree, governs approximately 24,000 | physicians in Ontario. |
te Members (Associate Members are individual | physicians who wish to join the WMA). |
Persons described as surgeons are commonly | physicians, but the term is also applied to podiatric p |
vely of the male sex" and are "predominantly | physicians by whom the patient has been treated". |
..) second in honour to the Hylobii, are the | physicians, for they apply philosophy to the study of t |
s Health Studies and Promotion as well as by | Physicians for Human Rights-Israel. |
umble" Angeloi, who were known as officials, | physicians and clergymen. |
rab medical writers, as well as contemporary | physicians. |
ield of California, then known as California | Physicians' Service, was created by the California Medi |
hile NBME' mission centered on assessment of | physicians, this mission encompasses the spectrum of he |
of Temecula ·Primary Care Associates ·Mercy | Physicians Medical Group, Inc. ·Redlands Family Practic |
unded in 1981 as the American Association of | Physicians for Human Rights, GLMA "came out of the clos |
so served as president of the Association of | Physicians of the Province of Tarragona and president o |
ersity Press on behalf of the Association of | Physicians of Great Britain and Ireland. |
n Medical Association and the Association of | Physicians of Australasia. |
Acheson was President of the Association of | Physicians of Great Britain and Ireland (1979) and the |
ber of the Board of Hospitals Association of | Physicians of Barcelona. |
rated in 1897, is the largest association of | physicians and medical students in the United States. |
Award from the International Association of | Physicians in AIDS Care, the Crystal Heart award from t |
It is available to | physicians and patients as a blood test from multiple c |
arious levels of membership are available to | physicians specialized in child psychiatry or pediatric |
ctive treatments of any disease available to | physicians before the middle of the 20th century, and i |
ugh EPEC), organ donation awareness program, | Physicians for Responsible Negotiations (PRN), The Cult |
However, after delivering the baby, the | physicians discovered that the baby was infected with C |
becoming prominent bankers, industrialists, | physicians, public officials and artists. |
The Bay Area | Physicians for Human Rights is founded in San Francisco |
udents/graduates who wish to become licensed | physicians in the U.S.. |
By 1917, the hospital had 35 beds, nine | physicians and three specialists. |
the healers of the time long before medical | physicians. |
Rather, it believes that | physicians are allowing themselves to be courted and sw |
e shaped both the relationship between white | physicians and black patients and the attitude of the l |
Merchants, blacksmiths and | physicians set up shop in what is now the downtown area |
train the next generation of board certified | physicians in our community" said Sandy Sosa Guerrero, |
It is staffed by board certified | physicians who specialize in the care and health mainte |
d is staffed with nearly 600 board certified | physicians. |
eturn to the United States, five Boston area | physicians stated that she was healed (with no explanat |
The goal of the fund was to bring women | physicians from England to work at a proposed medical i |
The panel brought together | physicians, scientists, consumers, and others in order |
It was established in 1797 by 10 | physicians in order to foster the common interests of i |
t (Beleric myrobalan) is considered by Hindu | physicians to be astringent and laxative, and is prescr |
tient must be assessed and reassessed by two | physicians, that spouses rely upon the stated wishes of |
of the Oculists was widely used by European | physicians for hundreds of years. |
The former college was used by the | physicians, administrators, and staff. |
xual harassment experienced by Massachusetts | physicians and medical students, survey projects for th |
These treatments are regarded by many | physicians as having little or no efficacy. |
y have been treated disrespectfully by their | physicians, and 46 percent view their physicians as unc |
German medical community, first by activist | physicians within the medical profession, particularly |
ing, which were still practices used by many | physicians at the time. |
s were beginning to be understood by leading | physicians worldwide. |
are increasingly being recommended by Health | Physicians in the U.S. to treat allergies, hayfever, rh |
Francis Hospital Company is founded by five | physicians. |
An article by three | physicians from Weill Cornell Medical College published |
They were created in 1949 by two | physicians, Roberto Caldeyro-Barcia and Hermogenes Alva |
It was founded by three | physicians: Dr. Ellis Sparks, Dr. James Earl Robertson, |
