A nurse has told a jury she did not feel able to question the actions of a colleague who mistakenly gave a toddler an incorrect injection. |
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The nurse who had just walked in to access the equipment room adjacent to the waiting room sensed the tension. |
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The obstetric nurse has the neonatal resuscitation equipment prepared and ready if it is needed. |
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The nurse reappears to walk us down to the theatre, all very casual, no being portered down on trolleys. |
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However, governments around the globe have adopted policies to nurse their ailing economies back to health. |
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As to whether Nancy Cornelius was America's first Native American trained nurse, a definitive answer remains in abeyance. |
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Therefore, the nurse planned the evening work activities to allow time for the admission process. |
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Some, including a GP, a consultant, and a psychiatric nurse, have reduced their hours by going part-time or finding a job-share. |
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The nurse assesses the patient's skin condition, noting any areas of redness or abrasions. |
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The other nurse, who continues to suffer ill health arising from the near assault, has been absent from work on a number of occasions. |
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We introduced the first chest pain specialist nurse in the region in my centre and have some of the best door to needle times. |
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Carlow nurse Lily Cummins recently departed for war-torn Sudan to lend her expertise to the aid effort there. |
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Yesterday was the first day at college for Annette Stock, 41, as she started an access course as a step to becoming a full-time nurse. |
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Interspersed among these episodes, on the other side of the stage, we see a querulous old man confronting an impatient, offensive nurse. |
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A doctor or nurse went on each visit to answer any questions and give health information. |
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Sally, 26, who qualifies as a nurse next month, said she could see a line of traffic ahead and realised something was wrong. |
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Alice, the head nurse, wore her usual grim expression and young Lily stood at the foot of the bed with wide, expectant eyes. |
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The nurse explains hospital admission routines and the process of being prepared for surgery. |
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A nurse will make sure you are comfortable and reassure you if you are nervous. |
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Our nurse had phoned the director of the maternity unit and the hospital administrator on call. |
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The school nurse visited to talk about healthy bodies and the children learnt to cook wholesome foods. |
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The preoperative nurse or the anesthesia care provider administers a prophylactic antibiotic as requested by the surgeon. |
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As we were waiting for our group to reassemble at the close of the session, a surgeon and nurse were pushing a patient into the hospital. |
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The whale shark, the hammerhead and the nurse shark are impossible to confuse. |
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With the help of a nurse who came to their aid, they tried without success to revive him. |
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The nurse administers preoperative medications ordered by the anesthesia care provider or surgeon. |
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This nurse prepared his food and anything else required for his physical health and well-being. |
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A nurse whose car was wheel-clamped on hospital grounds as she dealt with an emergency has threatened her bosses with legal action. |
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The pilot project is expected to increase patient access by adding the services of nurses and nurse practitioners to physicians' offices. |
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From the viewpoint of public policy this is desirable, if banks are to be encouraged to nurse ailing companies back to health. |
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It helps me always to keep in mind, for example, a nurse doing long hours in an intensive care ward, and paying her full whack of tax. |
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Instead of having to go through medical examinations and being seen by a confusing variety of different people, they get their own one-to-one nurse. |
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He grew up in a well-to-do area of San Diego with a nurse mother, Arlene, and dad Robert, a software-company manager. |
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His mother, Arlene, worked as a nurse and was a regular attendee and volunteer at a nearby church. |
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Caroline Trimm, a nurse counselor at Greenwich House in the SoHo district of Manhattan, seems to have the opposite view. |
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I was a qualified nursery nurse at Tiny Tots nursery in Middleton. |
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In the late 1980s, Hawking began to grow close to his redheaded, controlling nurse, Elaine Mason. |
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The nurse came up to the bedside, placing the jug on the table. |
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She also advises finding a doctor and a bedside nurse who are comfortable with the procedure. |
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Jorgen Kiil plays the jocose patriarch, an ageing, overweight male nurse. |
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The reason I became a nurse was to provide tender loving care to patients. |
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Both inpatient costs and total costs were significantly higher for nurse led inpatient care compared with standard care of medical patients on an acute ward. |
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She had always wanted to be a nurse and turned her childhood dream into a reality when she signed up for nurse training at Leicester Hospital 13 years ago. |
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He tried to contact a Health Republic doctor to overrule the nurse and get approval for payment. |
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As his grandfather Genghis Khan advised, Sorghaghtani chose a Buddhist Tangut woman as her son's nurse, whom Kublai later honored highly. |
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Oh, those women! They nurse and cuddle their presentiments, and make darlings of their ugliest thoughts, as they do of their deformed children. |
