Dental Practice Management: Including Ethics, Economics and Socio-economics, and Jurisprudence, as Applied to Successful Practice ManagementYear Book Publishers, Incorporated, 1944 - 290 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-3 af 18
Side 270
... injury to the patient , though only one actually inflicted the damage . If a partner guilty of malpractice dies , the surviving partner is liable , even though he did not contribute to the injury . If two or more dentists , not partners ...
... injury to the patient , though only one actually inflicted the damage . If a partner guilty of malpractice dies , the surviving partner is liable , even though he did not contribute to the injury . If two or more dentists , not partners ...
Side 271
... injury was the result of accident . Burns from acids or other caustics come under the same rulings . Infection caused by leaving part of a broken instrument in a root canal would require explanation from the dentist and it would be ...
... injury was the result of accident . Burns from acids or other caustics come under the same rulings . Infection caused by leaving part of a broken instrument in a root canal would require explanation from the dentist and it would be ...
Side 280
... injury and loss sustained . In malpractice cases , there are no fixed rules to measure the amount of damage to be awarded , the laws of the various states varying in this regard . The court or the jury consider the pain and suffering ...
... injury and loss sustained . In malpractice cases , there are no fixed rules to measure the amount of damage to be awarded , the laws of the various states varying in this regard . The court or the jury consider the pain and suffering ...
Indhold
Introduction | 9 |
II Professional Codes of Ethics | 18 |
Factors Involved | 31 |
7 andre sektioner vises ikke
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Almindelige termer og sætninger
ability agreement American Dental Association amount anesthetic annuity appointment assistant avoid bill cards cash cause cent chair character charged clinics conduct consent considered contract court COURTESY CARD damages definite dental office dental practice dental restorations dental schools dental service dentifrices dentistry denture depending desirable discussed ditions duty employed equipment established ethical eudaemonism examination expected expert witness fees health service hospitals important impression income individual injury instances interest investment involved judgment jurisprudence jury liable license malpractice matter ment methods moral necessary negligence nurse obtained offer operating room opportunities oral oral hygiene ordinary parties patient payment periodontal disease physi physicians possible prac practitioner procedures profes profession professional service proper purchase reasonable records referred rendered result roentgenograms salary similar skill social specific statutes success suit teeth telephone tion treatment usually x-ray young dentist