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  • laboratory infection control
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  • leprosy control program
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  • local control
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  • matched control
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  • membrane control protein
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  • nosocomial infection control
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  • pain control
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  • quality control
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  • quality control program
    Áú°ü¸®ÇÁ·Î±×·¥
  • reflex control
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  • regional quality control program
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  • relaxed control
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  • species control
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  • stimulus control
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  • nosocomial infection control
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  • pain control
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  • quality control
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  • reflex control
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  • relaxed control
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  • safety control
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  • sensitivity control
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  • sibling control
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  • species control
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  • stimulus control
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  • stringent control
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  • sugar control
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  • sulfur dioxide control
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  • thought control
    »ç°íÅëÁ¦
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  • control hole
    (À¯µ¹µ¿)°üÂû¿ë ¼Ò°ø(êáÔÍ÷ÓδóÌéÄá³Íî).
  • control level
    °ü¸®¼öÁØ(Ë´ËöËàÌ¡).
  • control limit
    °ü¸®ÇѰè(Ë´Ëö̰˭).
  • control mechanism
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  • control mode ventilation
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  • control of bleeding
    ÁöÇ÷¹ý(ò­úìÛö).
  • control of bleeding
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  • control of epidemics
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  • control of light
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  • control of ventilation
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  • control test
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  • control tube
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  • control tube
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CDC   1) Cheno-Deoxy-Cholic acid
    = CDCA
  2) Center fo...
VCPI Virtual Control Program Interface
AAPCC adjusted annual per capita cost; adjusted average per capita cost; American Association of Poison Co...
ABC absolute basophil count; absolute bone conduction; acalculous biliary colic; acid balance control; a...
A/C albumin/coagulin [ratio]; anterior chamber of eye; assist control [ventilation]
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ABCD Appropriate Blood Pressure Control in Diabetes
A/C Assist/Control
AEC Automatic Exposure Control
AGC Automatic Gain Control
CDC Center for Disease Control
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social control, formal Control which is exerted by the more stable organizations of society, such as established institutions and the law. They are ordinarily embodied in definite codes, usually written.
(12 Dec 1998)
social control, informal Those forms of control which are exerted in less concrete and tangible ways, as through folkways, mores, conventions, and public sentiment.
(12 Dec 1998)
social control policies Decisions for determining and guiding present and future objectives from among alternatives.
(12 Dec 1998)
negative control Regulation of an enzyme activity by an inhibitor of that enzyme or regulation of a protein by repression of transcription.
(05 Mar 2000)
stimulus control The use of conditioning techniques to bring the target behaviour of an individual under environmental control.
See: classical conditioning.
(05 Mar 2000)
delusion of control Delusion of being controlled, a delusion in which one experiences one's feelings, impulses, thoughts, or actions as not one's own, but as being imposed on by some external force.
Synonym: delusion of passivity.
(05 Mar 2000)
synergic control Impulses transmitted from the cerebellum regulating the muscular activity of the synergic units of the body.
(05 Mar 2000)
drug and narcotic control Control of drug and narcotic use by international agreement, or by institutional systems for handling prescribed drugs. This includes regulations concerned with the manufacturing, dispensing, approval (drug approval), and marketing of drugs.
(12 Dec 1998)
idiodynamic control Nervous impulses from the medulla that preserve the normal trophic condition of the muscles.
(05 Mar 2000)
impulse control disorder A class of mental disorder's characterised by an individual's failure to resist an impulse to perform some act harmful to himself or to others; includes pathological gambling, pedophilia, kleptomania, pyromania, trichotillomania, intermittent and isolated explosive disorder's.
(05 Mar 2000)
impulse control disorders Disorders whose essential features are the failure to resist an impulse, drive, or temptation to perform an act that is harmful to the individual or to others. Individuals experience an increased sense of tension prior to the act and pleasure, gratification or release of tension at the time of committing the act.
(12 Dec 1998)
impurity control <radiobiology> Processes which reduce or control the level of impurities in a plasma, and thereby improve its quality.
See: wall conditioning.
(09 Oct 1997)
quality control In biotechnology, quality control is essential to ensure purified protein pharmaceuticals are indeed pure and that they are intact and maintain their biological activity.
(14 Nov 1997)
quality control chart A chart illustrating the allowable limits of error in laboratory test performance, the limits being a defined deviation from the mean of a control serum, most commonly &plusmn;2 SD.
See: quality control.
(05 Mar 2000)
infection control Programs of disease surveillance, generally within health care facilities, designed to investigate, prevent, and control the spread of infections and their causative microorganisms.
(12 Dec 1998)
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