Results 251 to 260 of about 2,929,460 (308)
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General Internal Medicine

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1991
Some 20 years ago, general internal medicine residencies and divisions were organized to move training outside the hospital and to produce a new generation of general internists for primary care. Despite public and private support for such training, the number of general internists from these special programs and from the traditional medical residency ...
John D. Stoeckle, John G. Goodson
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The Malaise in Internal Medicine [PDF]

open access: possibleArchives of Internal Medicine, 1977
Internists today are discomforted by uncertainty of identity, governmental interference with practice, total responsibility for patients' health, and by waning of faith in science. As personal "caring" physicians, internists are secure in primary care but should maintain their distinctive scholarly leadership as master clinicians and consultants ...
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General Internal Medicine

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1994
Internists advanced toward a patient care model based on critical, qualitative, and quantitative assessment of clinical care processes and outcomes. The complete internist must consider social context as well as traditional risk factors in promoting the health of patients.
R. Nathan Link   +2 more
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General Internal Medicine

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1993
With the increasing demand for and cost of medical care, policymakers recognize the need to reconsider the organization of health care in the United States. Any reordering of health care priorities will focus on providing optimum care at minimum cost and can only advance the role of general internal medicine.
John R. Feussner, David L. Simel
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Internal Medicine

2007
Internal Medicine is designed to provide the busy clinician with precisely the information needed where and when it is needed. The Associate Editors and contributors are internationally recognized authorities, and they have organized the content specifically so as to convey the essentials necessary for diagnosis, differential diagnosis, management ...
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General Internal Medicine in Internal Medicine: At the Core or on the Periphery?

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1992
In the past decade, faculty in sections of general internal medicine have assumed responsibility for training residents, for staffing clinical practices, and for developing new domains of health services and effectiveness research. These activities form the core of internal medicine: They are integral to the role of internal medicine as an academic and
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Internal medicine in Spain

European Journal of Internal Medicine, 2003
Patients who are seen by internists seldom have a single, well-defined nosological entity. More often they are elderly patients with marginal pluripathology who have associated chronic or terminal illness with their attendant social problems. Nowadays, the majority of patients with the most prevalent diseases fit this profile.
Jose de Portugal, Pedro Conthe
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Internal Medicine in the 1930s

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1988
The Harvard Medical School set up a teaching service at Boston City Hospital in 1914; in 1923, the school added a specially endowed research facility, the Thorndike Memorial Laboratory. The combination, known as the Harvard Medical Unit at Boston City Hospital, endured for 52 years.
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