Citations
for articles:
Database: CINAHL
Query: kw: cardiac and kw: care
1. |
Anti-fibrinolytic
use for minimising perioperative allogeneic blood transfusion |
2. |
Exercise-based
rehabilitation for coronary heart disease |
3. |
Nursing
interventions for smoking cessation |
4. |
Psychosocial
outcomes after an MI: an evaluation of two approaches to rehabilitation |
5. |
Race
discrimination: courts finds serious violations of patient-care standards,
not race discrimination, upholds nurse's firing |
6. |
Pediatric
sports emergencies |
7. |
Developing
research apprentices: involving occupational therapy students in
gerontological research |
8. |
New cardiac
project is first to tackle clinical and operational issues: time commitment
high for data collection, analysis |
9. |
A case
study approach to evaluation of cardiac disease in women |
10. |
Relationship
of cardiac inpatients' outcomes to mood state |
FirstSearch® Copyright © 1992-2001 OCLC as to electronic
presentation and platform.
Citation
for a book:
Database:
GIL
Author: |
Crews, Harry, 1935- |
Title: |
A childhood, the biography of a place / Harry Crews. |
Edition: |
1st ed. |
Publisher: |
New York : Harper & Row, c1978. |
Description: |
171 p. ; 22 cm. |
Subject(s): |
Crews, Harry, 1935- --Biography--Youth. |
Citation
with abstract:
Database: |
General Science Abstracts |
Copyright: |
Database Producer Copyright © the H.W. Wilson Company. All rights reserved. |
Ownership: |
Check
the catalogs in your library. · · |
Author(s): |
Hadfield, Peter. |
Title: |
Dead seas. |
Source: |
New
Scientist v. 169
no2273 (Jan. 13 2001) p. 22 Journal Code: New Sci |
Standard No: |
ISSN: 0262-4079 |
Language: |
English |
Abstract: |
Global warming may be responsible for creating a situation where ocean life hangs in the balance. Yoon Jong-Hwan, a South Korean marine physicist working at the Research Institute for Applied Mechanics on the island of Kyushu, Japan, believes that global warming will create a "dead zone" in the Sea of Japan in 350 years as a result of weakening ocean convection currents in the region. If ocean waters generally start to circulate less efficiently, this will have dire knock-on consequences for ocean life and produce a further positive feedback for global warming. However, other researchers advise more work on the relationship between global warming and ocean circulation. |
|
SUBJECT(S) |
Descriptor: |
Climatic
changes. |
Record Type: |
article |
Article Type: |
feature article |
Citation
with full-text:
Database:
Lexis-Nexis Academic
Copyright 1992 The Christian Science Publishing Society
The Christian Science Monitor
December 24, 1992, Thursday
SECTION: THE WORLD; Pg. 6
LENGTH: 753 words
HEADLINE: Czechs, Slovaks Work to Ensure A Peaceful Split
BYLINE: Francine S. Kiefer, Staff writer of The Christian
Science Monitor
DATELINE: PRAGUE
HIGHLIGHT:
CZECHOSLOVAKIA'S 'VELVET DIVORCE'
BODY: Full-text
THE Czechs and Slovaks have managed to settle their divorce with remarkable
speed and in a businesslike manner. In just three months they have worked out
the terms for the split of Czechoslovakia, which will take place Jan. 1.
"We learned something from Yugoslavia," says Jiri Schneider,
spokesman for Vaclav Klaus, prime minister and chief negotiator for the Czech
Republic. "We learned that postponing solving the problem is most
dangerous."
Negotiators were spared much work because the Czech and Slovak republics, which
comprise Czechoslovakia, already had their own parliaments and ministries, and
much of the negotiating was delegated to these ministries. Another time-saver
was the good neighbor treaty between the two republics. It was cribbed from
existing treaties between Prague and other countries.
It is inevitable that mistakes were made and are hidden in the details, diplomats
here conclude. "There are going to be squabbles after Jan. 1," one
Western diplomat in Prague says, "but people don't think there's going to
be a big to-do." Generally, observers praise the agreements, as do both
sides in the "velvet divorce."