
I found this interesting as identified medicals fake their primary role as medical transcriptionist In the responses identified themselves as a speech recognition editor and said they do both traditional transcription and speech recognition editing. Also in the group, 6.8% said they are in quality assurance, the same number who identified themselves as a supervisor or manager. MT educators made up 1.4% of the responses. There were a few responses under "other" that included a student who is doing general transcription, a recruiter, a business owner, and an MT/QA supervisor.
Knowing that these medicals fake two things are the cause of of all cases of halitosis is actually good news. Why? Because both problems are fairly simple to correct.
Indeed, I was rather alarmed when I saw an Airborne tattoo insignia in a tattoo parlor with a price tag next to it of $100. Meaning that you would not have to prove that you're ever in the military just give them the $100, medicals bad and fake that was a little disconcerting. Of course, a tattoo parlor is under no legal obligation to check papers to make sure that they were actually in the military before they give them that tattoo.
What thoughts run through your mind when you hear the word Cancer? Forget what type for a moment... just consider the word itself. Cancer is always spelt with a capital C because this disease tends to upset people.
If you're lucky, these products will do nothing at all. Some of them are seriously dangerous by themselves. They promise cures for life threatening illnesses, causing those who buy the promise to delay proper medical treatment, sometimes past the point where it would have helped.
Which is why every time I'm about to enter a patient's exam room to deliver bad news myself I pause and remember Mrs. Peterson, a woman I've never seen or heard from since, but whose life I irrevocably changed in the middle of the night while she lay at home in bed without her husband next to her--as she would from that point forward--all those years ago.