Results 321 to 330 of about 257,548 (365)
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1969
In order to make medicine a more feasible career choice for women and in order to increase the level of training and, therefore, the quality of practice, it is important to decrease the scheduling rigidity of standard residency training programs. The steadily increasing numbers of women in medical school makes the problem more pressing at this time ...
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In order to make medicine a more feasible career choice for women and in order to increase the level of training and, therefore, the quality of practice, it is important to decrease the scheduling rigidity of standard residency training programs. The steadily increasing numbers of women in medical school makes the problem more pressing at this time ...
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Stress During Residency Training
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1989Sir .—We read with interest the article by Hoekelman regarding stress experienced during pediatric residency training in the February 1989 issue of AJDC . 1 This article adequately outlined the problem of resident stress and proposed some very useful solutions.
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Standardized residency training
American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy, 2003Robert P. Rapp, Janet Teeters
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Preventive Medicine Residency Training: A Resident's Perspective
American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 1991Preventive medicine as a discipline confronts considerable internal and external pressure today about society's needs for prevention specialists. Training in the field has remained static in the face of great changes. This article asserts the need to reassess the philosophy, content, and structure of graduate training in preventive medicine.
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Dermatology residency training in 1932 versus dermatology residency training in 1990
Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1991Dermatologic training programs and patient care in 1932 are compared with patient care, research, and residency training programs in 1990. The changes are due to development of newer diagnostic procedures and therapeutic agents, emergence of dermatopharmacology programs, research conducted by and supported by the pharmaceutical industry, and support of
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