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Poland issues

Smith, M., Lin, K.M. 8c Mendoza, R. (1993). Non-biological issues affecting psychopharmacotherapy cultural considerations. In K. M. Lin, R. E. Poland and G. Nakasaki, eds., Psychopharmacology and Psychobiology of Ethnicity. Washington DC American Psychiatric Press, pp. 37-58. [Pg.133]

Then the French Ministry of Production violated the Hitler-Petain pact and issued a special ruling agreeing not to stand in the way of Farben control. Still, the French industrialists stretched out the negotiations. Von Schnitzler wrote to a subordinate in Poland ... [Pg.298]

In April 1939, Hitler issued strict directives to the high command to prepare for war against Poland. But in a speech to the Reichstag, on 28 April, he said "The intention to attack on the part of Germany. . . was merely invented by the international press."... [Pg.348]

Ibid., pp. 142-150,149,150. The issue was pressing in Finkelstein s America just as it was in Itzik s Poland according to the historian Hasia Diner, more than a hundred anti-Semitic organizations formed in the United States in the 1930s. Diner, Almost Promised Land, p. 241. [Pg.334]

Goodman found still another series of atropine coma treatments for mental illness in the April 1963 issue of the Bulletin of Health Medical Science and History. Authors R. Dohnierski, M.D. and S. Smoczynski conducted their therapeutic studies in the Department of Psychic Diseases of the Medical School in Gdansk, Poland. [Pg.112]

Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Cyberspace Security and Defense Research Issues Gdansk, Poland 6—9 September 2004... [Pg.387]

Based on preliminary data from the EC for verified emissions for 21 of the 25 countries covered by the EU ETS, released on 15 May 2006. It is assumed that Poland, the main unknown, has an 18% excess allocation, similar to Hungary and the Czech Republic. The data suggest that market was 86 MtC02 (long) in 2005. See the article on auctioning (Hepburn et al., this issue). [Pg.28]

Benz emphasizes that where the Soviet evacuations, the Jewish population trends in Poland, and the Polish flight migrations are concerned, there are no definite figures, and one must rely on estimates alone. He arrives at his utterly incorrect estimates in the space of a very few sentences, without any sort of logical line of reasoning. Even though he admits that these issues are in dire need of further research, he avoids any such endeavor. [Pg.212]

The Polish healthcare system is regulated by the Pharmacy Act established by the Polish Parliament on Medical Material, Pharmacies, Wholesaler Outlets and Pharmacy Inspection Act in October 1991 and came into force in February 1992 (Dziennik Ustaw 1991). Following the implementation of this Act, the regulation issued by the Minister of Health and Socicd Welfare (MOHSW) set the requirements for drug registration in Poland. [Pg.458]

Public advertising of all pharmaceuticals in Poland was forbidden by the Pharmacy Act issued in October 1991 (Scrip 1991). However, advertising of some pharmaceutical products in the professional medical press only has been in practice for the last 6 years. [Pg.462]

The MOHSW Directive issued on 21 February 1994 (Monitor Polski 1994) regulates promotion to the general public for OTC pharmaceutical products licenced for marketing in Poland by Registration Certificates issued by MOHSW or Licence for Free Sale issued by the Drug Institute. [Pg.462]

Apart from the criticised registration system, well founded in some ways, the advanced international pharmaceutical companies will keep and enlarge their future pharmaceutical market and export of their drugs to Poland. A mutual close cooperation and multi-basis support, including help on financial and information issues would be in the interest of Poland and other countries. [Pg.487]

Let me end by citing some discussion in Marx s writings of this problem. It arises mainly in connection with the "national question" that has plagued Marxism from its inception. This was the question whether socialists should support movements for national independence in countries, such as Poland and Ireland, that were oppressed by foreign nations, or rather work on the assumption that an international proletarian inflagration would do away with class oppression and national oppression in one fell swoop. This question did not enter into the earlier discussion (5-2.3 and 5.3.2) of the various scenarios for the international proletarian revolution. That discussion concerned mainly the problem whether the conditions for revolution can ever be united in one country or whether there will have to be some revolutionary division of labour, not whether the countries in question must all be independent nationstates. Marx apparently was an internationalist on the former issue, a nationalist on the latter. He believed that the revolution would take place by the interaction between several, independent countries. [Pg.394]

Smith MW, Lin K-M, Mendoza R Nonbiological issues affecting psychopharmacotherapy cultural considerations, in Psychopharmacology and Psychobiology of Ethnicity. Edited by Lin K-M, Poland RE, Na-kasaki G. Washington, DC, American Psychiatric Press, 1993, pp 37-58... [Pg.112]

In many ways, the most interesting Member State NAPs were those from the ten accession countries, which, with the exception of Slovenia, have no problem meeting their Kyoto targets. How to handle hot air became a complicating issue in deciding the total cap, but many of the problems and solutions found elsewhere show up in the three examples described here Hungary, the Czech Republic and Poland. [Pg.11]

These changes were accompanied by huge social cost. A lot of problems are still unsolved. Regarding the possibilities of further CO2 reduction in Poland, it is necessary to consider the following issues ... [Pg.302]

One of the most important issues is that implementing the ETS in Poland generates no cost savings in CO2 emission reduction, because no carbon restriction programme is needed to comply with... [Pg.333]

Otto Kaufmann studied law and political sciences. Doctorate degree in law postdoctoral lecture and research qualification, Habilitation, HDR. He is currently employed as a Senior Research Fellow with the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Social Law, Munich, and teaches at Robert Schuman de Strasbourg, where he has been associate professor since 1998, and Rennes 1 universities. He has moreover held guest lectures at various universities, e.g. in 2006 and 2007, at the University of Wroclaw, Poland, on the subject of European policies and labour and social security law. His fields of activity above all include German and French labour and social security law, as well as international and European social law. Focal point of his research are comparative law social relations junctions and boundaries between labour and social law sickness insurance, invalidity and old-age protection, notably supplementary and employment-related schemes juridical comparisons of occupational pension plans unemployment, employability, exclusion, and labour policies in comparative studies. Many of his publications deal with labour and social law issues from a comparative law perspective, as well as... [Pg.461]

It is essential to preserve the ethical values of respect and dignity for all clients and to incorporate the client s cultural context into the helping process. This may sometimes be complicated when clients are struggling with acculturation issues or they may not be in tune with how their cultural backgrounds influence their behaviors, symptoms, or approach to treatment. The importance of integrating the client s cultural beliefs and practices can be illustrated by an incident experienced by one of the authors on a recent trip to Poland. The author s aunt, who was suffering... [Pg.270]


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