X-Nico

unusual facts about Medical practice



Ted Lockwood

Ted Lockwood (May 19, 1945 – 2005) was an aesthetic plastic surgeon in private practice and clinical assistant professor of plastic surgery at the University of Kansas Medical School, Kansas City, Kansas.


see also

Ada Salter

Alfred Salter set up a low-cost medical practice in Bermondsey, which soon was under pressure to expand.

Alexander Marcet

He had married Jane Haldimand (see Jane Marcet), lived in Russell Square, and, as he grew wealthier, grew less and less inclined for medical practice.

Ashley Hutchings

They rehearsed on the floor above Nicol's father's medical practice in a house called "Fairport" and lent its name to the group they formed together as Fairport Convention in 1967 with Richard Thompson, which soon included Martin Lamble, Judy Dyble and Iain Matthews.

Brunonian system of medicine

According to the Encyclopædia Perthensis, "Thus, from personal experience of the inefficacy of the former medical practice in the gout, he was led to review the whole old system of medicine."

Canisbay

It is home to Canisbay Primary School, a Village Hall, Medical Practice, and two Churches, one of which is the church used by Charles, Prince of Wales.

Charles de Lorme

Charles became wealthy in a medical practice of prescribing a concoction of antimony to Henry IV, Louis XIII, Cardinal Mazarin, and Madame de Sevigné as a health-preserving, health-restoring and life extending preparation.

Doctor Finlay

Early storylines include the setting up of the new National Health Service and the modernisation of the medical practice at Arden House, Tannochbrae, Scotland.

Dr. Finlay

Based on Cronin's novella entitled Country Doctor, the storylines centred on Dr. Finlay's general medical practice in the fictional Scottish town of Tannochbrae during the late 1920s.

Francis Charteris, 10th Earl of Wemyss

He developed an interest in the alternative medical practice of Homeopathy, even becoming President of the London Homeopathic Hospital until his death.

Friedrich Christian Rosenthal

He earned his doctorate from the University of Jena, and later opened a medical practice in Greifswald (1804).

George Adams Leland

After departing Japan, Leland travelled to Europe, returning to Boston in October 1882, where he established a private medical practice, and also developed the gymnastics program for the YMCA.

Hernán Padilla

After 1984, he returned to medical practice as a nephrologist, serving at the National Capital Area for Kaiser Permanente.

John Goodchild

According to Benham (see below)Goodchild had a private medical practice in Bordighera, Italy, serving mainly expatriate Britons.

John Milton Bernhisel

After returning briefly to his medical practice, he also ran and served in the Thirty-seventh Congress (March 4, 1861 – March 3, 1863).

John Salmon Ford

He opened a medical practice in the east Texas town of San Augustine, where he practiced for eight years.

José Antonio Dávila

In 1918, he enrolled in the University of Puerto Rico and later transferred to Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia where he studied medicine, earning his medical degree in 1924; after graduating he established a medical practice there.

Joseph Kent

He was admitted to medical practice in Lower Marlborough, Calvert County in 1799 with a Doctor Parran, but ceased relations with Parran after a political disagreement in 1801.

Joshua Clay

As Carmichael, using funds borrowed from a local loan shark, he purchases a small Park Avenue medical practice and lives a quiet, respectable life treating rich hypochondriacs.

Mary-Anne Cotterill

She retired from medical practice in 1998 and went on to be a bereavement counsellor and supervisor for Cruse.

Montserrat Tura i Camafreita

After graduating with degrees in Medicine and Surgery from the University of Barcelona, she combined medical practice with her specialisation in health care management and economics.

Narrative medicine

As of late 1990s physicians like Rachel Naomi Remen and Rita Charon have emphasized that medical practice should be structured around the narrative.

Noah Biggs

It argued that medical practice should be open to all, a point also taken up by William Walwyn.

Riccardo Pampuri

After a three years practical experience with this doctor uncle, and for a short time as temporary assistant in the medical practice at Vernate, he was appointed to the practice of Morimondo in Milan.

Robert Francis Catterson

After completing his medical studies, Catterson established a medical practice in Rockville, Indiana, just prior to the start of the American Civil War.

Sketty

Also on De La Beche Road, the Sketty Medical Practice can be found; and on the junction with Gower Road, St. Paul's Church (Church in Wales) is situated.

Users' Guides to the Medical Literature

In 1990 Dr. Gordon Guyatt introduced the term "evidence-based medicine" to describe a paradigm shift in medical practice that stressed the role of rigorous, systematic evidence from clinical research in conjunction with patients’ values and preferences in clinical decision-making.

Veronica Carstens

From 1960 to 1968 she worked as a medical assistant and in 1968 she opened her medical practice in Meckenheim near Bonn.