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Publisher's Noteguaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or access to any online entitlements included with the product.The most comprehensive program of its kind has been expanded with extensive audio recordings for improving communication with Spanish-speaking patients!With expanded coverage of language used by hospitalists, palliative caregivers, and mental health professionals McGraw-Hill Spanish for Healthcare Providers builds your competence in interviewing patients, conducting exams, and providing follow-up instructions. This program features vocabulary, key phrases, dialogs based on common medical situations, and exercises that reinforce understanding and build confidence. The course book is accompanied with an MP3 disk containing extensive audio recordings (more than 13 hours) of dialogs, monologs, vocabulary, and exercises from the book, to improve your pronunciation and your comprehension of Spanish in a wide range of typical situations.This Premium Third Edition features support materials in the McGraw-Hill Language Lab app for study on-the-go:Sets of flashcards for all the vocabulary lists in the book (over 2,000 terms) Audio recordings of all the dialogs and monologs from the book Progress tracker to keep track of your progress through the appInstructions for downloading 15 CME Tests to earn 45 AMA continuing education credits (additional fees apply)Note: audio recordings (totaling 100 minutes) require Internet access.
Contents
Chapter 11.1 Greetings1.2 The alphabet 1.3 Nouns: gender and number1.4 Parts of the body1.5 "What is this?"1.6 "Where is . . . ?"1.7 "What do you need?"1.8 Chief complaintChapter 22.1 Numbers2.2 Vital signs2.3 Question words, relative pronouns, prepositions, and other words2.4 Internal organs2.5 Cognates2.6 Giving instructionsChapter 33.1 Conjugation3.2 Common -ar verbs3.3 "Necesitar"3.4 "Estar"3.5 More numbers3.6 Common symptoms3.7 Qualifying and quantifying painChapter 44.1 Household items4.2 "Ser"4.3 Telling time4.4 Adjectives4.5 "Hay"4.6 Conjugation of -er verbs4.7 Conjugation of -ir verbs4.8 Pediatrics4.9 Expressing destination and future actions4.10 Emergency room4.11 "Ser" v. "estar"Chapter 55.1 The family5.2 More verb tenses5.3 Illnesses and medical history5.4 Types of food | Tipos de comidas5.5 Diet | La dieta5.6 Indirect object pronouns5.7 Irregular -er and -ir verbsChapter 66.1 Irregular verbs in the present tense6.2 Days of the week6.3 Months of the year6.4 Authority figures and home remedies6.5 The imperative mood or command form6.6 A physical exam6.7 A neurological examChapter 77.1 Key Power Verbs AKA Power Punch Verbs7.2 Prescription and diet instructions7.3 Pap smear7.4 Beware of direct translations7.5 Giving directions7.6 Present progressive tense7.7 Blood test7.8 Urine test7.9 Sputum test7.10 Skin tests7.11 Taking X rays7.12 Results and diagnosisChapter 88.1 Possessive adjectives8.2 "Se impersonal"8.3 Demonstrative adjectives8.4 The preterit tense8.5 Irregular verbs in the preterit8.6 Well-baby visit8.7 Emergency room visit: ear infection8.8 Emergency room visit: an asthma attackChapter 99.1 Reflexive verbs9.2 Direct object pronouns9.3 To have, one should/must9.4 Abdominal pain9.5 A trip to the dentist's office9.6 An appointment with the ophthalmologist9.7 Dermatology9.8 The pharmacyChapter 1010.1 "Preguntar" y "pedir"10.2 "Conocer" y "saber"10.3 Possessive pronouns10.4 Another future tense form10.5 The present and past progressive tenses10.6 The use of acabar de . . .10.| Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs or STIs)10.8 The present and past perfect tenses10.9 "Por" v. "para"10.10 The tu form of the commandChapter 1111.1 The conditional tense11.2 A child who needs to lose weight11.3 The imperfect tense11.4 Prenatal instructions11.5 Direct object pronouns11.6 Indirect object pronouns11.7 Using direct and indirect object pronouns together11.8 The deliveryChapter 1212.1 The subjunctive mood12.2 A postpartum visit12.3 The imperfect subjunctive12.4 A patient with high blood pressure12.5 The conditional and the imperfect subjunctive in "si" clausesChapter 1313.1 The present perfect subjunctive13.2 The pluperfect subjunctive13.3 The first visit of a patient with diabetes13.4 How the heck does one use the pluperfect subjunctive?13.5 Instructions for taking birth control pills13.6 A review of all verb tenses covered Chapter 1414.1 A rape victim14.2 Victim of a car accident in the ER14.3 Occupational therapy14.4 A burn14.5 Patient regaining consciousness14.6 Monthly breast self-examination14.7 Monologue on neonatology14.8 Myocardial infarction or cerebrovascular thrombosis14.9 Pattern for growth and development14.10 Nursing14.11 Psychiatry and psychology15.1 Cultural competency/cross-cultural communication15.2 Herbal remedies15.3 Medicines15.4 Illnesses and symptoms (by body part)Appendix A: Verb TablesAppendix B: Dialogues and Monologues: English TranslationsAppendix C: Useful Documents and FormsAdvance Directives and Do Not Resuscitate (DNR)OrdersQuestions about DNR Code StatusQuestions for Determining Geriatric Depression ScaleCommunication with Advanced Disease Patients (Palliative Care)Primary Care Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)ScreeningPatient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9)Answer KeyEnglish-Spanish GlossarySpanish-English GlossaryIndexNER(01): WOW