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- Bookedited by Wendy R. Uhlmann, Jane L. Schuette, Beverly M. Yashar.Contents:
The practice of genetic counseling / Ann P. Walker
The ultimate genetic tool : the family history / Jane L. Schuette and Robin L. Bennett
Interviewing : beginning to see each other / Kathryn Spitzer Kim
Thinking it all through : case preparation and management / Wendy R. Uhlmann
Psychosocial counseling / Luba Djurdjinovic
Patient education / Ann C.M. Smith and Toni I. Pollin
Risk communication and decision making / Bonnie Jeanne Baty
The medical genetics evaluation / Elizabeth M. Petty
Understanding genetic testing / W. Andrew Faucett and Patricia A. Ward
Medical documentation / Debra Lochner Doyle
Multicultural counseling / Gottfried Oosterwal
Ethical and legal issues / Susan Schmerler
Student supervision : strategies for providing direction, guidance, and support / Patricia McCarthy Veach and Bonnie S. LeRoy
Genetic counseling research : understanding the basics / Beverly M. Yashar
Professional identity and development / Elizabeth A. Gettig and Karen Greendale
Genetic counselors as educators / Debra L. Collins and Joseph D. McInerney
Evolving roles, expanding opportunities / Elizabeth A. Balkite and Maureen E. Smith
Putting it all together : three case examples / Jane L. Schuette ... [et al.].Digital Access ProQuest Ebook Central 2009PrintLocationVersionCall NumberItems - ArticleFaccini JM, Naylor D.Arch Toxicol Suppl. 1979(2):517-20.Computer storage of data from toxicology, biochemistry, haematology and pathology has been found necessary in our Laboratory in order to handle the vast amount of information generated by animal toxicology studies. The value of the system to pathology is enormous and its potential has not been exhausted. All finding, from organ weights and macroscopic observations made at autopsy, to the final histopathological diagnosis made by the pathologist are computerized. A modified version of the American College of Pathologists' systematized nomenclature of pathology is used. The pathologist recordtor whose role in the system is indispensable. The designation of a pathologist with special responsibility for supervising the computerisation and its scientific validity ensures its smooth running. The integration of data from haematology and clinical chemistry as a profile for each animal is available to the pathologist when making the final diagnosis. The system has resulted in a standardisation of pathological terminology, greater speed and improved accuracy in report formulation, the establishment of a readily retrievable in-house data bank and an enormous saving in the time of pathologists and secretaries.