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Lanham, MD

13 entries published in this place. (Lanham, US)

2000 CE

#8504

Indigenous theories of contagious disease.

2000 CE–2015 CE

#12260

Ladies in the laboratory. 4 vols. 1: American and British women in science, 1800-1900: A survey of their contributions to research. 2: West European women in science, 1800-1900: A survey of their contributions (2004). 3: South African, Australian, New Zealand, and Canadian women in science: Nineteenth and early twentieth centuries (2010). 4: Imperial Russia's women in science, 1800-1900: A survey of their contributions to research (2015).

2005 CE

#9965

A concise history of euthanasia: Life, death, god, and medicine.

2005 CE

#7987

Bioethics beyond the headlines: Who lives? Who dies? Who decides?

2009 CE

#12095

Forgotten voices: Death records of the Yakama, 1888-1964.

"Despite a recent resurgence in studies of death and disease in native peoples of the Western Hemisphere, little work has been done on death and disease in Native Americans during the reservation period of the late 19…

2011 CE

#8615

Childbirth in republican China: Delivering modernity.

2012 CE

#8059

Historical dictionary of the World Health Organization. Second edition.

Covers the history of the WHO through a chronology, an introductory essay, appendices, and an extensive bibliography. The dictionary section has over 1000 cross-referenced entries on key bodies, programs, events and p…

2013 CE

#12682

Catching cancer: The quest for its viral & bacterial causes.

2014 CE

#11786

Doctors of another calling: Physicians who are best known in fields other than medicine. Edited by David K. C. Cooper.

2015 CE

#12130

Medicine on the periphery: Public health in Yucatán, Mexico, 1870-1960.

2016 CE

#10669

Public opinion, public policy, and smoking: The transformation of American attitudes and cigarette use.

2019 CE

#11528

Johann Reinhold Forster and the making of natural history on Cook's Second Voyage, 1772–1775

2021 CE

#13726

A history of medical libraries and medical librarianship: From John Shaw Billings to the digital era.

Concerns only U.S. medical libraries.