Example sentences of "[vb pp] [prep] the [adj] medical [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Only current versions of this form should be used and a prepaid envelope , clearly addressed to the CHIEF MEDICAL OFFICER , PITHEAVLIS , PERTH , PH2 ONH , MUST BE ENCLOSED . |
2 | Nursing organisations in New South Wales have for some time been discussing specific roles of the nurse practitioner with the Department of Health , the outcome of which has been eagerly awaited by the Australian Medical Association ( AMA ) and nursing organisations in other states . |
3 | The trials , organised by the British Medical Research Council and the French National AIDS Research Agency , were carried out at centres in the UK , France and Ireland from October 1988 . |
4 | In 1948 another settler paper appeared , based in Lusaka : the Central African Post , edited by the retired medical practitioner , Dr Alexander Scott . |
5 | The ideal diet for a pregnant woman recommended by the Chief Medical Officer at the Ministry of Health included milk at a cost of 4/1d when the total allowance for the wife of an unemployed man was only 4/11d . |
6 | Lovers reported five to 15 minutes of intense pain during and after sex , doctors have revealed in the British Medical Journal . |
7 | And three Oxford Doctors have now written to the British Medical Journal to highlight the case of a forty two year old who broke her neck when her suit did n't stick , and they say she was lucky not to be paralysed . |
8 | Collections for medical supplies were also undertaken and the first British Medical Unit of doctors and nurses , organized by the Spanish Medical Aid Committee , left for Spain as early as August 1936 . |
9 | His future was saved by the Dutch medical instrument company , Docshop , who signed him to attack the 250 Euro series . |
10 | In this book , diagnosis will be used in the traditional medical sense : to designate a process of classification on the basis of presumed causes . |
11 | Studies have shown that guidelines on training produced by the General Medical Council and the Council for Postgraduate Medical Education are not being followed . |
12 | Those medical graduates who intend to practise in the UK become provisionally registered with the General Medical Council after graduation . |
13 | The degrees will be recognised by the General Medical Council in Britain but on a limited registration basis . |
14 | ‘ We are calling on Members of Parliament to support the Parliamentary campaign ensuring that the policy of ‘ Born Too Soon ’ is not adopted and that every individual is provided with the proper medical care regardless of age , size , race or gender . |
15 | Supporting a notion of consumerism he proposed litigation as a more satisfactory procedure than the existing forms of self-regulation provided by the General Medical Council . |
16 | During my researches for this series I have met many people who , though agreeing with the theory behind the reforms of British medical education proposed by the General Medical Council and other bodies , do not think that reforms can be implemented on a wide scale . |
17 | However the fact that patients are receiving what is billed a revolutionary treatment , combined with the close medical supervision entailed , and weekly monitoring of blood samples , may well disguise a ‘ Hawthorne ’ effect , in which patients are responding to the process , rather than the drug ( Healy , 1993 ) . |
18 | Such a rehabilitation programme can and should be combined with the general medical care of convalescing patients including exercise testing for risk stratification and consideration for further investigation with a view to possible coronary surgery or angioplasty . |
19 | He was subjected to the common medical practice of bleeding , which weakened him further , and a massive cerebral haemorrhage finally killed him . |
20 | He was admitted to the general medical service at Pinderfields General Hospital with a provisional diagnosis of pulmonary embolism . |
21 | No patients would be identified and the information would be confidentially passed to the British Medical Association and then on to the Home Office . |
22 | It is appalling that these two doctors were charged by the fraud squad and that they will be investigated by the General Medical Council . |
23 | Performance-related pay for general practitioners ( GPs ) — an innovation bitterly resisted by the British Medical Association — is already driving up rates of childhood immunisation and of testing for cervical cancer . |
24 | That means doctors who qualify from Czech Univeristies will only be allowed by the General Medical Council to work in this country under the supervision of a fully registered colleague . |
25 | Advice about eligibility for registration with the Council may be obtained from the General Medical Council . |
26 | News that the region has backed plans to create purchasing consortiums has been criticized by the British Medical Association . |
27 | The commission proposed then that the guardian could require the client to receive medical treatment prescribed by the responsible medical officer . |
28 | But by March 1951 , it was clear that even this reform did not satisfy the Irish hierarchy who had also been lobbied by the Irish Medical Association to oppose the scheme . |
29 | The source of these difficulties is not the campaign of opposition waged by the British Medical Association , nor is it an incipient revolt among backbench MPs . |
30 | Editor , — Minerva 's statement that ‘ Most children with suspected acute bacterial meningitis have no contraindications to lumbar puncture , which should be done promptly before treatment is started with intravenous antibiotics , ’ may undermine the advice given by the chief medical officer in 1988 in relation to meningococcal infection . |