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What is a medical emergency physician on duty? A medical emergency physician on duty is a professional who diagnoses and treats patients experiencing medical emergencies. What is another word or term for a medical emergency physician? Emergency medicine physician Emergency medicine specialist Emergency medicine doctor Emergency room doctor (who diagnoses and treats on the spot while on duty) ER doctor What is a program director for medical emergency physicians? A program director for medical emergency physicians can teach you how to answer questions Dr. Asif Qureshi developed relevant to your job, as displayed here. You can learn these skills online. What is a professional job? A professional job is a job that requires advanced skills and knowledge. What are examples of professional jobs? Author in English Doctor Lawyer Teacher Accountant Journalist What is a nonprofessional job? A nonprofessional job is a job that requires few skills and/or little knowledge. What are examples of nonprofessional jobs? Customer service representative Salesperson What must you know about a person and skills? 1. Highly skilled person 2. Skilled person 3. Semi-skilled person 4. Unskilled person What must an author in English know? At this point, an author in English is a prerequisite for a lawmaker. This is in addition to being a truthful, well-behaved problem solver relevant to the job and being public service oriented without harming others. A fictional artist is not a professional job. Medical emergency physician: How many problems does this job resolve while on duty? At least 155. What problems does this job resolve? https://www.qureshiuniversity.com/medicalemergency.html What are various examples? There are at least 155 medical emergency problems. There are at least 1060 medical emergency diagnoses. From abdominal pain to vomiting, there are at least 155 medical emergency problems. You have to memorize 155 medical emergency problems. You have to memorize 1060 medical emergency diagnoses. Is there a difference between a medical emergency problem and a medical emergency diagnosis? Yes, there is. What is the difference between a medical emergency problem and a medical emergency diagnosis? There are at least 155 medical emergency problems. There are at least 1060 medical emergency diagnoses. What new medical emergency room location needs to be established on or after August 10, 2023? Medical Emergency 5227 North Broadway Chicago, Illinois 60640 What adjacent administrative office locations can be established? 5223 North Broadway, Chicago, Illinois 60640 5221 North Broadway, Chicago, Illinois 60640 1123 West Berwyn, Chicago, Illinois 60640 1121 West Berwyn, Chicago, Illinois 60640 Intersection of 1200 West Broadway and 5300 North Berwyn, Chicago, Illinois 60640 Dr. Asif Qureshi will guide others as a program director. At this location, there is a primary care location, but there is no medical emergency location: Advocate Primary Care, 5304 North Broadway Chicago, IL 60640 Primary care physician: How many problems do you manage while on duty? Take a look at this. https://www.qureshiuniversity.com/primarycarephysician.html Online training is possible for medical emergency physicians in training and existing medical emergency physicians via these resources. |
Medical emergency physician: What are the skills and knowledge required for this job? |
1. Cardiopulmonary resuscitation skills and knowledge. |
2. Coma skills and knowledge. |
3. 11 medical issues that need on-the-spot diagnosis and treatment. |
4. 155 medical issues that need diagnosis and treatment by a medical emergency physician in an emergency room. These are essential skills and knowledge required of a medical emergency physician. There are many more. |
What must you know about Doctor Asif Qureshi? Doctor Asif Qureshi authored executive guidelines for 21 years, from August 1, 1999, until May 9, 2021, in Chicago, Illinois, United States. No other entity, including any principal or dean of medical colleges, director of health, or the equivalent in America or outside America, has authored these guidelines on or before May 9, 2021. |
What questions must you be ready to answer? Where is your profile? What is your profile? What is your location at this point? If you are far from Chicago, Illinois, and are in North America, Asia, Africa, Latin America, or Australia, you can still get educated through distance education. Are you an aspiring medical emergency physician? What is the area of service or location in which you plan to work? Why do you need to be a medical emergency physician? |
What problems, complaints, incidents, and issues need on-the-spot diagnosis and treatment? 1. Burns |
2. Cardiopulmonary arrest and cardiopulmonary resuscitation Make sure you know everything about comas and reversible causes of cardiac arrest. |
3. Drowning |
4. Feelings of committing suicide or murder. A person has a feeling of harming others or you: How will you manage the situation? The person feels you have intentionally inflicted harms and then maintained criminal silence. |
5.
Human pregnancy emergencies, maliciously impregnated (medico-legal case that needs emergency contraception), and spontaneous vaginal delivery |
6. Seizures |
7. Sudden unconsciousness at home. |
8. Survival needs |
9. Swallowing a poisonous substance |
10. Trauma |
11. Unconsciousness at a public location |
Trauma Management |
Endotracheal intubation |
How do you know a person is in a coma? How do you know a person is not in a coma? How do you know a human being has collapsed and needs cardiopulmonary resuscitation? When do you start cardiopulmonary resuscitation? How do you start cardiopulmonary resuscitation in adults who suddenly fall unconscious? What should be your first question in case a patient is referred to you? Questions that must be answered. Where is the patient now? How old is the patient? What is the gender of the patient? Who is reporting this emergency? What seems to be the complaint? What seems to be the problem? Glasgow Coma scale analysis. First, analyze Glasgow Coma scale, then analyze vital signs including consciousness. When was the patient normal? Can the patient open both eyes spontaneously? Can the patient talk or make noise relevant to age? Can the patient walk or move extremities relevant to age? Here are further guidelines. |
Are there any differences between cardiac arrest and a coma? How do you know a person is in a coma? How do you know a person is not in a coma? How do you know a human being has collapsed and needs cardiopulmonary resuscitation? Are there any differences between cardiac arrest and a coma? Yes. Cardiac arrest: What are the findings? Sudden collapse No pulse No breathing Loss of consciousness Sometimes other signs and symptoms occur before sudden cardiac arrest. These might include: Chest discomfort Shortness of breath Weakness Palpitations In a coma, the individual has a pulse and is breathing. In a coma, the individual cannot engage in spontaneous eye opening, talking, or walking. How do you know a human being has collapsed and needs cardiopulmonary resuscitation? Start with the coma scale. When should you start on-the-spot cardiopulmonary resuscitation? Was the patient able to see, talk, and move a few minutes earlier? Yes. Can the patient open both eyes spontaneously? No. Can the patient talk or make noises relevant to age? No. Can the patient walk or move their extremities relevant to age? No. Put your hand on the radial pulse. Is there a pulse? No. Put your hand on the chest. Is there respiratory movement? No. The patient was able to see, talk, and move a few minutes earlier. There is no pulse, no breath movement, and/or no heart sounds at this point. Start cardiopulmonary resuscitation. |
Cardiac Arrest |
How many causes are there? At least 47. What is done in a critical care unit or medical emergency unit? 1. Constant and close monitoring of the patient. 2. Support for the organ systems of the patient using specific equipment. 3. Medication to keep the body functioning normally until the patient recovers. What is the treatment? Fix the underlying cause. Here are further guidelines. |
How will you further research and investigate negligence because healthcare executives mentioned that the entities and those who gave them this job did not have the skills and knowledge of a human being in a coma despite at least 6,806,029 individuals going into coma and dying from 2019 to March 8, 2023?
See the deaths from January 1, 2019, until March 8, 2023. They falsely gave viral infections as the cause of all these deaths. Not all of these deaths were due to viral infections. All auditors must know that there are at least 47 causes of coma that need proper treatment. Investigators: What did you understand? Administrators: What did you understand? Audience: What did you understand? |