Slander
Yes, you can potentially be sued for making a statement about a physician's mistake if the statement is false, defamatory, or damages the physician's reputation or practice. It is important to be careful and ensure that any statements made are true and supported by evidence to avoid legal repercussions.
patient must sign a confidentiality statement
The plural of patient is "patients."
for one patient: patient's for more than one patients: patients'
The correct form depends on the context. If you're referring to something belonging to one patient, it should be "patient's." If you're referring to something that belongs to multiple patients, use "patients'." For example, "the patient's chart" (one patient) versus "the patients' waiting area" (multiple patients).
If you are talking about one patient then it is: Patient's allergy. If you are talking about lots of patients, then it is: Patients' allergy.
If patient information is lost or stolen and harm comes to the patient, the patient may sue for damages. This means that damages must have occurred in order for the patient to obtain monetary compensation.
The difference between patience and patients is patience means having the ability to be patient and wait but patients means a patient of yours meaning like a hospital patient.
It is hard to be patient when waiting for your car to be fixed. The doctor went to the hospital to check on his patient.
dr mis-inturpertated a statement made by patient. Can patient ask dr to remove the statement from his medical records?
No, the noun 'patient' is the singular form.The plural noun is patients.
There is no homophone for patient, but there is a homophone for the plural patients, which is patience.