Results 261 to 270 of about 129,637 (314)
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The right dose for the right patient

Blood, 2012
Even in the setting of intensive, multiagent chemotherapy treatment, interpatient variability in pharmacokinetics and adequate dosing are keenly important to the successful treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL).
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Patient Rights and Patient Chronicity

The Journal of Psychiatry & Law, 1980
Uncritical efforts to extend and promote rights for the mentally ill may ameliorate the degree of chronicity for some patients, but can also contribute to chronicity for others. A positive definition of chronicity emphasizes the need for psychiatric services to attain maximum possible independence from the consequences of illness.
Roger, Peele, Richard R, Palmer
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Human Rights and Patient’s Rights

2020
At the present moment, it is usually not long before a problem is framed in terms of rights-based arguments. Although it is hard to maintain that human rights is an unequivocal, universal tool, rights talk today is the trumping vocabulary of political struggle.
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What's Right with Patients' Rights

Medicolegal News, 1980
After eight years of review, analysis, several rejections, at least one near passage, and little or no floor debate in 1979, the Massachusetts Legislature enacted a patients' rights statute. Its passage was generally greeted with rising apathy except for one section which requires physicians treating female patients to make available “in the case of a ...
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Patients' rights in Europe

Health Policy, 1987
On the national and international level, legal instruments for the protection of the patient are developing. From the WHO-Europe study 'Trends in Health Legislation' trends regarding patients' rights on the national level in Europe are discussed. Moreover, an overview of international activities for the promotion of patients' rights is given.
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Choosing the right lungs for the right patient

The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation, 2013
There is an historical trend in lung transplantation, an altering appreciation of donor risks. In this issue, a report from the Hannover group is both a product of that trend and expresses a logical conclusion. In a previous era, only the best lung would do, and all the emphasis was on the “standard donor.” Gas exchange had to be good, the chest X-ray ...
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Getting the right drug into the right patient

Nature Biotechnology, 1997
Pharmacogenomics will help explain why drugs work better in some patients than in others. These tools should be used as early in the drug development process as possible.
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The rights of patients in Europe

European Journal of Health Law, 1994
The rights of patients in Europe , The rights of patients in Europe , کتابخانه مرکزی دانشگاه علوم پزشکی ...
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Telemedicine and patients’ rights

Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare, 2000
Telemedicine improves access to both health-care and second opinions. However, the potential risks of telemedicine, such as breaches in patient confidentiality and security, need to be addressed in order to ensure that patients’ rights are not violated.
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A patient’s right to choose

Nursing Standard, 2002
In her final article on the new Code of Professional Conduct, Lynne Pearce reports on the complex issue of consent to treatment.
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