Academic literature on the topic 'Interns (Medicine) Victoria'

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Journal articles on the topic "Interns (Medicine) Victoria"

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Piterman, Leon, and Chris Silagy. "Hospital interns' and residents' perceptions of rural training and practice in Victoria." Medical Journal of Australia 155, no. 9 (November 1991): 630–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.5694/j.1326-5377.1991.tb93934.x.

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Azer, Sarah, Munad Khan, Nathan Hoag, Riteesh Bookun, Nathan Lawrentschuk, Richard Grills, and Damien Bolton. "Interns’ perceptions of exposure to urology during medical school education in Victoria, Australia." ANZ Journal of Surgery 87, no. 1-2 (January 2017): 10–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/ans.13769.

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Brick, Aarón. "Guadalupe Victoria tenía abuelo gachupín." Relaciones Estudios de Historia y Sociedad 42, no. 165 (December 1, 2021): 179. http://dx.doi.org/10.24901/rehs.v42i165.759.

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El padre de Guadalupe Victoria nació en Salamanca, Michoacán (hoy Guanajuato) en 1750. Este artículo contiene los primeros datos publicados sobre sus orígenes, en la forma de tres partidas sacramentales. Lo suministrado nos ayuda para refinar el entendimiento del federalismo y republicanismo de su hijo, el eventual guerrilla y Presidente. De interés especial es el hecho que Guadalupe Victoria tenía un abuelo peninsular.
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CHENG, A. C., K. D. WINKEL, G. M. HAWDON, and M. McDONALD. "Irukandji-like syndrome in Victoria." Australian and New Zealand Journal of Medicine 29, no. 6 (December 1999): 835. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1445-5994.1999.tb00797.x.

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Špinar, Jindřich, Lenka Špinarová, and Jiří Vítovec. "Vericiguat in patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction." Vnitřní lékařství 67, no. 3 (May 26, 2021): 180–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.36290/vnl.2021.041.

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Shavarova, E., E. Kazahmedov, A. Orlov, and Zh Kobalava. "[PP.03.04] VICTORIA STUDY." Journal of Hypertension 35 (September 2017): e109. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.hjh.0000523265.78065.22.

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Nagao, K. J., A. Koschel, H. M. Haines, L. E. Bolitho, and B. Yan. "Rural Victorian Telestroke project." Internal Medicine Journal 42, no. 10 (October 2012): 1088–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1445-5994.2011.02603.x.

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Shadur, B., J. MacLachlan, and B. Cowie. "Hepatitis D virus in Victoria 2000-2009." Internal Medicine Journal 43, no. 10 (October 2013): 1081–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imj.12247.

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McCOLL, G. J., A. G. FRAUMAN, J. P. DOWLING, and G. A. VARIGOS. "A report of Lyme disease in Victoria." Australian and New Zealand Journal of Medicine 24, no. 3 (June 1994): 324–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1445-5994.1994.tb02189.x.

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Hiscock, H., K. Ledgerwood, M. Danchin, E. Ekinci, E. Johnson, and A. Wilson. "Clinical research potential in Victorian hospitals: the Victorian clinician researcher needs analysis survey." Internal Medicine Journal 44, no. 5 (May 2014): 477–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imj.12396.

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Book chapters on the topic "Interns (Medicine) Victoria"

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Angell, Katherine. "Miserrimus Dexter." In The Male Body in Medicine and Literature, 48–63. Liverpool University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/liverpool/9781786940520.003.0004.

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This essay focuses on the ‘monstrous’ deformities of Miserrimus Dexter in Wilkie Collins’s The Law and the Lady (1875) and their framing within the Victorian interest in teratology – the study of genital birth defects. Born without legs, Dexter is a taxonomical conundrum, positioned somewhere between subject and object and between madness and knowledge. His deformity is, as Katherine Angell makes clear, the object of scientific investigation, but it must also be interpreted in order to resolve the mystery at the heart of the novel’s plot. The dangerous knowledge that he possesses, which as much concerns his deformed body as the key to the novel’s mystery, threatens to exceed the symbolic order and thereby render questionable the ordering principles of science and medicine.
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Sharpe, Michael, and Simon Wessely. "Chronic fatigue syndrome." In New Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry, 1035–43. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199696758.003.0133.

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Chronic fatigue syndrome is a controversial condition, conflicts about which have frequently burst out of the medical literature into the popular media. Whilst these controversies may initially seem to be of limited interest to those who do not routinely treat such patients, they also exemplify important current issues in medicine. These issues include the nature of symptom-defined illness; patient power versus medical authority; and the uncomfortable but important issues of psychological iatrogenesis. The subject is therefore of relevance to all doctors. Fatigue is a subjective feeling of weariness, lack of energy, and exhaustion. Approximately 20 per cent of the general population report significant and persistent fatigue, although relatively few of these people regard themselves as ill and only a small minority seek a medical opinion. Even so, fatigue is a common clinical presentation in primary care. When fatigue becomes chronic and associated with disability it is regarded as an illness. Such a syndrome has been recognized at least since the latter half of the last century. Whilst during the Victorian era patients who went to see doctors with this illness often received a diagnosis of neurasthenia, a condition ascribed to the effect of the stresses of modern life on the human nervous system the popularity of this diagnosis waned and by the mid-twentieth century it was rarely diagnosed (although the diagnosis subsequently became popular in the Far East—see Chapter 5.2.1). Although it is possible that the prevalence of chronic fatigue had waned in the population, it is more likely that patients who presented in this way were being given alternative diagnoses. These were mainly the new psychiatric syndromes of depression and anxiety, but also other labels indicating more direct physical explanations, such as chronic brucellosis, spontaneous hypoglycaemia, and latterly chronic Epstein–Barr virus infection. As well as these sporadic cases of fatiguing illness, epidemics of similar illnesses have been occasionally reported. One which occurred among staff at the Royal Free Hospital, London in 1955 gave rise to the term myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME), although it should be emphasized that the nature and symptoms of that outbreak are dissimilar to the majority of those now presenting to general practitioners under the same label. A group of virologists and immunologists proposed the term chronic fatigue syndrome in the late 1980s. This new and aetiologically neutral term was chosen because it was increasingly recognized that many cases of fatigue were often not readily explained either by medical conditions such as Epstein–Barr virus infection or by obvious depression and anxiety disorders. Chronic fatigue syndrome has remained the most commonly used term by researchers. The issue of the name is still not completely resolved however: Neurasthenia remains in the ICD-10 psychiatric classification as a fatigue syndrome unexplained by depressive or anxiety disorder, whilst the equivalent in DSM-IV is undifferentiated somatoform disorder. Myalgic encephalomyelitis or (encephalopathy) is in the neurological section of ICD-10 and is used by some to imply that the illness is neurological as opposed to a psychiatric one. Unfortunately the case descriptions under these different labels make it clear that they all reflect similar symptomatic presentations, adding to confusion. Official UK documents have increasingly adopted the uneasy and probably ultimately unsatisfactory compromise term CFS/ME. In this chapter, we will use the simple term chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).
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