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Inyongo is bile, according to doctors. To Zulu, Xhosa, Swazi and Ndebele patients Inyongo is both an illness and bile. It is a complex illness, a "Crypto-illness." The Pedi, Sotho and Tswana patients call it Nyooko or Kgala. Inyonga to the Tsonga and Dzinyongwe in ThiVenda. What the doctors know about Inyongo and what the Nguni patient understands about Inyongo are miles apart. This book is a fun way of bridging that gap.
Ever walked out of a doctor's office feeling that you got very little in exchange for your coin? Do you want to change that? Change a few things: - Be the patient but start thinking like a doc. - Learn the Art, Science, Business and Politics of Medicine. - Get to know where your diagnosis hides. 1) The best hiding place for your diagnosis is in your "story", the medical history that you tell your doc -learn how to tell a good "illness story" to your doc. 2) The diagnosis also hides "beyond the flesh" (outside the flesh) -get to know how to help doc get a diagnosis, wherever it hides. -Get a BIG Bang for your Health BUCK! -read this book and get the worth of every coin you spend on a medical consultation.
Doctors behaving badly, but well … Misconduct is a bad way of doing good. It showcases a doctor practicing what he preaches. Professional Misconduct keeps you far from doctors (if you practice it). It is bad for the doctor’s image, but good for your health. This cheeky misconduct prevents pain and lifestyle diseases. It doesn’t harm patients or destroy doctors. Misconduct looks fine on patients, but unprofessional when performed by doctors. Patients don’t always do what doctors say, they do what doctors do. This is where misconduct comes in. Professional Misconduct is about a doctor doing good, but unprofessionally.
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The Celts and the Teuton started westward from the cradle of the human race, spreading themselves over Europe; while other members of the same stock went eastward, extending themselves over wide tracts of Asia. From the Celts, the Greeks, the Romans, and the Teutons have sprung the chief nations in whose possession Europe still remains. It is interesting to think that the brothers who parted thousands of years ago, somewhere in teeming Asia, the one going east and the other west, are now meeting again on the plains of Hindostan. Their movements during those thousands of years have encircled the whole earth. Fiercely have they fought and disputed over every inch of the ground which one or oth...
Reprint of the original, first published in 1866.
Vols. for 1828-1934 contain the Proceedings at large of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.