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Hearing Loss

Annals of Internal Medicine, 2020
Hearing loss is highly prevalent and may significantly affect how we age. Although the population is aging, relatively few adults receive treatment for hearing loss. Internists are a critical partner to audiologists and otolaryngologists in caring for the adult population with hearing loss.
Carrie L. Nieman, Esther S. Oh
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Hearing Loss

Medical Clinics of North America, 2010
Hearing loss is one of the most common sensory impairments and affects almost 10% of the adult population. The percentage of adults with hearing loss markedly increases with advancing age. The differential diagnosis for patients presenting with hearing loss is extensive, but can often be narrowed with a directed hearing history and physical examination.
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Pregnancy loss

Best Practice & Research Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 2014
Women who lose desired pregnancies by miscarriage, stillbirth, or genetic termination are at risk of suffering from grief, anxiety, guilt and self-blame that may even present in subsequent pregnancies. It is important to find effective means of helping women deal with these losses.
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Hearing loss

2003
Abstract The World Health Organization has estimated that 360 million people worldwide are affected by disabling hearing loss, making hearing impairment—the hidden handicap frequently overlooked by all clinicians—the most common sensory impairment.
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Parental losses

Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1984
ABSTRACTIn a review article parental losses (PL) of children in different age and sex groups are psycho‐analytically examined from the view point of the triangular family relationship, cognitive development of the children and their ability to mourn, delinquency, schizophrenia and affective illnesses, and lastly the controversies about and objections ...
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Loss aversion

Loss aversion postulates that people prefer avoiding losses over acquiring gains of equal size. It is a central part of prospect theory and, according to Daniel Kahneman, "the most significant contribution of psychology to behavioral economics" (Kahneman, 2011, p. 300). It has powerful implications for decision theory and has been fruitfully applied in
Imai, Taisuke, Schmidt, Klaus
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Loss

Medical Humanities, 2016
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