If you experience these lingering symptoms after the time when the coronavirus has typically cleared the bodyâfour to eight weeksâit's a good idea to call your doctor to ask for advice. Read on to find out moreâand to ensure your health and the health of others, don't miss these Sure Signs You've Already Had COVID. 1 Fatigue iStock
Familiarize yourself with the legislation, frequently asked questions, and support programs using the following information resources: call SSA's toll-free number at 1-800-772-1213. contact your local Social Security office. visit the SSA special "Worksite", or read more about SSA's work incentive rules.
Needless to say, I changed doctors. - chamomile_tea. 18. I went in for my first lady parts check and the doctor would occasionally put his thumb on my clit and press hard. I don't know if this was pervy or it just didn't occur to him but it was really, REALLY uncomfortable and it turned me off from ever going back. - MississippiQueen. 19.
Not "go to see a doctor" but just "see a doctor" or "go see" (where I live). Either "go to" or "see" is fine where I live. If don't feel better by tomorrow: I'll go to the doctor. I'll go see the doctor. I'll see the doctor. You're still sick? Did you see a doctor? Have you been to the doctor? have you seen a doctor? I thought you were going to
Changes in mental status. Marked confusion, extreme sleepiness and inability to waken are emergency symptoms that can occur with reduced circulating oxygen in the body. Blue face or lips. If your
36Pcq. âYouâd better go to the doctorâs if you have got a pain in your back, Annaâ, Henry said. â Henry suggested______________________________________________________________________ ÄĂĄp ĂĄn Ta cĂł cáș„u trĂșc cĂąu tưá»ng thuáșt vá»i Äá»ng từ suggestâ S + suggest + V-ing gợi Ăœ lĂ m gĂŹ ÄĂł dĂčng khi 2 chá»§ ngữ giá»ng nhau Hoáș·c S1 +suggest + that + S2 + should V dĂčng khi 2 chá»§ ngữ khĂĄc nhau Khi chuyá»n từ cĂąu trá»±c tiáșżp sang cĂąu giĂĄn tiáșżp, ta cĂł cĂĄc lưu Ăœ - LĂči Äá»ng từ vá» má»t thĂŹ have got -> had got - Thay Äá»i cĂĄc ÄáșĄi từ cho phĂč hợp you -> she, your -> her Do ÄĂł âYouâd better go to the doctorâs if you have got a pain in your back, Annaâ, Henry said. => Henry suggested Anna that she should go to the doctorâs if she had got a pain in her back. TáșĄm dá»ch Henry ÄĂŁ Äá» nghá» Anna ráș±ng cĂŽ áș„y nĂȘn Äáșżn bĂĄc sÄ© náșżu cĂŽ áș„y bá» Äau lưng.
Describe a time when you had to go to the doctorâs/hospital You should say What was wrong with you How you felt at that time What happened at the doctorâs/hospital And explain what treatment you were given to help you get better. Sample Answer Hospital is that one place where no one would like to visit. I personally hate going to the doctorâs. But I had to visit one recently. Due to frequent travelling to varied altitudes and atmosphere, I got home having terrible cold and viral infection. It was accompanied by heavy head, continuous sneezing and a runny nose which left me in moderate discomfort. I felt too sick and in pain. Due to the ever-growing headache I couldnât concentrate on any thing and found it impossible to do even the smallest everyday task. My head felt like it weighed a ton and I could barely keep my eyes open due to the developing stress. After no more resistance, I decided that I need to visit the doctorâs. The doctor checked me and asked me how I was feeling. He checked my pulse and my body temperature. He asked me to open my mouth, take my tongue out and checked it subsequently for any possible infections and if there are any possible symptoms of typhoid. He further checked my blood pressure and concluded that I have developed intense allergy infections probably due to the temperature changes and dust inhaled during the travels. He prescribed me some medicines and a cough syrup to be taken at regular interval for 3 days. He advised me to avoid any cold food items and beverages. He also suggested that I drink turmeric milk and ginger lemon honey tea for instant healing. He asked me to take plenty of rest and avoid going out in the dirt. The suggestions were useful and my health improved significantly in a couple of days. Feel free to call for suggestions and queries. 8439000086 8439000087 7055710003 7055710004 IELTS Band 7 Dehradun Near Ballupur Chowk, Dehradun email info at IELTS online simulator IELTS BAND 7 Home page
