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Peculiarities of Bacterial Cellulose. [PDF]
Militký J, Venkataraman M, Sözcü Ş.
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From conjecture and refutation to the documentation of occupational diseases in Taiwan
王榮德, WANG, JUNG-DER
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Dengue and the industry: Mental health perspectives.
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Journal of the American Medical Association, 1955
The impact of medicine on industry has been so well established that there can be no returning, for industries with well-established medical programs are continuously searching for more ways of utilizing the potentialities that make for optimum health in all facets of their organization.
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The impact of medicine on industry has been so well established that there can be no returning, for industries with well-established medical programs are continuously searching for more ways of utilizing the potentialities that make for optimum health in all facets of their organization.
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Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 1980
Beyond their direct use in traditional medicine, medicinal plants are used on an industrial scale to produce total extracts and tinctures, purified extracts and chemical products. The importance of the appropriate solvents to prepare extracts and their correct use in pharmaceutical formulations are emphasized. Generally, purified extracts, because they
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Beyond their direct use in traditional medicine, medicinal plants are used on an industrial scale to produce total extracts and tinctures, purified extracts and chemical products. The importance of the appropriate solvents to prepare extracts and their correct use in pharmaceutical formulations are emphasized. Generally, purified extracts, because they
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Evidence and the industrialization of medicine
Clinical and Experimental Dermatology, 2008Medicine is changing rapidly. In part, this is due to the accumulation of discoveries in biomedical science. However, this is not sufficient to explain the changes clinicians see. Whereas once medical advance concerned discoveries external to clinical practice (such as the identification of a causative microorganism or gene), medical practice itself is
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CONSTRUCTIVE MEDICINE AND INDUSTRY
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1946Of late so much has been said of the doctor in the lay press, both here and abroad, that not only is the public confused in regard to existing medical problems but many doctors themselves are confused, as well as perturbed, both in regard to their personal professional well being and in regard to the actual future of medicine.
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