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单词 paediatrics
释义

Definition of paediatrics in English:

paediatrics

(US pediatrics)
plural noun ˌpiːdɪˈatrɪksˌpidiˈætrɪks
  • treated as singular The branch of medicine dealing with children and their diseases.

    儿科学

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In primary care, no major changes are proposed except possibly ending single handed practice and encouraging general practitioners to specialise in paediatrics and gynaecology.
    • They come from various fields of medicine including internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, gynaecology, epidemiology and Traditional Chinese Medicine.
    • I worked in pediatrics in physical therapy for four years, and I love babies.
    • The remaining members will be senior professionals in fields such as general medicine, paediatrics, clinical pharmacology, analytical chemistry, biological science, and herbal medicine.
    • At Pontefract, Shipman trained in general medicine, paediatrics and obstetrics and gynaecology before moving to Todmorden in West Yorkshire where he worked as a GP.
    • I came across this when I was working in paediatrics in the neonatal intensive care units where the pre-term infants are much more susceptible to haemorrhages in the white matter of their brain.
    • I had been in Kenya as a medical student, and when I was a resident, one of our attending physicians at Penn State took residents twice a year to Honduras, trying to set up a pediatrics orthopedic clinic.
    • The remainder of this multiauthored volume is an ambitious review of topics in medicine, pediatrics, and obstetrics.
    • Dr. Johnson said she ‘loves pediatrics, geriatrics, the whole spectrum of family medicine.’
    • I also have clinical experience in oncology, pediatrics, critical care, and community health.
    • Dr. Koranyi is board-certified in pediatrics and pediatric infectious diseases.
    • During year 3, all students study medicine, surgery, paediatrics, women's health, general practice, and liaison psychiatry.
    • Physicians were in what are considered primary care specialties in the United States: internal medicine, family practice, general practice, paediatrics, and obstetrics and gynaecology.
    • Seizures occurring with fever are the most common neurological disorder in paediatrics, affecting 2-4% of all children in Britain and the United States.
    • In addition, the clinics have ‘outpatient specialists,’ most often in internal medicine, paediatrics, obstetrics and gynaecology, and otorhinolaryngology.
    • He practices developmental-behavioral pediatrics in a community health center in Boulder, Colo.
    • Their training consisted of a rotating internship for a year in which they learned surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics, and medicine.
    • Some physical therapists have additional training and education in certain specialties, such as pediatrics, orthopedics, sports medicine, or rehabilitation.
    • Fortunately, advances in obstetrics and neonatology, the branch of pediatrics that deals with newborns, have improved the chances for survival for even these smallest babies.
    • Considering the health of patients, doctors said that the priority was to keep flowers out of certain wards, including gynecology, respiratory diseases, dermatology and pediatrics.

Origin

Late 19th century: from paedo- 'of children' + Greek iatros 'physician' + -ics.

  • page from late 16th century:

    The page of a book goes back to Latin pagina ‘page’, from pangere ‘to fasten’. The connection between fastening and the page of a book is probably because pagina was originally used of a scroll, made up of strips of papyrus glued together, and then transferred to the page of a book when books replaced scrolls. Before the 16th century older forms, such as pagne, were in use. The other page (Middle English) is first found in the sense ‘youth, male of uncouth manners’ and comes via Old French from Greek paidíon ‘boy, lad’. Page boys at a wedding date from the late 19th century. Paidíon is also the source of the word-element paed- or ped found in words such as paediatrics ‘the medical care of children’ [M19], paedophile ‘child-lover’ [M20], and pedagogue (Late Middle English) formed from the Greek words for ‘child’ and ‘leader’, which was the word in ancient Greece for the slave who took a child to school, but became a term for a teacher in Latin. The Italian pedante ‘teacher’, which entered the language in the late 16th century as pedant may be from pedagogue. See also encyclopedia, pageant

Definition of pediatrics in US English:

pediatrics

(British paediatrics)
plural nounˌpēdēˈatriksˌpidiˈætrɪks
  • treated as singular The branch of medicine dealing with children and their diseases.

    儿科学

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Their training consisted of a rotating internship for a year in which they learned surgery, pediatrics, obstetrics, and medicine.
    • They come from various fields of medicine including internal medicine, surgery, pediatrics, gynaecology, epidemiology and Traditional Chinese Medicine.
    • I came across this when I was working in paediatrics in the neonatal intensive care units where the pre-term infants are much more susceptible to haemorrhages in the white matter of their brain.
    • Seizures occurring with fever are the most common neurological disorder in paediatrics, affecting 2-4% of all children in Britain and the United States.
    • He practices developmental-behavioral pediatrics in a community health center in Boulder, Colo.
    • Physicians were in what are considered primary care specialties in the United States: internal medicine, family practice, general practice, paediatrics, and obstetrics and gynaecology.
    • In addition, the clinics have ‘outpatient specialists,’ most often in internal medicine, paediatrics, obstetrics and gynaecology, and otorhinolaryngology.
    • The remainder of this multiauthored volume is an ambitious review of topics in medicine, pediatrics, and obstetrics.
    • Some physical therapists have additional training and education in certain specialties, such as pediatrics, orthopedics, sports medicine, or rehabilitation.
    • At Pontefract, Shipman trained in general medicine, paediatrics and obstetrics and gynaecology before moving to Todmorden in West Yorkshire where he worked as a GP.
    • In primary care, no major changes are proposed except possibly ending single handed practice and encouraging general practitioners to specialise in paediatrics and gynaecology.
    • Fortunately, advances in obstetrics and neonatology, the branch of pediatrics that deals with newborns, have improved the chances for survival for even these smallest babies.
    • Dr. Johnson said she ‘loves pediatrics, geriatrics, the whole spectrum of family medicine.’
    • Dr. Koranyi is board-certified in pediatrics and pediatric infectious diseases.
    • Considering the health of patients, doctors said that the priority was to keep flowers out of certain wards, including gynecology, respiratory diseases, dermatology and pediatrics.
    • During year 3, all students study medicine, surgery, paediatrics, women's health, general practice, and liaison psychiatry.
    • I also have clinical experience in oncology, pediatrics, critical care, and community health.
    • I worked in pediatrics in physical therapy for four years, and I love babies.
    • I had been in Kenya as a medical student, and when I was a resident, one of our attending physicians at Penn State took residents twice a year to Honduras, trying to set up a pediatrics orthopedic clinic.
    • The remaining members will be senior professionals in fields such as general medicine, paediatrics, clinical pharmacology, analytical chemistry, biological science, and herbal medicine.

Origin

Late 19th century: from paedo- ‘of children’ + Greek iatros ‘physician’ + -ics.

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更新时间:2024/11/10 0:58:59