When George M. Gould, a prominent physician, first implored Americans to get an annual physical checkup, he made it poetic. âThe ranchman has his annual round-up; the merchant his yearly account of stock and balancing of books; the machinist gives his engine a thorough going-over at regular intervals; every military organization has its reviews and inspections,â Gould noted in a speech before the American Medical Association. â[I]t is not so,â he opined, âconcerning the one piece of mechanism that conditions all these things, and that is the most valuable of all earthly possessionsâthe human body.âThis was 1900, and life expectancy for all races and genders was under 50. People dropped dead of polio and smallpox. It seemed wise to get checked out regularly. Over the next century, annual checkups for all were further encouraged as a matter of war readiness and insurance cost the idea that people with no complaints should see a doctor has taken a hit. A 2013 Danish study of 183,000 people found no difference in long-term health outcomes between people who went to the doctor annually and those who went only when they had an issue. Some physicians have scrapped the idea of a yearly physical for healthy adults under 50 with no anxiety-raising family medical histories of disease and instead recommend they go every few prefer not even to do that. We asked few people who go yearsâor who have gone yearsâwithout scheduling an appointment with a general practitioner to explain what keeps them out of the waiting Rachel Pipes, 26, PittsburghI believe in health at any size, which basically means that at any weight, someone can have general basic health. My numbers have never been âoff.â I donât have diabetes. I do have polycystic ovarian syndrome, which testing has shown has affected my thyroid, and doctors have refused to prescribe me the medication for my thyroid unless I lose weight, even though if my thyroid was working properly, I would lose might have been 15 [when I was diagnosed with PCOS]. I know I was prime puberty years. I went to thyroid specialists and endocrinologists. There were lots of doctors. Weight loss was the only active âpreventative medicineâ they would offer. Every trip to the doctorâs office has come with a 15-plus-minute lecture about how, even though my numbers are good, I will die soon. Even though Iâm healthy now, I will pay later in years of life for being obese. Iâve been âobeseâ since I was used to go to doctors all the time, but they constantly failed me because, rather than treat my PCOS or thyroid, they asked my parents to send me to fat camp or start Weight Watchers â both of which Iâve done, but without medication, Iâm just going to stay fat it was up to me, I stopped going to a GP by choice. Whereas, when my parents were in charge of my health, the desire was to lose weight because the idea was that would help me feel better. And I have no desire to lose weight. I only have a desire to be healthy and feel good. Being fat hasnât hurt my health. I eat right. I exercise. My hormones are a little off, but there is no cure for PCOS, so Iâm one of my [public relations] clients, I had to I interview around 100 doctors from [the] Allegheny Health Network [a Pittsburgh medical and hospital system]. Almost all of them talked about how they focus on weight loss as part of preventative care, without being prompted. They were being asked questions like, âWhatâs your approach to patient care?â and over 75 percent of them are saying âweight loss.â Itâs in their training to see weight as a primary think that any doctor will tell you their approach is to listen to the patient first. With fat people, doctors tend to see fatness before they ever listen. If Iâm coming in for a routine OB/GYN appointment, I donât need to be told to lose weight. If someoneâs coming in worried about pain or illness, doctors should be treating that. Yes, for some patients, losing weight is what they want and what will make them feel better, but itâs certainly not the primary treatment plan for someone coming in for a rash or an ear infection, or even a cancer scare.âBrian LaRue, 36 New York CityFor all intents and purposes, my body behaves like that of a very healthy person. I sleep fine. My digestion is fine. I don't have chronic pain. I don't get headaches. I don't have asthma, all that first reaction to most pains and ailments, aside from colds, is to suspect I have a terminal condition. If I have a terminal condition, I donât want to know how much time I have left. I once thought an ingrown hair was a tumor. I once thought a rash was a tumor. Whenever I [hit] the top of my skull really hard, I try to stay up through the night, because that's how [Dead Boys lead singer] Stiv Bators died, by going to sleep after getting a concussion. I find myself taking stock of my heartbeat very often throughout the day. A few days ago, I was worried about permanent damage to my knees after I was a little stiff for two days straight, but it turned out I was just sleeping also worry [because] I don't have a full picture of what I'm genetically predisposed toward. My dad was adopted. I don't know anything about his family's medical been to walk-in clinics twice in the last two years once after catching my ankle in a revolving door, and once to get a script for