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Articles in regional publications that pertain to a wide range of North Carolina-related topics.

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27 results for "Medical care"
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Record #:
36049
Abstract:
Talent was present; absent was funding. In a campus meeting, Senator Burr heralded Johnson and Johnson’s offer to help ECU fulfill medical missions like curing diabetes. A research university springing from a teacher’s training school, then, may seem off the beaten path. Realizing this intent—improving the quality of life—made it obvious ECU has stayed on course.
Record #:
31259
Author(s):
Abstract:
According to the Carolina Organ Procurement Agency in Durham, more than two-thousand North Carolinians are waiting for organ or tissue donations. The statewide program of the EMC Volunteers Committee in 1999 is to promote organ and tissue donation. In this article, a North Carolina family discusses organ donation and their experience.
Source:
Carolina Country (NoCar HD 9688 N8 C38x), Vol. 31 Issue 1, Jan 1999, p11, por
Record #:
3122
Author(s):
Abstract:
The state's health-care industry is profiled with statistical data pertaining to hospitals, health maintenance organizations, physicians, and nursing homes.
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Record #:
2724
Author(s):
Abstract:
Possible changes, including more local control by county commissioners of health programs and expenditures, competition from home health care, and managed heath care systems, could affect the role of local public health departments.
Source:
Popular Government (NoCar JK 4101 P6), Vol. 61 Issue 2, Fall 1995, p14-19, il
Record #:
1851
Author(s):
Abstract:
This is the first in a series of articles and pictorials documenting North Carolina's community health-care projects, which make health care accessible to uninsured people and to people in remote areas of the state.
Source:
Independent Weekly (NoCar Oversize AP 2 .I57 [volumes 13 - 23 on microfilm]), Vol. 12 Issue 34, Aug 1994, p10-15, il Periodical Website
Record #:
1883
Author(s):
Abstract:
This is the second in a series of articles and pictorials documenting North Carolina's community health-care projects, which make health care accessible to uninsured people and to remote areas.
Source:
Independent Weekly (NoCar Oversize AP 2 .I57 [volumes 13 - 23 on microfilm]), Vol. 12 Issue 35, Aug 1994, p16-19, il Periodical Website
Record #:
241
Author(s):
Abstract:
Tar Heels exceed the national averages in deaths from heart disease, cancer, injuries, and infant mortality. This article examines what the state can do about its relatively poor showing in health condition.
Source:
North Carolina Insight (NoCar JK 4101 N3x), Vol. 14 Issue 1, May 1992, p2-19, il, bibl, f Periodical Website
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Record #:
560
Author(s):
Abstract:
As regional medical centers grow stronger, rural hospitals seek remedies for their financial ills.
Record #:
23
Author(s):
Abstract:
Residents of Madison County are the beneficiaries of a program, Community Oriented Primary Care (COPC), that combines old-fashioned health care with the latest medical technology.
Source:
Endeavors (NoCar LD 3941.3 A3), Vol. 9 Issue 1, Fall 1991, p7-10, il, por Periodical Website
Record #:
672
Author(s):
Abstract:
Public tax-supported hospitals in North Carolina are facing a financial crisis that threatens their existence and jeopardizes the continuing health care for a large segment of our population.
Source:
North Carolina (NoCar F 251 W4), Vol. 46 Issue 1, Jan 1988, p44-48, il
Record #:
35972
Author(s):
Abstract:
Detailed primarily were eventful and uneventful cases of labor and delivery this doctor attended during his six years of services. His descriptions included timely obstetric practices, such as use of pituitrin, and life threatening childbirth-related conditions like sepsis. As for his patients, offered also were observations that showed his respect for the people and their culture.
Source:
Sea Chest (NoCar F 262 D2 S42), Vol. 3 Issue 2, Spring 1976, p58-65
Record #:
9984
Author(s):
Abstract:
Writer Bob Brown traveled to Maimonides Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York for an outpatient surgery in which he was provided anesthesia via experimental acupuncture Drs. Fan and Leung.
Source:
The State (NoCar F 251 S77), Vol. 41 Issue 8, Jan 1974, p19-20, por
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