Results 261 to 270 of about 3,132,502 (317)
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Clinical Practice, Clinical Ethics
Archives of Internal Medicine, 1985There are physicians who make patient-care decisions as part of their everyday life, but who are still unconvinced of the importance of the "fuss" about ethics. It is understandably difficult for many physicians, raised on a belief in medical science and surrounded by the effective technology that is the hallmark of today's practice, to acknowledge ...
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Clinical competence/clinical credibility
Nurse Education Today, 1997This paper offers a report of a small-scale research study undertaken by the author to investigate teachers' perceptions of clinical competence and credibility. To provide a balance of opinions, senior clinicians' views on the subject were also obtained. Historically, the topic of nurse teachers' clinical competence and credibility has received varying
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Clinical Trials Without Clinical Sites
JAMA Internal Medicine, 2021Clinical trials conducted at clinical sites are limited to enrolling people who live nearby and are able to attend visits at clinics. Some types of clinical trials can be performed without clinical sites, which enables people to participate regardless of proximity to a clinical site or limitations that make visits difficult.
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Clinical Ethics versus Clinical Research
The American Journal of Bioethics, 2006Chiong's paper (2006) nicely highlights the clinical researcher's dilemma: To which set of ethical principles does the researcher owe allegiance?
Paul S, Appelbaum, Charles W, Lidz
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Journal of Professional Nursing, 1983
Clinical research in nursing is well known and well described. Clinical scholarship is an alternative, but not a substitutable, form of nursing's intellectual activity. Clinical scholarship is described with examples. It is argued that for some kinds of nursing work, clinical scholarship is the appropriate method.
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Clinical research in nursing is well known and well described. Clinical scholarship is an alternative, but not a substitutable, form of nursing's intellectual activity. Clinical scholarship is described with examples. It is argued that for some kinds of nursing work, clinical scholarship is the appropriate method.
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Clinical and non-clinical binges
Behaviour Research and Therapy, 1990A study was conducted to determine if, and in what respects, clinical binges (reported by bulimic subjects) are different from non-clinical binges (reported by a non-clinical population). Furthermore, the study tested whether the DSM-III-R criteria and other variables that are retrospectively claimed to be defining characteristics indeed differentiate ...
Jansen, Anita +2 more
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Current Infectious Disease Reports, 1996
Clinical toxinology is a specialized area of clinical medicine focused on the pathophysiology, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of diseases caused by animal, plant, and fungal toxins. This review focuses on recent developments in snakebite.
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Clinical toxinology is a specialized area of clinical medicine focused on the pathophysiology, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of diseases caused by animal, plant, and fungal toxins. This review focuses on recent developments in snakebite.
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Lgc: Clinical About Clinical Measurement
Bioanalysis, 2012LGC is the UK's designated National Measurement Institute for chemical and bioanalytical measurement, and through this role improves the quality and international acceptance of measurements performed within the UK. This research spotlight, highlighting measurement 'across the scale', from elemental analysis and small molecules, through to proteins, DNA
Julian, Braybrook, Louise, Dean
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Clinical Science, 1976
The most obvious achievements of clinical science have been in the elucidation of symptoms and signs and the patterns of disordered function due to failure of the organs or to nutritional disturbances. The benefits of clinical research are both direct--through improved practice--and indirect--through improved teaching and contributions to biological ...
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The most obvious achievements of clinical science have been in the elucidation of symptoms and signs and the patterns of disordered function due to failure of the organs or to nutritional disturbances. The benefits of clinical research are both direct--through improved practice--and indirect--through improved teaching and contributions to biological ...
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Clinical judgement and clinical training
British Journal of Medical Psychology, 1980The literature indicates that clinical judgement may sometimes be adversely affected by clinical training. It is suggested that this reflects qualitative changes in the modes of clinical listening, modes of inference, and relative weights given to stereotypic and individual information.
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