Word: clinics
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...work," explained a clinic patient, "it's the aggravation...
Says Dr. Kasanin, who maintains a clinic for the rehabilitation of discharged servicemen as well as one for the treatment of servicemen's wives: women are paying the same war penalties as men, many of whom crack up long before they reach combat. Women who have followed their husbands to embarkation ports often find themselves spiritually stranded. Many stay simply because they somehow feel closer to their husbands there...
Other Brödel pupils represented in the show are Hopkins' Ranice W. Birch and Annette Burgess, Mayo Clinic's Russell Drake, Yale's Armin Hemberger. Their pictures clearly demonstrate that a good medical artist takes pleasure in beauty as well as scientific exactness. Most delicate are Miss Burgess' paintings of the tissue at the back of the eye, with each vein in glowing color. There is also a careful picture of a seven-and-a-half-day-old human embryo magnified 500 times (see cut), which James Didusch took two months to draw...
...unheated clinic hall in Washington's Court House Square, 24 nervous men, almost all Government employes or servicemen, gathered somewhat sheepishly one evening last week. They were expectant fathers, met to hear a lecture on "Anatomy and Physiology Relating to Pregnancy...
Inching Along. The stolid American Medical Association, although still unconvinced, has finally given up its golden dream of preserving the status quo. It has even managed to swallow two pills: 1) some forms of group practice (like the Mayo Clinic), 2) voluntary group medical insurance (such as many big corporations now sponsor for their employes). But the A.M.A. has always opposed a combination of the two, in which the insured group hires a group of doctors to take care of its members...