View allAll Photos Tagged medicalschool
Shadow cast by a corrugated fence with circular perforations onto steps striped with black non-slip material.
Once upon a time, I lived in 2 states at the same time and commuted 5.5 hours each way, every week (ish), for 2 years. I'm glad that's over, although I still love to drive
The crocuses are out in force around the Medical School on the Univeristy campus. a great space of purple.
Hradec Králové / Czech Republic
Learning Center of Charles University in public Hospital
Nedávejte mi prosím do komentářů žádná "ocenění skupin" atp. Mažu je.
I'm not a collector of jewelry. Very un-girl like I know. I do like to have a few pairs of nice earrings, I have an opal necklace I'm fond of and I wear two rings at all times. One is my wedding set, the other is this ring.
I never got a high school ring. The first "class ring" I ever wanted to get was this one. I was 38 when I got it. It still makes me smile. As you can see it's got some wear and tear on it now.
I went back to school to get my medical degree (MSPAS) when I was 35. It was one of the best and most difficult things I've ever done. I sometimes hear people about that age talk about going back... and I smile, and encourage them to DO IT!
Although I whine and groan about being tired and working too much, I have to say I love my chosen profession. Some days it makes me cry, some days it makes me frustrated, most days it wears me out... but overall, I love doing what I do. It's not this way for everyone, and I know it. I consider myself to be quite a lucky person because of it. :o)
This was taken behind the Medical School car Park. It was a low level picture and catches the light nicely
I've never been a guest of the University of California Irvine Medical Center — in Orange, California. The place is ringed with No Trespassing signs, not exactly welcoming if your loved one is laying on one of the beds inside. Fortunately there was no drama, no trauma, no ventilators, no endotracheal tubes, and no intravenous drips with mysterious contents for my friends and I today. Just some guy with a camera doing what Flickr users do. The place looks new and is probably ready to continue business after the most righteous of earthquakes.
I accosted someone going to work here by asking if this was a Trauma Center. The employee nodded yes. "Level 1 adult?" I continued. "Yes," came the response. This is jargon for a teaching hospital that has at least a few thousand (2,500?) trauma cases per year. Many are addressed by very capable Residents. I'd go here willingly if there were a need.
Ambulances and fire engines from Westminster, Anaheim, and Orange dropped by. There was a Orange County Fire Authority 100-foot tractor-drawn aerial with a three-axle tractor, the driver managed to park in a wide part of the driveway.
That road in the background, going straight for the mountains, is Chapman Avenue, if you're looking for this place on a map. The top of the ridge line is under 6,000 feet (1,829 meters). The mountains are part of the Department of Agriculture's Cleveland National Forest. The patchwork of forest lands continues 85 miles south to maybe 10-15 miles north of the US-Mexico border.
This clumsily hand held photo is brought to you by natural streetlights, the ambient light of Orange County.
Hospitals are a little like a beach. The next wave comes in, and the footprints of your pain and suffering, your delivery and recovery, are obliterated; the sheets are changed.
— Anna Quindlen
Please do not copy this image.
Journalism Grade Image.
Source: 4,100x1,800 16-bit TIF file.
University of Nevada School of Medicine medical students Chad Goffstein and Miren Guenechea-Sola can apply what they learn in the lecture hall during mock patient exams at the Clinical Simulation Center, Dec. 2, 2009. Photo by Edgar Antonio Nunez.
A University of Nevada School of Medicine internal medicine resident, left, works with UNLV nursing students during an emergency medical scenario, Dec. 2, 2009. Photo by Edgar Antonio Nunez.
University of Nevada School of Medicine student Casie Schedel, foreground, helps out during a simulated emergency medical scenario during the Clinical Simulation Center's opening, Dec. 2, 2009. Photo by Edgar Antonio Nunez.
Two of a collection of carved pumpkins by the Medical School building at the University of British Columbia
The ornate doorway of the old Queen's College medical building, Paradise Street, Birmingham city centre, April 2024
By Tomasz Wasik
TlW Photography
When you don't have your DSLR, whip out that iPhone!
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© Copyright. All rights are reserved.
Please do not use, copy or edit any of my photographs without my written permission.
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The former school for the iron-mining community of Lakeville, NY was expanded upon and became a research lab for NYU's School of medicine's department of Environmental Medicine. A few years ago the labs were consolidated back in New York, and this building is now empty and up for sale. The power is still on.
Graduation ceremony for the University of Minnesota Medical School, Northrop Auditorium, Minneapolis - the green edging on his hood indicates medicine, the length is doctoral, and the inner color indicate what medical school he graduated from, in this case the University of California, worn by Dr. Michael DeGroot, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry
Autumn is in its final throw and this picture of the medical school shows the vibrant colours that are around.
University of Minnesota Medical School, Twin Cities Campus, Minneapolis, Minnesota - each year nationally there are about 50,000 applicants and only about half that matriculate to medical school. Many of those rejected would have made fine physicians. The road to medical school is long and grueling with challenging course work and other experiences to demonstrate fitness for medical school and the profession.
