A medical assistant should never say that because it is highly unprofessional and very superficial as you can never know how the other person is feeling and what you've experienced can be very different from what they are experiencing. You rather than saying that you can always say many people feel that way.
why should the medical assitant avoid the phase. " i know how you feel"
Have you or someone you know experienced a medical error before? It might have been the wrong medication, neglected allergy, etc. Regardless of if you have or haven’t, what are your thoughts on why these errors occur? What do you think should be done differently to avoid medical errors or do we simply have to “live” with medical errors because humans make mistakes?
Why is practicing "mentally" a pitfall and how will you avoid this? 2. How might technology aid the practice phase of your speech presentation? 3. What is your best strategy for effective practice?
What is your definition of a medical emergency and when do you feel the EMS should be activated?
How do people usually feel about medical terminology classes and why? What do they relate to in this class usually and why?
I know the answer is A, but I want to know why and how you would figure out this question.... which acid has the lowest pKa? a) HClO4 b)HBrO c) HClO d) HlO
Why are fine particulates dangerous to breathe? Do you feel that there should be a PM-2.5 standard? How would you go about enacting such a standard?
why is it important to know how to use available resources in the medical office to research or verify information? what roles do accurate data entry and proofreading have this process
Do you feel that supplements should be regulated by the FDA? If so, and it becomes necessary to have a prescription, who should be writing these prescriptions? Medical physicians? Naturopaths? Nutritionists? Herbalists? How will these practitioners educate themselves on these topics?
how do you prevent VTE? What should the patient do? what should they avoid?
Should a patient be able to erase information from their medical records (i.e. embarrassing diagnoses, unwanted information, information they don't want to share with a new doctor, et cetera)?I have a discussion in my course about medical records and why it should/should not be okay for patients to erase info from the medical records. Personally, I am torn.I believe a person should be able to hide certain data on their records if it's not useful to the person they are hiding...