Results 261 to 270 of about 42,832 (306)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
ECT: Misconceptions and Attitudes
Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 1982One hundred and seventy-eight subjects completed a questionnaire regarding ECT. The sample comprised three groups of approximately equal size: a group of patients who had received ECT, a group of visitors to ECT-treated psychiatric patients, and a group of visitors to non-ECT-treated psychiatric patients. Misconceptions about ECT were common throughout,
Kerr, R. A. +3 more
openaire +5 more sources
ENDOGENOUS OBESITY–A MISCONCEPTION
The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1930Excerpt The physician who prescribes a low calorie diet to reduce the weight of his obese patients frequently deals with subjects who fail to lose weight during the period of observation.
L.H. NEWBURGH +1 more
openaire +1 more source
Ophthalmology, 1979
Certain misconceptions about the law are common among physicians. The purpose of the legal system is to resolve disputes rather than dispense "justice." The rules of law are neither stable nor clear. Truth cannot be recovered for purposes of litigation; therefore, the evidence alone must determine the merit of a case.
openaire +2 more sources
Certain misconceptions about the law are common among physicians. The purpose of the legal system is to resolve disputes rather than dispense "justice." The rules of law are neither stable nor clear. Truth cannot be recovered for purposes of litigation; therefore, the evidence alone must determine the merit of a case.
openaire +2 more sources
The paper identifies a number of misconceptions about the monetary policy process and the monetary transmission mechanism in the UK. Among the misconceptions about the process are the alleged lack of regional and sectoral representativeness of the Monetary Policy Committee and the view that operational central bank independence means that monetary and ...
openaire +1 more source
Chapter 1 analyzes common tropes—the “graveyard of empires,” the Great Game, a place of disease and squalor—used to describe Afghanistan in order to highlight the ways in which memory-making and representation have contributed to mystifying the country and its peoples.
openaire +1 more source
openaire +1 more source

