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The Family Doctor and the Suicidal Family

Psychiatry in Medicine, 1970
Suicide is a broad social problem, the full scope of which extends beyond the medical profession. The physician is, nevertheless, one of the most important figures in the field of suicide prevention. Particularly because of the growth of community psychiatry and other changes in psychiatric practice, it is more urgent than ever that the physician be ...
J, Richman, M, Rosenbaum
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Pharmacotherapy Guidelines for the aged by family doctors for the use of family doctors

Int. Journal of Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 2008
Part C of the guideline is preceded by Part B General Pharmacology IJCPT. 2008; 46: 600 - 617. Included in Part C are practical guidelines for improving the therapy of some age-specific diseases and problems commonly encountered in general practice. The article in this issue is dedicated to the therapy of Dementia and M. Parkinson.
F W, Bergert   +15 more
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The Doctor in the Family

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1999
The last thing my nephew and his family needed was another physician. They needed their aunt, their sister, their sister-in-law, not a doctor in the family.
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The Dilemma of the "Doctor in the Family"

Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics, 2018
The twelve narratives written by physicians for this symposium address the same question: "What happens when I wear a white physician's coat at the bedside of an ill or dying family member or friend?" This commentary addresses several key themes, which emerged as the author reacted to these narratives: (1) the physicians did not mention policy issues ...
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Doctor, Patient, and Family

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1989
Excerpt To the Editor:Hahn and colleagues (1) on the doctor-patient-family relationship are to be commended for acknowledging and discussing the dysfunctional situations that may underlie the behav...
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THE FAMILY DOCTOR

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1949
The picture of the family doctor has been drawn by greater artists than I. In his role as confidant and confessor, busy but patient, sometimes limited in preparation but long in understanding, he created a position which deeply influenced the decisions of the family and community.
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Doctors treating their families

BMJ, 2014
Common, often harmless, sometimes dangerous and wrong It began for me when I was a boy in the 1950s. My sisters and I would troop over to the house next door where our uncle, a general internist, jabbed us with the Salk polio vaccine. He wasn’t our regular doctor—we had a pediatrician whom we saw regularly for checkups and ear infections—but we ...
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THE FAMILY DOCTOR

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1956
In humbly accepting this high professional position as President of the American Medical Association, I look upon this office as a personal honor to me, and, even more so, I look upon it as a tribute to the nation's family doctors. For more than 35 years I have been a general practitioner in a small California city.
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The Family Doctor

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1985
He comes home excited, hugs all the children, plays with the baby, then lies down with me for a few moments of uninterrupted silence. To most people, four children aren't considered "silent," but compared with the clamor of a busy hospital, they are. He soaks up the noises of our house like other people soak up the rays of the sun.
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THE FAMILY DOCTOR

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1959
ABSTRACT To the Editor:— In the correspondence section of The Journal, Dec. 6, 1958, page 1929, an interesting letter by Dr. Leo J. DeBacker appears in reference to an article by Dr. Wheatley. Both doctors suggested remedies for the deplorable situation of boredom in which some pediatricians seem to find themselves.
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