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19 Sentences With "resuscitations"

How to use resuscitations in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "resuscitations" and check conjugation/comparative form for "resuscitations". Mastering all the usages of "resuscitations" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"He's been very good at revivals and resuscitations," Sonnenfeld said at the time.
Society does not owe them multiple medical resuscitations from their own bad judgment, criminal activity, and self-inflicted wounds.
That experience hasn't kept me from responding to other people, but it does make me think twice about "hands on" resuscitations.
"They have a crash cart there, they're working on her now as we speak," the second woman said, referring to the wheeled supply cart used for resuscitations. Gov.
"Many of us in daily practice have the perception that we regularly do resuscitations that are futile from the inception," said Dr. Patrick Druwé, an intensive care physician at Ghent University Hospital in Belgium.
"Harriet Said" and "Filthy Lucre" were resuscitations of failed manuscripts she'd put away decades before, and she released revised versions of "A Weekend With Claude" and "Another Part of the Wood" long after their original publication.
The entire execution and multiple resuscitations were filmed for Hitler to view at his leisure.
From 1999 onwards, he was employed at the "Klinikum Oldenburg", stationed in its cardiac surgery intensive care unit. In August 2001, doctors and medical orderlies of the hospital's ward 211 began discussing an unusual spike in both resuscitations and deaths during the preceding months. Högel himself attended the aforementioned meeting. Most of the attempted resuscitations and deaths were found to have occurred while Högel was on duty.
Sigurlás collapsed while on a hike with friends on Heimaklettur in Heimaey on 24 April 2018. Resuscitations were unsuccessful and he was pronounced dead at Vestmannaeyjar hospital later that day.
During this time the 274th provided trauma resuscitation and emergency surgical support operations for the 4th Infantry Division and 101st Airborne Division in Eastern Afghanistan. The 274th performed over 150 trauma resuscitations and treated over 40 surgical cases during the deployment. The unit also provided medical support for trauma patients during four Mass Casualty (MASCAL) events.
The fetus was able to have the spinal shunt closed surgically. However, during this treatment several resuscitations were required and these caused trauma to the chest. Despite the closing of the shunt, extreme developmental inhibition was expected, and the prognosis was still extremely poor. This sparked questions as to whether this sort of treatment was ethical on fetuses.
In 1956 American cardiologist Paul Zoll described resuscitations during open-heart surgery and later after sudden cardiac death by means of an alternating current (AC) electric shock, derived from a wall socket. AC current was untested as to its safety and efficacy and could cause death. In 1959, Lown demonstrated that AC was injurious to the heart and could be lethal.
Hopkins briefly worked for 2GB prior to becoming a full-time lifeguard. He has worked as a lifeguard with Waverley Council, which oversees Bondi, Tamarama and Bronte Beaches, since 1991 and has been involved in more resuscitations than any other lifeguard in the service. He was appointed head lifeguard in 2000 and is one of the longest serving and most experienced lifeguards on the roster.Carroll, Nick (2009).
As a result of an unexpected death of a baby (Amber) in the (JKZ, Juliana Children's Hospital) in The Hague on 4 September 2001, earlier deaths and cardiopulmonary resuscitations were scrutinised. Between September 2000 and September 2001 there appeared to have been nine incidents, which earlier had all been thought unremarkable but now were considered medically suspicious. Lucia de Berk had been on duty at the time of those incidents, responsible for patient care and delivery of medication. The hospital decided to press charges against de Berk.
On 22 June 2005, colleagues caught Högel intentionally manipulating a patient's syringe pump, administering the anti- arrhythmic Gilurytmal (Ajmaline) without medical indication. The incident prompted the Delmenhorst police inspectorate to initiate an investigation into Högel. In the course of the investigation, multiple Klinikum Delmenhorst employees independently came forward to voice their concerns, suspecting Högel's possible responsibility for numerous complications, resuscitations and further unexplained deaths at the hospital. The extensive police investigation that followed these allegations examined all deaths at the hospital between 2003 and 2005.
In October 2001, the 274th FST (ABN) deployed to Bagram, Afghanistan in support of Operation Enduring Freedom following the September 11th attacks, where it remained until May 2002. During this period, the FST was responsible for functioning as a small combat support hospital, performing in-flight resuscitations and surgeries to soldiers wounded in combat, and leading the multinational coalition that provided medical support for Operation Anaconda. Most recently, the 274th FST (ABN) deployed to Jalalabad, Afghanistan, in support of Operation Enduring Freedom (XII-XIII) on 29 Jun 2012.
Thromboelastography (TEG) is a method of testing the efficiency of blood coagulation. It is a test mainly used in surgery and anesthesiology, although increasingly used in resuscitations in Emergency Departments, intensive care units, and labor and delivery suites. More common tests of blood coagulation include prothrombin time (PT,INR) and partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) which measure coagulation factor function, but TEG also can assess platelet function, clot strength, and fibrinolysis which these other tests cannot. Thromboelastometry (TEM), previously named rotational thromboelastography (ROTEG) or rotational thromboelastometry (ROTEM), is another version of TEG in which it is the sensor shaft, rather than the cup, that rotates.
There has always been a small but enduring following for Lamb's works, as the long-running and still-active Charles Lamb Bulletin demonstrates. Because of his quirky, even bizarre, style, he has been more of a "cult favourite" than an author with mass popular or scholarly appeal. Anne Fadiman notes regretfully that Lamb is not widely read in modern times: "I do not understand why so few other readers are clamoring for his company... [He] is kept alive largely through the tenuous resuscitations of university English departments.". Two of the houses at Christ's Hospital (Lamb A and Lamb B) are named in his honour.
On 24 March 2003, de Berk was sentenced by the court in The Hague to life imprisonment for the murder of four patients and the attempted murder of three others. The verdict depended in part on a statistical calculation, according to which the probability was allegedly only 1 in 342 million that a nurse's shifts would coincide with so many of the deaths and resuscitations purely by chance. De Berk was however only sentenced in cases where, according to a medical expert, other evidence was present or in which, again according to a medical expert, no natural causes could explain the incident. In the appeal on 18 June 2004, de Berk's conviction for the seven murders and three attempted murders was upheld.

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