Occupational medicine and its relationship to present day industrial relations. 1947

C F YEAGER

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007221 Industry Any enterprise centered on the processing, assembly, production, or marketing of a line of products, services, commodities, or merchandise, in a particular field often named after its principal product. Examples include the automobile, fishing, music, publishing, insurance, and textile industries. Tertiary Sector,Industries,Sector, Tertiary,Sectors, Tertiary,Tertiary Sectors
D009787 Occupational Medicine Medical specialty concerned with the promotion and maintenance of the physical and mental health of employees in occupational settings. Industrial Medicine,Medicine, Industrial,Medicine, Occupational
D009790 Occupations Crafts, trades, professions, or other means of earning a living. Vocations,Occupation,Vocation
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man

Related Publications

C F YEAGER
April 1957, A.M.A. archives of industrial health,
C F YEAGER
February 1964, Minnesota medicine,
C F YEAGER
May 1989, Revue medicale de la Suisse romande,
C F YEAGER
January 1950, Virginia medical monthly,
C F YEAGER
September 1959, Revue medicale de la Suisse romande,
C F YEAGER
May 1955, The Journal of the Kansas Medical Society,
C F YEAGER
January 2002, Meditsina truda i promyshlennaia ekologiia,
C F YEAGER
January 1962, Annali di medicina navale,
C F YEAGER
May 1946, Industrial medicine & surgery,
C F YEAGER
January 1974, Anales de la Real Academia Nacional de Medicina,
Copied contents to your clipboard!