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ASSERT
improving Alcohol and Substance abuse Services and Educating providings to Refer patients to Treatme...
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JrId: 27362
JournalTitle: References en gynecologie obstetrique.
MedAbbr: Ref Gynecol Obstet
ISSN: 1244-8168
ESSN:
IsoAbbr:
NlmId: 9418470
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refer
1. To carry or send back.
2. Hence: To send or direct away; to send or direct elsewhere, as for treatment, aid, infirmation, decision, etc.; to make over, or pass over, to another; as, to refer a student to an author; to refer a beggar to an officer; to refer a bill to a committee; a court refers a matter of fact to a commissioner for investigation, or refers a question of law to a superior tribunal.
3. To place in or under by a mental or rational process; to assign to, as a class, a cause, source, a motive, reason, or ground of explanation; as, he referred the phenomena to electrical disturbances. To refer one's self, to have recourse; to betake one's self; to make application; to appeal. "I'll refer me to all things sense." (Shak)
Origin: F. Referer, L. Referre; pref. Re- re- + ferre to bear. See Bear to carry.
Source: Websters Dictionary
(01 Mar 1998)
reference
The act of referring or consulting, something that refers to something else.
(18 Nov 1997)
reference books
Books designed by the arrangement and treatment of their subject matter to be consulted for definite terms of information rather than to be read consecutively. Reference books include dictionaries, encyclopedias, atlases, etc.
(12 Dec 1998)
reference books, medical
Books in the field of medicine intended primarily for consultation.
(12 Dec 1998)
reference electrode
An electrode expected to have a constant potential, such as a calomel electrode, and used with another electrode to complete an electrical circuit through a solution; e.g., when a reference electrode is used with a glass electrode for pH measurement, changes in voltage between the two electrode's can be attributed to the effects of pH on the glass electrode alone.
(05 Mar 2000)
reference method
An analytical procedure sufficiently free of random or systematic error to make it useful for validating proposed new analytical procedures for the same analyte.
(05 Mar 2000)
reference standards
A basis of value established for the measure of quantity, weight, extent or quality, e.g. Weight standards, standard solutions, methods, techniques, and procedures used in diagnosis and therapy.
(12 Dec 1998)
reference values
The range or frequency distribution of a measurement in a population (of organisms, organs or things) that has not been selected for the presence of disease or abnormality.
(12 Dec 1998)
referendary
1. One to whose decision a cause is referred; a referee.
2. An officer who delivered the royal answer to petitions. "Referendaries, or masters of request."
3. Formerly, an officer of state charged with the duty of procuring and dispatching diplomas and decrees.
Origin: LL. Referendarius, fr. L. Referendus to be referred, gerundive of referre: cf. F. Referendaire. See Refer.
Source: Websters Dictionary
(01 Mar 1998)
referendum
1. A diplomatic agent's note asking for instructions from his government concerning a particular matter or point.
2. The right to approve or reject by popular vote a meassure passed upon by a legislature.
Origin: Gerundive fr. L. Referre. See Refer.
Source: Websters Dictionary
(01 Mar 1998)
referral
The recommedation of a medical or paramedical professional. If you get a referral, for example, to ophthalmology, you are sent to the eye doctor. The earliest recorded use of the word referral in medicine was in 1927.
(12 Dec 1998)
referral and consultation
The practice of sending a patient to another program or practitioner for services or advice which the referring source is not prepared to provide.
(12 Dec 1998)
referred pain
Pain from deep structures perceived as arising from a surface area remote from its actual origin; the area where the pain is appreciated is innervated by the same spinal segment(s) as the deep structure.
Synonym: synalgia, telalgia.
(05 Mar 2000)
MeSH(Medical Subject Headings) ˻ (http://www.nlm.nih.gov) : 5 : 1
ܺ ũ - Merriam-Webster's л ˻ (https://www.merriam-webster.com) : 5 : 1
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reference
mention: a remark that calls attention to something or someone; "she made frequent mention of her promotion"; "there was no mention of it"; "the speaker made several references to his wife" citation: a short note recognizing a source of information or of a quoted passage; "the student's essay failed to list several important citations"; "the acknowledgments are usually printed at the front of a book"; "the article includes mention of similar clinical cases" reference point: an indicator that orients you generally; "it is used as a reference for comparing the heating and the electrical energy involved" reference book: a book to which you can refer for authoritative facts; "he contributed articles to the basic reference work on that topic" character: a formal recommendation by a former employer to a potential future employer describing the person's qualifications and dependability; "requests for character references are all to often answered evasively" the most direct or specific meaning of a word or expression; the class of objects that an expression refers to; "the extension of `satellite of Mars' is the set containing only Demos and Phobos" the act of referring or consulting; "reference to an encyclopedia produced the answer" a publication (or a passage from a publication) that is referred to; "he carried an armful of references back to his desk"; "he spent hours looking for the source of that quotation" the relation between a word or phrase and the object or idea it refers to; "he argued that reference is a consequence of conditioned reflexes" refer to; "he referenced his colleagues' work"
ó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
reference dose
Oral reference dose. EPA defines a reference dose as an estimate, with uncertainty spanning perhaps an order of magnitude, of a daily oral exposure to the human population (including sensitive subgroups) that is likely to be without an appreciable risk of deleterious effects during a lifetime.
ó: www.epa.gov/envirohealth/children/background/gloss...
reference
(noun) a source of information; (verb) to identify and record a source of information.
ó: www.reefed.edu.au/glossary/r.html
reference dose
A dose of a pesticide that the US EPA considers safe for regular daily consumption by humans without adverse health effects. Generated by taking the NOAEL from animal studies and adding uncertainty factors to account for differences between animals and humans, and susceptibility within the human population.
ó: www.nrdc.org/health/kids/farm/glos.asp
reference
A published reference which establishes or describes the standard.
ó: www.fws.gov/stand/standards/defterms.html
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