Friday, February 11, 2011

Beauty Therapist Reference Letter

THE "clothed themselves"



remember with particular affection that interpretation was Manquiña Manuel Pazos, Galicia a drug dealer in "Airbag" (Juanma Bajo Ulloa, 1997). Must see the game that gave a simple falling point of a word, like a ripe fruit in summer, how it changes the meaning of a word when someone confuses their meaning.
I had the opportunity to read these anthologies of nonsense that occasionally show themselves in real and virtual worlds, usually compiled anthologies of nonsense in the classroom homelands or in doctors' offices. A deceased elderly patient, witty where they exist, I had to take some pills to control your blood called Bernardine. " I really wanted to refer to the drug Brinerdina ®, a cocktail of diuretic and Rauwolfia alkaloid that was used in the heroic days for the treatment of hypertension. Another gentleman soothed the pain of osteoarthritis with "lily ," a nickname floral water and more euphonious to defining the popular Neobrufen ®, perhaps the most famous anti-inflammatory in the world. Finally, one patient managed to allay their anxiety at bedtime taking one tablet every night " tranquilizin ", lo and behold a more convenient to define the well-known anxiolytic Trankimazin ®.
Now that electronic recipes and generally reports are written on the computer, it is more difficult to go wrong with the name of the medication. Much blame for the miscommunication between doctors and patients have the doctors, intent on using a complex jargon ridden hermetisms.

But tit for tat, the acerbic Aloysius just flood my email with some malicious phrases culled from some medical reports.

Here we leave some, as evidence to posterity: "slipped on the ice and his legs were in opposite directions in early December, "the second day after surgery, his knee was better, and the third was completely gone," the patient is depressed since she began visiting, in 1983 "," 69 year old male subject, decrepit but apparently healthy, active mental state, but forgetful, "the patient has occasional headaches, constant, infrequent," said he had been constipated for most of his life until 1989, when she divorced, "the patient left the hospital feeling much better, except for her original complaints, "and finally, the icing on the cake:" The patient expired on the floor, quietly. "

should be reviewed carefully all these clothed themselves because of all it is well known that has a mouth, think again.


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