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Anyone with basic first-aid training was pressed into service as a triage nurse after the earthquake. |
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In normal situations, lambs nurse after standing, receiving vital colostrum milk. |
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In a naive population, all age groups are affected at once, leaving few or no healthy caregivers to nurse the sick. |
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Immobile and confined to a couch, she was cared for by her mother until purchasing a house and hiring a nurse to aid her. |
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While recuperating, he fell in love, for the first time, with Agnes von Kurowsky, a Red Cross nurse seven years his senior. |
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Leading the life I did, of the sedulous, strained nurse, I had to do something to keep myself fit. |
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Esther Coles stars as Liz, the nurse, while Whitehouse takes on roles including an agoraphobic and a soldier with posttraumatic stress disorder. |
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Esther Coles stars as Liz, the nurse, while Whitehouse takes on various roles including an agoraphobic. |
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Alison Young joined a small animal practice in 1998 as a student veterinary nurse and whilst there gained her VN qualification. |
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Abortion is the nurse so haunted by the gruesome imams of the abortuary that she is driven to drink to erase them from her mind. |
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When the nurse explains the sexual threat she poses to her clients and their wives, Wok Tan responds, 'Ah the poor little wifeys. |
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To make matters worse, the flight nurse and medical assistant were hopelessly airsick, and the patients had to be attended to by the flight crew. |
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Medicare requires nurse anesthetists be supervised by an anesthesiologist or surgeon. |
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During World War II, there were seventeen nurse anesthetists to every one physician anesthetist. |
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Illegal immigrants have secured important roles from a hospital children's nurse and a radiographer to a police IT contractor. |
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This behavior is also most commonly found among sharks, such as the grey nurse shark, but has also been reported for Nomorhamphus ebrardtii. |
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The school nurse will be testing students' hearing next week. |
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These remarks would seem to imply a shift for the nurse from autocentric controlling, to allocentric controlling, then to allocentric nurturing. |
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As a school nurse, Pat was used to bandaiding lots of scraped knees and elbows. |
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She carried me to a young woman to nurse for her what she nursed at Mostor Wilks befo freedom. |
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The nurse was unsuccessful in medicating Marty because he was given free-roam of the unit. |
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When my poor James was in the smallpox, did I allow any hireling to nurse him? |
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His wet nurse was Hodierna of St Albans, whom he gave a generous pension after he became king. |
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The nurse always must be alert to signs of slow leak or insidious infiltration. |
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She later received another allowance, apparently for being engaged as nurse for Clarence's son, Edward of Warwick. |
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She gave birth to a son, believed to be named Damerei, who was given to a wet nurse at Durham House, but he died in October 1592 of plague. |
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He asserted that the working class physically build bridges, craft furniture, grow food, and nurse children, but do not own land, or factories. |
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He was visited regularly by his wife, a nurse, and his servant William Vavasour, who documented his strangury. |
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His will reveals that he had two infant children in England, of whom nothing is known except that they were in the care of a nurse. |
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Lady Capulet and Juliet's nurse try to persuade Juliet to accept Paris's courtship. |
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Leveen imagining the fourteen years leading up to the events in the play from the point of view of the nurse. |
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Mary's earliest years were happy ones, judging from the letters of William Godwin's housekeeper and nurse, Louisa Jones. |
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His speech is monepic. These words consist of substantives, such as mamma, nurse, milk, and so forth. |
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On 24 December 1915, Fleming married a trained nurse, Sarah Marion McElroy of Killala, County Mayo, Ireland. |
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These standards help to shape the content and design of programmes and state what a registered nurse or midwife needs to know and be able to do. |
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The NMC has the power to restrict a nurse or midwife's practice or strike them off their register. |
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In August 1970 Hughes married Carol Orchard, a nurse, and they remained together until his death. |
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He was a late reader, first learning at age seven or eight, but even before this he dictated stories to his mother and nurse. |
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At the age of one, child Jonathan was taken by his wet nurse to her hometown of Whitehaven, England. |
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Oldfield's parents were Raymond Oldfield, a general practitioner, and Maureen Liston, an Irish nurse. |
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In Catherine Sinclair's Holiday House, the children climb Arthur's Seat during a rare day away from their nurse. |
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Mothers of some species fast and nurse their young for a relatively long period of time. |
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It is to our interest to let Lee and Johnston come together, just as a billiard-player would nurse the balls when he has them in a nice place. |
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A woman... might bring herself to submit to the offices of a nurse, for the sake of the provision and security of a wife. |
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His mother, Mary Margaretta Phyllis Jones, was a nurse, and his father, Rhys Davies, was a mechanical engineer and Colonial Officer. |
