Examples of profession in the following topics:
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- Historically and in many parts of the world, women's participation in the profession of medicine has been significantly restricted.
- At the beginning of the twenty-first century in industrialized nations, women have made significant gains, but have yet to achieve parity throughout the medical profession.
- Women's participation in medical professions was limited by law and practice during the decades while medicine was professionalizing.
- Moreover, there are skews within the medical profession.
- At the beginning of the 21st century, women in industrialized nations have made significant gains, but have yet to achieve parity throughout the medical profession.
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- A physician is a health care provider who practices the profession of medicine, which is concerned with promoting, maintaining or restoring human health through the study, diagnosis, and treatment of disease, injury and other physical and mental impairments.
- Nursing is a healthcare profession focused on the care of individuals, families, and communities so they may attain, maintain, or recover optimal health and quality of life.
- The profession combines physical science, social science, nursing theory, and technology in caring for those individuals.
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- Any profession, such as a doctor, lawyer, or social worker, is an example of a vocation.
- In the broader sense, Christian vocation includes the use of one's gifts in their profession, family life, church, and civic commitments for the sake of the greater common good.
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- Common middle and upper class professions include those of lawyer, doctor, and CEO.
- Thus, education beyond college is required for many middle to upper class professions.
- Many middle-class professions require post-secondary degrees, which are classified as tertiary education (or "higher education").
- Having a degree is strongly linked to occupation, and therefore income; degree holders work in more highly skilled professions and earn more on average.
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- Their professions require high educational status, are well-compensated, and are held in high esteem.
- The most common professions of the upper-middle class tend to center on conceptualizing, consulting, and instruction.
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- While women are succeeding in a number of professions, they continue to face significant barriers to entry and participation.
- A number of factors over the past few decades have resulted in women entering and flourishing in a variety of different professions.
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- Professional occupations, sometimes called "the professions" or "white collar jobs," include highly skilled positions, such as that of a lawyer, physician, and CEO.
- To enter the professions, a person usually must hold a professional degree.
- Because the professions are considered highly skilled, require high educational attainment, and provide high incomes, they are associated with high social status.
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- Mental health is a socially constructed and socially defined concept; different societies, groups, cultures, institutions, and professions have very different ways of conceptualizing its nature and causes, determining what is mentally healthy, and deciding what interventions are appropriate.
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- Entry of women into the higher professions like law and medicine was delayed in most countries due to women being denied entry to universities and qualification for degrees; for example, Cambridge University only fully validated degrees for women late in 1947, and even then only after much opposition and acrimonious debate.
- As gender roles have followed the formation of agricultural and then industrial societies, newly developed professions and fields of occupation have been frequently inflected by gender.
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- A profession, such as a law enforcement, is not a group but a category.