Cardiologist in a sentence as a noun

Should we[1] be shopping around for doctors?My wife did this with* Her cardiologist.

No suprise the founder got bad news from his cardiologist with an earlier version.

In fact, mentioning it to my doc won me a full cardio work-up from a cardiologist.

A cardiologist in this area can get paid a salary of $350,000 per year, guaranteed three year contract.

Now tell me why a talented person would become a dev instead of a cardiologist or banker.

I miss being in private practice and being my own boss, says Alexander, the Illinois cardiologist.

In most cases it still requires an appointment with a cardiologist or similar physician though.

A couple of years ago, a routine physical showed a small blip on my EKG, "nothing to worry about, but here, go see this cardiologist".

It might just be me though, but I suspect not as I mentioned how quiet everything went to a cardiologist who didn't seem surprised.

In addition, the cardiologist can keep practicing into her 60s whereas a programmer should plan on changing careers in his 40s.

Patients are usually given a card with appointment details scribbled on for when to next see their cardiologist for their CHF, or whatever that is.

Also my cardiologist here in New Zealand said that they have a much lower incidence of heart disease than you would expect given the above, and no-one knows why.

It doesn't mean that the cardiac health advice of a consultant cardiologist is weighed the same as a random person on the street with no medical training.

Dr. Agatston, the famous cardiologist who invented what is now the standard test for coronary calcification, certainly claims that there is no reason to avoid eating eggs.

For instance, the average family practitioner would earn less than a neurosurgeon or cardiologist.

From, among other medical staff, a consultant cardiologist who just happened to be at the game, the same cardiologist later treated him throughout his stay at hospital.

" Another woman cardiologist said she could see using Watson on about ten percent of her office appointments, but she had a hard time seeing how to integrate it and not be slowed down for the other 90% where it was unnecessary.

Already there have been a number of lawsuits arising from overworked and sleep-deprived residents making mistakes, and it's a tough sell politically to say "Your cardiologist spent 33% less time training to receive a bargain degree.

The period between them walking out of their cardiologist's office to their next appointment is, I guarantee, almost never spent reflecting on their condition or actively taking steps to mitigate the complications, save for taking pills.

And even for problems that the ER will treat, they will only get you stable: so, if you have a heart attack, they'll stabilize you, but they won't put in stents or do any of the followup care that a good cardiologist would do in the weeks after your heart attack.

Cardiologist definitions

noun

a specialist in cardiology; a specialist in the structure and function and disorders of the heart