Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.
Ittmann, Karl
2003.
Demography as Policy Science in the British Empire, 1918–1969.
Journal of Policy History,
Vol. 15,
Issue. 4,
p.
417.
Eldredge, Jonathan D.
2003.
The Randomised Controlled Trial design: unrecognized opportunities for health sciences librarianship.
Health Information & Libraries Journal,
Vol. 20,
Issue. s1,
p.
34.
Farewell, Vern
Johnson, Tony
and
Armitage, Peter
2006.
‘A memorandum on the Present Position and Prospects of Medical Statistics and Epidemiology’ by Major Greenwood.
Statistics in Medicine,
Vol. 25,
Issue. 13,
p.
2161.
Smith, G. D.
2008.
How do we know, what do we know and what can knowledge do? From John Brownlee to translational medicine.
International Journal of Epidemiology,
Vol. 37,
Issue. 5,
p.
911.
Lilienfeld, David E.
2009.
Louis I. Dublin and the Development of the Observational Study: The Metropolitan Life Insurance Company Natural History (Cohort) Studies of Typhoid Fever and Scarlet Fever.
Annals of Epidemiology,
Vol. 19,
Issue. 6,
p.
410.
Berlivet, Luc
2010.
Les médecins, le tabagisme et le Welfare State: Le gouvernement britannique face au cancer (1947-1957).
Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales,
Vol. 65,
Issue. 1,
p.
157.
Chalmers, Iain
2013.
UK Medical Research Council and multicentre clinical trials: from a damning report to international recognition.
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine,
Vol. 106,
Issue. 12,
p.
498.
Longo, Lawrence D.
2013.
The Rise of Fetal and Neonatal Physiology.
p.
167.
Farewell, Vern T
and
Johnson, Tony L
2013.
Commentary: Dr John Brownlee MA, MD, DSc, DPH (Cantab), FRFPS, FSS, FRMetS (1868–1927), public health officer, geneticist, epidemiologist and medical statistician.
International Journal of Epidemiology,
Vol. 42,
Issue. 4,
p.
935.
Farewell, Vern
and
Johnson, Tony
2016.
Major Greenwood (1880–1949): a biographical and bibliographical study.
Statistics in Medicine,
Vol. 35,
Issue. 5,
p.
645.
Hayward, Rhodri
2017.
Busman’s stomach and the embodiment of modernity.
Contemporary British History,
Vol. 31,
Issue. 1,
p.
1.
Longo, Lawrence D.
2018.
The Rise of Fetal and Neonatal Physiology.
p.
673.
Payling, Daisy
2020.
“The People Who Write to Us Are the People Who Don't Like Us”: Class, Gender, and Citizenship in the Survey of Sickness, 1943–1952.
Journal of British Studies,
Vol. 59,
Issue. 2,
p.
315.