Scotland
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Subject Areas on Research
- A framework for developing excellence as a clinical educator.
- A genome-wide association study implicates the APOE locus in nonpathological cognitive ageing.
- A genome-wide association study suggests new evidence for an association of the NADPH Oxidase 4 (NOX4) gene with severe diabetic retinopathy in type 2 diabetes.
- A study of decompression sickness using recorded depth-time profiles.
- APOE/TOMM40 genetic loci, white matter hyperintensities, and cerebral microbleeds.
- An accidental laboratory infection with African trypanosomes of a defined stock. I. The clinical course of the infection.
- Canicola fever in man and animals.
- Changing indications for penetrating keratoplasty in the west of Scotland from 1970 to 1995.
- Commentary: Sir Arthur Mitchell--pioneer of psychiatric epidemiology and of community care.
- Computerised care plans in Tayside.
- Confirmation of linkage of oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy to chromosome 14q11.2-q13.
- Dyspepsia in England and Scotland.
- Improved survival rates in sebaceous carcinoma of the eyelid.
- Joseph Bell, MD, FRCS--Mr. Sherlock Holmes?
- Leptospirosis in the West of Scotland.
- Malignant melanoma of the conjunctiva.
- National Quality Improvement Program in Transurethral Resection of Bladder Tumor: A Model for the Rest of Us, Even if We Cannot Share All Results.
- Parents' experiences of managing their child's diabetes using an insulin pump: a qualitative study.
- Parents' information and support needs when their child is diagnosed with type 1 diabetes: a qualitative study.
- Public attitudes to the storage of blood left over from routine general practice tests and its use in research.
- Quick recovery of orientation after magnetic seizure therapy for major depressive disorder.
- Survey finds that 1 in 10 children has a mental disorder.
- The European union and postgraduate medical education in Scotland.
- The educational needs of staff grade doctors and dentists in Scotland.
- US and Scottish Health Professionals attitudes toward DNA biobanking.
- US and Scottish health professionals' attitudes toward DNA biobanking.