Results 211 to 220 of about 1,428 (252)
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Iatrogenic Is Not a Dirty Word

Chest, 1970
The difficulty of determining the severity of thromboembolic pulmonary vascular obstruction by the usual clinical methods is illustrated by the reporting of four patients that had suffered massive pulmonary embolism yet presented benign clinical manifestations. Since the most effective therapeutic management may depend upon a reliable assessment of the
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“Agriculture” Is Not a Dirty Word

Science, 2009
Agricultural science is ripe for a renaissance. For too many years, the agriculture sciences have been disparaged in the science and education communities, perhaps because agronomy, soil science, plant pathology, and animal science use a problem-solving approach rather than simply seeking knowledge.
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Dirty, deluded, and dangerous

BMJ, 2012
Left to their own devices, doctors don’t always do the right thing Obstetricians were outraged when, in 1846, Ignaz Semmelweis reduced mortality from puerperal fever in Viennese women from 16% to 3% by making doctors and medical students disinfect their hands between performing postmortems and delivering babies: they could not accept any criticism of ...
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Dirty writing

Culture and Organization, 2008
Alison Pullen, Carl Rhodes
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Short communication: Evaluation of a foot dirtiness scoring system for dairy cows

Journal of Dairy Science, 2020
Juan Manuel Ariza   +2 more
exaly  

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