Results 131 to 140 of about 20,366 (187)
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Debits and Credits in the Management of Depression

British Journal of Psychiatry, 1993
Concern over the cost of health care is playing an increasing role in Great Britain, but evaluation of benefit is generally inadequate. This is particularly true in the case of depression, for which the cost of drugs is 1.9% of the National Health Service pharmaceutical budget.
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DR. STANDS FOR DEBIT.

The Accounting Review, 1945
Abstract Two college students were working in the accounting laboratory at the university finishing their term problem. One asked the other that he wondered why they use the abbreviation dr. for debit in accounting? He said he could see the sense of cr. for credit, but not dr.
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Credits and debits on the Internet

IEEE Spectrum, 1997
Since the advent of banking in the Middle Ages, bank customers have used paper based instruments to move money between accounts. In the past 25 years (1972-97), electronic messages moving through private networks have replaced paper for most of the value exchanged among banks each day. With the arrival of the Internet as a mass market data network, new
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Debit Insurance

The Journal of Insurance, 1963
William M. Alrich, William B. Buckman
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["Windkessel" and coronary debit].

Archives des maladies du coeur et des vaisseaux, 1981
The aim of this study was to support the hypothesis that aortic distensibility, resulting in a Windkessel effect of the high pressure compartment, may influence coronary blood flow, principally in the subendocardial layers. A hydraulic model of the arterial circulation including a branch representing the coronary circulation, was constructed.
Y, Bouvrain, B, Lévy
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Debit or Credit?

Scientific American, 2001
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