View allAll Photos Tagged medical
A brief description of this photo:
A while ago, someone who shall remain nameless, had put out a photo with a catchy description, inviting participation. That said, I took part in said event only to suffer multiple injuries, the only one of which that I made known was the damage done to my hand by their apparatus. With that said, I was kindly rebuked in my mentioning of my injured hand. Then...in another encounter with said individual, I was told to send them my medical bill...well, since they offered. I took them up on it and on my way to mailing my bill to them, since it was tax season and they could afford my medical BILLS...ahem. I went to my mailbox to submit my envelope and tripped over another ill kept SL sidewalk, thus causing me to lose my balance and my crutch and in doing so, my envelope was taken away by a strong wind... a suspicious wind, mind you but nonetheless..my envelope was lost as well as my medical BILLS, that they were going to pay. The only proof of this, is one of the many CCTV that SL has in our cities.
If the person who is responsible for my broken hand sees this, my bill is forthcoming either by SL Postal Carrier or a strong Windlight wind!!!!
Now I'm off to pop some Oxy, as all this typing aggravated my hands, both good and broken!!!!
PS If anything is misspelled or is seen as an incomplete thought... I was in extreme pain typing this and reliving the whole experience.
One of the most used pieces of equipment... I cannot imagine how many syringes are used for dosing... here with food colors :-)
For Smile on Saturday#Magnets, my heart-sharped medical magnet.
I wear it on my left shoulder,so that this copper part lies on the skin, then the shirt goes, and over the shirt I put a nice little metal plate that holds the magnet. The heart itself consists of three parts, copper, magnet and metal.
HSoS!
Medical Museion (Danish: Medicinsk Museion) is a museum and research unit in Copenhagen, Denmark, dedicated to the history of health and disease in a cultural perspective. Part of the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences at University of Copenhagen, its principal area of interest is the recent history of the material and iconographic culture of biomedicine. It is based in a listed building from 1787 on Bredgade in Frederiksstaden.
The collections were founded by a circle of medical doctors in Copenhagen in 1906. The first exhibition of medical history opened on 22 August 1907 as part of the celebrations of the 50th anniversary of the Danish Medical Association. The museum was then located in the Rigsdag building in Fredericiagade, which now houses the High Court of Eastern Denmark, but moved to its current premises in 1947.
The museum has been part of University of Copenhagen since 1918 and was called the Museum of Medical History until 2004 when it received its current name.
Doctor: "...."
Me: "What?"
Doctor: "...."
Me: "WHAT?"
Doctor: "I SAID! You're Going Deaf!"
Me: "Well Doc, That's A Little Hard To Hear."
Arr Arr...ahem
"I showed my heart to the doctor
He said I'd just have to quit
Then he wrote himself a prescription
and your name was mentioned in it
then he locked himself in a library shelf
with the details of our honeymoon
and I hear from the nurse that he's gotten much worse
and his practice is all in a ruin."
Leonard Cohen
These fellows were just taking off from the parking lot when I arrived to work. Just a week later I myself needed assistance when I crashed my bike and broke my shoulder. Ambulance arrived fast and they took really good care of me. Huge respect for every rescue and medical personnel out there.
Now I'm an one armed photographer for a while. I do most of my photography hand held, but now I think it's time to brush dust off from the tripod.
Taken with Canon FD 50mm F3.5 Macro / APS-C Sensor / Darktable.
Medical doctors talking in the hospital., Selective focus on senior doctor in the middle. © chrisfutcher.com
Licence my images at iStockphoto
Medical personnel work diligently on a wounded U.S. Marine inside the Casualty Receiving Area, (CASREC) aboard the Military Sealift Command hospital ship USNS Comfort (T-AH 20). The Comfort is deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, the multi-national coalition effort to liberate the Iraqi people, eliminate Iraq's weapons of mass destruction and end the regime of Saddam Hussein. U.S. Navy photo by Photographer's Mate 1st Class Kevin H. Tierney.
And don't forget the other great news - the 1/6 scale version of Smart Doll - Pocket Doll.
View more at www.dannychoo.com/en/post/27346/Medical+Mirai.html
The medical train, also called “Katastrophenzug”, “catastrophe train” in English, is a set of railway carriages that were used as an ambulance and mobile hospital. There were 14 trains which were used during the first and second world wars, distributed all over the former German Democratic Republic. Unfortunately, most of those K-trains were scrapped by now. This one is preserved and looked after by a non-profit association which deals with the preservation of historical rail vehicles.
The Mobile Medical Unit is like a space ambulance/ER. Comes complete with two operating/recovery tables and all the supplies needed to stabilize patients before their extraction. Huge sensor array guides the MMU with uplink to the carrier vessel for increased guidance.
Old Army medical train. Not used during the war but for exercises. Much unrestored and original
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This old and small underground medical facility is abandoned these days. There are still a lot of remaining from the past inside this underground bunker. It was definitely fun to explore this small place. Because it was pretty dark there we had to lighten up the room with flashlight to make a picture. I hope you enjoy it.