9:04--- So I am expected to sit with a calender and count from which day to which date is it going to be two weeks, after just 45 mins to read, paraphrase and summarize all this.
Hi Yash, it's not going to be so hard to figure it out. You can always write the dates in if relevant rather than counting through the days / weeks etc. But it would be something obvious, like 31st and then the 15th, perhaps. As long as the timeline is nice and clear in your letter, you'll be fine!
That's a great question. I would avoid it myself, because it sounds impersonal. Use the patient's name (full name to begin with), then you can use just their title and surname, or even just their first name if appropriate. You can use pronouns, of course. The patient usually gets a copy of the letter, so it's nice for them as well to see their name, rather than just "the patient presented with xyz." I hope this helps!
Hi Sona, If they have given “ Admitting officer, Emergency Department “ ( without a specific name) in the case notes. Should we sign off the letter saying Yours faithfully or Yours sincerely? Thank you 😊
Hi Shaya, that's a great question. If you haven't got a person's name, then we always end, "Yours faithfully., " Here's a video that might help! th-cam.com/video/H7yd6JCW4ck/w-d-xo.html
Thanks for the tips.
Thanks for you super support, as ever!
@@UpgradeYourOET You're welcome 🤗
Great, thank you!
Many many thanks!
Thank you Sona very much for your brief and targeted videos.
Thanks very much, Mohamed! I'm glad you find the videos useful. If you have any questions you'd like me to try and cover, just let me know!
Thank you very much 💐 ❤.
Thanks very much, Lama 🥰
Thanku verymuch
Thank you! I'm so glad you liked it!
9:04--- So I am expected to sit with a calender and count from which day to which date is it going to be two weeks, after just 45 mins to read, paraphrase and summarize all this.
Hi Yash, it's not going to be so hard to figure it out. You can always write the dates in if relevant rather than counting through the days / weeks etc. But it would be something obvious, like 31st and then the 15th, perhaps. As long as the timeline is nice and clear in your letter, you'll be fine!
Really very useful , nice strategy you used
Thank you so much Sona
You are doing great.
That's so kind of you to say, thank you! I'm glad you are finding the videos useful.
Very informative
Thank you
I'm so happy to hear that you found it useful, thanks again 😊
Thanks for your informative presentation. Just want to know whether i am I allowed to use the word patient in OET.
That's a great question. I would avoid it myself, because it sounds impersonal. Use the patient's name (full name to begin with), then you can use just their title and surname, or even just their first name if appropriate. You can use pronouns, of course. The patient usually gets a copy of the letter, so it's nice for them as well to see their name, rather than just "the patient presented with xyz." I hope this helps!
Thanks so much Sona
My pleasure 😊 Thanks Essien!
Thanksmam
Thanks, Balsinder. If you have any questions, please feel free to get in touch.
Hi Sona,
If they have given “ Admitting officer, Emergency Department “ ( without a specific name) in the case notes. Should we sign off the letter saying Yours faithfully or Yours sincerely?
Thank you 😊
Hi Shaya, that's a great question. If you haven't got a person's name, then we always end, "Yours faithfully., " Here's a video that might help! th-cam.com/video/H7yd6JCW4ck/w-d-xo.html
@@UpgradeYourOET Thank you so much ♥️
You're very welcome!
I subscribed ur channel
Thanks for your support Jannat!