You should make eye contact with the pilot and follow his signals. He may not want you to approach at all until he shuts down. Due to the way helicopter engines are cooled, this may take a couple minutes.
At any rate, you should NEVER approach a running helicopter from the rear. The tail rotor is every bit as deadly as the main rotor.
Bedside manner is the physician's approach to the patient; practice (and diagnosis, on some level) is the physician's approach to the patient's problem. Malpractice is when the physician's approach is improper.
A patient centered approach is one that is individualized for that patient. I am not sure, but maybe that is what you are asking when you say "person centered approach."
Yes. There is a helicopter that you can ride in on the right side of the island.
cuts into the patient's side. This is particularly useful in massively obese patients. If both glands need to be removed, the surgeon must remove one gland, repair the surgical wound, turn the patient onto the other side, and repeat the entire process
How do you postion a patient after a thoracentesis? On the unaffected side to help drain the affected side.
The helicopter lifted the injured man off the side of the building and took him to safety. The President's helicopter is referred to as Marine One.
No, helicopter blades do not break the sound barrier. The tips of the blades can approach the speed of sound, but the entire blade does not exceed the speed of sound.
It is at the side of his mansion:).
A Helicopter - the number of blades is irrelevant. On a side note - what keeps a helicopter in the air? It's so ugly the earth repels it!
Either side he wishes. Normally he will approach the drivers side but he can approach the passenger side.
A patient in Buck's Traction should not turn from side to side. This can interfere with the immobilization of the leg or foot.
approach the patient with empathy and try to understand the reason of uncooperative or hostile behavior