Guest guest Posted June 20, 2001 Report Share Posted June 20, 2001 Main Entry: stal·worth - an archaic variant of stalwart. Main Entry: stal·wart Function: adjective : marked by outstanding strength and vigor of body, mind, or spirit <stalwart common sense> synonym see STRONG - stal·wart·ly adverb - stal·wart·ness noun Ref: www.m-w.com/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rennie - Student Member of AAMT 46/Texas/nulligravida Career Step Student www.careerstep.com Current Specialty: Studying Applied Medical Terminology (Orthopedics) and Beginning Transcription ~Find a job you love and you will never have to work again.~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----- Original Message ----- > Doctor is dictating a discharge summary. Lists 10 problem areas, most > fractures. Then says disposition is > " stalworth " is he saying stall work? I have no idea. He goes on to say he > does not need to see him in follow-up but he would follow up with hand > and orthopedic and spine and plastics. > ANY IDEAS? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2001 Report Share Posted June 20, 2001 Oh no. I don't know this service area, Kentucky so for all I know it could have been the name of a clinic or apartment etc. I sent it through with stalwart. Well, if I get a proof I will let you know. Aliceanne On Wed, 20 Jun 2001 19:07:17 -0400 " Margaret Grant " writes: > Aliceanne, I believe that stalwart would be possible, but it would > actually be describing his condition on discharge rather than the > disposition, although I could be wrong. My docs usually use the > disposition to refer to where the patient is being discharged to, > but your doc may be referring to his condition, just a thought. > Margaret > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/20/01 07:01PM >>> > I went to the MW dictionary site shared with us this morning and > found > Stalwart meaning serviceable. This could be it. > Thanks. > Aliceanne > On Wed, 20 Jun 2001 18:46:47 -0400 " Margaret Grant " > > writes: > > Aliceanne, I have no idea what he is saying. Usually when the do > not > > want the patient to return to work, I hear the doc say something > > like " return to work in " or " not to return to work until seen > > again " . I have never heard a doc just say stall work. Sorry I > > can't be of more help. If I think of something, will let you > know. > > Margaret > > > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/20/01 06:39PM >>> > > Doctor is dictating a discharge summary. Lists 10 problem areas, > > most > > fractures. Then says disposition is > > " stalworth " is he saying stall work? I have no idea. He goes on to > > > say he > > does not need to see him in follow-up but he would follow up with > > > hand > > and orthopedic and spine and plastics. > > ANY IDEAS? > > Aliceanne > > > > TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to > > nmtc-unsubscribe > > > > PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2001 Report Share Posted June 20, 2001 Rennie I did not realize I did not include all in my response so made a copy for you. You may have seen Margaret's response which shakes my confidence again but I already sent it through with stalwart. Aliceanne --------- Forwarded message ---------- To: MGrant@... Date: Wed, 20 Jun 2001 19:01:36 -0400 Subject: Re: Discharge disposition I went to the MW dictionary site shared with us this morning and found Stalwart meaning serviceable. This could be it. Thanks. Aliceanne On Wed, 20 Jun 2001 18:46:47 -0400 " Margaret Grant " writes: > Aliceanne, I have no idea what he is saying. Usually when the do not > want the patient to return to work, I hear the doc say something > like " return to work in " or " not to return to work until seen > again " . I have never heard a doc just say stall work. Sorry I > can't be of more help. If I think of something, will let you know. > Margaret > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/20/01 06:39PM >>> > Doctor is dictating a discharge summary. Lists 10 problem areas, > most > fractures. Then says disposition is > " stalworth " is he saying stall work? I have no idea. He goes on to > say he > does not need to see him in follow-up but he would follow up with > hand > and orthopedic and spine and plastics. > ANY IDEAS? > Aliceanne > > TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to > nmtc-unsubscribe > > PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2001 Report Share Posted June 20, 2001 Rennie I did not realize I did not include all in my response so made a copy for you. You may have seen Margaret's response which shakes my confidence again but I already sent it through with stalwart. Aliceanne --------- Forwarded message ---------- To: MGrant@... Date: Wed, 20 Jun 2001 19:01:36 -0400 Subject: Re: Discharge disposition I went to the MW dictionary site shared with us this morning and found Stalwart meaning serviceable. This could be it. Thanks. Aliceanne On Wed, 20 Jun 2001 18:46:47 -0400 " Margaret Grant " writes: > Aliceanne, I have no idea what he is saying. Usually when the do not > want the patient to return to work, I hear