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obstetrician

[ UK /ɒbstɪtɹˈɪʃən/ ]
[ US /ˌɑbstəˈtɹɪʃən/ ]
NOUN
  1. a physician specializing in obstetrics

How To Use obstetrician In A Sentence

  • Lord Patel, the crossbencher and former president of the Royal College of Obstetricians, has won the support of the Labour party for his amendment to the bill aimed at watering down the government's proposal to change welfare payments. The Guardian World News
  • Do you know that two-thirds of obstetricians in the States have been sued at least once in their lives?
  • At ninety, Sarah was unquestionably a woman whom a modern obstetrician would call an elderly primigravida, a term that includes all women over thirty-five—not just nonagenarians. Beginner’s Grace
  • It is always helpful for obstetricians and gynaecologists to have their practices carefully scrutinised, since so much is not underpinned by rigorous evidence.
  • If you are pregnant, discuss your immunization record with your obstetrician well before your due date.
  • After practicing for three years, she moved on to medical school to become an obstetrician / gynecologist.
  • Surgeons and obstetricians are leaving or curtailing their practices, fleeing the increasingly high cost of malpractice insurance.
  • I called my obstetrician and we took a cab to his office. History of a Suicide
  • According to general medical definitions of pregnancy that have been endorsed by many organizations including the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists and the United States Department of Health and Human Services, pregnancy begins when a pre-embryo completes implantation into the lining of the uterus ACOG, 1998; DHHS, 1978; Hughes, 1972; “Make the Distinction?” Republican Governor Vetoes Rape Victims Rights Bill
  • Neonatologists and obstetricians need to seek consent in every neonatal death or stillbirth while pathologists need to provide the service sought by clinicians and relatives.
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