Academic literature on the topic 'Medicine, periodicals'

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Journal articles on the topic "Medicine, periodicals"

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Frampton, Sally, and Jennifer Wallis. "Reading Medicine and Health in Periodicals." Media History 25, no. 1 (October 17, 2018): 1–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13688804.2018.1531696.

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Wilson, Cheryl A. "Jane Austen in Mid-Victorian Periodicals." Humanities 11, no. 4 (June 22, 2022): 76. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/h11040076.

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Victorian periodicals were an important part of the literary marketplace that shaped Jane Austen’s critical reception during the nineteenth century. Moreover, throughout the century, periodical authors used the critical conversation around Austen to create a space for themselves and their work in the press by beginning to shape a critical canon, as well as by raising and responding to questions about the nature of Victorian women’s authorship. Focusing on articles published during the mid-Victorian period (1852–1868), prior to the publication of James Edward Austen-Leigh’s 1870 A Memoir of Jane Austen, this essay considers Austen’s presence in periodical writing in the middle of the nineteenth century and explores how writers used both Austen herself and her writings to accomplish their own authorial ends.
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Nestayko, Markiyan. "Photos of Julian Dorosh on the pages of Lviv periodicals on the example of a magazine “Literature and Art”." Proceedings of Vasyl Stefanyk National Scientific Library of Ukraine in Lviv, no. 14(30) (December 2022): 346–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.37222/2524-0315-2022-14(30)-14.

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The article reveals to the peculiarities of photography as an artistic direction and a component of a periodical publication, highlights the characteristic features of photographs that are used as illustrations for journalistic texts. Special attention is focused on the development of photography in the first half of the last century. Illustrative photos of Julian Dorosh on the pages of Lviv periodicals, using the example of the “Literature and Art” publication, were analyzed on specific examples. On the basis of the analysis, the methods and forms of the transmission of color pictures with the help of black-and-white photographs are distinguished. Keywords: photography, Julian Dorosh, periodicals, visual art.
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Sławomir, Sztorbyn. "Historiografia pedagogiczna w czasopismach tradycyjnych i elektronicznych." Biuletyn Historii Wychowania, no. 25 (March 6, 2019): 63–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.14746/bhw.2009.25.4.

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Scientific and research periodicals play an extremely important part in popularizing (and promoting) results of research studies, though this role is not equally appreciated across different domains of science. This becomes apparent if we compare the number of traditional and electronic titles of periodicals in such disciplines as medicine, natural science and exact science on the one side, and those that represent the humanities, broadly understood, on the other. The advantage of electronic content in the former group is overwhelming. Nowadays, we use two terms in relation to periodicals available online and launched on the electronic platform. The terms make a distinction between a degree of their involvement in the cyber space. “Digitalization” means a certain transitory state between traditional periodicals in print and virtual publications; in other words, a product of “digitization” is an electronic copy (e.g. a scanned text) of a text originally published in print, whereas the notion of “digital authorship (the author as digital producer), in Polish: cyfryzacja” deals with an entirely electronic publication with specific properties underlined by multimedia and hypertext capabilities. Digital research information as an entirely new quality has not been yet appropriately appreciated. The history of education as a discipline of research does not have its own electronic platform that would offer peer-reviewed research papers in Open Access (OA), e-books or electronic document repositories. For the time being, the most recent Polish periodical within this discipline, i.e. Biuletyn Historii Wychowania, has only a front page, ToCs and a masthead available online, without access to full-text electronic content.
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Ivanets, I. V., and P. S. Ivanets. "Reviews of foreign periodicals." Vestnik otorinolaringologii 85, no. 2 (2020): 89. http://dx.doi.org/10.17116/otorino20208502189.

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Ostapenko, Roman I. "Strategies for attracting foreign authors to a new journal." Economic Consultant 36, no. 4 (December 1, 2021): 26–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.46224/ecoc.2021.4.3.

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A lot of newly established periodicals aiming at international recognition face the problem of finding foreign editors and authors of articles. It is more difficult for periodicals that are not included in respected databases to compete in attracting new authors with more reputable ones. There are quite a few recommendations for promoting a journal in order to involve potential authors who want to submit their articles to the journal. However, practical experience suggests that it is quite a challenge to involve foreign authors. In attracting high-quality materials, it is necessary to employ a multi-faceted approach to the development of a periodical concerning the following issues: the website of the journal; its content; cooperation with authors; use of external resources. It is vital to revise the duties of the editorial board members, who prepare up-to-date reviews in related areas and journal headings that cover a range of issues concerning an international audience or trigger a scientific dialogue among overseas authors.
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Yukun, Wang, Yao Chang, He Fan, and Zeng Jiayao. "Meta-analysis of effectiveness of traditional Chinese medicine or its combination with Western medicine in the treatment of triple negative breast cancer." Tropical Journal of Pharmaceutical Research 18, no. 3 (May 14, 2021): 639–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.4314/tjpr.v18i3.28.

