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Dialog Present Continous Tense

This document contains three dialogues between a nurse and patient discussing the patient's antenatal care. In the first dialogue, the patient is meeting with the nurse for the first time and discloses that she is in her first pregnancy and 20 weeks along. She complains of vomiting and heartburn. In the second dialogue at 20 weeks, the patient continues experiencing vomiting and heartburn. In the third dialogue in her third trimester, the patient asks if it is safe to fly domestically for the birth, and the nurse advises consulting the airline doctor but that flying sooner is safer the closer it gets to the due date.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
212 views2 pages

Dialog Present Continous Tense

This document contains three dialogues between a nurse and patient discussing the patient's antenatal care. In the first dialogue, the patient is meeting with the nurse for the first time and discloses that she is in her first pregnancy and 20 weeks along. She complains of vomiting and heartburn. In the second dialogue at 20 weeks, the patient continues experiencing vomiting and heartburn. In the third dialogue in her third trimester, the patient asks if it is safe to fly domestically for the birth, and the nurse advises consulting the airline doctor but that flying sooner is safer the closer it gets to the due date.

Uploaded by

Messy
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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NAME : MESSY HENNY SUPRIYANI

CLASS/SMT : B/6
NIM : SR172110038

DIALOG ANTENATAL CARE PRESENT CONTINOUS TENSE

Nurse : Have you seen an obstetrician before coming here?

Patient : No, I haven’t. I just noticed that I haven’t been in my period for 2 months and my
husband suggested that I took a pregnancy test. The result was obviously positive. 

Nurse : Do you remember when your last menstruation period was? 

Patient : I’m not sure, but if I’m not mistaken, it was by the end of September. 

Nurse : Is it your first pregnancy? 

Patient : Actually, yes. We weren’t planning for this and it made me worried so much. I was
having a really unhealthy lifestyle last month—I’m worried about the baby. 

Nurse : We’ll have an examination to count how many weeks you’ve been pregnant and see
if everything’s okay. We’ll also see if an ultrasound report is needed. 

Dialog 2

Nurse : How long have you been pregnant? 

Patient : It’s been 20 weeks. I’m in my second trimester now. 

Nurse : And how are things going? 

Patient : Well, I’m not sure if it’s morning sickness but I keep vomiting this whole week. I
didn’t know I would have it in two trimesters. 

Nurse : It’s actually normal to have morning sickness throughout your first and second
trimester. Any other symptoms you complain of? 

Patient : Heartburn. It hurts so much, especially when I have to throw up. It also made me
lose a lot of weight. 

Nurse : I need to know what you’ve been eating because this might have something to do
with it. Let me guess, you did have problems with your stomach before your pregnancy,
didn’t you? 

Patient : Yeah, I think I had a stomach disorder.  


Nurse : We’ll make sure you have a healthy diet after this

Nurse : So, what are you feeling? 

Patient :  I still suffer from a lot of heartburn during my third trimester but things get better
this week. Now I’m just really nervous about the delivery. The estimated due date is next
month. 

Nurse : Any other thing you want to complain of? 

Patient : Well I’m feeling a lot better actually. I was just wondering if it’s okay for me to fly
on the airplane; because I was thinking about giving birth in my hometown. It’s only an hour
flight. 

Nurse : From all the check-ups we have, I conclude it might be safe but you do have to
confirm it with the airline doctor. They’ll be the one who decide. It’s also better to fly sooner
because the closer it is to your due date, the less chance you’ll have. You know, some people
deliver their babies earlier than expected. 

Patient : I understand. I’ll talk about it with my husband. 

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