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Communicating healthcare information : an analysis of medical records /Pagano, Michael Pro, January 1990 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oklahoma, 1990. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 183-194).
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A survey of the perceptions of impact factor among gastrointestinal researchers /Mak, Kwok-kei. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M. Med. Sc.)--University of Hong Kong, 2005.
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A survey of the perceptions of impact factor among gastrointestinal researchersMak, Kwok-kei., 麥國基. January 2005 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Medical Sciences / Master / Master of Medical Sciences
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Narratives and rhetoric persuasion in doctors' writings about the summer complaint, 1883-1939 /Sliter-Hays, Sara Maria. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2008. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Effects of guided imagery exercises verus writing and editing exercises on writing anxiety and self-perception of writing ability of health professionals /Shilling, Lilless McPherson January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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Narratives and rhetoric : persuasion in doctors' writings about the summer complaint, 1883-1939Sliter-Hays, Sara Maria 24 September 2012 (has links)
Narratives and Rhetoric: Persuasion in Doctors’ Writings about the Summer Complaint, 1883-1939, is a study of narrative as it is used in scientific writing. This rhetorical analysis follows the historical evolution of a genre as the genre mediates competing scientific, professional, and social forces, changes them, and is changed by them. Despite advances in scientific and medical technology that offered supposedly objective and measurable data and despite doctors’ push for recognition as scientific professionals, doctors’ writing increasingly relied on narrative as a persuasive device in medical articles published in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Medical narratives perform pedagogical functions, illustrating both the general course of a disease and variant courses so that practitioners can make better diagnoses when they are faced with similar cases. Medical narratives also shape doctors’ discourse and, through that, the practice of medicine and the formation of the medical profession. Medical narratives maintain ambiguity, perpetuating the need for the skilled human clinician despite the proliferation of more and more sophisticated medical technology. Medical narratives also determine how the various participants in medical decisions--the doctor, the patient, the parent, and the disease itself--are valued and judged. These value judgments determine what medical interventions and cultural systems are deployed to return a patient to health. Medical narratives can be epideictic, reinforcing doctors’ ethos; they can be disciplinary, correcting errant members; and they can be exhortatory, urging doctors toward better ethical practice. Thus, narratives are extremely valuable in medical discourse, and their persistence in doctors’ writing is easily explained. / text
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AN INTERNSHIP AS A SCIENTIFIC COMMUNICATIONS ASSOCIATE AT ELI LILLY AND COMPANYCrowder, Julie K. 30 November 2004 (has links)
No description available.
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Purpose and identity in professional and student radiology writing : a genre based approachGoodier, Caroline Margaret Mary 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines the way in which purpose and identity are realised in the written case
reports of radiography students in comparison with those of professional writers. Students
entering a new discourse community have to take on a new social identity and this identity
is expressed by means of familiarity with the appropriate discourse conventions, including
genre as the most overt expression of rhetorical purpose. Also important are the
pragmatic choices used by writers to guide readers’ understanding of text and to construct
interaction between them, i.e. metadiscourse, which here provides an additional and
complementary way of viewing purpose and identity.
The study aims, at a more theoretical level, to make a contribution to writing research by
integrating genre analysis and metadiscourse analysis within a single framework to
provide new insight into the resources available to writers to construe identity in text. At a
descriptive level, it provides analyses of a hitherto neglected genre of medical writing.
Because the study compares the writing of novices and professionals, the description of
this genre makes findings available for pedagogical application.
Radiographers and radiologists work as members of the same professional teams and
both publish case reports, often in the same journals. Data for the study is provided by
two corpora of reports, one produced by radiography students and the other published in
national journals by professionals. The genre analysis establishes the move structure of
the radiological case study for both corpora and a cross-corpus analysis of metadiscourse
demonstrates how identity is realised in the text as the moves unfold. Both quantitative
and qualitative approaches are adopted with regard to the data.
The student reports appear to be examples of a sub-genre of case reports with the move
structure and metadiscoursal strategies differing in several significant ways, reflecting the
different purposes and identities of the writers. Student writers are found not to be
concerned with the more persuasive rhetorical functions of the genre and tend to align
themselves with the viewpoint of the patient rather than the medical profession, drawing on
school essay discourse and making use of metadiscoursal strategies associated with
textbooks. / Linguistics / D.Litt. et Phil. (Linguistics)
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Purpose and identity in professional and student radiology writing : a genre based approachGoodier, Caroline Margaret Mary 11 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines the way in which purpose and identity are realised in the written case
reports of radiography students in comparison with those of professional writers. Students
entering a new discourse community have to take on a new social identity and this identity
is expressed by means of familiarity with the appropriate discourse conventions, including
genre as the most overt expression of rhetorical purpose. Also important are the
pragmatic choices used by writers to guide readers’ understanding of text and to construct
interaction between them, i.e. metadiscourse, which here provides an additional and
complementary way of viewing purpose and identity.
The study aims, at a more theoretical level, to make a contribution to writing research by
integrating genre analysis and metadiscourse analysis within a single framework to
provide new insight into the resources available to writers to construe identity in text. At a
descriptive level, it provides analyses of a hitherto neglected genre of medical writing.
Because the study compares the writing of novices and professionals, the description of
this genre makes findings available for pedagogical application.
Radiographers and radiologists work as members of the same professional teams and
both publish case reports, often in the same journals. Data for the study is provided by
two corpora of reports, one produced by radiography students and the other published in
national journals by professionals. The genre analysis establishes the move structure of
the radiological case study for both corpora and a cross-corpus analysis of metadiscourse
demonstrates how identity is realised in the text as the moves unfold. Both quantitative
and qualitative approaches are adopted with regard to the data.
The student reports appear to be examples of a sub-genre of case reports with the move
structure and metadiscoursal strategies differing in several significant ways, reflecting the
different purposes and identities of the writers. Student writers are found not to be
concerned with the more persuasive rhetorical functions of the genre and tend to align
themselves with the viewpoint of the patient rather than the medical profession, drawing on
school essay discourse and making use of metadiscoursal strategies associated with
textbooks. / Linguistics and Modern Languages / D.Litt. et Phil. (Linguistics)
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Technical Writing Internship at a Medical Device CompanyWeflen, Mark R. 13 December 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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