Results 291 to 300 of about 572,996 (341)

The science of recalls

Meat Science, 2005
Morbidity due to foodborne illnesses in the US has decreased over the last ten years. During the same time period recalls affecting the meat and poultry industry have increased from 38 in 1993 to a peak of 128 in 2002. Recalls due to L. monocytogenes (LM) and E.
Melvin N. Kramer   +2 more
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Duty to Recall

Southern Medical Journal, 1980
In the last few years there has been a dichotomy in the law vis-à-vis health care providers. The state legislatures are imposing statutory barriers which impede the ability of patients to bring malpractice suits against health care providers. On the other hand, the courts are increasing the spectrum of legal causes of action available to patients in ...
Berg D, Hirsh Hl
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Anatomy of a Recall

Topics in Companion Animal Medicine, 2008
Pet foods on the market that are contaminated or otherwise present a health risk to humans or animals may be subject to a recall under US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulations. Legally, all recalls are "voluntary," but there is little incentive for companies to refuse a request by FDA to conduct a recall.
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Awareness and Recall

International Anesthesiology Clinics, 1986
Awareness and recall under anesthesia is a complication that appears to be related to the use of muscle relaxants. While little is known about unconscious awareness and its physical and psychological consequences, it is well known that recall can result in traumatic psychological sequelae under certain circumstances.
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On Recalling Ant [PDF]

open access: possibleThe Sociological Review, 1998
The paper explores one after the other the four difficulties of actor-network theory, that is the words ‘actor’, ‘network’ and ‘theory’—without forgetting the hyphen. It tries to refocus the originality of what is more a method to deploy the actor's own world building activities than an alternative social theory.
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Recalling to Recognize and Recognizing Recall

1999
The influence of the Atkinson-Shiffrin (1968) model is far-reaching to the point that one current memory textbook refers to it as the "modal model" (Schwartz & Reisberg, 1991). The Atkinson-Shiffrin chapter focussed on cued and free recall, proposing a serial search as the control process underlying retrieval in these tasks.
openaire   +2 more sources

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