Article
Open Access
Cognitive effects of ERT in older women
-
Thomas Wesley Allen
Published/Copyright:
October 1, 1994
Published Online: 1994-10-01
Published in Print: 1994-10-01
© 1994 American Osteopathic Association
Articles in the same Issue
- Letters to the Editor
- Reimbursement inequities leave rural practices 'in the dust'
- Response: Reimbursement inequities leave rural practices 'in the dust'
- Editorial Comments
- Some physicians staffing emergency rooms (ERs) across America have not been adequately trained to stop bleeding, resuscitate a child, or to treat a patient in cardiac arrest, among other health emergencies.
- The worldwide death toll from smoking continues to escalate
- The benefits of screening healthy men for prostate cancer are once again being questioned in the latest research.
- Saturated fats play some role in the development of ovarian cancer
- News
- From the CDC: Smoking-related healthcare costs escalate
- From the FDA: Breast exam device rejected
- From the EPA: Regulations for medical incinerators to be proposed
- From the PHS: Illegal drug use up, concern down
- Book Reviews
- Myofascial Pain and Fibromyalgia
- Joslin's Diabetes Mellitus
- News
- Cognitive effects of ERT in older women
- Editorial
- ER protocols needed for treating cardiac patients—STAT
- Original Contribution
- HIV prevention: Factors that predict compliance with testing and counseling procedures
- Review
- An osteopathic cardiologist's review of hypertension: Beyond The Fifth Report of the Joint National Committee on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure
- Health Policy
- Skewed incentives in our healthcare delivery system
- Abstracts
- Thirty-Eighth Annual AOA Research Conference Abstracts, 1994: Addendum
Creative Commons
BY-NC-ND 4.0
Articles in the same Issue
- Letters to the Editor
- Reimbursement inequities leave rural practices 'in the dust'
- Response: Reimbursement inequities leave rural practices 'in the dust'
- Editorial Comments
- Some physicians staffing emergency rooms (ERs) across America have not been adequately trained to stop bleeding, resuscitate a child, or to treat a patient in cardiac arrest, among other health emergencies.
- The worldwide death toll from smoking continues to escalate
- The benefits of screening healthy men for prostate cancer are once again being questioned in the latest research.
- Saturated fats play some role in the development of ovarian cancer
- News
- From the CDC: Smoking-related healthcare costs escalate
- From the FDA: Breast exam device rejected
- From the EPA: Regulations for medical incinerators to be proposed
- From the PHS: Illegal drug use up, concern down
- Book Reviews
- Myofascial Pain and Fibromyalgia
- Joslin's Diabetes Mellitus
- News
- Cognitive effects of ERT in older women
- Editorial
- ER protocols needed for treating cardiac patients—STAT
- Original Contribution
- HIV prevention: Factors that predict compliance with testing and counseling procedures
- Review
- An osteopathic cardiologist's review of hypertension: Beyond The Fifth Report of the Joint National Committee on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure
- Health Policy
- Skewed incentives in our healthcare delivery system
- Abstracts
- Thirty-Eighth Annual AOA Research Conference Abstracts, 1994: Addendum