antibiotics for a sinus infection. Those didn't give me full physicals, not by a long shot. They just checked my weight and blood pressure, and confirmed I have the early stages of hypertension, which is exactly what I donât want to hear [my girlfriend] told me I needed to make a doctor's appointment or she would dump me. I know she's joking, but I understand a joke like that comes from a real place. I booked an appointment for a checkup, originally meant for the first week of January. It got bumped back to March, because I'm new, and I was so relieved. I really don't want to go to this appointment in March, but I guess I have to force myself to face my absolutely didn't want to know about my health five years ago. I was drinking too much, I was smoking cigarettes every day, and I was eating Top Ramen four or five meals per week. I did a lot of less-than-healthy things in my 20s, and I figured, as I did with my credit, âIâll take care of it later.â Yeah, well, now it's later, and it's freaking me consider it one milestone on a road toward accounting for my past. Other milestones have been financial. Hell, there was a time when I didn't know how much credit card debt I was Sherrell, 34, Dallas, TXUsually in my experience, Iâve never been that sick where I am dyingâand if I am, it just goes away. Iâm from Syracuse. I grew up wrestling, and you kind of grin and bear it. There are worse things than just having a sniffle or a cold. Thereâs been a couple of times where Iâve been pretty bad. I got the flu. Usually, if you take DayQuil and drink a lot of water, it just runs its course. Thatâs been my last time I went to the doctor I was passing blood through my stool. That was a bit of a shock, so I was like, âI better go to the doctor for this one. Thatâs one you might want to get looked at.â And that was from just wear and tear on my body from wrestling. Then, before that, I think I got strep throat, my freshman year going into my sophomore year [of college] over the summer, and I got some antibiotics. Even with that, it took me about a week. I was like, âIt will get better.â I was pounding Advils. I felt really dumb because [the antibiotics] cleared it up really broke my finger back in college on a Friday. I snapped it wrestling and I thought, âWell, the on-campus officials are gone and Iâve got tape and ice.â On Monday, it still hurt, but I was like, âOh, this isnât that bad,â and it was during summer, so I was free to do whatever I wanted to do. Ten years on, my finger is crooked. My middle finger is crooked. Looking back, I should have done something but I was just like, âEh, itâs not that bad. Iâll get around to it.âI have work. Between my gig, travel, and hanging out with my buddies, going to the doctor isnât high on the list of priorities. It just slips my mind [that] I havenât been to the doctor in a while. Iâve had one [regular] doctor my whole life from when I was a kid, but at 10 or 12, I just stopped. I never really got sick. But I didnât mind it. You get checked out. You get away from school. Honestly, itâd probably be worth it [now] just to have a day off of work. You get your physical and whatever and then you have the rest of the day. Itâd probably be worth it for just that process was never bad. I never disliked it. My mom is the medical field, actually. Sheâs in administration. I donât think she knows [I havenât gotten a physical in years]. If sheâs like, âHave you been to the doctorâs recently?â Iâll just glaze over it. In the course of conversation, sheâs more concerned about when I am going to get married, when sheâs going to get more grandkids than if Iâve been to the think people should go to the doctor, obviously. I think itâs a boneheaded move for me not to. Itâs just one of those deals where you get caught up in the day-to-day and that gets pushed to the Holm, 41, Shelton, ConnecticutIn my day-to-day life, I donât think about it. I feel like I am in generally good health. It doesnât cross my mind. At the same time, I make sure my kids get their checkups and have all their shots. For me, Iâve only gone when I have had to go to the emergency really wants to go to the doctor and be told there is something wrong with you? At my age, I do have to think about this. My girlfriend hounds me about it. She goes to the doctor every time she starts to worry about stuff. She goes to her OB/GYN and will go if thereâs something wrong with her me, itâs out of mind. Itâs not the best way of thinking, but it is my reality, I guess. I try to live a healthy lifestyle, but I do worry about that wakeup call, where I go and get diagnosed with something that could have been treated and Iâm just that much did smoke, but I quit smoking. I play hockey. I try to eat right, not eat a ton of fatty foods. I drink three or four beers a day and I guess thatâs not healthy, but Iâm not