BIOMARKERS

Molecular Biopsy of Human Tumors

- a resource for Precision Medicine *

118 related articles for article (PubMed ID: 3440676)

  • 1. The 1665-1666 plague epidemic at Eyam: two paradigms, one verdict.
    Vandenbroucke JP
    Int J Epidemiol; 1987 Dec; 16(4):623-4. PubMed ID: 3440676
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 2. A plague epidemic in voluntary quarantine.
    Coleman MP
    Int J Epidemiol; 1986 Sep; 15(3):379-85. PubMed ID: 3533810
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 3. COVID-19 and the ethics of quarantine: a lesson from the Eyam plague.
    Spitale G
    Med Health Care Philos; 2020 Dec; 23(4):603-609. PubMed ID: 32761351
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 4. A dreadful heritage: interpreting epidemic disease at Eyam, 1666-2000.
    Wallis P
    Hist Workshop J; 2006; (61):31-56. PubMed ID: 16967576
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 5. Making us as cruel as dogs: plague in 16th and 17th century England.
    Wear A
    Lancet; 2015 Jun; 385(9986):2456-7. PubMed ID: 26122061
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 6. The plague at Eyam.
    Howell MJ
    Practitioner; 1969 Jul; 202(213):98-104. PubMed ID: 4895698
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 7. [Hospitalization and quarantine in times of plague-Switzerland compared to upper Italy].
    Waldis V
    Gesnerus; 1982 Jan; 39(1):7l-8. PubMed ID: 7042476
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 8. [The history of quarantine].
    Ziskind B; Halioua B
    Rev Prat; 2008 Dec; 58(20):2314-7. PubMed ID: 19209665
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 9. [The lazaretto in Split in the 19th century].
    Piplović S
    Lijec Vjesn; 1986 May; 108(5):217-20. PubMed ID: 3523091
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 10. Bubonic plague in a Tuscany village.
    Aronson SM
    Med Health R I; 1997 Mar; 80(3):77-8. PubMed ID: 9117940
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 11. A short history of quarantine (Victor C. Vaughan).
    Matovinovic J
    Univ Mich Med Cent J; 1969; 35(4):224-8. PubMed ID: 4914473
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 12. Shutt up: bubonic plague and quarantine in early modern England.
    Newman KL
    J Soc Hist; 2012; 45(3):809-34. PubMed ID: 22611587
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 13. Plague, arsenic, and a dried toad.
    Gilman EB
    Lancet; 2009 Jun; 373(9680):2018-9. PubMed ID: 19533834
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 14. Some further consideration of the plague in Eyam, 1665/6.
    Race P
    Local Popul Stud; 1995; (54):56-65. PubMed ID: 11639747
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 15. Epidemiological analysis of the Eyam plague outbreak of 1665-1666.
    Whittles LK; Didelot X
    Proc Biol Sci; 2016 May; 283(1830):. PubMed ID: 27170724
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 16. 'A broom in the hand of the almighty': the plague and the unruly poor.
    Sumich C
    Clio Med; 2013; 91():216-59. PubMed ID: 24290513
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 17. Plague, rats, and ships The realisation of the infection routes of plague.
    Sonne O
    Dan Medicinhist Arbog; 2016; 44():101-133. PubMed ID: 29737663
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 18. Plague and contagionism in eighteenth-century England: the role of Richard Mead.
    Zuckerman A
    Bull Hist Med; 2004; 78(2):273-308. PubMed ID: 15211050
    [TBL] [Abstract][Full Text] [Related]  

  • 19. [Quarantine service and anti-epidemic measures in the Ukraine during the 18th century].
    BorodiÄ­ NK
    Zh Mikrobiol Epidemiol Immunobiol; 1980 May; (5):117-20. PubMed ID: 6998219
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

  • 20. [The medical knowledge of plague in the 1st half of the 17th century in the area of north Germany].
    Hille M; Ehler E
    Med Klin; 1968 Oct; 63(42):1696-9. PubMed ID: 4881838
    [No Abstract]   [Full Text] [Related]  

    [Next]    [New Search]
    of 6.