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Purpose: To assess the efficacy and side effects of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) in the management of triple negative breast cancer (TNBC). Methods: Full text data on randomized controlled trial (RCT) of TNBC treated with TCM or its combination with Western Medicine (WM) were retrieved from the Chinese biomedical literature database, Chinese periodicals, Chinese Science-Technology periodicals and VP and PubMed. The qualities of the RCTs were evaluated. Revman 5.3 was used to conduct the meta-analysis. Results: A total of 16 RCTs involving 1186 patients were included. Analysis of these RCTs showed significant differences in total effectiveness between WM and TCM or combination of TCM with WM {(OR = 2.63, 95 % CI = 1.37, 5.03), test of the combined effect (Z = 2.91, p ˂ 0.005)}. Conclusion: The results show that TCM is effective in the treatment TNBC
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Kasovich, A. S. "The Repertoire of Saratov Periodicals." Bibliosphere, no. 2 (March 29, 2022): 129–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.20913/1815-3186-2022-2-129-131.

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Malyutina, N. N., Roman B. Eremeev, Nataliya Viktorovna Shumatova, Dmitrij Mikhailovich Vatolin, and Dmitriy Y. Sosnin. "Analysis of publication activity of periodicals on specialty 14.02.04 – occupational medicine." Perm Medical Journal 38, no. 6 (November 15, 2021): 94–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.17816/pmj38694-102.

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The article is devoted to the analysis of journals included in the list of peer-reviewed publications recommended by the Higher Attestation Commission for the publication of materials of works on the specialty 14.02.04 Occupational Medicine (edition 12.07.2021). The data on the characteristics and publication activity of these journals are presented from the point of view of choosing a printed publication for publishing the materials of the dissertation research and when choosing a journal for publishing the results of scientific research in accordance with the requirements for the indicators of publication activity of scientific and pedagogical workers.
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Arabadzhy, Svitlana. "Periodical materials as sources for historical approach to daily life of the greek population in the North of Pryazovia (ХІХ – beginning of ХХ)." Bulletin of Mariupol State University. Series: History. Political Studies 11, no. 31-32 (2021): 7–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.34079/2226-2830-2021-11-31-32-7-19.

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The article studies periodical publications as sources for the historical approach to the daily life of the Greek population in the North of Pryazovia. It has been determined that the main position among newspaper periodicals take “Journal of the Ministry of State Property”, “Journal of the Ministry of Internal Affairs”, materials of Russian agricultural journals “The Owner” and “The Fruit-growing”, including notes published in “Notes of the Society of Agriculture of South Russia” and “Notes of the Odessa Society of History and Antiquities”. “Journal of the Ministry of State Property”, which represents the Ministry of the State Property founded in 1841, plays a special role among newspaper periodicals. Its value and specificity embrace numerous publications based on documents and narrations, which have been lost. It has been stated, that the materials of newspaper periodicals and publications of scientific societies are quite informative and they envisage different aspects of daily life: financial support, main activities, public order, mentality and temper peculiarities, common diseases, traditions, etc. It has been found, that the authors of these articles are mainly scientists, officials, or medical authorities. Information, published in these periodicals, differs significantly in authenticity, as these authors witnessed most of the events. They took the information from the official sources; they usually checked it themselves and then it was to be selected carefully. The authors tried to give a full and realistic review of the mode of life of the Greek people in the North of Pryazovia, that they were observing during the work performed on the articles. It has been noted, that inevitable value possesses an essay of Kaleri G., a metropolitan doctor, who gave a very precise review on common diseases among the Greek population, their nature in different seasons, and treatments. Kaleri G. contributed greatly to a medical center by adding his own observations and conclusions regarding the daily life of the Greek people.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Medicine, periodicals"

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Furlong, Claire Rosemary. "Bodies of knowledge : science, medicine and authority in popular periodicals, 1832-1850." Thesis, University of Exeter, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10871/18117.

