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  2. Sherwin B. Nuland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherwin_B._Nuland

    Sherwin Bernard Nuland [1] (born Shepsel Ber Nudelman; December 8, 1930 – March 3, 2014) was an American surgeon and writer who taught bioethics, history of medicine, and medicine at the Yale School of Medicine, and occasionally bioethics and history of medicine at Yale College.

  3. The Soul of Medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Soul_of_Medicine

    The medicine spoken about in this book is from an earlier era, which shows the best and the worst moments of many surgeons and doctors. Each chapter in this book consists of a different unrelated story from the previous, yet all are recollections of Nuland's peers while he was doing his residency in Yale-New Haven Hospital.

  4. Victoria Nuland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victoria_Nuland

    Nuland was born in 1961 to Sherwin B. Nuland, a surgeon born to Eastern European Jewish immigrants from Bessarabia, then part of the Soviet Union, with the last name Nudelman, [9] and a Christian British native mother, Rhona McKhann, née Goulston. [failed verification] [10] She graduated from Choate Rosemary Hall in 1979. [11]

  5. Hippocrates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hippocrates

    Hippocrates of Kos (/ h ɪ ˈ p ɒ k r ə t iː z /, Greek: Ἱπποκράτης ὁ Κῷος, translit. Hippokrátēs ho Kôios; c. 460 – c. 370 BC), also known as Hippocrates II, was a Greek physician and philosopher of the classical period who is considered one of the most outstanding figures in the history of medicine.

  6. Listening to Prozac - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Listening_to_Prozac

    In a review in the New York Review of Books, Sherwin B. Nuland said that Kramer has "played fast and loose with the most basic principles by which physicians evaluate clinical experience and propose new ways of explaining or treating illness. Those principles require (1) meticulous and personally made observations of an illness or maladaptive ...

  7. Help:Citations quick reference - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Citations_quick_reference

    Citations are important in Wikipedia to ensure that information comes from actual, reliable sources (WP:V, WP:CITE).There are three preferred ways of citing sources: ...

  8. ACS style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACS_style

    The ACS Style is a set of standards for writing documents relating to chemistry, including a standard method of citation in academic publications, developed by the American Chemical Society (ACS).

  9. Wikipedia : Citing sources/Example edits for different methods

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Citing_sources/...

    This style of citation was a type of referencing used on Wikipedia until September 2020, when a community discussion reached a consensus to deprecate this format of citation. Inline parenthetical references are conceptually very much like shortened footnotes, but insert the shortened reference inline into the article body text rather than in a ...