the doc say something > like " return to work in " or " not to return to work until seen > again " . I have never heard a doc just say stall work. Sorry I > can't be of more help. If I think of something, will let you know. > Margaret > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/20/01 06:39PM >>> > Doctor is dictating a discharge summary. Lists 10 problem areas, > most > fractures. Then says disposition is > " stalworth " is he saying stall work? I have no idea. He goes on to > say he > does not need to see him in follow-up but he would follow up with > hand > and orthopedic and spine and plastics. > ANY IDEAS? > Aliceanne > > TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to > nmtc-unsubscribe > > PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2001 Report Share Posted June 20, 2001 Aliceanne, I hadn't thought about that. Who knows, maybe it should have been Stalwart, as the name of a place. Let us know if it comes back wrong. Margaret >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/20/01 07:11PM >>> Oh no. I don't know this service area, Kentucky so for all I know it could have been the name of a clinic or apartment etc. I sent it through with stalwart. Well, if I get a proof I will let you know. Aliceanne On Wed, 20 Jun 2001 19:07:17 -0400 " Margaret Grant " writes: > Aliceanne, I believe that stalwart would be possible, but it would > actually be describing his condition on discharge rather than the > disposition, although I could be wrong. My docs usually use the > disposition to refer to where the patient is being discharged to, > but your doc may be referring to his condition, just a thought. > Margaret > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/20/01 07:01PM >>> > I went to the MW dictionary site shared with us this morning and > found > Stalwart meaning serviceable. This could be it. > Thanks. > Aliceanne > On Wed, 20 Jun 2001 18:46:47 -0400 " Margaret Grant " > > writes: > > Aliceanne, I have no idea what he is saying. Usually when the do > not > > want the patient to return to work, I hear the doc say something > > like " return to work in " or " not to return to work until seen > > again " . I have never heard a doc just say stall work. Sorry I > > can't be of more help. If I think of something, will let you > know. > > Margaret > > > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/20/01 06:39PM >>> > > Doctor is dictating a discharge summary. Lists 10 problem areas, > > most > > fractures. Then says disposition is > > " stalworth " is he saying stall work? I have no idea. He goes on to > > > say he > > does not need to see him in follow-up but he would follow up with > > > hand > > and orthopedic and spine and plastics. > > ANY IDEAS? > > Aliceanne > > > > TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to > > nmtc-unsubscribe > > > > PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 20, 2001 Report Share Posted June 20, 2001 Aliceanne, I hadn't thought about that. Who knows, maybe it should have been Stalwart, as the name of a place. Let us know if it comes back wrong. Margaret >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/20/01 07:11PM >>> Oh no. I don't know this service area, Kentucky so for all I know it could have been the name of a clinic or apartment etc. I sent it through with stalwart. Well, if I get a proof I will let you know. Aliceanne On Wed, 20 Jun 2001 19:07:17 -0400 " Margaret Grant " writes: > Aliceanne, I believe that stalwart would be possible, but it would > actually be describing his condition on discharge rather than the > disposition, although I could be wrong. My docs usually use the > disposition to refer to where the patient is being discharged to, > but your doc may be referring to his condition, just a thought. > Margaret > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/20/01 07:01PM >>> > I went to the MW dictionary site shared with us this morning and > found > Stalwart meaning serviceable. This could be it. > Thanks. > Aliceanne > On Wed, 20 Jun 2001 18:46:47 -0400 " Margaret Grant " > > writes: > > Aliceanne, I have no idea what he is saying. Usually when the do > not > > want the patient to return to work, I hear the doc say something > > like " return to work in " or " not to return to work until seen > > again " . I have never heard a doc just say stall work. Sorry I > > can't be of more help. If I think of something, will let you > know. > > Margaret > > > > >>> Alice A Sawyer 06/20/01 06:39PM >>> > > Doctor is dictating a discharge summary. Lists 10 problem areas, > > most > > fractures. Then says disposition is > > " stalworth " is he saying stall work? I have no idea. He goes on to > > > say he > > does not need to see him in follow-up but he would follow up with > > > hand > > and orthopedic and spine and plastics. > > ANY IDEAS? > > Aliceanne > > > > TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM THIS MAILING LIST send a blank email to > > nmtc-unsubscribe > > > > PLEASE VISIT THE NMTC WEB SITE - http://go.to/nmtc > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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