Canadian Forces Health Services Training Centre Borden CFHSTC at Canadian Forces Base Borden located in Simcoe County Ontario Canada
(3/365) This is where the magic happens. This is where I spend most of my days and nights of studying and what-not. I think a person's habitat can reveal a lot about them, so I thought I would share mine.
Built in 1637, the Anatomical Theater in Bologna, Italy is housed within Palazzo dell'Archiginnasio - the home of the University of Bologna from 1563-1803. Dissection of human bodies took place on the table in this room as future doctors were viewed by students, professors and of course an Inquisition priest ensuring the souls of the dead were not compromised during dissection. The room is surrounded by busts and statues of those respected by the medical community, including two skinless statues on the back wall representing Hippocrates and Galen. The room suffered severe damage during the Allied bombings of WWII, but was rebuilt in exact detail from paintings and pictures found throughout the university.
© LMGFotography 2013; please do not use without permission.
Jun 4 2007
I spent a while on photoshop yesterday so today I decided to study while I was doing my 365 day/Class with Dave shot. Voila: The Brachial Plexus.
1. Text - The subject of the photo must be text (letters and/or numbers in any language). The text must be photographed, not added in post-processing.
Take a Class With Dave and Dave
Memorizing the Brachial Plexus:
Each nerve is made up of several roots from the spinal cord and there is a handy way to memorize which roots make up which nerves. Take your left hand and name the thumb C5, then your first finger C6, all the way to your pinky, which is T1. Then say the following phrase:
3 Musketeers (hold up first 3 fingers - C5,6,7 make up the Musculocutaneous nerve)
Assassinated (hold up a "gun" with your hand - C5,6 make up the Axillary nerve)
5 Mice (C5-T1 make up the Median nerve)
5 Rats (C5-T1 make up the Radial nerve)
and 2 Unicorns (C8, T1 make up the Ulnar nerve)
Also, as the 5 nerves form, the brachial plexus mixes up all the parts and each time parts combine, the segments have different names. The mnemonic to memorize each segment is "Randy Travis Drinks Cold Beer:"
Roots (C5, C6, C7, C8. T1)
Trunks (Upper, Middle, Lower)
Divisions (Each Trunk divides into an Anterior and Posterior segment)
Cords (Lateral, Medial, Posterior)
Branches (Musculocutaneous, Axillary, Radial, Ulnar, and Median)
Finally, there are two lesions of the brachial plexus that love to be tested on the Boards:
1. Erb-Duchenne Palsy (waiter's tip deformity) - this is due to a strong blow to the top of the shoulder, or a traumatic birth where the shoulder sticks in the birthing canal. This forces causes damage to the C5 and C6 parts of the brachial plexus (upper trunk) thus leading to a limp arm with forearm pronated and palm facing dorsally. (The deltoid, teres minor, supraspinatus, infraspinatus, biceps, and briachialis are paralyzed.)
2. Klumpke's Palsy (claw hand) - this is due to a forcible pull of the arm upwards, like when grabbing onto something when falling (Yes, James Bond and most action heroes probably would have this palsy in real life). This damages C8 and T1 (the lower trunk) which results in the 4th and 5th fingers (mostly) being stuck in a flexed position and the thumb not able to abduct. (The intrinsic hand muscles innervated by the Ulnar nerve are paralyzed.)
That concludes today's lesson.
Explore #304
Some times you just need to hear from the medical experts.
Even if you do not like what they have to say.
Tristan Holt
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May 24 2007
My second tribute to the genius who is Gary Larson. I found that diagram of the liver on wikipedia while I was studying and I thought it was the funniest thing I have ever seen. I laughed until I cried. That diagram is so helpful! Buahaha!!!
Anyway, it inspired me to do the Far Side's "cow diagram one" for my photo of the day. In this shot you get to see the many sides of Ewa today whilst she is cramming for her 2 year comprehensive exam which is tomorrow. Gah!!!
See if you can find all 7 Ewa's:
1. Class Clown Ewa
2. Bored and Tired Ewa
3. Distracted Ewa
4. Submitted to her own Advertising Ewa
5. Forgotten Everything she has Learned in the Past Two Years Ewa
6. Just Ewa
7. Not Even There Ewa
Explore #215
A Jedi is a guardian of peace and justice, able to wield a lightsaber and attuned to the power of the Force, an energy that connects all living things.
Pictured are faculty of the University of Minnesota Medical School at commencement with the Jedi being the one in the middle, a surgeon, a professor and a colonel. Northrup Auditorium on the campus of the University of Minnesota Twin Cities, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Leland Parker Mcguire in “The Test Subject”
Science has many dark secrets.
There are none as dark when you get some clown that thinks it is a scientist and there is nothing to stop it.
The screams and wails in the dark halls are the only progress that it seems to have.
The progress must be made, it can always get more Test Subjects.
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Models:
Clown: Will always be Unknown ( We do not want it coming after us!! )
Test Subject: Leland Parker Mcguire
www.instagram.com/leland_parker_mcguire
@leland_parker_mcguire
#art #halloween #creepy #horrorfan #scary #circus #joker #makeup #medicine #doctor #doctors #nurse #hospital #medicalstudent #health #medstudent #medschool #surgery #goth #usmle #horrorfilm #mbbs #horrorlover #spooky #anatomy #horrormovie #neet #medicalschool #horrorgram #boy
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** Warning ** These are shots used for giving starting actors and models a look to get roles in the Horror genre.