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Over the course of the 1830s and 1840s, a professional scientific and medical community was coming into being. Exclusive membership, limits to the definition of science, and separation of the professional from the popular sphere became important elements in the consolidation of scientific authority. Studies exploring Victorian scientific authority have tended to focus on professional journals and organs of middle-class culture; this thesis takes a new approach in exploring how this authority is reflected and negotiated across the content of the popular mass-market periodicals which provided leisure reading for working- and lower-class men and women. It uses as examples Chambers's Edinburgh Journal, Reynolds's Miscellany and the Family Herald. The readers of these publications were consumers of scientific information, participants in popularised science and beneficiaries and subjects of new research, but were increasingly excluded from the formal processes of developing scientific theory and practice. Examining representations of anatomy and of mesmerism, health advice and theories of class and gender, the thesis argues for an expanded understanding of mass-market periodicals as communicators of scientific ideas, showing how such material widely informs the content of these publications from fiction to jokes to full-length factual articles. However, the role of the periodicals is much wider than simply the transmission of received ideas, and the thesis reveals a plurality of positions with regard to science and medicine within the popular press. The periodicals engage with modern science in complex and varied ways, accepting, modifying and challenging scientific theories and methods from different positions. The form of the periodical is key, presenting multiple sources of knowledge and ways in which readers may be invited to respond. Chambers's broad support for scientific progress is informed by its useful knowledge identity but tempered by its founding editor's own ambivalent relationship to the scientific establishment. The Herald, influenced by both the periodical's commercial character and its editor's adherence to a spiritual, anti-materialist view of existence, is strongly resistant to modern science, while Reynolds's incorporates it alongside other forms of knowledge in its aim to educate, entertain and empower readers from a socialist perspective.
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Gordon, Alison. "(Re)constructing the discourse of disease women's magazines' mediation of medicine /." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/MQ39195.pdf.

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Wong, Kit-ming Leone, and 黃潔明. "Systematic review on meta-analysis in British Medical Journal, New England Journal of Medicine, the Lancet and JAMA." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2002. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31970849.

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Yue, Weiping Biotechnology &amp Biomolecular Sciences Faculty of Science UNSW. "Predicting the citation impact of clinical neurology journals using structural equation modeling with partial least squares." Awarded by:University of New South Wales. School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences, 2004. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/20821.

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The ongoing debate on the evaluative role of citation analysis and the theory of citation recognizes that the citation process is complex and that citation counts are affected by certain extra-scientific or external factors. To date, little effort has been made to explore the effects of various external factors; this thesis addresses this lack. In the context of the various perspectives on citations and citation analysis, this study uses journals as the unit of analysis and investigates what, how, and to what extent extra-scientific factors influence the citation impact of journals. An integrated conceptual model of Journal Citation Impact that takes into account current theoretical positions and prior empirical research findings is developed. It addresses the interrelationships between Journal Citation Impact and a range of external factors (Journal Properties, Journal Visibility, Journal Accessibility, Journal Internationality, Journal Selectivity, Journal Promptness, Journal Editorial Prestige, and Perceived Journal Quality). The proposed conceptual model is novel in that it: (1) incorporates nearly all possible external factors that affect Journal Citation Impact; (2) addresses the complex interrelationships between a number of external factors and Journal Citation Impact in one model; (3) regards both Journal Citation Impact and its external factors as theoretical constructs; and (4) identifies the observed variables of the external factors and Journal Citation Impact. However, because of the difficulties in operationalizing all the theoretical constructs, this conceptual model is simplified to an operational model for empirical testing. The operational model includes the construct Journal Citation Impact and four of its external factors, Journal Properties, Journal Accessibility, Journal Internationality, and Perceived Journal Quality. Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) with Partial Least Squares (PLS) is used to test the operational model with empirical data from 41 research journals in clinical neurology. Data are collected from bibliographic database searching, web searching, printed journals, and from a web-based survey that was conducted to obtain information on perceptions of journal quality. Empirical results of the operational model show that Journal Accessibility, Journal Internationality, and Perceived Journal Quality have large, medium, and small effects respectively on Journal Citation Impact, thus indicating that certain extra-scientific factors can influence Journal Citation Impact significantly. The findings suggest that great care should be taken in interpreting and evaluating the results obtained from citation analysis. In terms of Journal Citation Impact, this research also suggests that various journal citation indicators should be ii used to reflect different aspects of citation impact. By exploring the phenomenological domain in the citing process, this exploratory study not only provides a better understanding of citation analysis, it also contributes to the development of the theory of citation. From the methodological perspective, introducing SEM with PLS to Informetrics and Scientometrics also contributes to the knowledge base of these fields. Pragmatically, the research findings will enhance the judgment of researchers and practitioners such as editors, publishers, librarians and other information specialists in assessing journal performance. Finally, the worldwide survey findings on peer assessment of journal outlets in clinical neurology will be useful for researchers, academics or clinicians in this field.
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Moulds, Alison. "The construction of professional identities in medical writing and fiction, c. 1830s-1910s." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2017. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:e78862c0-1b16-404b-8096-d6701cc7f443.

