Language and the physician.

PubWeight™: 3.64‹?› | Rank: Top 1%

🔗 View Article (PMID 5933270)

Published in Arch Surg on June 01, 1966

Authors

L DeBakey

Articles citing this

Releasing literary inhibitions in scientific reporting. Can Med Assoc J (1990) 2.62

Mind to mind: persuasion in medical writing. Can Med Assoc J (1967) 0.75

Articles by these authors

Releasing literary inhibitions in scientific reporting. Can Med Assoc J (1990) 2.62

Every careless word that men utter. I. The English language. Anesth Analg (1971) 1.99

The case report. I. Guidelines for preparation. Int J Cardiol (1983) 1.56

Verbal eccentricities in scientific writing. N Engl J Med (1966) 1.38

The abstract: an abridged scientific report. Int J Cardiol (1983) 1.18

Medical writing. Let thy words be few. Int J Cardiol (1982) 1.07

Lifelong learning tailored to individual clinical practice. JAMA (1992) 1.03

Rewriting and the by-line: is the author the writer? Surgery (1974) 0.97

The case report. II. Style and form. Int J Cardiol (1984) 0.91

The title. What's in a name? Int J Cardiol (1983) 0.90

Ethics and etiquette in biomedical communication. Perspect Biol Med (1975) 0.84

Ghostwriters: not always what they appear. JAMA (1995) 0.79

Every careless word that men utter. II. The language of science. Anesth Analg (1971) 0.79

Continuing medical education: the paradigm is changing. J Contin Educ Health Prof (2001) 0.78

Journal peer reviewing. Anonymity or disclosure? Arch Ophthalmol (1990) 0.77

Medicant: nothing hinders communication as much as words--when they are used badly or incorrectly. Forum Med (1978) 0.77

Journal editors and the press: cooperation not conflict. JAMA (1981) 0.77

Authors vs contributors: accuracy, accountability, and responsibility. JAMA (1998) 0.75

The fictional physician-scientist of nineteenth-century America: scientific milieu. South Med J (1966) 0.75

Letter: Impartial signed reviews. N Engl J Med (1976) 0.75

Journal usage under attack. N Engl J Med (1978) 0.75

Medical gobbledygook and writer's gookledygobb. IMJ Ill Med J (1971) 0.75

The fictional physician-scientist of nineteenth-century America: Nathaniel Hawthorne. Anesth Analg (1968) 0.75

The art of persuasion: logic and language in proposal writing. Grants Mag (1978) 0.75

Medical writing. Grammar. Word order: the misplaced modifier. Int J Cardiol (1982) 0.75

[The fictional physician-scientist of nineteenth-century America: Herman Melville]. South Med J (1968) 0.75

The fictional physician-scientist of nineteenth-century America: scientific milieu. Anesth Analg (1968) 0.75

Letter: A spooky proposal. JAMA (1974) 0.75

Medical writing: Echolalia. Int J Cardiol (1982) 0.75

Syntactic orphans and adoptees: unattached participles. II. Medical misconstructions. Int J Cardiol (1983) 0.75

Editorial: Editorial ethics. JAMA (1974) 0.75

Instruction in scientific communications. J Med Educ (1965) 0.75

Big government and hospital care: prescription for disaster. Read Dig (1980) 0.75

Truth in health or show-biz fluff? Am Coll Physicians Obs (1981) 0.75

Letter: Who purple-xed the Debakeys's? N Engl J Med (1976) 0.75

Should physicians unionize? Yes, it would curb HMO abuse. South Med J (1999) 0.75

A tribute: Oscar Creech Jr., MD. Arch Surg (1968) 0.75

Letter: Up with excellence. JAMA (1974) 0.75

Syntactic orphans and adoptees: unattached participles. I. Mischievous intruders. Int J Cardiol (1983) 0.75

Muddy medical writing: is the culprit "bad grammar," technologic terminology, committee authorship, or undisciplined reasoning. South Med J (1976) 0.75