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An examination room in a typical doctor's office. Note the examination table, a key feature of almost all such rooms worldwide. A doctor's office in American English, a doctor's surgery in British English, or a doctor's practice, is a medical facility in which one or more medical doctors, usually general practitioners (GP), receive and treat patients.
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In 1938, 43% of the adult population was covered by a panel doctor. [39] When the National Health Service was established in 1948 this extended to the whole population. The practice would be responsible for the patient record which was kept in a " Lloyd George envelope " [ 40 ] and would be transferred if necessary to another practice if the ...
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Category:Pages using infobox medical person with unknown parameters (2) Category:Pages using infobox medical person with conflicting parameters (0) Category:No local image but image on Wikidata (9,077) – Used by Template:Wikidata image to track articles where an infobox has no image but Wikidata has an image name.
Archer also boasts of three inventions—a vapour-bath, a new kind of oven and a chariot which enabled one horse to do the work of two. The only interest attaching to these discreditable works and their author is the singular fact that a man who might in the present day even be liable to prosecution, should in the reign of Charles II have enjoyed the status of the king's physician.
Prior IA, Evans JG, Morrison RB, Rose BS. The Carterton study. 6. Patterns of vascular, respiratory, rheumatic and related abnormalities in a sample of New Zealand European adults. N Z Med J. 1970 Sep;72(460):169-77. PMID 5273561. Prior IA, Davidson F. The epidemiology of diabetes in Polynesians and Europeans in New Zealand and the Pacific.
Source/Photographer: Image extracted from page 306 of volume 1 of Old and New London, Illustrated, by Walter Thornbury.Original held and digitised by the British Library. Copied from Flic