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This thesis examines the representation of medical practitioners between the 1830s and 1910s in Britain and its Empire, drawing on the medical press and fiction. Moving away from the notion that practitioners' identities were determined chiefly by their qualification or professional appointment, it considers how they were constructed in relation to different axes of identity: age, gender, race, and the spaces of practice. Each chapter concentrates on a different figure or professional identity. I begin by looking at the struggling young medical man, before examining metropolitan practitioners (from elite consultants to slum doctors), and the hard-working country general practitioner. I then consider how gender and professional identities intersected in the figure of the medical woman. The last chapter examines practitioners of colonial medicine in British India. This thesis considers a range of medical journals, from well-known titles such as the Lancet and British Medical Journal, to overlooked periodicals including the Medical Mirror, Midland Medical Miscellany, and Indian Medical Record. It also examines fiction by medical authors such as Arthur Conan Doyle and W. Somerset Maugham, and lesser-known figures including Margaret Todd and Henry Martineau Greenhow. I read these texts alongside other contemporary writing (from advice guides for medical men to fiction by lay authors) to scrutinise how ideas about practice were shaped in the medical and cultural imagination. My research demonstrates not only how medical journals fashioned networks among disparate groups of practitioners but also how they facilitated professional rivalries. I reveal the democratising tendency of print culture, highlighting how it enabled a range of medical men and women to write about practice. Ultimately, the thesis develops our understanding of medical history and literary studies by uncovering how the profession engaged with textual practices in the formation of medical identities.
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Sjögren, Petteri. "Randomised clinical trials and evidence-based general dentistry /." Linköping : Univ, 2004. http://www.bibl.liu.se/liupubl/disp/disp2004/med865s.pdf.

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Roberts, J. P. "Medicine and the body in the romantic periodical press." Thesis, University of Salford, 2014. http://usir.salford.ac.uk/32346/.

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This thesis focuses on the body in political debate during the Romantic period. My original contribution to knowledge is an analysis of a corpus of periodical writing in intense detail, and I track the way in which periodical writing utilises a medical vocabulary and the reasons for this appropriation. I identify the key concern of each popular periodical, and reveal the way in which the editors attempt to achieve their goal by using language borrowed from medical discourse. I also uncover the ways in which periodical writing influenced medicine, by outlining how medical practice was politicised by social and cultural demands. Political essays and letters are the main focus of the thesis, but I also analyse poetry included in the periodical press, paying attention to formal attributes such as article placement. Illustration and marginalia are also considered. I argue that political, social, and cultural agendas shaped the direction in which medical discourse moved. Periodicals have been selected as my primary texts due to their immediacy and highly political nature, and I have selected titles that were prominent in both the literary and political spheres. I conclude that the body becomes a site of political contention in the Romantic period, and is used as an allegory in discussions of systems, power, and resistance.
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Benoit, Delphine. "Un malade qui s’ignore, un médecin qui guérit. : Les représentations de la médecine dans les revues de l’Entre-deux-guerres en France." Thesis, Paris 11, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PA112129/document.

