Doctors also argue that detailed autopsy of stillborn babies has allowed pathologists to identify viruses that can cause miscarriages. |
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This text will be of interest primarily to veterinary ophthalmologists, ophthalmic pathologists, and ocular oncologists. |
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The core business of perinatal and paediatric pathologists is to help women and children. |
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Postmortem examinations were conducted to an agreed protocol and reviewed by independent paediatric pathologists. |
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Elderly paediatricians and pathologists fear that they are becoming the victims of a witch-hunt. |
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His ethnic origin is not confirmed, but Home Office pathologists said that the victim was probably not North African or Afro-Caribbean. |
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Studies have shown that perinatal and paediatric autopsies are performed best by perinatal and paediatric pathologists. |
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Performing sentinel lymph node biopsy requires coordinated expertise between nuclear medicine physicians, pathologists, and surgeons. |
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The percentage of concordant cytologic diagnoses between 2 pathologists was also determined. |
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Furthermore, the intellectual processes of pathologists during microscopic analysis sessions can differ from one another noticeably. |
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This is done by a skilled team of doctors, physical therapists, occupational therapists, and speech pathologists. |
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If they get proper consent, then nothing prevents pathologists from carrying out post-mortems. |
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Our study of an unselected population took place at a tertiary referral centre with autopsy performed by specialist paediatric pathologists. |
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Forensic pathologists see the natural pathologic progression of many untreated diseases. |
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Animal pathologists found the mammals had suffered internal bleeding in the ears and the brain. |
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All autopsies were carried out by pathologists at the Health Sciences Authority. |
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Medical Examiners are pathologists who have special training in death investigation and legal autopsies. |
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A common problem for pathologists examining hysterectomy specimens is finding pronounced tissue autolysis. |
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The dramatists also tend to get the office politics wrong, creating tensions and torrid love affairs between pathologists and police where there are none. |
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The role of coroners, medical examiners, and forensic pathologists is to be independent, to not take sides. |
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The book was written for practicing and teaching pathologists, but it should also be appealing to radiologists, medical and surgical oncologists, and radiotherapists. |
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When pathologists say the mammary gland is a sweat gland, they mean an apocrine gland not an eccrine gland. |
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That is important information because, hitherto, pathologists have focused on the cancer cells themselves and ignored the stroma. |
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Speech and language pathologists will work with your child to improve his communication skills. |
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Get all necessary information or expert advice before going to the scene, i.e. consult with forensic pathologists, lawyers. |
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Additional agreements were reached in 2001 with psychologists, speechlanguage pathologists and audiologists with the assistance of a facilitator. |
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The Directive applies to all workers including those particularly at risk such as farmers, abattoir workers and laboratory pathologists. |
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Through Saturday evening and Sunday, I was on nodding terms with several groups of pathologists who had theories that produced a wide range of diagnoses. |
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Discussion of concordant diagnoses and discrepancies would build a collaborative relationship between clinicians and pathologists and might lead to better autopsy utilization. |
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Neonatologists and obstetricians need to seek consent in every neonatal death or stillbirth while pathologists need to provide the service sought by clinicians and relatives. |
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Coroners should not allocate excessive numbers of autopsies to individual pathologists, and the total caseloads of pathologists should be monitored. |
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To do the review we wanted pathologists who were board certified and had extensive clinical experience, and we wanted to limit the number of reviewers to only a few. |
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In addition, pathologists and coroners vary in their willingness to accept the sudden infant death syndrome as a designation for unexplained deaths. |
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The specimen was then examined by parasitologists and pathologists, who determined the forms to represent ciliocytophthoria and not a ciliated protozoan. |
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The Department of Health agrees that remuneration and education of pathologists is critical to the recruitment and retention of qualified candidates. |
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The level-three forensic science students worked with pathologists and serologists at the National Institute of Legal Medicine, Bucharest. |
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The critical lack of speech-language pathologists is a prime example of the shortage of resources needed to do the work at an extremely important stage in a child's development. |
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In addition, referrals to other allied health care specialists such as nurse practitioners, dieticians and speech language pathologists can also be made. |
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Over the coming months, he put together a team of forensic anthropologists, pathologists, radiologists, and odontologists, then recruited and trained Argentine medical students to help identify remains. |
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Medical technologists work alongside pathologists in the blood bank's lab analyzing blood samples. |
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Before that time haematologists could either train as haematological pathologists, or as paediatricians or physicians. |
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But the third-highest biller, a pathologist, directs a diagnostic company that performs tests for twenty-six other pathologists, which are all billed under his name. |
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Many of Rehab Synergies' senior directors and speech pathologists are required to take it. |
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She said speech pathologists use many different treatments, tailored to the individual. |
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However, speech pathologists fill their shelves with books that promote oral language and support language development. |
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If the primary pathologists were graded using the cytotechnologist grading scale, there would have been fewer pathologist failures. |
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Speech language pathologists can include occupational therapists, physical therapists, therapist assistants, public health nurses, child psychologists and others. |
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Cytologists and pathologists can only achieve a reliable evaluation of the Pap smear if they are presented with a representative sample of sufficient, good quality cell material from the cervix uteri. |
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She knows a number of examples, where parents have brought their children to speech pathologists, only to realize it is actually their hearing that is at fault. |
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Class I IHC tests are used by pathologists to make a diagnosis of cancer. |
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Novocastra HD was developed to meet the needs of pathologists and histologists, in terms of menu, diagnostic confidence and workflow. |
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The classification of the underlying lung disease was based on multidisciplinary assessments by pneumologists, pathologists and radiologists. |
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The scopes of practice are intended to inform employers, other professionals and the general public of the broad range of activities that speech-language pathologists and audiologists can provide. |
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Specialists such as neuropsychologists, speech and language pathologists, or occupational therapists can help you learn how to compensate for cognitive difficulties you are having. |
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Forensic support is limited and relies primarily on support provided by six national police officers, the assistance from UNMIT and two Cuban pathologists based at the national hospital in Dili. |
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It does this through parent and caregiver language development programs, by training professionals and speechlanguage pathologists to deliver programs, by developing user-friendly learning materials and through research. |
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Now Lily found herself in Hollywood, California, on the set of a television show bustling with pseudoscientists and make-believe pathologists. |
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For example, several people working in the field have pointed to our critical shortage of speech-language pathologists, which means that the children who need help are often left to their own devices. |
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It is reported to be a highly stigmatized feature, with children who use it often being referred to speech pathologists. |
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One of the lab's pathologists, James Lanier, who just retired, has run the Iditarod race many times and was pictured in the 2006 Sports Illustrated Year in Sports. |
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