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They nurse for about six months, then mix nursing and independent feeding for possibly six months more. |
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For otariids and some phocids like the harbor seal, mothers fast and nurse their pups for a few days at a time. |
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Mothers were encouraged to breastfeed their children, as using a wet nurse would prevent a bond from forming between mother and child. |
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In noble families a Greek nurse usually taught the children Latin and Greek. |
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The mothers nurse for over a year before weaning, but the young can spend up to five years with the mothers. |
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Shortly after his birth, John was passed from Eleanor into the care of a wet nurse, a traditional practice for medieval noble families. |
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Females are capable of becoming pregnant immediately after giving birth, and can nurse one litter while pregnant with another. |
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Though relatively independent and weaned within days, precocial young may continue to nurse and be groomed by their mothers. |
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In the Patagonian mara, young are also placed in communal warrens, but mothers do not permit youngsters other than their own to nurse. |
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It seems our nurse contracted melodram patheticism from a nervous dog. Silly old cow. |
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You may notice some periodlike cramping, particularly when you nurse if you're breast-feeding. |
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Females of all mammal species nurse their young with milk, secreted from the mammary glands. |
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Domitian's body was carried away on a common bier and unceremoniously cremated by his nurse Phyllis. |
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In his early years, Alexander was raised by a nurse, Lanike, sister of Alexander's future general Cleitus the Black. |
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Paula Blonski, Vice-President of ARDS Foundation, lost her sister, Marybeth, a nurse, at the age of thirty-six. |
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Shawn didn't hear the nurse return thirty minutes later to gently refasten the body restraints, locking the door as she left. |
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After informed consent was obtained, venous samples were drawn by a registered nurse or physician and sent to CDC's Free-living Amebae Laboratory for analysis. |
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Psychiatric nurse Tanya Allen was one of the first on the scene when six-month-old Sam Cooper-Stevens was pulled from the icy waters of Watchet, Somerset, early on Sunday. |
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Over the last four months, Andrea Bradley, lead nurse at the Morriston Hospital casualty unit in Swansea, has written out around 20 Asbos to protect other patients and staff. |
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Overall camp supervision is typically done by older camp directors, who lead a team that includes cooks, sports instructors, a nurse, maintenance personnel and counselors. |
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You'd think a nurse would want to get blood on her uniform to show people she did something useful with her day instead of just saving schoolboys from paper cuts. |
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Mothers of some species fast and nurse their young for one to two years. |
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Walruses are unique in that mothers nurse their young at sea. |
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Mothers of some species fast and nurse their young for a relatively short period of time while others take foraging trips at sea between nursing bouts. |
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He was initially looked after by a wet nurse called Ellen in the south of England, away from John's itinerant court, and probably had close ties to his mother. |
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Palmer's nurse, Mary Ward, and his other son William joined him there. |
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Palmer, who was born in Surrey Square off the Old Kent Road in Newington, London, was the son of a bookseller and sometime Baptist minister, and was raised by a pious nurse. |
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The nurse was brushing knots from the protesting child's hair. |
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His nurse returned him to his mother, still in Ireland, when he was three. |
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There he fell in and out of love with a nurse, Mary Welland. |
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According to our results we can recommend physical exercise on the development of native arteriovenous fistula under control by hemodialysis nurse. |
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On 16 April 2009, nurse Margaret Haywood was barred from practising as a Nurse in the UK following a ruling by the NMC Conduct and Competence committee panel. |
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The children were under the care of a nurse, Sara Wager, who instilled in them not only polite manners and good behaviour but also liberal social and philosophical opinions. |
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Juliet's nurse refers to an earthquake she says occurred 11 years ago. |
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Eton has educated 19 British prime ministers and generations of the aristocracy and has been referred to as the chief nurse of England's statesmen. |
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The nurse will show you how to irrigate the wound to prevent infection. |
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She was the head nurse and Jill-of-all-trades at the Sunshine Gap clinic. |
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The nurse injected a painkilling drug into the veins of my forearm. |
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Miss Flax, the little thin sister, and Miss Gloria, the stout able-bodied sister, lifted up their hands and eyes in horror at the mere hint of a wet nurse. |
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The nurse spent all day taking blood pressures at the hospital. |
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It was rumoured that she had been his ama, the wet nurse who then became part of the family, taking charge so effectively that she ruled the household. |
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It would ensure that Minnesota health care facilities will be reimbursed by Medicare whenever a nurse anesthetists provides anesthesia services to a Medicare patient. |
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Zwerling's understanding of addiction's effects stems in part from his work in addiction counseling, as a physician assistant, and finally as a nurse anesthetist. |
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