Behavioral Science in Clinical MedicineThomas, 1976 - 230 |
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Strona 47
... recorded bodily changes yield highly reliable evidence which may be further strengthened in an experimental setting . After a control period during which the patient is lightly diverted and made comfortable and while the indicators in ...
... recorded bodily changes yield highly reliable evidence which may be further strengthened in an experimental setting . After a control period during which the patient is lightly diverted and made comfortable and while the indicators in ...
Strona 76
... recorded and on listening to it the student picked up the clue he had missed . A portion of the interview , recorded during the recital of the family history in the first fifteen minutes , ran as follows : Q : You're married ? A : Yes ...
... recorded and on listening to it the student picked up the clue he had missed . A portion of the interview , recorded during the recital of the family history in the first fifteen minutes , ran as follows : Q : You're married ? A : Yes ...
Strona 78
... recorded without question , and on several occasions the patient's statement that he had never had tarry stools was not doubted until inquiry by the instructor dis- closed that the patient never looked at his stools . The student ...
... recorded without question , and on several occasions the patient's statement that he had never had tarry stools was not doubted until inquiry by the instructor dis- closed that the patient never looked at his stools . The student ...
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