词汇 | example_english_ward |
释义 | Examples of wardThese examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. There they shared wards with non-addicted patients with acute hepatitis. In the ten worst housed wards, labour enjoyed solid success in six while it was only predominant in the other four. Strategies to address the increase in elderly admissions to hospital have included the development of admissions wards to which all acute admissions are received. The researcher made several visits to the wards and community centres when necessary to make contact. The community involved comprized of two wards and hence had a neat geographical location. Table 2 shows the characteristics of the electoral wards included in this study according to this classification, according to the level of socio-economic deprivation. Assessing the environmental quality of longstay wards for the confused elderly. Respondents are contacted through surgeries, hospital wards or clinics, and may be interviewed there. On hospital wards, strict control measures aimed at breaking the chain of transmission were implemented as soon as a case was suspected. Many wards have no routine maintenance policy for sphygmomanometers. Participative management style feature of high satisfaction and quality of care wards compared with low satisfaction and quality of care wards. As stated, old age psychiatrists are best placed to address the specific problems of elderly patients on general medical wards. Posters and flyers with invitations and information about the study were also given at seven different psychiatric wards, but few respondents were recruited this way. The establishment was comparable to that of the elderly care wards that shared the same hospital site, a satellite of a large acute trust. Were midwives to examine all babies on normal wards, savings would increase to approximately £4.30 per baby born or £2.5 million nationally. Charges in private wards recover nearly all the actual costs. They were regarded as minors and wards of the crown, were forbidden to bear arms and ride horses. Playing an instrument was viewed as contributing towards a positive outlook on life and even a way of ' warding off ' the ageing process. In 1926 there were 139 wards, 104 males and 35 females. Of these, three wards were listed as 'insane', and only four of the total were girls. Each panchayat contains several wards which correspond closely to villages. A questionnaire was distributed to all wards 3 weeks after the party in order to rule out further cases. Only this standard requires surrogates to acknowledge their ward's individuality as well their humanity. Thus, knowledge and consideration of the life narratives that situate wards' attitudes and views are crucial to respectful treatment of this population of research subjects. Moreover, analysis of qualitative data from a pilot project38 revealed low awareness of the concept of informed consent among nursing employees in elderly wards. What are the risks of creating wards for these people ? The previous study completed preabortion interviews on the public wards very near to the time of the operation. The studies covered all three council levels : the district headquarters, the wards and the village levels. People coming to hospital wards and saying, look, we have private ambulances. The ecological estimates for the entire set of 56 parishes and 17 wards contain systematic results for the main coefficients. All postoperative care was given in the remaining wards. Schools were established, wards were rearranged, and educational methods were suggested. Complications of enteric fever encountered in medical wards. Both the wards and their estates had been looked after, and upon release, many emerged in sound financial health. The reform did not affect the grouping of wards into townships, but the imposition of sectors did alter the arrangement of townships within cantons. Almost every respondent believed that dancing warded off the ailments of old age, especially the stiffening of the body and the deterioration of the mind. There are 24 wards and hence 24 generation nodes. From this point on, wards were cared for in a less physical sense, but as we will see, they were still closely monitored. Developmentally, four wards were said to do consistently better than the rest, owing to their effectiveness of their [representatives]. The same grouping procedure was applied to the wards according to their social fragmentation scores. Consequently, parent substitutes may not easily develop genuine parental affection for their wards. Patients at the hospice day care center are palliative patients referred from oncological wards or general practitioners or the patients themselves initiate the contact. Each of the four wards in the study area served as a stratum. On the other hand, mortality approached 100% for the cases diagnosed in the wards. The clear implication is that the process is operating at very local scales within constituencies and wards. Within each selected sub-district, five city wards were randomly selected (a total of fifteen city wards). The patients were cared f or in 26 wards from eight hospitals. The day-care unit treats patients from all of the hospital's wards; in 1998 chemotherapy represented 58% of admissions. Included in this figure is also the ward's share of current costs mutual for the department or hospital but not investments or other capital costs. The respectable classes' anxieties about the disorderly and degraded social conditions of the inner wards ensured a receptive audience for the temperance message. The fifteenth, on the other hand, was paid by nearly all householders, at least in the inner-city wards from which assessments survive. Hospitals all over the country offered special inducements in the way of comfortable wards and appropriate