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Alors que les travaux historiens existants portant sur la médecine de la France de l’Entre-deux-guerres sont essentiellement tournés vers le réel, les objets, les institutions, cette thèse a choisi d’étudier cette médecine en en caractérisant les représentations. Les représentations de ce qu’est une activité, un domaine en sont en effet constitutives. En rendre compte implique donc d’en saisir aussi les représentations. C’est ce à quoi s’est attelée cette thèse pour la médecine de l’Entre-deux-guerres qui, par là, se veut une contribution originale à l’historiographie existante. Pour retrouver et analyser ces représentations, le choix a été fait d’analyser des revues de vulgarisation qui ont la propriété d’avoir été très peu étudiées alors même que ce sont des média encore très présents dans la France de l’Entre-deux-guerres. Une analyse comparée de grande ampleur portant sur sept revues, qui ont été retenues en fonction des publics qu’elles visaient, a été construite et mise en œuvre. Deux revues de vulgarisation scientifique populaire, deux revues de haute vulgarisation scientifique, deux revues politiques et littéraires et une revue professionnelle médicale ont été analysées suivant une approche qualitative qui permette la prise en charge et la comparaison de ces revues très diverses par leurs formats, leurs contenus, leurs auteurs et les publics visés. Cette approche a notamment pour caractéristique l’adaptation aux particularités de chaque revue et de porter une attention particulière à leur matérialité (illustrations, mises en page, signatures). Au-delà d’une diversité de représentations – les représentations dégagées sont parfois portées par plusieurs revues, parfois spécifiques à l’une d’elles – se dessine l’image d’une médecine puissante, variée et inventive, dont la puissance est assurée grâce aux sciences physiques et au recours à une Nature maîtrisée voire artificialisée. L’image du patient est celle d’un patient infantilisé et de facto ignorant qui a besoin en tout instant de l’expertise ou du savoir du médecin qui peut par ses soins permettre aux corps de la Nation de retrouver leurs santés physique et mentale, et à la Nation de redevenir ainsi économiquement prospère. Au-delà de sa contribution à l’histoire de la médecine de l’Entre-deux-guerres, en dégageant des discours et des modalités d’administration de la preuve spécifiques à certaines revues ou groupes de revues, la thèse apporte aussi des éléments à l’histoire de chacune des revues et à l’histoire des revues de vulgarisation de la France de l’Entre-deux-guerres
While existing historical scholarship on Interwar medicine in France has mainly questioned the reality, the objects and the institutions, this thesis chose to study it by characterizing its representations. Representations of an activity or a domain are indeed constitutive of this activity or this domain. Therefore accounting for an activity or a domain implies to also grasp its representations. This is what this thesis is seeking to do for the Interwar medicine. By so doing it aims to contribute in an original manner to the existing historiography. In order to retrieve and analyze these representations, the choice was made to analyze a series of popularization journals which present the specificity of not having been studied whilst they were still important media in the Interwar France. A wide comparative analysis of the seven journals – that were chosen according to their intended readership – has been developed and carried out. Two revues de vulgarisation scientifique populaire, two revues de haute vulgarisation scientifique, two revues politiques et littéraires and one medical professional journal have been analyzed, following a qualitative approach that allows to cater for and compare these journals that are very diverse (eg. format, contents, authors, intended readership). One of the characteristics of this approach is the adaptation to the peculiarities of each journal and to pay a special attention to their materiality (illustrations, layout, signatures). Beyond the diversity of the representations – the identified representations are sometimes shared by several journals, sometimes specific to one of them –, an image is drawn, the image of a powerful, varied, inventive medicine whose powerfulness is secured through physics and a mastered if not artificialized nature. The representations of the patient is this of an infantilized and de facto ignorant patient that all the time needs the expertise and the knowledge of the doctor that through its dedicated care can make the bodies of nation retrieve their physical and mental health, and the nation become again economically prosperous. Beyond its contribution to the history of medicine in the Interwar France, by identifying discourses and modalities of administration of proof specific to individual journals or groups of journal, the thesis also brings elements to the history of each of these journals as well as the history of popularization journals in the Interwar France
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Eccles, Fiona. "A laboratory and numerical study of periodically forced, nonlinear, baroclinic systems." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2003. http://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/59981/.

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Ferro, David L. "Selling Science in the Colonial American Newspaper: How the Middle Colonial American General Periodical Represented Nature, Philosophy, Medicine, and Technology, 1728 - 1765." Diss., Virginia Tech, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/27585.

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This study examines the character of colonial American newspaper science to understand how and to what extent the newspaper contributed to the movement of information between those engaged in science and the public. It explores the issue of the origins of science and the press in America and characterizes the public role of enlightenment science in articles and advertisements pertaining to matters of health, invention and the natural world. The focus is on the mid-Atlantic region of colonial American newspapers including all the extant issues of the Pennsylvania Gazette, Maryland Gazette, Virginia Gazette, and American Weekly Mercury between the years 1728 to 1765. This study aims at informing the discussions of Enlightenment thought in colonial America and the role the newspaper played in the public acceptance of the processes of natural philosophy. The findings reveal that in the eighteenth century the colonial American newspaper became the textual locus through which the negotiations of what would and would not constitute acceptable public explanations of numerous subjects, including natural phenomena, were played out. Along with the public lecture, the newspaper became a primary device where actors and artifacts made legitimizing natural claims to a larger audience and enlisted allies in both scientific and broader disputes. In this way the American colonies paralleled Britain which had seen an increase in the public witnessing of an empirical natural philosophy and an appeal to economic and social gain for that philosophy since the late seventeenth century. In order to enroll a broader constituency, natural philosophers used the newspaper to argue for the value of rational and empirical exploration and its products in everyday affairs, matters of state, and even entertainment. Despite the negotiation through the pages of the general periodical, and despite the lack of strong differentiation between "virtuosi" and "lay" philosophers, the newspaper seldom became a principle place of exchange for the theory and practice of science between those doing science. With some notable and interesting exceptions, the public infrequently became privy to vanguard scientific theory and scientific disputes or enjoyed direct participation through the newspaper. Nevertheless, in eighteenth-century British America, the drive for public acceptance of natural philosophical explanations by those engaged in its explorations made the representative power of the newspaper critical to the success of science. By promoting an empirical view of the world the newspaper helped create a contemporary science, science communication and a society, that to varying degrees accepted the practices of science.
Ph. D.
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Books on the topic "Medicine, periodicals"

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Physicians, American College of. Annals of internal medicine. Philadelphia, Penn: American College of Physicians, 2006.

