Results 201 to 210 of about 126,190 (263)
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The Doctor's Wife

Psychosomatics, 1976
A sociological survey of 52 doctors' wives was performed. The majority had attended private school, 19% had reached a tertiary level of education and 58% had been employed in the health profession before marriage, 42% in the nursing profession. At the time of the survey only 10% were in full-time external employment, but the majority assisted their ...
G, Parker   +5 more
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Wife's Marital Dependency and Wife Abuse

Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1982
Data from a nationally representative sample of 2, 143 adult men & women were used to explore the relationship between wives' dependency on marriage and wife abuse. While family violence researchers have posited such a relationship, it has not been empirically demonstrated.
Debra S. Kalmuss, Murray A. Straus
openaire   +1 more source

Freud's Wife

The Journal of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry, 2004
"What do women want?" Sigmund Freud famously declared, yet Martha, his wife for over 50 years, has always received scant attention. Most biographies of Freud and psychoanalytic studies treat her as an early romantic interest and neglect her once she becomes a wife and mother.
David, Galef, Harold, Galef
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Overview: The “Wife-Beater’s Wife” Reconsidered

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1980
Although not a new phenomenon, wife-beating has been largely ignored by mental health professionals. The author describes a context in which the physical abuse of women as wives can be understood and suggests alternative theoretical constructs to traditional theories of masochism as explanations of why women stay in violent marital relationships.
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A strangled wife

The Lancet, 1999
neurointerventional unit for cervical and cerebral angiography. She had been seen at another hospital 3 weeks earlier with sudden onset of weakness of her left arm. She had been treated for hypertension and hyperthyroidism. Upon arrival she was awake, alert, and oriented, with normal cognition and speech.
A M, Malek   +3 more
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Wife Abuse and the Wife Abuser

The Counseling Psychologist, 1994
This article reviews the clinical, theoretical, and empirical literature on wife abuse and the wife abuser that suggests answers to the questions, Why does he do it? and What will stop him? The article begins with a discussion of relevant historical and contextual information.
openaire   +1 more source

The wife of God

Anthropology & Medicine, 2009
The case was presented of an ultra-orthodox Jewish woman who believed that she is the wife of God. Such a belief may be normative in some religions, but not in Judaism, where closeness to God is understood as a metaphor. Although the patient's beliefs are not acceptable within ultra-orthodox beliefs, there are examples of such ideas within the history ...
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The Doctor's Wife

Archives of Internal Medicine, 1965
"Out of Zebulun they that handle the pen of the writer" (Judges V, 14) Gleanings From the Commonplace Book of a Medical Reader IT IS ONE of the humbling experiences we have as we grow older to find so many estimable things that we have taken for granted.
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The Doctor's Wife

Hastings Center Report, 2007
My husband brings his work home. Had he been a butcher, it might have been a prime cut of steak; a mason, a block of limestone. The newspaper reporter brings home fingers covered in ink, and the fishmonger, the smell of the sea. But my husband is an oncologist, so he brings home the dead and dying. This makes our king-size bed rather crowded.
openaire   +2 more sources

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