treatment for the cure of opium addicts. The calpolli were divided into wards (no indigenous term emerges) formed of 20, 40, 80, or more households. At the beginning, a rough scheme of dividing the village into a few wards was usually drawn up. On their arrival, he and his peers were treated not as valued co-participants in nation-building, but as subordinate wards in need of state-scripted retraining. Seniors whose main income source is currently government transfers do not appear to have been permanent wards of the welfare state. Thus, surrogates must consider these as they strive to discharge their responsibilities not only to protect their wards but also to treat them with respect. There is contained within it an obligation to protect wards from harm. We also have to value the input of those who work the wards and inhabit the sickrooms. In part this was achieved specifically by moderate councillors in those wards being more responsive to working-class issues and needs. In all other wards die involvement was close, though attention was also given to the country village church. Using these numbers, it was decided to make nineteen male beds and thirteen female beds available in the sick wards for casuals. They also offered alternatives to the casual wards, including money for a night's lodging elsewhere. All patients remained in screened wards of the hospital to prevent infection of local anophelines. However, feelings about the general hospital wards were less positive and views on primary care follow-up mixed. Patients are often transferred to other wards to await community care provision before discharge home. We did not include people meeting our diagnostic criteria currently living in the local learning disability hospital or in long-stay psychiatric wards. A system of allocation keys was developed based on those cost components being assigned to the wards. The trainees then tour the wards, examining individuals suffering from the various disorders discussed in the lecture, and patients at various stages of recovery. The one tale is superimposed onto the other, thereby warding off recognition and exposure. Patients were admitted to the same hospital wards and assigned to the same team of rehabilitation professionals. Finally, many cities did not have systematic criteria for identifying individual houses so that placing voters within their correct precincts and wards was extremely difficult. The study wards were of similar design, each consisting of four six-bedded bays and containing four side rooms, and were situated on the same floor of a 10-year-oldbuilding. Although we cannot be sure about the reasons behind common council's vacillations in these years, it is probable that resistance in the wards to another tax grant played a part. The 17 in-patients determined to be suitable, who were initially referred to in-patient wards based on the severity of their symptoms, were assessed 2 weeks post admission on average. Students of labor and political machines have been most interested in how bosses and their minions in the wards influenced the politics of the labor movement. Rehabilitation may occur in a range of settings - acute, specialist stroke, orthogeriatric units or mixed wards, community hospitals, day hospitals, and outreach services in the community. Routine environmental cleaning on study wards was carried out using a general-purpose detergent (containing phosphate and ionic and nonionic surfactants), in line with current advice [28]. A recent meta-analysis (22) found that stroke unit management was associated with lower rates of death and disability compared with management on general medical or neurological wards. The national system complements local risk management systems, allowing national data collation and dissemination of urgent alerts (for example regarding the storage of potassium chloride on wards) when necessary. A reorganization committee was established for the thirty-nine wards of the three hospitals. As in many asylums, rehabilitation had tended to revolve around the acute admission wards from which patients were more likely to make a full recovery. Alternatively, she may be allocated specific wards where she is responsible for all learners who work there. Evaluating the scheme one year on, the programme of instruction was continuing and indeed, had been extended to other wards. In making such an important transition, you become aware of your progress and mentally separate the time before entering from that after wards. Approximately 20 households were randomly sampled from each of two wards selected from each of the three sample panchayats. In city wards cost of labour and land is very high as compared to suburban wards. However, it can be stated that little standardization in water control existed between the two urban wards and between the wards and the civic-ceremonial center. The suggested implication of this is that different decision-making mechanisms may have been employed when planning and constructing water-control features in the residential wards. The reason for the functional differences between the causeways may have to do with their paths through these urban wards. A new system of territorial collection, based on the new electoral wards, was suggested as an alternative. They were treated in a quite different way and in separate wards the forerunner to the modern pay-beds. Various investigations are carried out on surgical wards. In surgical wards you will often have to care for people who display anxiety. I was always in the wards, full of people and the staff, then a social worker every day seeing people. These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors. |
反思网英语在线翻译词典收录了377474条英语词汇在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用英语词汇的中英文双语翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。