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Grisholme, Nicholas. Geriatrics and medicine: Guidebook for reference & research. Washington, D.C: ABBE Publishers, 1985.

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Attempted suicide: Guidebook for medicine, reference & research. Washington, D.C: Abbe Publishers Association, 1985.

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El-Aman, H. D. Human hemorrhoids: Guidebook for medicine, reference & research. Washington, D.C: Abbe Publishers Association, 1985.

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Muggler, Dixie. Poisoning & medicine: Guidebook for reference and research. Washington, D.C: Abbe Publishers Association, 1985.

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Valahos, Bernard. Vasectomy and medicine: Guidebook for reference & research. Washington, D.C: Abbe Publishers Association, 1985.

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C, Bartone John. Hypnosis: Guidebook for medicine, reference & research. Washington, D.C: ABBE Publishers, 1985.

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Zander, Gloria Litterig. Orthopedics & medicine: Research and subject analysis with reference bibliography. Washington, D.C: Abbe Publishers Association, 1987.

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Bowman, Marjorie A. 2005 yearbook of family practice. St. Louis, Mo: Elsevier Mosby, 2005.

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Conn, Howard F. (Howard Franklin), 1908-1982, ed. Conn's current therapy 2013. Philadelphia, Pa: Saunders, 2013.

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Book chapters on the topic "Medicine, periodicals"

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Takasaki, Mitsuhiro, Yoshio Taniguchi, Mariko Egashira, and Tadahide Totoki. "Periodical and Fluctuational Analysis of the Effect of Kampo Medicines on Mouse Motility." In Pain and Kampo, 73–78. Tokyo: Springer Japan, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-4-431-68260-8_6.

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Peterson, M. Jeanne. "Medicine." In Victorian Periodicals and Victorian Society, edited by Rosemary VanArsdel and J. Don Vann. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/9781442683075-006.

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Coyer, Megan. "Reading Medicine in Blackwood’s." In Romantic Periodicals in the Twenty-First Century, 33–54. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474448123.003.0003.

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How does one study medical discourse in Romantic periodicals? This methodological essay outlines a range of possible approaches in a digital age, taking Blackwood’s as a test case. Its open by offering a series of practical steps for identifying medical articles in the magazine, including usings contents pages, published and digital bibliographical materials, targeted keyword searches, and attribution indexes. One particularly difficulty is identifying and determining what constitutes a ‘medical article’, particularly in the case of magazines like Blackwood’s, where the tradition of explicitly categorising articles gave way to the miscellany format. This organizational shift gave rise to such generic hybrids such as the ‘medico-literary’ review and the ‘medico-popular’ short story. Arguing that the study of medical discourse in Blackwood’s will never be exhaustive with the manual and digital tools currently available, the remainder of this paper models how one might productively study identifiable strands of medical discourse in the magazine, focusing on a series of medico-literary reviews written by John Wilson in the character of ‘Christopher North’.
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Coyer, Megan. "Chapter 2 Reading Medicine in Blackwood’s." In Romantic Periodicals in the Twenty-First Century, 33–54. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781474448147-005.

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King, Andrew. "The Trade and Professional Press." In The Edinburgh History of the British and Irish Press, Volume 2, 558–85. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474424882.003.0038.

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This chapter provides the first methodologically aware overview of the Victorian trade and professional press. It uses advertising directories to map the changing nature of the field, showing the different densities of periodical types over time and raising methodological questions about the reliability of data and claims derived from them, categorisation, the status differences between various kinds of knowledge and occupations, and the importance of the researcher’s positionality (especially with regards to emic and etic research procedures). Academic neglect of trade periodicals in favour of science and medicine is countered by a demonstration of the enormous importance of trade and mercantile periodicals to the press industry and of their huge diversity. Finally, standard press history is questioned by showing the small effects of the removal of the taxes on knowledge, and the significance instead of manufacturing methods and changes in the demands of society at large.
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Pusapati, Teja Varma. "Claiming Medicine as a Profession for Women: The English Woman’s Journal’s Campaign for Female Doctors." In Women, Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1830s-1900s, 120–39. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474433907.003.0009.

