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The phrase "are walk in" is not correct in English.
Did you mean "a walk-in"? You can use "a walk-in" to refer to someone who arrives without an appointment, often in contexts like businesses or services.
Example: "We welcome walk-ins at our clinic, so feel free to come by anytime."
Alternatives: "drop-in" or "walk-up".
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"A good portion of our guests are walk-in business".
Toilet rooms are separate, and showers – heated by solar panels – are walk-in.
There also are walk-in closets in cherry wood, while the wallpaper comes with a metal finish in one apartment, another is in horsehair plaster.
"There are walk-ins here," said one American official.
Most PHCs are walk-in facilities, similar to urgent care centers in the United States.
The six parameters are walk-in arrival rate, no-show rate, post-triage rate, new patient rate, number of double booking, and nurse-only appointment rate.
These facilities are walk-in clinics that offer medical services at a minimum of 12 hours per workday and 8 hours/ per day on weekends, 365 days a year.
For the most part, almost all were walk-ins".
At the GP-C 100% of the encounters were walk-ins.
1901 encounters were walk-ins and underwent further analysis (ED 1133, GP-C 768).
Most of the children were walk-in patients without referral from the primary health care clinics.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com