Results 311 to 320 of about 684,036 (340)
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With WHO in the Philippines

The American Journal of Nursing, 1952
for mildew. After the rainy season comes the dust, especially in the rural areas where there are no paved roads, and the heat which reaches its peak during April and May. Government employees work only during morning hours in this period. The people are hospitable and family ties are very strong.
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Redtide in the Philippines

Human & Experimental Toxicology, 1994
1 Redtide is a marine phenomenon that poses great risk to the health and economic livelihood of people in coastal areas. Paralytic shellfish poisoning develops when a person consumes molluscs containing toxic dinoflagellates and suffers neurological and/or gastrointestinal manifestations. 2 Four redtide incidents in the Philippines are presented. The
K. Hartigan-Go, D. N. Bateman
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Philippines

Archipel, 1985
Loyre Ghislaine. Philippines. In: Archipel, volume 29, 1985. L'Islam en Indonésie I. pp. 84-90.
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PSYCHIATRY IN THE PHILIPPINES

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1964
The concept of psychiatry as a medical specialty applies to most countries today provided we keep in mind the varying fin plications of nosological entities in differ ent cultural settings. Accordingly, psychi atry in the Philippines must be viewed in a historical-geographical and cultural per spective.
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Dermatology in the Philippines [PDF]

open access: possibleInternational Journal of Dermatology, 1982
Perpetua D. Reyes-Javier   +1 more
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The Philippines.

Pacific Affairs, 1965
R. S. Milne   +2 more
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Genocide in the Philippines

Asian Journal of Psychiatry, 2018
Muhammad Hassan Majeed, Ali Ahsan Ali
openaire   +3 more sources

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