Word: physicians
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...relatives to be much happier together. But they still had a peculiar emotional effect on each other. The week of the killing they got into an emotional dither over evidence that a prowler had broken into their Oyster Bay home. Explained Dr. John Prutting, Ann Woodward's physician...
...Princeton football squad may face the Crimson next Saturday without the services of two of its most valuable players, according to Dr. Harry R. McPhee, the team physician...
Comparing the educators' progress with that of other professionals makes the picture even gloomier. Since 1929, the average physician's income has gone up from $5,224 to $15,000, which makes him 48% the richer. But, in spite of a jump of from $11,000 to $16,500, large-university presidents are now 26% poorer while their full professors, making $7,000 in 1953, are 10% worse off than...
However far apart they seem, says Dr. Page, the pure science researcher and the bedside physician must be brought together, as they are in his own laboratory. From 20 years of personal study and correlating his views with those of other researchers, Dr. Page sums up: "Hypertension is not a single disease. It may be almost as variable as the many different forms of cancer. Neither can it have a single cause. There are at least eight mechanisms in the body operating to maintain an even blood pressure, and these are all interrelated. The balance of one cannot be upset...
...blood smear. If he finds many cells of an abnormal type he has good evidence of the disease. A confirmatory tests consists of adding a small sample of the serum to a much larger amount of sheep's red blood cells. If the sheep's cells agglomerate the physician can be virtually positive that the patient has mononucleosis. Only these two tests can differentiate between "mono" and a common cold, and only a competent doctor can perform them...