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Disputatio medica inauguralis de febre remittente Indiæ OccidentalisLindesay, John January 1805 (has links)
Febres Indiae Occidentalis, pariter atque eae Britanniae, dividantur in contunuas, remittentes, et intermitentes.
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Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de febri endemica, improprie dicta febri flavaShortt, Thomas January 1815 (has links)
Quamdiu homies manserunt proprio solo adstricti, et nececiverunt reliquas partes orbis terrarum, sustentati et nutriti fructibus quos tellus sponte fundit, almaque rerum parens benigne suppeditat, morbi fere ignoti fuerunt, necdum exarserat vis eorum immansueta.
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Dissertatio medica inauguralis de febri endemica BataviaeThomson, John January 1828 (has links)
Qualis extiterit Febris inter naves, dum Bataviae commorarer, literis hic tradere consilium est. Atque cum loci descriptio saepe morbis ejusdem illustrandis utilis inveniatur, compendiaria quaedam ejusmodi ante morbum ipsum delineatio ut tradatur, conferet.
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The omnipresence of cancerShaha, Maya January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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The personal experience of chronic benign low back pain : an interpretative phenomenological analysisOsborn, Michael January 2002 (has links)
This thesis is a qualitative study of chronic benign low back pain (CBLBP). Psychological factors play an important role in the genesis and maintenance of CBLBP but the processes involved are poorly understood. The meaning of the pain for the sufferer is considered to be important and more research into this area that takes an idiographic approach is recommended in the literature. Three empirical studies are reported which employ Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) to explore the personal experience of CBLBP. A range of themes are discussed that capture the meaning of the pain for the sufferer and help to understand the dynamic relationship between the pain sensation, distress and disability. The first study is exploratory, the participants' struggle to make a coherent sense of their pain is revealed along with the related personal and social implications. In the second study the experience of pain itself is focused on more closely in the context of a simple intervention. Descriptions of the pain are given which reveal its threatening aspect and suggest that the participants' self-appraisal in the face of this threat is important. The factors underlying change are discussed and the contribution of contextual factors is emphasised. The first two studies indicated that the self-concept was worthy of further study and it became the explicit focus of the third study. The relevance of the self was highlighted and it was shown to be indivisible from the lived experience of CBLBP. The three studies reveal the multi-dimensional complexity of CBLBP and highlight how its inherent `unpleasantnessr'e presentsm ore than a noxious sensory experience but unfolds within a dynamic personal and social context. The emergent themes are reviewed and discussed in relation to the literature and implications for further research and clinical practice are suggested.
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Psychological stress, lifestyle and socioeconomic gradients in coronary heart disease, mortality and morbidityMacleod, John Andrew Arthur January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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A history of malaria control policy in colonial Kenya, 1897-1963Ombongi, Kenneth Sampson January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Genetic and functional analysis of syndromic and nonsyndromic genodermatosesHatsell, Sarah Jane January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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A putative role for cutaneous human papillomaviruses in the pathogenesis of non-melanoma skin cancersSurentheran, Thirunavukarasu January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Helicobacter pylori and the E-cadherin-catenin complex in the pathogenesis of gastric cancerMaher, Louise Sameen January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
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