fat, so to speak. I am my high school weight of 160 pounds and I try to do stuff, not be a coach at the age where I am thinking about [scheduling a checkup]. I havenât pulled the trigger on it. I know I am at the age where Iâm at increased risk of prostate probably kick myself in the ass [if I was diagnosed with prostate cancer later]. I think I would probably take it head on, but I would think I was an idiot for not going Bugey, 40, AustinAt the company I work for, the way it works is that anything up to $5,000, you have to pay for out of pocket, so it comes in handy if you are in a coma or something. But just for a general visit, itâs not really worth it. So if I have a cold, I just take over-the-counter medicine, rather than go to the doctor and shell out $100 [to] $150. But I got married in November and now Iâm under my husbandâs insurance. I guess I probably should go have pretty good genes in our family, longevity-wise. My grandparents all lived to be in their 90s, so Iâm like, âWell, they were okay, so I guess Iâm okay.â We donât have a history of cancer or anything like think if I did go in for a physical, they would just tell me everything is okay. I donât get dizzy or anything. I think my blood pressure is okay. I know I donât have high cholesterol because I eat pretty well. The only thing that might be an issue is that we do have diabetes in our family, but I donât really show any of those think I would have to be really sick [to go to a doctor]âlike, I canât get out of bed. Or I have a 102-degree fever that wonât break, just horrible just donât like carving out time to go to the doctor. Iâm a paralegal, so I have a pretty busy workload. Itâs going to the doctorâs office You have to take time off from work and then you get in there and you have to wait more and then you are there for three hours. For my job, we have to put in for any time that weâre going to miss, even if itâs an extended lunch hour, and thatâs a huge hassle. So Iâm like, âIâd rather take some NyQuil and be done with it.â Moore, 35, Los AngelesI didnât have health insurance for a while because I was freelancing. Even when I had health insurance, I was doing okay and I didnât want to spend the money on it because for all of what health insurance does, itâs still pretty expensive to go to the doctor. The other thing is a mental block where I think of the healthcare-industrial complex as a counterpart to the prison system, in that once you get in you canât get out and I have been loath to get into the system. I really donât trust American healthcare for the most Iâve come to the doctor in the last two years, itâs either been to urgent care or Planned Parenthood and thatâs it. I went to urgent care this weekend because I had an asthma attack. I have asthma and I have not had an inhaler in ten years, because I let the prescription lapse and then I didnât go to the doctor! I told them I barely take any meds. I take a Zyrtec when I am having an allergic reaction and I think they were I know who sees a general practitioner is on some kind of medication and I donât like taking a lot of drugs unless Iâm really sick. Iâm afraid they would ask me a lot of questions and then I would be on prescription meds for the rest of my had some bad experiences when I did go to the doctor when I was younger. It made me distrustful of how Iâd be treated. When I was a teenager, I got an STD from a guy when went down on me. This was in the state of Georgia, and they treated me like I was this little whore. There was so much judgement when they were asking me about my sexual activity and what I was doing with myself. That sucked. And I had a doctor who wouldnât put me on birth control. It really undermined my faith if doctors exist to care for people or if they just exist to do things to people to make them we had socialized healthcare, I would go to the doctor just whenever, because I feel like it would take away the question about whether or not I was a product. I feel like it is impossible to engage with the medical community as it exists within the United States without the patient being a product, and I am not interested in participating in Johnson, 32, New OrleansI went to urgent care like three years ago when I had strep throat. I had to. I couldn't never go otherwise, because first off, they just always got something bad to tell you. You don't ever go to the doctor and they're like, "Oh my goodness, we just ran your test results and we just added five years to your life!" It's always like, "We just ran your test results now take this medicine which might fuck you up even more and hopefully you'll live." Get away from me with all it's just a waste of money. I already know I'm going to die. I don't need to pay you money to tell me when I'm going to die. That's part of life. Part of life is not knowing when you're