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Populations of the western world are now healthier and enjoying higher life expectancy than ever. They are beginning to benefit from an array of costly new therapies made possible through recent rapid advances in medical science and technology, and their demands on modern medicine are rising. Meanwhile, healthcare systems are struggling with their outdated legacy models of the m- th 20 century and are experiencing ever-increasing financial pressure from g- ernments and health insurance organizations. The equation is no longer in balance, and this predicament is forcing societies to explore new approaches to managing healthcare in the future. Since the first edition of Molecular Diagnosis of ...
First Published in 2004. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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Gabriel Prescott married Abigail Fairist in Walton on Hill, Lancashire, England in 1715. John Sephton Prescott (1835-1874), his great-great- great-grandson, was the son of James Prescott and Mary Sephton, born in Aughton, Lancashire. James later married Margaret Westhead and Ann Rutter Horrocks and settled in Bountiful, Davis Co., Utah. John married Saloma Leanna Hammon (1845-1913) in Uinta, Weber Co., Utah and settled in Liberty, Bear Lake Co., Idaho. Her parents were Levi Hammon and Polly Chapman Bybee of Skauks Creek, Knox Co., Ohio. She was a descendant of Johan Philip Haman or Hamman, whose family settled in Northampton Co., Pennsylvania. Saloma later married William Alfred Hymas (1837-1916), the son of William and Mary Ann Atkins Hymas, originally from Rayleigh, Essex, England. Their descendants settled in California, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, Washington, Colorado, Texas and elsewhere.
The Siders had their beginnings in Lancaster Pennsylvania 200 years ago. A young German man by the name of Jacob Seider married a young Swiss woman by the name of Maria Wenger. The Sider name was adopted from the German name of Seider in the early 1800s in Canada. George Sider was born ca 1730 in Germany and married Anna Margaret Reinhardt in 1754. They had three sons and four daughters. He died ca 1802 in Dauphin county Pennsylvania.
In full, the book contains detailed information about the clinical applications and limitations of assay technology for over 350 analytes. It acts as an introduction, analysis and evaluation of the clinical and technical trends in the immunoassay market.
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