Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 173
pro vyhledávání: '"Marc H. Hollender"'
Autor:
Watts, C. A. H.
Publikováno v:
The British Medical Journal, 1958 Nov . 2(5108), 1340-1340.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/25385795
Autor:
Renée L. Gelman
Publikováno v:
New England Journal of Medicine. 324:1221-1222
Autor:
S.W. Bloom
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Social Psychiatry. 5:310-311
Autor:
Bloom, S.W.
Publikováno v:
International Journal of Social Psychiatry; April 1960, Vol. 5 Issue: 4 p310-311, 2p
Autor:
Marc H. Hollender
Publikováno v:
JAMA. 274:1562
Heterosexuality , by William H. Masters, Virginia E. Johnson, and Robert C. Kolodny, 595 pp, with illus, paper, $16, ISBN 0-06-092600-7, New York, NY, HarperPerennial, 1994. Seven Weeks to Better Sex , a self-help book written in everyday language, i
Autor:
Warren W. Webb, Marc H. Hollender
Publikováno v:
JAMA. 273:168
Propelled into action by the AIDS epidemic and building upon prior surveys of sexual behavior, this study of "a representative sample of the British population" was carried out from 1986 to 1994. The authors (faculty of two British medical schools an
Autor:
Harry S. Abram, Marc H. Hollender
Publikováno v:
The International Journal of Psychiatry in Medicine. 5:67-80
A patient who had undergone two coronary artery bypass procedures is interviewed and discussed with respect to his adaptation to the operation and his illness. The complex biochemical, social and psychological interactions, often overlooked when prop
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Psychiatry. 145:554-562
The authors discuss the phenomenon of lying, a common psychic process that has received remarkably little scrutiny. The ubiquity of lying and others forms of deception suggests that they have "normal" aspects, but lying which is persistent or destruc
Autor:
Harry S. Abram, Marc H. Hollender
Publikováno v:
Southern Medical Journal. 67:691-696
Thirty-six coses in which anticoagulants have been turned to nontherapeutic (or “disease”-producing) purposes have been reported. Most patients, referred to as “Dicumarol-eaters,” are women who are members of the medical profession or persons