this medical form also wants my immunization record with years. I have access to my current record from my dr fron the last 10 years and I have my childhood shot record, but I do not have any idea where my data on getting some of these are.
Natter 76: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Foaminess
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People need to do those immunization records when they come in as students. The easiest thing is to go to a PCP and have them sign off. But the polio is always a challenge.
For everything except polio, they can do titres to prove that you are vaccinated, even without dates,
I'm a little weirded out that this work medical form asks medical history and for medications I am taking. I did not think they could ask that.
The answer seems to be "it's complicated". [link] Personally, I would list what you are comfortable with and leave off anything you feel is none of their dang business.
Immunizations I can understand, but just do the best you can. I'd have zero method of finding out any of my childhood ones. Parents and all the doctors long gone.
If it were me I would list anything life threatening plus allergies and leave it at that - enough information so if I had to be rushed to the ER from work I wouldn't die, but nothing sensitive that wasn't relevant to the job.
I finished the form. I also got the $$ from selling house in TX an I have paid off 3 credit cards. Off to the physical thing.
Although lately I have been craving hash- which I can't have because potatoes
I make hash all the time without potatoes. I usually substitute things like mushrooms or zuccini or yellow squash, bell peppers etc.
People substitute cauliflower for potatoes all the time -- could you use riced cauliflower for a hash?
Also, I will take all the taters that people can't eat. ALL OF THEM.
People need to do those immunization records when they come in as students. The easiest thing is to go to a PCP and have them sign off. But the polio is always a challenge
I went to grad school in the gap between my childhood records being easily accessible and their being digitized, and ended up getting a sign-off from student health when I told them I had gone to a real college for undergrad -- they believed that I had had the records at 17 and the childhood stuff was still the same at 30!
I went to grad school in the gap between my childhood records being easily accessible and their being digitized, and ended up getting a sign-off from student health when I told them I had gone to a real college for undergrad -- they believed that I had had the records at 17 and the childhood stuff was still the same at 30!
Mine didn't and I wound up having to get a second round of MMR at age 40. (I had my titres done and came in just barely below the threshold.)