going to die. Why would I want to pay somebody to tell me when my demise is coming?I don't have insurance. To be honest with you I don't even know if I'd go [to the doctor] if I had insurance because I've never had it. I left my parents' house when I was 18 and that's the last time I had insurance so that's the last time I've had a check up, a primary care doctor, a dental exam or anything like that. And when I went back then, it didn't bother me but I didn't see any benefit in it either. Every time you went you ended up in an uncomfortable-ass situation. Don't even get me started on the racial dynamics that exist when you go to the when you're talking about a conservative city like New Orleans, and you have to go see a specialist for whatever, and all you're dealing with is the old racist doctor who has no bedside manner as he or she talks to you, even refusing to look you in the eye. And you're like, why am I paying this high ass co-pay again?I went to go see a dermatologist once, who was a white, and what was perplexing to me was how he could talk to me about [my skin]. He was highly recommended and he was about my age. I was looking at him like, you can't possibly talk to me about my skin. You're not an expert on that. You're not what I'm looking This Next We Asked Doctors What Our Dumbest Health Beliefs Are
ï»ż1 Hi there, I would like to know what's the correct expression from these two structures you had better/You should better see a doctor. On top of that, I'll be grateful if anyone of you clarifies the precise meaning of that utterance to me. Thanks. 2 You had better is what I would expect. You should better sounds very odd. The meaning is that it would be in your best interest to ...More explanations here We use âhad betterâ plus the infinitive without âtoâ to give advice. Although âhadâ is the past form of âhaveâ, we use âhad betterâ to give advice about the present or future.â You'd better tell her everything. I'd better get back to work. We'd better meet early. 3 I agree with Swiss Pete that "you had better see a doctor" is correct. If you drop "better", the second construction would also be correct You should see a doctor. Should = had better.
Introduction These three verbs are modal verbs. should ought to had better Modal verbs are helping/auxiliary verbs that express ideas like ability, advice, and obligation. Many modal verbs have more than one meaning. They are always followed by the simple form of a verb. For example Amanda should go to the doctor. This shows that we think it is a good idea for Amanda to visit the doctor. Modals for Advice Let's learn how to give advice! English speakers use the modal verbs âshould,â âought toâ and âhad betterâ to express that they think something is a good or a bad idea. âShouldâ is the most common way to give advice. Look at these examples Affirmative Negative Question A I failed my test. B Really? You should study harder. Young children shouldn't watch violent TV shows. I have a problem. Should I call my parents or my friend? A It's really cold outside. B You ought to wear a warm jacket. âought toâ is not usually used in the negative form âought toâ is not common in question form A You had better slow down. You are driving too fast! You had better not forget to pay your tuition. If you do, the university will kick you out! âhad betterâ is not usually used in question form These examples have the same basic advice message, but âhad betterâ is a bit stronger. It includes the idea of a warning something bad will happen if you do not follow my advice. For example You had better not forget to pay your tuition. If you forget, the university will kick you out You had better do your homework. If you do not do your homework, the teacher will give you a low mark. Note âYou had better...â can be contracted to become âYou'd better....â This is correct grammar, and very common in speaking. Some native speakers say, âYou better ...,â but this is incorrect. The âhadâ is necessary in good grammar. In the above examples, you can see that the modals are followed by the simple form of a verb in these patterns. Subject + modal + basic verb + ... You should study harder. You should to study harder. Wrong! You had better slowing down. Wrong! She ought to to drink more water. Wrong! Remember that âought toâ is a modal verb and is followed by a simple verb. The âtoâ is not an infinitive âto.â Modal + subject + basic verb + ...?? Should I call my parents or my friend? WH- information questions can also be formed by putting the WH- question word immediately before the modal. For example What should I do about my problem? Where should we have dinner tonight? Why should you believe them? When should they call their boss? When you are sure that you understand the lesson, you can continue with the exercises.
you had better go to the doctor