Limit search to available items
Nearby Subjects are:
Result Page   Prev Next
Add Marked to Bag Add All On Page Add Marked to My Lists
Mark   Year Entries
 

Bloodborne infection -- See Bloodborne infections


  1
Bloodborne infections.   18
Bloodborne infections -- Australia -- Congresses. : Indigenous Resiliency Project Participatory Action Research component : a report on the Research Training & Development Workshop, Townsville, 4-6 February 2008 / [prepared by Julie Mooney-Somers ... [and others]]  2008 1
Bloodborne infections -- Congresses. : Transfusion transmissible infectious agents : proceedings of a symposium conducted by the NSW Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service, held at the Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences, Sydney, Australia, November 26th and 27th 1992 / edited by Kenneth G. Kenrick  1994 1
Bloodborne infections -- Drama.   2
Bloodborne infections -- India -- Prevention. : Safer injections, fewer infections : management of needles and sharps and occupational blood exposure in rural north Indian health settings / Michelle Anna Kermode  2004 1
 

Bloodborne infections Prevention -- See Also the narrower term Needle exchange programs


  1
Bloodborne infections -- Prevention.   70
Bloodborne infections -- Prevention -- Study and teaching : Standards for infection control. Part 2, Preventing bloodborne pathogens transmission / produced by Medcom/Trainex  2007 1
Bloodborne infections -- Transmission   2
Bloodborne infections -- United States -- Prevention.   11
 

Bloodborne Pathogens -- See Blood-Borne Pathogens


Infectious organisms, including pathogenic bacteria, viruses, and fungi, that are present in the BLOOD
  1
Bloodhound. : Mythbusters: Hair Of The Dog  2010 1
Snyder, Timothy. Bloodlands : Bloodlands : Europe Between Hitler and Stalin  2017 1
 

Bloodless Medical and Surgical Procedures -- See Also Blood Substitutes


Substances that are used in place of blood, for example, as an alternative to BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS after blood loss to restore BLOOD VOLUME and oxygen-carrying capacity to the blood circulation, or to perfuse isolated organs
  1
Bloodless Medical and Surgical Procedures : Transfusion Free Medicine and Surgery  2014 1
 

Bloodless medicine -- See Transfusion-free surgery


  1
 

Bloodless Medicine and Surgery Programs -- See Bloodless Medical and Surgical Procedures


The treatment of patients without the use of allogeneic BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS or blood products
  1
 

Bloodless Surgeries -- See Bloodless Medical and Surgical Procedures


The treatment of patients without the use of allogeneic BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS or blood products
  1
  Bloodless Surgery -- 2 Related Subjects   2
 

Bloodless warfare -- See Casualty aversion (Military science)


  1
  Bloodletting -- 2 Related Subjects   2
Bloodletting   19
Bloodletting -- history : The decline of therapeutic bloodletting and the collapse of traditional medicine / K. Codell Carter  2012 1
 

Bloodmobiles -- See Also Blood banks


  1
 

Bloods, Artificial -- See Blood Substitutes


Substances that are used in place of blood, for example, as an alternative to BLOOD TRANSFUSIONS after blood loss to restore BLOOD VOLUME and oxygen-carrying capacity to the blood circulation, or to perfuse isolated organs
  1
 

Bloods, Cord -- See Fetal Blood


Blood of the fetus. Exchange of nutrients and waste between the fetal and maternal blood occurs via the PLACENTA. The cord blood is blood contained in the umbilical vessels (UMBILICAL CORD) at the time of delivery
  1
 

Bloods, Fetal -- See Fetal Blood


Blood of the fetus. Exchange of nutrients and waste between the fetal and maternal blood occurs via the PLACENTA. The cord blood is blood contained in the umbilical vessels (UMBILICAL CORD) at the time of delivery
  1
 

Bloods, Umbilical Cord -- See Fetal Blood


Blood of the fetus. Exchange of nutrients and waste between the fetal and maternal blood occurs via the PLACENTA. The cord blood is blood contained in the umbilical vessels (UMBILICAL CORD) at the time of delivery
  1
Bloodstain pattern analysis.   3
 

Bloodstain spatter analysis -- See Bloodstain pattern analysis


  1
Bloodstains.   8
Bloodstains -- Analysis : Blood-stains: their detection, and the determination of their source A manual for the medical and legal professions. By Major W.D. Sutherland ..  1907 1
 

Bloodstone -- See Hematite


  1
 

Bloodsucking animals -- See Also the narrower term Bloodsucking insects


  1
Bloodsucking insects -- Anatomy.   2
 

Bloodsucking midges -- See Ceratopogonidae


  1
Bloodworth, Dennis., 1919- : The reporter's notebook / Dennis Bloodworth  1988 1
Bloodworth, Dennis -- Anecdotes. : The reporter's notebook / Dennis Bloodworth  1988 1
Bloodworth-Thomason, Linda, 1947- -- Interviews : 60 minutes. Best of friends [Bloodworth-Thomason] / produced by Rome Hartman  1998 1
Bloody Assizes, 1685.   4
Carter, Angela, 1940-1992. Bloody chamber. : Erotic infidelities : love and enchantment in Angela Carter's the bloody chamber / Kimberly J. Lau  2014 1
Bloody Falls Massacre, 1771 : Far off Metal River : Inuit lands, settler stories, and the making of the contemporary Arctic / Emilie Cameron  2015 1
Derry -- Bloody Sunday. : The Bloody Sunday inquiry : the families speak out / edited and introduced by Eamonn McCann  2006 1
Bloody Sunday, Derry, Northern Ireland, 1972.   9
Bloody Sunday, Derry, Northern Ireland, 1972 -- Historiography : Commemoration and Bloody Sunday : pathways of memory / Brian Conway  2010 1
Bloody Sunday, Derry, Northern Ireland, 1972 -- Personal narratives : Bloody Sunday : a Derry diary / a film by Margo Harkin ; a Besom Productions, Lichtblick Films co-production  2007 1
Bloody Sunday, Dublin, Ireland, 1920. : Imperial violence and the path to independence : India, Ireland, and the crisis of empire / Shereen Ilahi  2016 1
 

Bloody Sunday, Thailand, 1973 -- See Thailand History Student Uprising, 1973


  1
 

Bloom, Algal -- See Eutrophication


The enrichment of a terrestrial or aquatic ECOSYSTEM by the addition of nutrients, especially nitrogen and phosphorus, that results in a superabundant growth of plants, ALGAE, or other primary producers. It can be a natural process or result from human activity such as agriculture runoff or sewage pollution. In aquatic ecosystems, an increase in the algae population is termed an algal bloom
  1
Add Marked to Bag Add All On Page Add Marked to My Lists
Result Page   Prev Next