“For all the sophisticated diagnostic tools of modern medicine, the conversation between doctor and patient remains the primary diagnostic tool.” This idea lies at the heart of Danielle Ofri's new book What Patients Say, What Doctors Hear, in which she acknowledges, dissects, experiments with, and analyses the complexities and miscues of the patient–doctor exchange.
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Summary We tested whether prophylactic droperidol and ondansetron, in combination with a moderate dose of dexamethasone, were equally effe...
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by Rita Rey-Baños, Luis E. Sáenz de Miera, Pedro García, Marcelino Pérez de la Vega Retrotransposons with long terminal repeats (LTR-RTs) a...
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by Demin Li, Carol Bentley, Jenna Yates, Maryam Salimi, Jenny Greig, Sarah Wiblin, Tasneem Hassanali, Alison H. Banham Therapeutic monoclon...
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Web version of a book about Subversion. Work in progress, however already very complete. The book should be published by O'Reilly and As...
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by Kerstin Jost, Isabelle Pramana, Edgar Delgado-Eckert, Nitin Kumar, Alexandre N. Datta, Urs Frey, Sven M. Schulzke Background Poor contro...
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Abstract Background Head and neck extirpations requiring reconstruction are challenging surgeries with high postoperative complication r...
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Through the Wormhole: Is There an Edge to... Science - 43 min - ★ It is commonly theorized that the universe began with the Big Bang... Thro...
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