Results 211 to 220 of about 965,843 (259)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Surgical Neurology, 1997
The development and current state of Vietnamese neurosurgery is presented, in order to highlight the difficulties faced by neurosurgeons in Vietnam and other developing countries.Information has been collected personally by the authors in Vietnam.The conditions of neurosurgery endured by our neurosurgical colleagues in Vietnam are far inferior to those
Jeffrey V. Rosenfeld, Nguyen Thuong Xuan
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The development and current state of Vietnamese neurosurgery is presented, in order to highlight the difficulties faced by neurosurgeons in Vietnam and other developing countries.Information has been collected personally by the authors in Vietnam.The conditions of neurosurgery endured by our neurosurgical colleagues in Vietnam are far inferior to those
Jeffrey V. Rosenfeld, Nguyen Thuong Xuan
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Psychiatric Services, 1983
Letters from readers are welcorned. They will be published at the discretion of the editor as space permits and will be subject to editing. They should be a maxirnurn of 500 words with no more than five references and should be submitted in duplicate, typed double-spaced. Writers' affiliations will be published.
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Letters from readers are welcorned. They will be published at the discretion of the editor as space permits and will be subject to editing. They should be a maxirnurn of 500 words with no more than five references and should be submitted in duplicate, typed double-spaced. Writers' affiliations will be published.
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Journal of Psychosocial Nursing and Mental Health Services, 1988
The unresolved anger and despair felt by the bereaved family members of over 50,000 soldiers who lost their lives in the tragedy of the Vietnam War still reverberates in American society today and presents an unvoiced yet persistent need to health care professionals.
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The unresolved anger and despair felt by the bereaved family members of over 50,000 soldiers who lost their lives in the tragedy of the Vietnam War still reverberates in American society today and presents an unvoiced yet persistent need to health care professionals.
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Hospital Practice, 1992
'No bandages,' Florman said. 'Why no bandages? Because the mother will cry when she sees her child. Then she will see what you have done, and she will think you are God.'
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'No bandages,' Florman said. 'Why no bandages? Because the mother will cry when she sees her child. Then she will see what you have done, and she will think you are God.'
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Importation and Human-to-Human Transmission of a Novel Coronavirus in Vietnam
New England Journal of Medicine, 2020Lan T Phan
exaly