They connect to allow the vitals to be pulled into the EMR to allow continuous documentation of vitals for the anesthesia record or central patient monitoring. More and more frequently, the database is not onsite and is shared amongst several sites within a hospital system.
lgmjon64
Except they're also giving it to their kids, who are far more susceptible to the diseases
FRS radio that has a flashlight and can tune to weather alerts and battery bank, water filter (kids have life straw filters, I have a katadyn), pocket tool, 72 hours of meds and food, 1 liter water, first aid kit (mine has advanced airway equipment, my wife has a stop the bleed kit), copies of birth certificates and other important docs, BIC lighter, change of socks and underwear, some hard candies, a gallon ziplock of dog food each for the furry family members, $100 in cash made up of $1 bills and quarters.
We live in an area prone to wildfires. So we try to keep ready to go at any time. We cycle through the food twice a year to keep it fresh and will put in season appropriate clothes depending on the time of year. We have some small activity booklets and similar things to entertain the younger ones.
Just defending their borders against aggressive neighbors
Agreed about the finale. It seems like it was hastily drawn up to create a potential new series (possibly Section 31). It all just felt like it came to an immediate head, and ended up too pretty.
Finished the last season of lower decks. Still not sure how I feel about the ending. Definitely going to have to give it another watch or two
Giving Disco another try. Made it through S1 and half of S2. Oddly enough, definitely enjoying it more this time, still my least fav.
Darkest of Days. You're one of Custer's soldiers at Little Big Horn who gets recruited to be a time cop and travel around the timeline fighting in historical battles with ridiculous futuristic weapons to create "balance" or something.
That's a full-on Burt Meownolds 'stache
Gross, olives.
Definitely. Nurse anesthetists are rarely employed by the hospital. We almost always work for an anesthesia group as a W2 or 1099. Pay can be better for some traveling gigs though. It's a little different than RN contracts and pay though.
I was thinking the opposite. I have 1 option for "high speed" in my town, and it's $90 for 12Mbps that rarely actually gets to that speed. I just barely switched to starlink and it's been amazing.
Central Florida just wet Central California confirmed.