What's the difference between admission and presentee?

Admission


Definition:

  • (n.) The act or practice of admitting.
  • (n.) Power or permission to enter; admittance; entrance; access; power to approach.
  • (n.) The granting of an argument or position not fully proved; the act of acknowledging something /serted; acknowledgment; concession.
  • (n.) Acquiescence or concurrence in a statement made by another, and distinguishable from a confession in that an admission presupposes prior inquiry by another, but a confession may be made without such inquiry.
  • (n.) A fact, point, or statement admitted; as, admission made out of court are received in evidence.
  • (n.) Declaration of the bishop that he approves of the presentee as a fit person to serve the cure of the church to which he is presented.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Patients with normal echocardiogram and ECG on admission do not require intensive care monitoring.
  • (2) We considered the days of the disease and the persistence of symptoms since the admission as peculiar parameters between the two groups.
  • (3) There is no evidence that health-maintenance organizations reduce admissions in discretionary or "unnecessary" categories; instead, the data suggest lower admission rates across the board.
  • (4) The "rehabilitation" and "institutional" meanings of the patient's admission to the clinic have been distinguished.
  • (5) The medium time of admission (8.98 vs 9.5 days) and mortality rate (6.3% vs 7.1%) did not change.
  • (6) Our results on humoral and cellular components of immunity in dependence of age, according to SENIEUR protocol admission criteria are presented.
  • (7) The incidence was 0.31 per 1000 gynaecological admissions and the peak age incidence was in the age group 26 to 35 years.
  • (8) This study provides strong and unexpected evidence that one admission to hospital of more than a week's duration or repeated admissions before the age of five years (in particular between six months and four years) are associated with an increased risk of behaviour disturbance and poor reading in adolescence.
  • (9) For the non-emergency admissions, the low-load physicians' patients had an average LOS that was 56.2% greater and an average hospital cost that was 58.3% greater than were the LOS and cost of the patients of the high-load physicians.
  • (10) Admission venom levels also correlated with the extent of local swelling and the occurrence of tissue necrosis at the site of the bite.
  • (11) It is concluded that based on readily available clinical criteria at the time of admission, a subgroup of patients at low risk for developing life-threatening complications requiring coronary care unit interventions can be identified and admitted directly to an intermediate-care unit.
  • (12) Functional status on admission measured by the Katz ADL was the most powerful predictor of functional status at discharge.
  • (13) During that period 1866 neonates were transferred from maternities of Strasbourg and its region to the neonatology unit, representing 23.77% of total admissions.
  • (14) Ultimate nonsurvivors of ICU admission (36 per cent) had shorter out-of-hospital times, shorter travel distances, and increased interventional support, as assessed by the Therapeutic Intervention Scoring System applied over the telephone and prior to departure at the referring hospital.
  • (15) Combining data on cows with productive and salvaged outcomes as satisfactory outcome, and terminal as unsatisfactory outcome, total correct classification was 90.7% for the admission model and 93.2% for the surgical model.
  • (16) The alveolar-arterial oxygen difference was greater than 150 mmHg (20 kPa) in nine subjects on admission.
  • (17) These results provide further data which counter the sometimes extreme advocates of the view that compulsory admission and treatment of patients with psychiatric illness is never acceptable.
  • (18) The Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) were recorded at the time of admission for all patients.
  • (19) Adverse drug reactions (ADR) were the primary cause of admission in 49 patients (11.5%), and 16 patients (3.8%) were admitted due to drug non-compliance (DNC).
  • (20) Three patients died shortly after admission due to pulmonary complications.

Presentee


Definition:

  • (v. t.) One to whom something is presented; also, one who is presented; specifically (Eccl.), one presented to benefice.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) There's also research suggesting that presenteeism is related to sick leave at a later stage – suggesting that people may only be putting off the inevitable.
  • (2) We have presenteed a late follow-up study of 8 eyes previously presented which were treated with scleral buckling procedures under hyperbaric oxygen conditions for repair of rhegmatogenous retinal detachments complicating sickle cell disease.
  • (3) Hence too the problem with the otherwise convincing arguments about “empty labour” and “presenteeism” that have appeared recently.
  • (4) Fewer care professionals feel pressured to demonstrate presenteeism and work longer hours now (4%) than they did in 2009 (13%).
  • (5) Short said women were climbing up company ladders, but warned that too many were assimilating to "a system that rewards presenteeism and availability over time efficiency".
  • (6) All these factors boost presenteeism, or its email version "electronic face time", as Prof Cooper calls it.
  • (7) Part of the answer must lie in so-called "presenteeism": the low productivity of people who are physically present at work but who, for a variety of reasons, are not contributing all that they could.
  • (8) Abesenteeism is costly but presenteeism is also a growing problem.
  • (9) Businesses that required workers to clock in and out were rigid in their hours, promoted presenteeism (overwork) and opposed home working and part-time work, Jackson argued.
  • (10) The name of the game is to be in the office even if you're not doing anything: the blight of presenteeism.
  • (11) Many of us have now had the chance to be condescended to by colleagues with wholly devolved childcare, as well as guilt-tripped by career mothers who call paid carers "strangers" and consider a good mother's full-time devotions essential until GCSEs or beyond, by which time a needy dog may have also been recruited to the arguments for domestic presenteeism.
  • (12) This brand of presenteeism – where employees underperform because of ill health – is calculated in the UK to cost £15.1bn a year from mental health-related conditions alone .
  • (13) At a breakfast discussion of women in the London economy at the office of the Centre for London thinktank, there is general agreement that anti-social hours and the culture of presenteeism in the City are barriers to women.

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