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This chapter highlights a model of active femininity that places young women outside the domestic sphere. Pusapati explores the support extended to the mid-century campaign for women’s entry into medicine in England by the feminist periodical the English Woman’s Journal (1858–64). The journal’s promotion of a ‘specific and highly ambitious model of the college-educated, professional female physician’ functioned to encourage young women to strive for access to higher education as well as entry to the world of medicine (122). As Pusapati demonstrates, the English Woman’s Journal frequently looked to examples from beyond Britain’s borders to buttress this sense of possibility for female readers, not only in terms of professional achievement but also to reassure readers, male and female, that women could practice medicine without flouting ‘women’s culturally sanctioned domestic and social roles’ (123).
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Frampton, Sally. "The Medical Press and its Public." In The Edinburgh History of the British and Irish Press, Volume 2, 438–56. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474424882.003.0029.

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This chapter examines the wide range of medical periodicals that were available in the nineteenth century. It argues that, as well as promoting professional cohesiveness, medical periodicals of the era were also significant in facilitating laypeople’s engagement with and contributions to medical knowledge, public health and politics. Particular attention is paid to three genres of medical journalism: the professional press, journals devoted to non-orthodox, alternative medicine practices like homeopathy and mesmerism, and medical and health journals which actively sought to include the public in their audience, the latter of which found increasing popularity in the last three decades of the century. These categories are neither neat nor entirely discrete; indeed, by examining them together this chapter evinces their continuous entanglement with one another.
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Pusapati, Teja Varma. "8. Claiming Medicine as a Profession for Women: The English Woman’s Journal’s Campaign for Female Doctors." In Women, Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain, 1830s-1900s, 120–39. Edinburgh University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781474433921-013.

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Cooper-Richet, Diana. "The English-Language press in Continental Europe." In The Edinburgh History of the British and Irish Press, Volume 2, 221–39. Edinburgh University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474424882.003.0014.

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During the nineteenth century, the English-language press thrived in Continental Europe in areas where no English was spoken locally, notably in France, Italy and the Ottoman Empire. Expatriate British, whether residing or visiting Paris, Rome, Florence or Constantinople, were eager to be kept informed on international politics and culture through locally available English language press outputs.They were served with a wide spectrum of periodicals – ranging from general information newspapers, literary reviews, parish bulletins, to specialised publications focusing on fashion, medicine, sports and entertainment. A good example was the well-known Galignani’s Messenger, a Paris based daily, dominant across Europe from 1814 through to 1890. The English-language press, published abroad, formed a somewhat transnational cultural space. Neglected until recently by academic researchers, its study provides valuable insights into the history of the cultural and social habits of the British abroad.
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Michael F. Suarez, S. J. "In Good Company." In Textual Transformations, 153–70. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198808817.003.0009.

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Throughout the eighteenth century, the business of reprinting books was associated with abridging texts. However unusual it may seem today, the copyholder’s property right in a ‘thoughtful abridgment’ of another’s text was commonly protected by law. This chapter examines the abridging activities of John Wesley, and of a variety of other actors in such areas as law and history, medicine and science, philosophy and theology, biography and fiction. Publishing ‘epitomes’ of proven sellers posed less financial risk than publishing new titles. Considering the extracts and abridgements that characterized so much of eighteenth-century newspapers and periodicals helps us understand how such practices were a routine part of the circulation and consumption of print. Abridgments of provincial publishers can be particularly instructive, as these are commonly adjusted in length and format to suit the productive capacity of the local printer and/or the buying power of consumers in the local market.
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Conference papers on the topic "Medicine, periodicals"

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Graham, Myfanwy, Elianne Renaud, Catherine Lucas, Jennifer Schneider, and Jennifer Martin. "Medicinal cannabis prescribing guidance documents: An evidence-based, best-practice framework based on the New South Wales experience." In 2022 Annual Scientific Meeting of the Research Society on Marijuana. Research Society on Marijuana, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.26828/cannabis.2022.02.000.51.

