Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 24
pro vyhledávání: '"T E Aldrich"'
Publikováno v:
North Carolina medical journal. 62(5)
Publikováno v:
North Carolina medical journal. 62(5)
Publikováno v:
Journal of the South Carolina Medical Association (1975). 95(6)
In 1996, there were 34,035 deaths in South Carolina. Almost 70 percent of these deaths were due to chronic diseases. There are known ways to prevent chronic diseases from developing or at least delay their developmental process, thereby lengthening y
Publikováno v:
Journal of the South Carolina Medical Association (1975). 95(2)
Autor:
W, Demark-Wahnefried, J M, Schildkraut, C E, Iselin, E, Conlisk, A, Kavee, T E, Aldrich, E J, Lengerich, P J, Walther, D F, Paulson
Publikováno v:
Cancer, Vol. 83, No 2 (1998) pp. 320-30
In the U.S., prostate carcinoma mortality is greatest among African Americans. In North Carolina, the state with the fourth largest population of African Americans, the prostate carcinoma mortality rate is 2.5 times greater among African Americans th
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=pmid_dedup__::aaebc565ddd455ee9410c230814b5373
https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:73954
https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:73954
Publikováno v:
Statistics in medicine. 15(17-18)
Conventional methods fail to provide adequate assignments of individuals into appropriate subgroups for small area analyses, especially when studies cover only a portion of a county or use ecologic, descriptive variables. An unconventional aid to epi
Autor:
F. Saad, T. E. Aldrich
Publikováno v:
Journal of Investigative Medicine. 52:391-392
Cancer risk among women sterilized with transcervical quinacrine hydrochloride pellets, 1977 to 1991
Publikováno v:
Fertility and sterility. 64(2)
To determine whether a cluster of eight cancers among 572 women who had received transcervical quinacrine hydrochloride was a random occurrence or evidence of an increased risk of cancer.Retrospective cohort study using interviews and reviews of medi
Publikováno v:
North Carolina medical journal. 51(2)
In 1984 the North Carolina Medical Society's House of Delegates adopted Report S, which called for the North Carolina Legislature to fund a statewide cancer incident reporting system. The Cancer Committee continues to be advisory to the Division of A