Results 301 to 310 of about 541,048 (356)
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Journal of the American College of Surgeons, 2000
Basic science, clinical, and epidemiologic research is producing impressive advances in obstetrics and gynecology that will have a major effect on clinical practice. This review highlights research reported or published during 1999 about the demographics and educational experiences of residents, race as a prognostic factor in malignancy, hormone ...
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Basic science, clinical, and epidemiologic research is producing impressive advances in obstetrics and gynecology that will have a major effect on clinical practice. This review highlights research reported or published during 1999 about the demographics and educational experiences of residents, race as a prognostic factor in malignancy, hormone ...
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1982
Heightened public interest in medical progress has brought the news media into an ever increasing role in the dissemination of new information. Frequently, the television, radio, or newspaper is the first source of such information, long before it appears in the medical journals, where a careful, dispassionate presentation of the facts can be made and ...
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Heightened public interest in medical progress has brought the news media into an ever increasing role in the dissemination of new information. Frequently, the television, radio, or newspaper is the first source of such information, long before it appears in the medical journals, where a careful, dispassionate presentation of the facts can be made and ...
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1995
Treating HIV-infected pregnant patients and the newborn with zidovudine reduced the percentage of HIV-infected infants. Uterine myomas are being treated effectively with gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogues. Nonoperative therapy is being used in the patient with an ectopic pregnancy.
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Treating HIV-infected pregnant patients and the newborn with zidovudine reduced the percentage of HIV-infected infants. Uterine myomas are being treated effectively with gonadotropin-releasing hormone analogues. Nonoperative therapy is being used in the patient with an ectopic pregnancy.
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Internship in obstetrics-gynecology
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1967Abstract The independent rotating internship of the past is rapidly disappearing. Mixed and straight programs are increasing and are being incorporated into the residency as a part of graduate medical education. The record of internships in obstetrics-gynecology is quantitatively and qualitatively second rate as compared with the other major ...
C J, Lund, J C, Donovan
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1989
The past year has seen exciting technological advances in the field of obstetrics and gynecology. Several advances in the areas of contraception, assisted reproduction, and the treatment of complications of prematurity are highlighted herein. On December 10, 1990, the Food and Drug Administration approved the Norplant Contraceptive System for use in ...
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The past year has seen exciting technological advances in the field of obstetrics and gynecology. Several advances in the areas of contraception, assisted reproduction, and the treatment of complications of prematurity are highlighted herein. On December 10, 1990, the Food and Drug Administration approved the Norplant Contraceptive System for use in ...
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OBSTETRIC AND GYNECOLOGIC EMERGENCIES
Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1997This article reviews the pearls and pitfalls of obstetric and gynecologic emergencies occurring in women presenting to the emergency department. Some pitfalls include failure to screen for ectopic pregnancy, tachycardia as an unreliable indicator of a ruptured ectopic pregnancy, and the use of serum hCG as a testing procedure during pregnancy.
E, Nadel, J, Talbot-Stern
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1996
Prematurity is the leading cause of infant morbidity and mortality in the United States, so research into the causes and prevention of preterm birth occupies the highest priority in the field of obstetrics. Before a prevention program can be tested, a reliable means of identifying pregnancies at risk must be available.
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Prematurity is the leading cause of infant morbidity and mortality in the United States, so research into the causes and prevention of preterm birth occupies the highest priority in the field of obstetrics. Before a prevention program can be tested, a reliable means of identifying pregnancies at risk must be available.
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Journal of the American College of Surgeons, 1999
A change in medical technology and the expansion of our informational resources continues to occur at the speed of light. Nowhere is this more evident than in obstetrics and gynecology. These new technologies improve patient outcomes and the quality of care that we can provide for our patients, but they are not without risks. We will not only look at a
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A change in medical technology and the expansion of our informational resources continues to occur at the speed of light. Nowhere is this more evident than in obstetrics and gynecology. These new technologies improve patient outcomes and the quality of care that we can provide for our patients, but they are not without risks. We will not only look at a
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Subspecialization in obstetrics and gynecology
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1977The formal development of subspecialities with obstetrics and gynecology has focused attention on problems of physician supply and demand. The need for subspecalized practitioners appears to be 750 in maternal-fetal medicine and 350 each in reproductive endocrinology and gynecologic oncology.
W H, Pearse, J R, Trabin
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Journal of the American College of Surgeons, 1998
New concepts that rock the foundations of current thought and established practice are infrequent in the realm of scientific discovery, and medicine is certainly no exception. But in our perennial collegial dialogue and in the ferment of medicine, there is constant questioning and reassessment of our knowledge. Novel insights emanate from this constant
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New concepts that rock the foundations of current thought and established practice are infrequent in the realm of scientific discovery, and medicine is certainly no exception. But in our perennial collegial dialogue and in the ferment of medicine, there is constant questioning and reassessment of our knowledge. Novel insights emanate from this constant
openaire +2 more sources

