Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 41
pro vyhledávání: '"Rubenstein AD"'
Autor:
Rubenstein Ad
Publikováno v:
The New England journal of medicine. 237(11)
Publikováno v:
The American Journal of the Medical Sciences. 214:389-394
Publikováno v:
New England Journal of Medicine. 239:1028-1032
The acute shortage of hospital beds experienced everywhere in the country during the past few years resulted in 1946 in the enactment of Public Law 725 by the Seventy-Ninth Congress. This act, the Hospital Survey and Construction Act, previously know
Autor:
Maccready Ra, Rubenstein Ad
Publikováno v:
New England Journal of Medicine. 248:527-530
SALMONELLA infection in Massachusetts occurs both sporadically and in epidemic form.1 By and large, most clinical cases are brought to light as a result of cultural studies on patients with gastrointestinal or enteric symptoms. When organisms recover
Publikováno v:
The New England journal of medicine. 244(20)
ACCUMULATING reports show that epidemic nausea, vomiting and diarrhea were widespread throughout the eastern United States during the period 1946–1947. Epidemics occurred among the populace of Jefferson County, Alabama1 and in Washington, D. C.2; i
Autor:
Rubenstein Ad
Publikováno v:
New England Journal of Medicine. 293:504-505
Publikováno v:
Journal of the American Medical Association. 138:737
Dermatitis as a result of contact with the brown tail moth (Euproctis chrysorrhea Linn) was first observed in the United States by White1in 1901. The rash was noted a few minutes to several hours after exposure to the cocoon, caterpillar or adult mot
Publikováno v:
Public Health Reports (1896-1970). 75:51
DETAILED information concerning hospital use is urgently needed at a time when construction and operation costs of hospitals continue to rise. How has the shift of population in metropolitan areas from the core cities to suburbia influenced hospital
Autor:
Rubenstein Ad, Morse Lj
Publikováno v:
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association. 202:939
One hundred and sixty-seven cases of infection due to Salmonella blockley were documented in an institutional outbreak. The source of infection was frozen, unpasteurized egg yolks used in the preparation of ice cream. This is further evidence for the
Autor:
Rubenstein AD
Publikováno v:
The New England journal of medicine [N Engl J Med] 1975 Sep 04; Vol. 293 (10), pp. 504.