首页|Handheld ultrasound and diagnosis of cardiovascular disease at the bedside
Handheld ultrasound and diagnosis of cardiovascular disease at the bedside
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NSTL
Elsevier
In 1903, Dr。 William Osier advocated for reform of medical education to emphasize bedside teaching, recommending "no teaching without a patient for a text and the best teaching is that taught by the patient himself" (1)。 More than a century later, new voices in the profession echo that sentiment, suggesting that diagnosis has again strayed from the bedside。 Some propose that technology has usurped the clinical examination at the expense of patient care and the cognitive development of practitioners。 Proponents of bedside medicine lament that ward rounds have been reduced to examining a patient's electronic medical record and clicking computerized order sets based on results of myriad prior diagnostic tests。
Wiley,B.、Mohanty,B.
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Zena and Michael A. Wiener Cardiovascular Institute, Mount Sinai Medical Center, Icahn School of