I think it's a priviledged communication between a doctor and a patient. It will be confined to hospital records only. Hope it helps.
Whatever the doctor want to track. There are too many thousands of options to try to list anything meaninful here. The database would need to contain patient information and medical history items.
Normally prior history is the past medical conditions, surgeries, allergies, and hospitalizations that may be important for doctors to understand the patient and treat the patient more effectively and safely.
Some things are..... Patient's demographics. Diagnosis. Treatment. Previous history. Doctors Notes.
Doctors should be patient with all Patients - it seems that this has become a real wide-spread issue.
patient
They care about their patient
Doctors and emergency health professionals should never turn away a patient.
Doctors did exist at the time of the medieval black plague, however, they did not know anything about the cause or treatment of the plague, and were useless. Medical science was extremely primitive at that period of history.
A doctor would use a database for storing information about the patients that come in. So, if they have an illness, the doctor can keep track on how well/badly the patient is doing and if it needs any medicine. Answered by Chicken-Cluck x
Yes. All doctors in the United States are required to inform a patient who has tested positive for the HIV virus.
Doctors may use a bacteriophage.
doctor told to patient dont do here and there