Brutto:
Brutto: 57,82 zł
Brutto:
Brutto: 18,47 zł
Brutto: 18,34 zł
COLOP POLSKA
Trodat
Antalis Polska
Impap Polska
Hurtownia "ADA"
Firma "JO-POL" Holandia
www.favore.pl
Poczta Polska
Firma Kurierska Inpost
Euforia Sierpc
MEGA Sierpc
F.P.-H. Alfa DRUK sp. z o.o.
Centrala:
tel. 24 275 64 65,
tel. 24 275 79 01
fax. 24 275 11 79
dla klientów e-sklepu
e-mail: biuro@alfadruk.pl
alfadruk@alfadruk.pl
Orzeczenie lekarskie do celów sanitarno-epidemiologicznych CB+CF
poz.kat.1000A A5 poziomo zlec.24627
Jest to druk o zapobieganiu oraz zwalczaniu zakażeń i chorób zakaźnych u ludzi,
druk w sprawie badań lekarskich jest na innej aukcji.
Liczba opinii: 10
Data dodania: 14 July 2015
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Ocena: 5/5
Data dodania: 13 July 2015
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Ocena: 3/5
Data dodania: 11 July 2015
I do have experience of both_a href="http://dbgwrx.com"_ hatelh_/a_ systems although thankfully not for anything critical. In general I've had more hospital time in the UK and more serious treatment (but not hospital) in Poland. I only have experience of family_a href="http://dbgwrx.com"_ hatelh_/a_care (wives and children) in Poland. I think one generalisation is true when talking about everyday illnesses the UK system tends to stop a little short and the Polish system tends to go too far. In the UK, as you say, there's a tendency to say The chances are it is nothing. Go away, take these and come back if it gets worse. . In Poland there is a reverse tendency to say The chances are it is a brain tumour or malaria. Do these 18 tests, take these 15 drugs, don't go to work, come back here every day for two weeks. . In my experience, neither of these approaches are right. My leaning is towards the shorter approach with less tests and a more optimistic prognosis, which, to be fair to the Brits, is usually where it ends up anyway.The things you say about Poland not waiting for a doctor or treatment, carers not neglecting their duties might be true of Torun but they for sure are not true of Warsaw. Even with so-called private_a href="http://dbgwrx.com"_ hatelh_/a_care there is a wait for a GP who then just passes you off to someone else = another much longer wait with kilka tests in the meantime all at your cost usually. Even if the GP has told you to come back and see the specialist in 2 months, you still have to do the whole GP thing all over again just to be able to do what they told you to do 2 months ago. Quite ridiculous really, and wasting GP's time when they could be seeing other patients and reducing the waiting time. The queues in the public doctors are even worse and if you want a list of times that this family has encountered Polish_a href="http://dbgwrx.com"_ hatelh_/a_care workers who truly don't care whether you live or die then you'll have to hold on because it's really long.Poles who move to Britain are not opening clinics to provide a level of service but to provide a level of hypochondriac_ness that Polish patients are undoubtedly missing and many British patients may well find is to their taste. And to make money, of course.Neither system is perfect. I think an ideal_a href="http://dbgwrx.com"_ hatelh_/a_ service is largely private (but far better run than Medicover) but with enough money coming out of it to fund 1/ a free service for those not able to get the private treatment, 2/ an emergency service for all in need and 3/ the less profitable research that needs to be done and is ignored by private_a href="http://dbgwrx.com"_ hatelh_/a_care.Not sure what happens in Ireland. I thought a few potatoes soaked in Guinness cured everything? :-)
Ocena: 2/5
Data dodania: 11 July 2015
Greetings all. First comment on Polandian after a few weeks of renidag. My experience is with Lithuania, not Poland, but from whatI read on a variety of topics, the countries are so similar in terms of inrastructure, govt, and, most importantly, the attitudes of people to a wide varietty of things.Which brings me to healthcare. Scatts hit the nail on the head with his diagnosis of hypochondria in Poland. From my experience, such levels are seen everyone from Germany eastwards. This is a major cultural difference in attitudes to healthcare between Lithuania/Poland and the UK, and from anectotal evidence is a major source of tension in mixed Lithuanian/British families. Typically, Lithuanian parent says, a8Oh my god, I/my child is ill. Take him to a specialist now. Do blood tests, mayhe has pneumonia. Keep him off school and don't let antone near him.a8 British parent says.a8 I/you/my child has a cough. Take some cough mixture. Of course I/you/my child is going to work/school.a8There are different expectation about health and medical professionals. For example, Lithuanians are aghast that doctors in the UK tend not to wear white coats anymore, and express surprise that Britons don't take food (I mean complete meals with soup, meat and veg) to their relatives in hospital. One difference is that there are about twice as many doctors per 1,000 people in Lithuania/Poland than in the UK. There are WHO figures on this, and former Communist countires come out on top in Europe on the number of doctors per 1,000 people, while the lowest is the UK and Ireland. Teh result of this is that there an excess of doctors in most East European countries. Put crudely, there is easier access to doctors in Eastern Europe because there are simply more doctors. Conversely, there are more nurses per 1,000 people in the UK than in Poland and Lithuania. This is obvious when it comes to seeing a doctor. Poles are shocked when they go to the GPs in the UK for some minor ailment, and they see the practice nurse, not a doctor. In Poland, specialists do virtually everything, from giving injectons to children to treating minor cuts. Nurses clean the beds and and hand instruments to doctors (I know they do more, but that's how it appears to the patient like myself).Finally,. most comments above concentrate on the experience of care, but the major differences are in how the health system is organised. In the UK, the sacred, Nye Bevin-inspired a8free at the point of carea8 principle means that NHS administration is a nightmare of allocating funds.Finally, Britsh healthcare is on the whole qite differnt in organisation and expectations from Europe because there are hardly any professional links between British and Eurpean doctors. British doctors have close links with US/Canadian/Australian and Angolphone African and Asian countires, (where they all handily speak English and British doctors historically set up the heath system), but few connections with Europe, especially Eastern Europe. Hence there is a major culture clash when British medical staff meet Poles/Lithuanians etc either as patients or colleagues.
Ocena: 1/5
Data dodania: 11 July 2015
Witam Panią.szukam protokołu wewnętrznej iljnatacsi wow-kan w budynku mieszkalnym jednorodzinnym a także protokf3ł iljnatacsi c.o.Jeżeli ma Pani jakiś wzf3r takich protokołf3w to proszę o ich przesłanie na e'maila
Ocena: 3/5
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ORZECZENIE LEKARSKIE nr ..../ (rok) .... A5 pap. zwykły NOWE
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Brutto: 7,14 złOrzeczenie lekarskie z badania przeprowadzonego do celów sanitarno-epidemiologicznych CB+CF
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