Behavioral Science in Clinical MedicineThomas, 1976 - 230 |
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Strona viii
... continue to enlarge . Among future expectations , many will surely relate to the need to remain healthy and productive throughout a long life . It is there- fore appropriate to ask , with Page , what may reasonably be re- quired of the ...
... continue to enlarge . Among future expectations , many will surely relate to the need to remain healthy and productive throughout a long life . It is there- fore appropriate to ask , with Page , what may reasonably be re- quired of the ...
Strona 27
... continue to function , the person is essentially lifeless . What distinguishes one individual human from another is a richly woven fabric of personality characteristics and behavior guided more or less by what is variously defined as ...
... continue to function , the person is essentially lifeless . What distinguishes one individual human from another is a richly woven fabric of personality characteristics and behavior guided more or less by what is variously defined as ...
Strona 116
... continue to beat , the kidney will continue to make urine , and the liver will persist in its metabolic conversions after all nerve connections have been severed . The range of visceral adaptability is restricted , however , and the ...
... continue to beat , the kidney will continue to make urine , and the liver will persist in its metabolic conversions after all nerve connections have been severed . The range of visceral adaptability is restricted , however , and the ...
Spis treści
Chapter | 3 |
BEHAVIOR | 106 |
PATTERNS OF DISABILITY | 120 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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able accepted achieved activity adaptive adjustment appear associated attack attitudes become behavior blood bodily brain cause changes concern conditioning considered continue course culture death depends difficulty discussion disease disturbances early effects emotional environment evidence example experience expression factors feelings Figure findings forces function further glucose headache heart human hyperemia hyperventilation important increased indicate individual induced interest interview involved leads less living means measured mechanisms medicine mother myocardial infarction nasal nature nervous system normal observed occur organ pain parents patient pattern period person physician pointed possible pressure problems Psychosomatic questions reactions recorded relation relationship requires responses result secretion setting significant situation social society stress student suggested symptoms talk things tion tuberculosis understanding values various visceral York