Birth to adult. Most pediatricians will see patients until they are about 16 or so and then suggest they find another doctor.
You can be any age as long as you have completed a medical degree and another six or more years of training.
Depending on what your question really means, children start seeing a pediatrician from birth and most pediatricians stop seeing them as patients at the age of 18.
It depends how long it take you to finish school, its about 11 years of school, so maybe around the late twenties like 26-28
after university
a pediatrician wears a uniform so he or she does not get mistaken for another patient.
Then the pediatrician will collaborate with other members of the health care team to find a solution.
It is a choice by Pediatrician. But generally pediatricians assist patient younger than 65 years old. Pediatricians specialize in child health therefore they will only provide medical services to children.
an adult
Depends on how smart/angry the patient is, emirate?
sensetive, caring, nuturing, knowledgble, patient:)
A doctor who treats infants to 18 year old children. A pediatrician means a doctor of the junior kids like ages 1 month-11 years old 100% sure I am a pediatrician!!!
A paediatrician is a child specialist, and can be consulted from birth to adolescence.
No. The term "pediatrician" generally refers to a physician, someone who is a specialist in pediatric (child) medicine. A pediatric surgeon would perform surgery on children.
It depends on where you are. There are countries where the Pedia visits the patient at home. From what I know, in USA, homehealth personnel do the visits.
No - there is not. Though most physicians in all specialties usually retire between 60-65 years old, there are many who will work well into their 70's. As long as their clinical skills stay sharp and they are physically fit, docs will keep on going!
One everyday use is in evaluating children's growth rates. Using charts of average/normal growth of children, a pediatrician evalutes how her patient's growth stacks up.