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Introduction: In 2018, the Australian Centre for Cannabinoid Clinical and Research Excellence (ACRE), a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Centre of Research Excellence was funded to develop a suite of state-wide medicinal cannabis prescribing guidance documents. At this time, regulatory changes in Australia were enabling broader access to medicinal cannabis in a medical model. The initiative funded through the New South Wales (NSW) Government’s Clinical Cannabis Medicines Program enabled the development of practical resources to support NSW medical practitioners in prescribing medicinal cannabis to patients for conditions where cannabinoids are perceived to have some benefit. Aim: To provide interim guidance to support medical practitioners in the prescription of medicinal cannabis where they are perceived to have potential benefit. Methods: A team of clinical pharmacologists, pharmacists and clinicians collaborated in the development of the first tranche of prescribing guidance documents. The suite of six medicinal cannabis prescribing guidance documents covered the most common indications for which prescriptions for medicinal cannabis were being sought by NSW patients: dementia; anorexia and cachexia; nausea; chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting; spasticity; and chronic non-cancer pain. In 2019, the draft guidance documents underwent a comprehensive review and consultation process involving fifty key stakeholders before publication. Results: The ACRE medicinal cannabis prescribing guidance documents have been widely adopted, both in NSW and around the world. The prescribing guidance documents are now recommended as a health professional educational resource by the Australian national medicines regulator the Therapeutic Goods Administration and state health departments. The prescribing guidance on epilepsy from the second tranche of guidance documents has recently been published in the British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology. National medicinal cannabis prescribing pattern data and enquiries to the first-of-kind, state-government funded medicinal cannabis advisory service for medical practitioners informed the themes of the second tranche of six medicinal cannabis prescribing guidance documents being developed in 2022. Conclusions: ACRE medicinal cannabis prescribing guidance documents delivered interim guidance to Australian medical practitioners on the evidence-based and best-practice prescription of medicinal cannabis. Prescribing guidance document themes align with Australian medicinal cannabis prescribing patterns and areas where medical practitioners are seeking further information and advice. It is anticipated that the prescribing guidance documents will be updated periodically as further evidence becomes available. Acknowledgements: NSW Government through the NSW Clinical Cannabis Medicines Program supported development of the NSW Cannabis Medicines Prescribing Guidance. ACRE was established and is funded through the National Health and Medical Research Council Centres of Research Excellence scheme.
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Kishida, Kuinharu. "Blind source separation of neural activities from magnetoencephalogram in periodical median nerve stimuli." In 2013 35th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/embc.2013.6610879.

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Reports on the topic "Medicine, periodicals"

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Chen, Changmao, Yunfeng Chen, and Lian Chen. The Effects of TCM Combined with Chemotherapy in Patients with Non-small Cell Lung Cancer: An Overview of Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, July 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2022.7.0114.

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Review question / Objective: The aim of this overview is to comprehensive summary and critically evaluate the current evidence from systematic reviews (SR)/Meta-analysis pertaining to risk of bias and quality of evidence and methodological quality of systematic reviews of TCM combined with chemotherapy in patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). Information sources: Five international electronic databases(Web of Science, The Cochrane Library, PubMed, MEDLINE, and EMBASE) and 4 Chinese electronic databases (China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), the Chinese Science and Technology Periodical Database (VIP), China Biology Medicine disc (CBM), and Wan Fang Digital Journals).
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Wei, Yuehui, Hui Mao, Ziyun Jiang, Luyao Liu, Yuqiao Quan, and Xun Li. Efficacy and safety of Zuogui Wan combined with conventional Western medicine for postmenopausal osteoporosis: A protocol for a systematic review. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, April 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2022.4.0099.

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Review question / Objective: The proposed systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) will address the effectiveness and safety of Zuogui Wan combined with conventional Western medicine (CWM) for osteoporosis in postmenopausal women, and provide reference for clinical practice. Information sources: We will use computers to search PubMed, Cochrane Library, Embase, Web of Science, Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure database (CNKI), WanFang database, Chinese Biomedical Database (CMB), Chinese Science and Technology Periodical database (VIP), China Master’s Theses Full-text Database (CMFD), China Proceedings of Conference Full-text Database (CPFD), WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP), Chinese Clinical Trials Registry (ChiCTR) and ClinicalTrials.gov, and select all eligible RCTs from inception to October, 2021. Clinicians will also be consulted for additional studies.
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Wang, Shuang, Aidong Liu, Zhilei Wang, and Yue Zhang. Efficacy and safety of acupuncture combined with Chinese herbal medicine in the treatment of angina pectoris of coronary heart disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis. INPLASY - International Platform of Registered Systematic Review and Meta-analysis Protocols, November 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.37766/inplasy2021.11.0100.

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Review question / Objective: This study is the protocol for a systematic review to evaluate the Efficacy and safety of acupuncture combined with Chinese herbal medicine in the treatment of angina pectoris of coronary heart disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis. we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of published randomized clinical trials (RCTs) of such combined therapy in the treatment of angina pectoris of coronary heart disease, It provides a reliable scientific basis for clinicians to use this approach to treat angina pectoris of coronary heart disease. Information sources: We conducted a systematic search for relevant documents in the Chinese and English databases, and the search time is limited to November 23, 2021. The following eight databases are included : PubMed,EMBASE, Web of Science, The Cochrane Library, Chinese Biomedical Literature Database (CBM), Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), Chinese Science and Technology Periodical Database (VIP), Wanfang Database.Relevant journals were searched to trace the references included in the study. Other resources will be searched if necessary.
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