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This [mHealth device] could've have been helpful because I really never knew when I was going to fall, and it seemed like my condition was escaping a diagnosis, until my physician realized I was taking too much medication.
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My best guess is that today a physician's bias makes all these personal decisions for patients in a majority of the cases without the patient (or sometimes even the physician) realizing what "preferences " are being incorporated into their recommendations.
"I think we as physicians realized that, in the first place, you couldn't buck that type," Marcus Conant, a pioneer in developing ways to share information with his patients, said about his experiences in the earlier days of the epidemic.
Patients appear to also underreport their incidence of side effects from drugs; for example, direct consultation with 240 patients with asthma also showed they experienced a higher incidence of side effects than their physicians realized [ 21].
About 50 years ago, enlightened physicians realized the weakness of this approach; they agreed to suspend their personal prejudices temporarily and subject their preferred treatment to a head-on comparison with a treatment championed by other doctors.
Analytic and compassionate physicians realized that, in the face of little or no threat of an attack, widespread use of a potentially toxic vaccine was not in the best interest of their patients.
As physicians realized that such dismal outcomes were no longer acceptable, experts came together under the auspices of the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC) to develop a set of evidence-based management strategies for severe sepsis and septic shock which would be of practical use for the bedside physician [ 6].
When telling their stories physicians realized that by avoiding one evil they unintentionally opened the door to the worse evil by not being sensitive enough to the patient's wishes, failing the relatives by not bringing up the crucial problem for discussion and ultimately failing themselves by not being true to their own values.
As predicted, "the survey became an intervention of sorts to help physicians realize what they didn't know," said Quinn.
So it was difficult to make receptionists and physicians realize the value of the FMG.
They become tired, hungry, worry about the bills, their children, their practice, hospital policies, etc. Nonetheless, most physicians realize and understand what appropriate actions are necessary in regard to the most ill and poorest of patients.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com