Fatigue, stress, living with the knowledge you caused someone's death (anyone who does enough neurosurgical operations, particularly things like aneurysms, will have patients die). Exposure to blood and body fluids, possible needlestick injuries and risk of hepatitis/HIV/other bloodborne diseases. Being sued. Constantly having people make jokes, "Well, it doesn't take a brain surgeon!" or, "It's not brain surgery!"
The job outlook for a neurosurgeon is that it is a specialty dedicated to the medical and surgical care of the brain and nervous system. The training takes very many years because of the nature of the job that they do.
He was a neurosurgeon.
A neurosurgeon
Prostitution all the way
A. document hazards C. identify hazards of the job
Animal psychic- to the stars! Or Neurosurgeon...
It is unlikely that you will become a Neurosurgeon.
The responsibility for controlling safety hazards on the job lies with line management, but the individual employee is also responsible for identifying hazards and ensuring that work does not proceed if the hazards are not adequately controlled.
Neurosurgeon is the correct spelling.
A neurosurgeon usually spends one year in an internship. But to be a neurosurgeon she will have to do 3-5 years as a neurosurgeon resident.
burning yourself :)
No, a baseline analysis identifies initial hazards in the workplace.