I want to say it does not. They can be a few weeks different as long as the Doctor orders it.
it is when you have lets say a def couple who conceive and they want a baby to fit their life style or cutler and the get the doctor to do a procedure to make there baby def,
A good way to put from in a sentence is to say, I was unable to get from work to the doctor in a timely manner due to the heavy traffic. You could also use, She was excused from gym class due to her broken ankle.
Worldwide, well over a billion Some people say health care when they really mean medical insurance. If some one pays his doctor himself there is no one to count him. He has health care but he may not have insurance. No one shows up at his doors step to ask do you have health care. Even if they did, what if he said I feel fine I don't need a doctor. If I get sick I will go to a doctor then. Would you count him or not? In some primitive cultures people who don't have modern medicine by western standards would still say that they had medical care. That is the medical that they are accustomed too. So I don't see how you can put an accurate number on it. Even if you did come up with some kind of a number what relevance would it have.
It depends on your field of expertise and specialization in your field. If you are under the sciences, then it likely that you must know it since knowledge about calculus is required in higher mathematics used in the field. If, say, your field is Psychology, most likely it is uneeded.
he said "You have acid in-de-chest, yun"
When used in medical terminology, such as when a doctor is examining a patient, "not appreciated" means that they could not find or locate something. If a doctor were to say "pedal pulse on left foot was not appreciated", that would mean that the doctor could not locate, feel, or hear the pulse on the left foot. That does not mean it is not there, but simply that the doctor him or herself could not locate it.
Necesito un médico is how you say i need a doctor in Spanish :)Necesito un médico is how you say i need a doctor in Spanish :)Necesito un médico is how you say i need a doctor in Spanish :)Necesito un médico is how you say i need a doctor in Spanish :)
Estoy de acuerdo, doctor......that's how you say 'I agree, doctor'....hope that answered your question :)
John Smith is the Doctors cover name. His real name is The Doctor, he chose it. If you were writing him a letter, I would say Dear Doctor.
How are you, Doctor? = Ma nishma, Doctor? (מה נשמע, דוקטור)
Doctor translates as Arzt or Doktor.
The doctor may notice your tattoo and say something about it but unless it is offensive to them, it should not effect your doctor and patient relationship
by examining samples of, say, blood, and identifying the good and bad things in it
Translation: ¿Que dijo el doctor?
Eye doctor in spanish is "oculista"
For 'doctor', in Spanish you say médico (doctor), or el médico (the doctor). Also "doctor" or "doctora".