Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A baby is irritable, has trouble nursing and stops gaining weight. When the infant begins suffering repeated seizures and eventually begins sustaining rapid-onset cerebral ischemia, they are diagnosed with moyamoya disease, and must be treated before they suffer lethal brain damage from the repeated ischemic incidents.
Harvard Magazine is an independently edited magazine and separately incorporated affiliate of Harvard University. It is the only publication covering the entire ...
Brett Kahr, Senior Clinical Research Fellow in Psychotherapy and Mental Health at the Centre for Child Mental Health in London and a practising Freudian; Ronald Hayman, writer and biographer of Jung; Andrew Samuels, Professor of Analytical Psychology at the University of Essex and a Jungian analyst in clinical practice
Belvoir Media Group is now regarded as one of the largest circulation health information publishers in the world, and manages health newsletters and special health reports for Harvard Health Publishing, and Tufts Media. Harvard's titles include Harvard Health Letter, Harvard Heart Letter, Harvard Women’s Health Watch, and Harvard Men’s ...
The Harvard alumni health study is a cohort study focusing on the effect of exercise on coronary artery disease, strokes, diabetes, hypertension, cancer, obesity and mortality. Including only male, Harvard College graduates who began their studies between 1916 and 1950 and were still living in 1966, the study began with 21,582 individuals. Data ...
Julie Corliss is an American medical writer with more than sixteen years of experience in consumer health issues. Her work has been published in Newsweek, HealthNews and Harvard Health Publications. She helped Dr. George L. Blackburn write Break Through Your Set Point a weight loss book published by HarperCollins. [1]
Charles S. Maier, professor of history at Harvard University [7] John U. Monro, dean of Harvard College (1958–1967) [8] Eric M. Nelson, professor of government at Harvard [9] Rebecca L. Walkowitz, Provost of Barnard College. Walkowitz is a former Crimson president. [10] Claude E. Welch Jr., political scientist at SUNY at Buffalo.
Each episode focuses on two or more individuals who have struggled with obscure medical ailments, and their quest for a diagnosis. The program details the patients' and doctors' difficulty in pinpointing a diagnosis; often due to nonspecific symptoms, masquerading syndromes, the rarity of the condition or disease, or the patient's case being an ...