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US of the Ovary and Adnexa: To Worry or Not to Worry?

RadioGraphics, 2012
Ultrasonography (US) is typically the first study to be requested in patients with clinical findings that may suggest pelvic disease. The evaluation of adnexal masses is a common component of the sonologist's workload, and US has been shown to be accurate for both detecting and characterizing these masses, most of which are either insignificant or ...
Sandra J. Allison, F C Laing
openaire   +3 more sources

Vocal Cord Melanosis: To Worry or Not to Worry?

Indian Journal of Otolaryngology and Head & Neck Surgery, 2023
Laryngeal Melanosis is a rare entity with unclear significance: whether it is a premalignant lesion for squamous cell carcinoma of the larynx or a sign of mucosal melanoma. In the few reported cases in the literature, it is descried as localised/diffused brownish discoloration of the mucosal surface of the involved subsite of the larynx.
Firyal Balushi   +2 more
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Worries and Values

Journal of Personality, 2000
Relations of individuals' value priorities to their worries are investigated in seven samples from four cultural groups (N = 1,441). A social‐cognitive analysis suggests that value priorities influence worries by increasing attention to and perception of threats to valued goals. On this basis, we generate hypotheses relating two types of worries, micro
Lilach Sagiv   +2 more
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The Worried Sick

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1978
Excerpt The term "the worried well" (1) has long troubled me. On the contrary, in my experience patients may worry themselves sick; and worry, fear, and dread all spell unfitness or sickness, not w...
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To Worry or to Believe

JAMA, 2023
In this narrative medicine essay, a current associate program director who entered medicine-pediatrics residency the year work-hours were capped and heard worried remarks about the quality of training residents would receive now hears the same worries expressed after residents voted to unionize at her hospital.
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A Study of Worrying

British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 1971
Worrying has never been properly studied. It is difficult to induce and to measure and has never been clearly defined. Some view it as neurotic behaviour synonymous with anxiety, whereas others indicate the positive aspects of the ‘work of worrying’.
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Care-as-Worry, or “Don’t Worry, be Happy”

Qualitative Health Research, 2002
Care, or caring, is one of the central concepts in North American health science and nursing theories. Yet, experiential accounts of caring show dimensions of meaning that have received little attention in the literature. The author compares the meanings of the terms care and caring with their counterparts in other languages.
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Gradients After Aortic Valve Repair—To Worry or Not to Worry?

The Annals of Thoracic Surgery, 2022
Mikolaj Berezowski   +2 more
openaire   +4 more sources

Resilience during uncertainty? Greater social connectedness during COVID‐19 lockdown is associated with reduced distress and fatigue

British Journal of Health Psychology, 2021
Jonas P Nitschke   +2 more
exaly  

Stress‐Buffering Role of Social Support during COVID‐19

Family Process, 2021
Erica Szkody, Melanie A Stearns
exaly  

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