Tom Brady goes down with torn ACL.
Originally Posted by Zomax,Oct 24 2008, 01:15 PM
Yes, I am.
MRSA is very common in hospitals. MGH is the cleanest, most sterile hospital I've ever been in. We had a very low infection rate while I was there. I'm sure it's still very low.
MRSA is very common in hospitals. MGH is the cleanest, most sterile hospital I've ever been in. We had a very low infection rate while I was there. I'm sure it's still very low.
A physician would know the meaning of sterile, and there is no such thing as a 'sterile hospital'. Nor 'most sterile hospital'. Sort of like suggesting 'most ON light bulb', or 'most pregnant patient'.
Originally Posted by Sogno,Oct 25 2008, 05:39 AM
"...most sterile hospital..."
A physician would know the meaning of sterile, and there is no such thing as a 'sterile hospital'. Nor 'most sterile hospital'. Sort of like suggesting 'most ON light bulb', or 'most pregnant patient'.
A physician would know the meaning of sterile, and there is no such thing as a 'sterile hospital'. Nor 'most sterile hospital'. Sort of like suggesting 'most ON light bulb', or 'most pregnant patient'.
Something is sterile, or it is not. However, a hospital with a higher number of sterile surfaces and objects within its walls can be considered more sterile than the next.
And despite losing a top three player, we're still 5-2 bitches
And despite losing a top three player, we're still 5-2 bitches
Originally Posted by vtec9,Oct 27 2008, 06:15 AM
Something is sterile, or it is not. However, a hospital with a higher number of sterile surfaces and objects within its walls can be considered more sterile than the next.
And despite losing a top three player, we're still 5-2 bitches
And despite losing a top three player, we're still 5-2 bitches

Please explain: a hospital the size of Johns Hopkins compared with a regional 50-bed hospital "X". If Johns Hopkins had the 'higher number of sterile surfaces and objects', would it be "more sterile" than the small regional hospital? Please explain?



