Skip to main content

Search the Library

Full-text search across all chapters and sections

Also searching for:Birth RecordsBirth CertificateBirth RecordCertificate, BirthCertificates, Birthvia MeSH
Showing 110 of 16 results for Birth Certificates

2 New Developments in LGBT Development: What’s New and What’s (Still) True

birth certificates force a male-female dichotomy. That notwithstanding, the two-stage
Richard Ruth and Erik Santacruz· Oxford· 9988998899889Book detail →

3 Making Psychology Trans-Inclusive and Trans-Affirmative: Recommendations for Research and Practice

birth (APA, 1980). DSM-IV removed transexualism as a disorder but retained GID, and this was classified under Sexual Disorders (APA, 1994). Subsequently, the DSM-5 removed GID, replacing it with gender dysphoria, a change meant to reduce the stigmatization of transgender individuals
Richard Ruth and Erik Santacruz· Oxford· 9988998899889Book detail →

7 Caught at the Intersections: Microaggressions toward Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer People of Color

Birth Female 27 African American African American Lesbian Catholic Student PhD candidate Bronx, NY Female 27 African American African American Lesbian Catholic Student Bachelor’s degree Bronx, NY Female 26 Black Not specified Gay None None High school New York, NY Female 31 American Indian
Richard Ruth and Erik Santacruz· Oxford· 9988998899889Book detail →
Pediatric Neurology · Chapter 31

Case 19 Skin Is the Window to the Brain

birth or during the first year of life. Lesions can involve the trunk, limbs, and/or head. The patient was otherwise healthy and born following an uncomplicated full-term pregnancy at 39 weeks via elective cesarean section to a G3P2 mother with no complications during delivery
Hugo A. Arroyo· Elsevier Inc.· 8363524232526Book detail →
Pediatric Neurology · Chapter 31

Case 19 Skin Is the Window to the Brain

birth or during the first year of life. Lesions can involve the trunk, limbs, and/or head. The patient was otherwise healthy and born following an uncomplicated full-term pregnancy at 39 weeks via elective cesarean section to a G3P2 mother with no complications during delivery
Hugo A. Arroyo· Elsevier Inc.· 9123456798765Book detail →

33.  Health disparities and value-based care

birth, phone number, and the urgency level of the request, which may be standard, urgent, or state-specific. The form notes that if an urgent box is checked, it confirms that the standard review timeline could jeopardize the patient’s life, health, or ability
Claudette M. Lajam· Oxford· 7766778899887Book detail →

11 LGBT Health and LGBT Psychology: Emerging Policy Issues

records; (3) development and standardization of sexual orientation and gender identity measures and methodological research that relates to LGBT health; (4) creation and implementation of a comprehensive research training approach to strengthen LGBT health research at NIH; and (5) policy on research participation that encourages grant applicants to explicitly
Richard Ruth and Erik Santacruz· Oxford· 9988998899889Book detail →
Pediatric Neurology · Chapter 31

Case 19 Skin Is the Window to the Brain

birth or during the first year of life. Lesions can involve the trunk, limbs, and/or head. The patient was otherwise healthy and born following an uncomplicated full-term pregnancy at 39 weeks via elective cesarean section to a G3P2 mother with no complications during delivery
Hugo A. Arroyo· Elsevier Inc.· 9123456780105Book detail →

4 How Contemporary Psychoanalysis Contributes to LGBT Psychology: Examining and Addressing Gender Fluidity and Diversity as We Slide toward 21st-Century Transformations

birth-assigned physical selves and their self-determined psychic selves is not possible, painting them as suffering from psychotic or delusional processes. There continues to be a tendency of many clinicians to view gender-diverse patients as having unstable object choices, problematic attachments, immature relational
Richard Ruth and Erik Santacruz· Oxford· 9988998899889Book detail →
Pediatric Neurology · Chapter 30

Case 18 Focus on the Etiology

Birth history was notable for the use of vaginal forceps, but he was born full-term with no complications. Family history was unremarkable. During presentation, a full septic workup was performed with no abnormalities. Prolonged video-EEG captured multiple epileptic spasms associated with electrodecremental responses
Hugo A. Arroyo· Elsevier Inc.· 9123456780105Book detail →
Also search PubMed

Search the National Library of Medicine for peer-reviewed articles