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#crohns colotis
r0ttenbunni · 1 year
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So turns out I’m not crazy and my therapist was telling me it was metaphysical was wrong because seeing things for about 1-2 years before being diagnosed with epilepsy is actually normal ???
No schizophrenia. Just epilepsy. Not a witch. Need a new therapist. Apparently that was completely normal and I was thrown down the metaphysical Wicca rabbit hole for no reason. It’s normal to have paranoia or to even see things before epileptic seizures apparently. I was normal and I did not need to burn sage and buy crystals. Wow …
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qrepublikmedid · 4 years
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Medical ID by QRepublik
Who should wear medical identification? 
It may surprise you to learn hat even pregnant women may need to wear a medical id bracelet.Having a baby is an amazing and beautiful experience, however not all expectant Mom's encounter smooth sailing. Some may develop Gestational Diabetes or Toxemia, two possible complications of pregnancy. In the event one cannot not speak for themselves, it is always best to be wearing some form of medical identification to alert medical professionals
Or take the situation of the Type 2 Diabetic who is Not on Insulin. Well...did you know they can also have Hypoglycemic reactions. In the event of low blood sugar, it is imperative to give the patient quick sugar, such as orange juice, then call for help. 
Here is a partial list of the illnesses of which we recommend wearing medical alert jewelry:
Medical IDentification jewlery should be worn by those who have:
    A
* Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm — see Aortic Aneurysm
* Acanthamoeba Infection
* ACE (Adverse Childhood Experiences)
* Acinetobacter Infection
* Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) — see HIV/AIDS
* Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) — see HIV/AIDS
* Adenovirus Infection
* Adenovirus Vaccination
* ADHD [Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder]
* Adult Vaccinations
* Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE)
* AFib, AF (Atrial fibrillation)
* African Trypanosomiasis — see Sleeping Sickness
* Agricultural Safety — see Farm Worker Injuries
* AHF (Alkhurma hemorrhagic fever)
* AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome)
* AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome)
* Alkhurma hemorrhagic fever (AHF)
* ALS [Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis]
* Alzheimer's Disease
* Amebiasis, Intestinal [Entamoeba histolytica infection]
* American Indian and Alaska Native Vaccination
* American Trypanosomiasis — see Chagas Disease
* Amphibians and Fish, Infections from — see Fish and Amphibians, Infections from
* Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis — see ALS
* Anaplasmosis, Human
* Ancylostoma duodenale Infection, Necator americanus Infection — see Human Hookworm
* Angiostrongylus Infection
* Animal-Related Diseases
* Anisakiasis — see Anisakis Infection
* Anisakis Infection [Anisakiasis]
* Anthrax [Bacillus anthracis Infection]
* Anthrax Vaccination
* Antibiotic and Antimicrobial Resistance
* Antibiotic Use, Appropriate
* see also Get Smart about Antibiotics Week
* Aortic Aneurysm
* Aortic Dissection — see Aortic Aneurysm
* Arenavirus Infection
* Arthritis
* Childhood Arthritis
* Fibromyalgia
* Gout
* Osteoarthritis (OA)
* Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)
* Ascariasis — see Ascaris Infection
* Ascaris Infection [Ascariasis]
* Aseptic Meningitis — see Viral Meningitis
* Aspergillosis — see Aspergillus Infection
* Aspergillus Infection [Aspergillosis]
* Asthma
* Atrial fibrillation (AFib, AF)
* Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder — see ADHD
* Autism
* see also Genetics and Genomics
* Avian Influenza
    B
* Bacterial Meningitis
* Bariatric Surgery
* Birth Defects
* Black Lung [Coal Workers' Pneumoconioses]
* blood clot
* Blood Disorders
* Blood Thinner
* Breast Cancer
    C
* Cancer
* Colorectal (Colon) Cancer
* Cerebral Palsy
* Cervical Cancer
* Chronic Fatigue Syndrome — see Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/ Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
* Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
* Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)
* Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy — see CTE
* Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD)
* CKD (Chronic Kidney Disease)
* Clotting Disorders
* CMV (Cytomegalovirus Infection)
* Coal Workers' Pneumoconioses — see Black Lung
* Coccidioidomycosis — see Valley Feve
* Crohn’s Disease — see Inflammatory Bowel Disease
* Cytomegalovirus Infection (CMV)
    D
* Deep Vein Thrombosis (DVT)
* Dengue Fever (DF)
* Diabetes (T1D, T2D)
* Down Syndrome [Trisomy 21]
    E
* Epilepsy
* Epstein-Barr Virus Infection (EBV Infection)
     F
* Fibromyalgia
    G
* Gastro Esophageal Reflux Disease (GERD)
* Gestational Diabetes
* Gout
* Guillain-Barré Syndrome
    H
* Hand, Foot, and Mouth Disease (HFMD)
* Hansen's Disease
* Hantavirus Pulmonary Syndrome (HPS)
* Hearing impairment
* Heart Disease [Cardiovascular Health]
* Heat Stress
* Hemophilia
* Hypertension (High Blood Pressure
* Hypoglycemia
    I
* Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)
* Impetigo — see Group A Strep Infection
    K
* Kawasaki Disease (KD)
* Kawasaki Syndrome — see Kawasaki Disease
* Kidney Disease (CKD)
    L
* La Crosse Encephalitis (LAC)
* Latex Allergy
* Lou Gehrig's Disease — see ALS
* Lung Cancer
* Lupus (SLE) [Systemic lupus erythematosus]
* Lyme Disease [Borrelia burgdorferi Infection]
* Lymphatic Filariasis
* Lymphedema — see Lymphatic Filariasis
* Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis (LCM)
   M
* Mad Cow Disease (BSE) — see Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
* Malaria
* Marburg Hemorrhagic Fever
* MD (Muscular Dystrophy)
* Meningitis
* Meningococcal Disease
* Mental Health 
* Mononucleosis, Infectious — see Epstein-Barr Virus Infection
* MRSA [Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus]
    N
* No MRI
    O
* OA (Osteoarthritis)
* Obesity and Genetics
* Oral Cancer
* Organ Donor
* Organ Transplant
* Ovarian Cancer
    P
* PAD (Peripheral Arterial Disease)
* Parasitic Diseases
* PE (Pulmonary Embolism)
* Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
* Polio 
* Pontiac Fever — see Legionnaires' Disease
* Pregnancy
* Prostate Cancer
* Pulmonary Embolism (PE) — see Deep Vein Thrombosis
* Pulmonary Hypertension
    R
* Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)
    S
* Scarlet Fever
* Seizure Disorder
* Shingles
* Sickle Cell Anemia
* Stroke
* Systemic Lupus
    T
* Thrombosis (Clotting Disorder)
* Toureette Syndrome
* Toxemia
* Traumatic Brain Injury
    U
* Ulcerative Colotis
* Uterine Cancer
    V
* Valley Fever
* Vision Impairment
* Von Willebrand Disease (VWD)
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New Post has been published on http://www.paraphrasetool.net/definition-of-a-footnote-and-proper-usage/
Definition of a Footnote and Everything You Need to Know for Proper Usage
What Is a Footnote, When It’s Used
A Footnote can be described as a kind of documentation used mainly by academic writers, which shows below a page of a particular text, as the name means. Footnotes are usually numbered in a sequential order all through the book or text and they have diverse kinds of content, including extensive discussion resembling the text itself or concise bibliographic record and can be generated sometimes through a free paraphrase generator.
Footnote is used to acknowledge and give credit to sources of any borrowed, paraphrased or summarized material. They are premeditated to refer readers to the exact pages of the works listed in the Bibliography, References or Works Cited section. The fonts of footnotes are very small and occasionally in an alternating typeface in some cases. To some extent, it serves as a means of telling the readers that the notes are minor to the major text. It always contains the name of the author, publication information, publication title, publication date as well as the page numbers, if you are using the source for the first time. At the end of the sentence referring to the source, footnotes should go well with a superscript number.
Purpose of Footnotes
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Recognition: Allowing the entire universe understand the fact that the success of the work would not have been possible without the support of their spouse, for instance.
