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Despite the common perception that medicine is becoming specialty driven, there are many reasons for primary care providers to offer women’s health procedures in an office setting. Women feel more comfortable having procedures done by prov- ers whom they already know and trust. Continuity of care is still valued by patients, who trust their primary care providers to work with them as collaborators in the decision-making process. Women have found that their options for care have become limited, not by their own decision, but by the lack of training of their p- vider. In rural areas, the barriers of time, expense, and travel often prevent many women from obtaining necessary care; yet many of...
A comprehensive, structured clinical resource that presents in bulleted fashion essential information about the diagnosis, treatment, medications, follow-up, and associated conditions of more than 600 medical conditions. With a new editor at the helm, this bestselling reference takes a more evidence-based approach.
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An in-depth look at current issues, new research findings, and interdisciplinary exchange in survey methodology and processing Survey Measurement and Process Quality extends the marriage of traditional survey issues and continuous quality improvement further than any other contemporary volume. It documents the current state of the field, reports new research findings, and promotes interdisciplinary exchange in questionnaire design, data collection, data processing, quality assessment, and effects of errors on estimation and analysis. The book's five sections discuss a broad range of issues and topics in each of five major areas, including * Questionnaire design--conceptualization, design of ...
Isaac Hall Sr. was born ca. 1688. He lived in Surrey Co., Virginia and married Judith Green sometime prior to the year 1720. They were the parents of at least four known sons. Issac had one son named Louis who later moved to Balden and Robeson Counties in North Carolina. Descendants of Isaac Hall and his son Louis lived primarily in Georgia, North Carolina and elsewhere.
William Ratchford was born in 1724, possibly in North Carolina, and in 1754 received a land grant in Anson (now Grant) Co., North Carolina. He married Mary Carroll, and they moved to South Carolina in 1791, settling in York Co. He died in 1804.