A neonatal physician assistant (PA) typically sees around 10 to 20 patients a day, depending on the specific unit, patient acuity, and the healthcare facility's protocols. The number can vary based on factors such as the complexity of cases and the level of support provided by the healthcare team. In some high-acuity settings, this number may be lower, while in less intensive environments, it could be higher.
Doctors see roughly 80 patients a week, which means they see (on average) 41060 patients a year.
A primary care doctor see about 20 patients 1 day. This number may vary depending on the various conditions affecting patients.
It's over 9,000!
Depends on how many patients one will see in a day and what treatment one would perform.
The average number of patients seen per day can vary widely depending on the type of healthcare facility and specialty. In general, a primary care physician may see around 20-30 patients per day, while a specialist or surgeon may see fewer patients due to longer appointment times. Emergency departments and urgent care centers can see a much higher volume of patients per day.
You have 900 patients and in 4 months you will be working 80 days (=/-) so you will need to see one of your patients every 45 minutes in an 8 hour day (with out lunch!) or 11.25 patients per day.
yes he can if he has many patients
You can't really know that answer without experimenting, such as averaging the amount of patients a dentist has per day for a whole week. Then you could probably find that answer, an accurate one. But, in my opinion, I would say a dentist would see a lot of patients per day. Unfortunately that answer varies widely based on location and how busy a dentist wants to be. However, on average, a dentist will do 12 exams in a day and treat 10 patients.
Could be either Neonatal Resuscitation Program, or National Response Plan. See links below.
The nurse will see 8 patients today. A teacher needs a lot of patience to work all day with middle school students.
Not necessarily. Psychiatrists are not paid by the hour ... nor do they all conform to strict hours of operation each day. They work until the work is done whatever amount of time it takes. They are paid on how many patients they see, not how many hours they spend with patients.
This will depend upon the type of practice the veterinarian is in. A general small animal practitioner will typically schedule appointments every 15 minutes and see one or two animals per appointment. In eight hours of appointments, this person would examine 32-64 patients, with a rough average of 40 per day. A large animal veterinarian doing herd checks, however, may see two herds of 5,000 animals in one day.