Protection: Making all efforts to avoid distortion of data, fabrication of evidence, accusations of fraud and plagiarism.
Provenance: Talk about prominent thinkers to confirm the academic heritage of their ideas, and allowing other readers to know the distinctiveness of other members of the intellectual club they want to be related with.
Commentary: Reacting to their texts, including tirades, tangents, clarifications and anecdotes.
Tracing: This is revealing exactly the place a fact or an idea was taken from the work of someone else, in such a manner that an inquisitive reader will have no trouble in going straight to the source.
Validation: Author discovering and showing that they are improving on the ideas of their predecessors.
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When Footnote Is Used
There are several occasions when footnotes can be used. Such paraphrasing techniques include the following:
Anytime you paraphrase or quote a particular source, provide a note.
If you cite statistics or other information from a certain source, make sure you mention that source.
Content footnotes are used to provide additional information on a particular topic not directly associated with the text. You should shun adding irrelevant information or writing long paragraphs because content footnote should be brief.
Copyright permission footnotes can be used to cite reprinted or adapted materials in paper, particularly quotations, tables and data sets that are more than 400 words.
When you discover a special interpretation or a particular shared by one or a few scholar, you must cite the source.
How to Format Footnotes, What Styles to Use
You can format a footnote in two ways:
Listed under the relevant page
Gather all altogether on a new page, next to the References page(s)
The title Footnotes should be centralized at the top of the page if the footnotes are assembled on a separate page. However, don’t format the title with quotation marks, underlings, italics and bold.
Align the very first line of every footnote 5 spaces beginning from the margin on the left, and double-space the whole page. Format each footnote number as a superscript, and site it after all punctuation marks apart from a long dash (—).
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Few Examples of Footnotes
Sample #1
It is widespread that patients who suffer from Colotis and Crohn can develop a lot of incapacitating signs.¹
Footnote:
¹See the CNFA.is website for additional information as regards the signs that Colitis and Crohn patients may experience.
Sample #2
A wide range of study recommends that increasing fundamental literacy skills in early childhood can contribute to great success in obtaining powerful understanding skills later in school.²
Footnote:
²A wide range of study based articles and ideas for increasing early learning skills can be instituted at www.atomicrockets.com.
Sample #3
Despite the fact that it is normally implicit that all huge dogs need abundant amounts of exercise that would stop them from being appropriate pets for slighter habitations, latest study has recommended that this is an erroneous belief.³
Footnote:
³See Smith (2013) to discover further information that is particular to huge dogs and exercise needs.
Sample #4
Malpractice law suit filings have restriction that might stop the wounded from trailing the route necessary to get compensation for injuries as a result of negligence by nurses, doctors, or other staff of the hospital, in many states.4
Footnote:
4Refer to BenJohn (2007) to get more information concerning limitations by state
Sample Footnote #5
More study is behind the idea chocolate can have positive impacts on the body when consumed, even as nearly all candy and sweet treats are alleged to have a negative effect on those with, or vulnerable to having diabetes.5
Footnote:
5Make a reference to Braundein (2011) for certain gains of chocolate consumption.
Conclusion
The footnote of your text is very important, particularly when you are writing your term paper or project. It allows you to give credit to sources of any borrowed, paraphrased or summarized material. The above facts about footnote will guide you in writing your next text with ease, give credit to sources of any borrowed, paraphrased or summarized material
Do you still want to learn more about footnote and how to write one perfectly? Click here!
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r0ttenbunni · 1 year
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If anyone knows the process of reporting things to the board of doctors when you’ve been mistreated at hospitals and if there are consequences to doing such PLEASE HELP ME. I was mistreated, called crazy, called anxious, avoiding the issue, avoiding testing, and over a period of TWELVE MONTHS. I don’t want to report this if I can’t do this anonymously I’m already scared enough of these doctors mistreating me.
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r0ttenbunni · 7 years
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When you get to the GI doctor and he immodestly starts putting on his gloves
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r0ttenbunni · 7 years
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Okay but those sprays you use on the toilet before you do your business are actual magic though
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