** Disclaimer ** No Children ( Or Parents ) was harmed in this photoshoot, all prop use, Outfits, and poses was done with strict parental supervision.
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Drivers Photography
We create Character looks for Actors and Actresses to develop a diverse portfolio.
These Characters are then brought to life thru photo and video and tested in short films and demo reels.
added to Cream of the Crop as my most viewed (although i'm not quite sure why, maybe its the shock factor)
The Medical University of South Carolina - MUSC aerial view in Charleston, South Carolina - © 2023 David Oppenheimer - Performance Impressions aerial photography archives - performanceimpressions.com
865 is seen exiting Teviot Place and turning into Forrest Road in the heart of the University of Edinburgh's central area. On the left is the Doctors pub ( so named as the building behind the bus is the Medical School). Service 41 crosses the city from the University's science and engineering campus at King's Buildings in the south to Cramond, one of the city's more expensive suburbs, in the northwest. As new buses are delivered, the current policy seems to be to do away with the upper display showing the line of route ( in this example Blackhall, Mound, Marchmont) and just have the destination and service number as a digital display. On former Edinburgh City Transport buses, the upper display might have as many as five places listed. With Cramond being on the shores of the Firth of Forth, this route and other routes serving Silverknowes, provide ideal access for those wanting coastal walks.
Leland Parker Mcguire in “The Test Subject”
Science has many dark secrets.
There are none as dark when you get some clown that thinks it is a scientist and there is nothing to stop it.
The screams and wails in the dark halls are the only progress that it seems to have.
The progress must be made, it can always get more Test Subjects.
-
Models:
Clown: Will always be Unknown ( We do not want it coming after us!! )
Test Subject: Leland Parker Mcguire
www.instagram.com/leland_parker_mcguire
@leland_parker_mcguire
#art #halloween #creepy #horrorfan #scary #circus #joker #makeup #medicine #doctor #doctors #nurse #hospital #medicalstudent #health #medstudent #medschool #surgery #goth #usmle #horrorfilm #mbbs #horrorlover #spooky #anatomy #horrormovie #neet #medicalschool #horrorgram #boy
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** Warning ** These are shots used for giving starting actors and models a look to get roles in the Horror genre.
** Disclaimer ** No Children ( Or Parents ) was harmed in this photoshoot, all prop use, Outfits, and poses was done with strict parental supervision.
-
Drivers Photography
We create Character looks for Actors and Actresses to develop a diverse portfolio.
These Characters are then brought to life thru photo and video and tested in short films and demo reels.
Founded in 1850, the University of Sydney is Australia's first university and is regarded as one of its most prestigious, ranked as the 27th most reputable university in the world. In 2013, it was ranked 38th and in the top 0.3% in the QS World University Rankings. Five Nobel or Crafoord laureates have been affiliated with the university as graduates and faculty. The University is colloquially known as one of Australia's "Sandstones", a status similar to that of the "Ivy League" in the United States and the "Russell Group" in the United Kingdom.
The university's Coat of Arms, granted by the College of Arms are an amalgamation of the arms of the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and their important figures, heraldry and other references to the two ancient universities are sprawled throughout the university in its architecture and character. Its motto, "Sidere mens eadem mutato" translated literally gives "Though the stars change, the mind is the same", but has been more liberally translated to give, "Sydney University is really just Oxford or Cambridge laterally displaced approximately 12,000 miles".
The 2013 QS World University Rankings placed Sydney in the top 20 in the world in 11 subjects; more than a third of the 30 measured. The University of Sydney was ranked 8th in the world for Education, 9th in Accounting and Finance and 10th in Law. Additionally, Sydney was placed 12th in English Language and Literature, History and Archaeology, Linguistics and Civil Engineering and Structural Engineering, the highest in Australia of those subjects. Psychology at Sydney was ranked 14th, Pharmacy and Pharmacology, and Communication and Media were ranked 16th, and the Sydney Medical School was ranked 17th.
Its main campus has been ranked in the top 10 of the world's most beautiful universities by the British Daily Telegraph, The Huffington Post and Disney Pixar, among others such as Oxford and Cambridge and is spread across the inner-city suburbs of Camperdown and Darlington.
The research and education hub of the Charles Perkins Centre is a 49,500 square metre state-of-the-art building designed to support collaboration and new ways of thinking. Opened for Semester 1 of 2014, the new building comprises a structure of six floors, plus three basement levels, and an area of approximately 49,500 square metres – almost twice the surface area of the Sydney Cricket Ground.
Located on the north-west boundary of the University’s Camperdown Campus, bordering St John's College and next to the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital (RPA) - Sydney's largest hospital and the teaching hospital of the Sydney Medical School. The hub will play a key role in fostering collaboration and multidisciplinary research, creating a research and education precinct with links to nearby affiliated medical research institutes and the hospital.
This building along with the original sandstone Anderson Stuart medical school is my new home.