Results 101 to 110 of about 30,662 (160)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Evaluating Newly‐Married Couples
British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 1969Early marriage represents an important point of personal and social reorganization. The study reports an intensive analysis of 26 newly‐married student couples drawn from a random sample of couples with known characteristics. Interview and test data indicate that emancipation from parental relationships and personal autonomy are important issues for ...
D, Hooper, A, Sheldon
openaire +2 more sources
Military Medicine, 1979
A review of 2,512 charts of cancer admissions in a small community hospital during a ten-year period revealed 19 married couples with cancer. Compared with other studies this number appears small. However, only 2% of our cases mentioned the spouse in the family histories, apparently because emphasis seems to be on genetics, not on environment.
openaire +4 more sources
A review of 2,512 charts of cancer admissions in a small community hospital during a ten-year period revealed 19 married couples with cancer. Compared with other studies this number appears small. However, only 2% of our cases mentioned the spouse in the family histories, apparently because emphasis seems to be on genetics, not on environment.
openaire +4 more sources
CANCER MORBIDITY IN MARRIED COUPLES*
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 1968A bstract For the purpose of collecting information about cancer morbidity in the spouses of cancer patients treated during a ten‐year period, special questionnaires were sent to the physicians involved. Of 1,691 questionnaires, 898 were answered. Only tissue diagnoses by the
O L, Manfredi, L, Gross
openaire +2 more sources
Journal of Surgical Oncology, 1990
AbstractThe occurrence of cancer in 46 couples related only by marriage and treated in a regional hospital is reported. Twenty‐four pairs had tumors of the same histopathologic type. Three couples had the same tumors with similar histology: brain (astrocytoma), urinary bladder (transitional cell carcinoma), and lung (adenocarcinoma).
openaire +2 more sources
AbstractThe occurrence of cancer in 46 couples related only by marriage and treated in a regional hospital is reported. Twenty‐four pairs had tumors of the same histopathologic type. Three couples had the same tumors with similar histology: brain (astrocytoma), urinary bladder (transitional cell carcinoma), and lung (adenocarcinoma).
openaire +2 more sources
Group Therapy for Married Couples
Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 1974The use of group therapy with married couples whose destructive relationship is chronic and an accepted way of life is described. Therapeutic forces operating in such groups and the role of the therapist in facilitating changes are assessed.
openaire +2 more sources
Mental Disorder in Married Couples
Journal of Mental Science, 1962The primary aim of family psychiatry is to demonstrate how the mental health of family members is interrelated. It is a study in which aspirations have outstripped techniques, possibly because research workers have attempted to apply the subtlety of clinical insights to details of family dynamics. Yet only confusion can follow such attempts while basic
openaire +2 more sources