Most theories proposed by trained | physicians (with specialties ranging from forensic medi |
Inspired by International | Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War, it was fo |
n there until certified of sound mind by two | physicians, when the Lord Lieutenant could direct their |
ally stiff penalties for violators, can lead | physicians and medical centers to withhold information |
nt, Blanchard Valley Regional Cancer Center, | Physicians Plus Urgent Care, Blanchard Valley Sleep Dis |
s staffed with California Cancer Specialists | physicians who provide expertise in Medical Oncology, R |
l specialties, California Cancer Specialists | physicians have been named in "America's Best Doctors f |
elated products to primary care office-based | physicians in the United States. |
L. virosa was used in the 19th century by | physicians when opium could not be obtained. |
Certain Lafayette | physicians signed a statement declaring that life begin |
edical Association and the Polish Chamber of | Physicians and Dentists, and was decorated as a Knight |
cquaintance of many illustrious chemists and | physicians. |
e mansion of the Aten in Akhetaten, Chief of | physicians, chamberlain. |
o help both parents of autistic children and | physicians decide on a possible course of treatment. |
nd MassGeneral Hospital for Children (MGHfC) | physicians. |
patients could be guided in their choices of | physicians and hospitals. |
t belonged also to the overlapping circle of | physicians following the tradition of William Harvey, a |
ool of Medicine graduated its first class of | physicians in 1972. |
e or had been from higher classes, including | physicians, newspaper editors, doctors, and officers. |
ed care center, various offices, clinics and | physicians' practices, including LeBauer HealthCare (a |
c with accusations against their coaches and | physicians that they were systematically doped, Daniela |
c with accusations against their coaches and | physicians that they were systematically doped, Andrea |
0 he became a fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians. |
mitted an extra licentiate of the College of | Physicians of London 4 April 1640. |
2006, and Hon Fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians in 2007. |
Harveian Oration before the Royal College of | Physicians in 1836. |
, and was elected a fellow of the College of | Physicians 4 November 1646. |
office of President of the Royal College of | Physicians from 1931 to 1937. |
ining the Membership of the Royal College of | Physicians, London she also sat for the Doctorate in Me |
A meeting of the Royal College of | Physicians in the early 19th century. |
and was admitted a fellow of the College of | Physicians, 29 December 1611. |
d was admitted a candidate of the College of | Physicians on 22 December 1643. |
gree from the Columbia University College of | Physicians and Surgeons in 1955. |
1959 became a fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians. |
e William Munk, Roll of the Royal College of | Physicians, ii (1878) |
-2) and as president of the Royal College of | Physicians of Edinburgh (1854-6). |
e an honorary fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians of Edinburgh and a foreign fellow of the Roy |
ge of Medicine's predecessor, the College of | Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago, opened in 1882, the |
In a presentation to the Royal College of | Physicians he postulated that "Devonshire colic", a pai |
The College of | Physicians of Philadelphia Building, designed by the fi |
of Edinburgh (1859-61), the Royal College of | Physicians of Edinburgh (1884-7), the Royal Society of |
In 1588 he became fellow of the College of | Physicians, and in 1606 president. |
was elected a Fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians and delivered their Gulstonian Lectures in 1 |
of the establishment of the Royal College of | Physicians and Surgeons of Canada in affiliation with Q |
became the president of the Royal College of | Physicians. |
ith a degree in medicine from the College of | Physicians and Surgeons, New York City, in 1882. |
s (MRCS), Licentiate of the Royal College of | Physicians (LRCP) and Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor |
5 he became a fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians, and was appointed Professor of Chemistry at |
s rumoured the Royal Australasian College of | Physicians had to change their assessment method after |
offered a Licentiate of the Royal College of | Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow (LRCPS or LRCPSG) wh |
Coughlin studied medicine at the College of | Physicians and Surgeons in Baltimore, Maryland. |
nry VIII and founder of the Royal College of | Physicians. |
