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Some physicians who treat cancer recommend that their patients use marijuana to relieve nausea and vomiting.
to treat every patient who seeks care
Some osteopathic physicians, physical therapists, and naturopathic physicians also use spinal manipulation to treat patients with low back pain.
Patients need to communicate as much as physicians. It is crucially important for a physician to be able to communicated effectively with their patients, as well as being open to hearing what the patient has to say. Unfortunately, not many physicians are interested in hearing what their patients have to say.
Doctors diagnose and treat illnesses and conditions. Nurses cannot diagnose, and can only treat patients under the orders of physicians.
Some are owned by hospitals and others are owned by the physicians who treat patients in them; about half, however, are operated by investor-owned businesses.
The duty of Physicians is to treat, diagnose, educate and abide by their ethics and laws as doctors. The patient's on the other hand has the duty to ask their doctors about their health, demand for privacy and confidentiality, cooperate with treatments and possible solutions, decide for their health if they have the capacity.
fyromygia physicians
Physicians who treat the heart are cardiologists and cardiothoracic surgeons.
yes
Physicians treat people according to their licensing and specialty. For instance, an anesthesiologist does not mend broken bones but rather an orthopedist would do that why the anesthesiologist manages the pain for the patient or anesthesia for surgery on the broken bone. A General Practitioner can do all kinds of treatment but they normally do not do major surgery. Trauma physicians care for the worst of the worst injuries, illnesses and break down of organ failure, like a heart attack. They are not supposed to treat their family members, prescribe drugs for non-patients since they do not always know a person's medical history, or allergies or treat people in places they are not licensed.
1. Veterinarians are medical professionals who have as much college education as a human physician. 2. Veterinarians are qualified to treat any animal, but not humans; physicians can treat humans but not any animals. 3. Veterinarians and physicians are finding themselves working on the same problems - diabetes management, joint replacement, etc. The same techniques and technologies are more often being used on both humans and animals. 4. Veterinarians tend to be generalists if they aren't board certified - they have a wide enough knowledge base to treat multiple species from birth to death. In contrast, most physicians tend to be specialists - they can treat only one species (humans) and often focus on a single organ system within that species.