Results 301 to 310 of about 602,686 (344)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

New England Journal of Medicine, 1956
TO those interested in the field of physical medicine and rehabilitation the major sources of publications in this country are the Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, the American Journal of Physical Medicine and the Physical Therapy Review.
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Rehabilitation Medicine: A Textbook on Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1965
In the six years since the first edition of this comprehensive book was published, scientific advances and clinical studies have necessitated the virtual rewriting of five complete chapters. "Principles of Home-Making and Housing" has been considerably revised and improved, with new diagrams and illustrations.
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Biofeedback in physical medicine and rehabilitation [PDF]

open access: possibleBiofeedback and Self-Regulation, 1978
Rehabilitation is a multidisciplinary process that includes the cooperative efforts of various medical specialists and their associates in related health fields to improve the mental, social, physical, and vocational aptitudes of persons who are handicapped, with the object of upgrading their ability to live happily and productively within their ...
C. K. Fernando, J. V. Basmajian
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Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1997
Rehabilitation medicine has a clear but complex mission. As the 13th century physician-philosopher Maimonides once remarked, "To sustain and nurture a man alive in the throes of disease and disability is as great a miracle as to create him." This credo, emblematic of physiatry's calling, is well represented in the pages of Dr Randall L.
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Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1984
Because patients with major disabilities usually are initially seen with a variety of problems that touch on many aspects of several different medical and psychosocial specialties and, most recently, the specialty of neurocybernetics, physical medicine and rehabilitation is a multidisciplinary practice that crosses traditional specialty and ...
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Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1981
The United Nations has proclaimed 1981 the International Year of the Disabled, and thus the research and clinical advances in physical medicine and rehabilitation are appropriately highlighted. Diagnosis Single-fiber electromyography has emerged as a clinically useful technique to identify neuromuscular transmission defects at an earlier stage in ...
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Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1993
Physiatry has continued to evolve with changing patterns of illness and disability. The Institute of Medicine estimates that 35 million Americans (approximately one in seven) have disabling conditions. 1 More than 9 million are unable to work, study, or live independently. The average American will live almost 13 years with some sort of limitation.
Kristi L. Kirschner, Henry B. Betts
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Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1975
To the Editor.— I think George A. Sheehan, MD (232:1127,1975) makes a good point in indicating the lack of use of physical therapy modalities in the treatment of noncontact sports injuries. I think part of the problem is that too few patients are referred to physicians in my specialty of physical medicine and rehabilitation to use all the modalities ...
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TRAINING IN PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1959
Rehabilitation is a word that denotes restoration or improvement in condition. In medicine it is concerned with a type of practice which places broad social responsibilities on the physician. Physical medicine and rehabilitation is directed toward treatment of disability.
Charles D. Shields, Hugh H. Hussey
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