e Institute of Medicine, American College of | Physicians (ACP), the National Science Foundation (NSF) |
n Tyne and President of the Royal College of | Physicians. |
al Center and Columbia University College of | Physicians and Surgeons in his honor. |
1584 he was elected fellow of the College of | Physicians. |
hysics at the Columbia University College of | Physicians and Surgeons in New York. |
Made a fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians he delivered a Goulstonian Lecture in 1947, |
a former President of the Ceylon College of | Physicians |
four main political parties, the College of | Physicians and Surgeons launched a full scale campaign |
the Harveian Oration to the Royal College of | Physicians. |
5-1669), was the president of the College of | Physicians. |
to ‘A Collection of Grants to the College of | Physicians,' London, 1660. |
Duncan Graham Award, Royal College of | Physicians and Surgeons of Canada, 1986 |
He was one of the founders of the College of | Physicians of Philadelphia in 1787, and was its preside |
Fellow of the AAAS, the American College of | Physicians, the American College of Clinical Pharmacolo |
He was a member of the Royal College of | Physicians of London, and one of the proprietors of the |
D. Bruce Award from the American College of | Physicians, Nathan Davis Award from the American Medica |
was elected a Fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians in 1819 and delivered their Lumleian lecture |
The Royal College of | Physicians admitted him as a licentiate on 19 March 172 |
bjections,' 1828; 'Letters to the College of | Physicians,' 1829 (advising them to give up antiquated |
llege and the Columbia University College of | Physicians and Surgeons. |
istinguished Service to Medicine, College of | Physicians, USA, in 1987. |
iation of Immunologists, American College of | Physicians, American College of Rheumatology, American |
n of the Dental Department at the College of | Physicians and Surgeons. |
y of Edinburgh in 1800, the Royal College of | Physicians in 1805 and the Royal Society in 1816. |
nary War, and was a fellow of the College of | Physicians of Philadelphia, of which he was one of the |
established in 1971 by the Royal College of | Physicians following the UK Government refusing to act |
Baltimore, which later became the College of | Physicians and Surgeons. |
He became a fellow of the College of | Physicians of London in 1676; censor in 1683; Harveian |
ge III and President of the Royal College of | Physicians. |
1952, and an MD from the Columbia College of | Physicians and Surgeons in 1956. |
UIC Athletics began with the College of | Physicians and Surgeons (P&S) in the 1880s with their b |
1899 and then attended the Boston College of | Physicians and Surgeons (now Tufts University School of |
om 1807 to 1826, he taught at the College of | Physicians and Surgeons of New York and then helped org |
gree from the Columbia University College of | Physicians and Surgeons. |
wards senior censor, of the Royal College of | Physicians, and a fellow of the Royal Society, he held |
ed and named in his honor, by the College of | Physicians, noted physicians William Stokes and of Robe |
s admitted candidate of the Royal College of | Physicians on 22 December 1814, and a fellow on 22 Dece |
y 1650, became a candidate of the College of | Physicians, London, 4 July 1651, and a fellow of the sa |
tended the University of Maryland College of | Physicians and Surgeons and graduated in 1962 summa cum |
ion Railway and a director of the College of | Physicians and Surgeons of Lower Canada. |
a year abroad, Arthur entered the College of | Physicians & Surgeons (CPS) of Columbia University. |
, Smith joined the faculty of the College of | Physicians and Surgeons in New York City, eventually be |
rstein of the Columbia University College of | Physicians and Surgeons called Ginsberg "a giant in thi |
and became a Fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians in Ireland in 1902. |
fe membership by the Saskatchewan College of | Physicians and Surgeons for his many years of service. |
stry but retained its name as the College of | Physicians and Surgeons until it was incorporated into |
ted to the medical council of the college of | physicians and surgeons of Ontario in 1866. |
He is a Fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians and a Fellow of the Faculty of Public Health |
mmittee on Neurology at the Royal College of | Physicians and Surgeons (1970-1975). |
He was a Fellow of the Royal College of | Physicians and a member of the Geological Society of En |
, was admitted a candidate of the College of | Physicians on 22 December 1677, and a fellow on 23 Dece |
ated from the Columbia University College of | Physicians and Surgeons in New York City, and commenced |
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