Ontology type: schema:ScholarlyArticle
2000-04
AUTHORSW. Wahl, D. Kirsch, P. Dutkowski, M. Maier, S. Schrapers, Th. Junginger
ABSTRACTSummary The measures taken in intensive care medicine are rated differently by the patients, their family, and personnel. A lack of understanding for intensive care therapy can lead to a negative attitude towards intensive care medicine, which in turn makes an impression on public opinion, and disturbs the reputation of the co-workers in intensive care medicine.¶ To form an objective view, we carried out a survey of 40 co-workers (11 physicians, 23 from the nursing staff, and 6 ancillary personnel) regarding the medical technology, the environment in the unit, general medical questions, and the extent of intensive care therapy. The length of employment in the intensive care unit ranged from 1–240 months (median 18 months), the ages ranged from 21 to 53 years (median 30 years). Of those questioned 73% found intensive care medicine in its current form to be purposeful: 100% of the physicians and only 57% of the nursing staff were of this opinion. Only 9% of the physicians believed the equipment to be fear-inducing for the patients; in contrast, 61% of the nursing staff believed this to be true. The noise level was rated as very disturbing by 65% of the nursing staff and 45% of the physicians. Only 22% of the nursing staff believed that the patients felt comfortable and protected on the intensive care unit; 48% felt that they were unhappy or even miserable. Of the physicians 46% believed that the patients were comfortable. Of the nursing staff 100% were of the opinion that for the deceased patients, organ substitution therapy had continued too long. On the other hand, only 45% of the residents shared this opinion.¶ The medical staff rated the intensive care measures as purposeful, less disturbing for the patients and more effective than did the nursing staff. In many cases, the nursing staff as a group exhibited a contrary and negative opinion. This could possibly be caused by insecurity, lack of information and lack of successful experiences. Next to patient outcome, the competent explanation and information regarding the disease and prognosis and the recurrent communication within the intensive care team, with respect to diagnostic and therapeutic measures are the deciding factors in the opinion formation regarding intensive care medicine. More... »
PAGES206-212
http://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s003900050325
DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s003900050325
DIMENSIONShttps://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1013512613
JSON-LD is the canonical representation for SciGraph data.
TIP: You can open this SciGraph record using an external JSON-LD service: JSON-LD Playground Google SDTT
[
{
"@context": "https://springernature.github.io/scigraph/jsonld/sgcontext.json",
"about": [
{
"id": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/11",
"inDefinedTermSet": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/",
"name": "Medical and Health Sciences",
"type": "DefinedTerm"
},
{
"id": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/1110",
"inDefinedTermSet": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/",
"name": "Nursing",
"type": "DefinedTerm"
}
],
"author": [
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Klinik und Poliklinik f\u00fcr Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.5802.f",
"name": [
"Klinik und Poliklinik f\u00fcr Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Wahl",
"givenName": "W.",
"id": "sg:person.01255770623.93",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01255770623.93"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Klinik und Poliklinik f\u00fcr Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.5802.f",
"name": [
"Klinik und Poliklinik f\u00fcr Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Kirsch",
"givenName": "D.",
"id": "sg:person.01304771406.87",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01304771406.87"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Klinik und Poliklinik f\u00fcr Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.5802.f",
"name": [
"Klinik und Poliklinik f\u00fcr Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Dutkowski",
"givenName": "P.",
"id": "sg:person.01015166345.71",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01015166345.71"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Orthop\u00e4dische Klinik am Klinikum Gro\u00dfhadern, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universit\u00e4t M\u00fcnchen, Marchioninistr. 15, D-81366 M\u00fcnchen, DE",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.5252.0",
"name": [
"Orthop\u00e4dische Klinik am Klinikum Gro\u00dfhadern, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universit\u00e4t M\u00fcnchen, Marchioninistr. 15, D-81366 M\u00fcnchen, DE"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Maier",
"givenName": "M.",
"id": "sg:person.01032163334.25",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01032163334.25"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Klinik und Poliklinik f\u00fcr Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.5802.f",
"name": [
"Klinik und Poliklinik f\u00fcr Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Schrapers",
"givenName": "S.",
"id": "sg:person.0634640016.01",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.0634640016.01"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Klinik und Poliklinik f\u00fcr Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.5802.f",
"name": [
"Klinik und Poliklinik f\u00fcr Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universit\u00e4t Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Junginger",
"givenName": "Th.",
"id": "sg:person.0712775056.68",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.0712775056.68"
],
"type": "Person"
}
],
"datePublished": "2000-04",
"datePublishedReg": "2000-04-01",
"description": "Summary The measures taken in intensive care medicine are rated differently by the patients, their family, and personnel. A lack of understanding for intensive care therapy can lead to a negative attitude towards intensive care medicine, which in turn makes an impression on public opinion, and disturbs the reputation of the co-workers in intensive care medicine.\u00b6\u2002\u2009\u2009To form an objective view, we carried out a survey of 40 co-workers (11 physicians, 23 from the nursing staff, and 6 ancillary personnel) regarding the medical technology, the environment in the unit, general medical questions, and the extent of intensive care therapy. The length of employment in the intensive care unit ranged from 1\u2013240 months (median 18 months), the ages ranged from 21 to 53 years (median 30 years). Of those questioned 73% found intensive care medicine in its current form to be purposeful: 100% of the physicians and only 57% of the nursing staff were of this opinion. Only 9% of the physicians believed the equipment to be fear-inducing for the patients; in contrast, 61% of the nursing staff believed this to be true. The noise level was rated as very disturbing by 65% of the nursing staff and 45% of the physicians. Only 22% of the nursing staff believed that the patients felt comfortable and protected on the intensive care unit; 48% felt that they were unhappy or even miserable. Of the physicians 46% believed that the patients were comfortable. Of the nursing staff 100% were of the opinion that for the deceased patients, organ substitution therapy had continued too long. On the other hand, only 45% of the residents shared this opinion.\u00b6\u2002\u2009\u2009The medical staff rated the intensive care measures as purposeful, less disturbing for the patients and more effective than did the nursing staff. In many cases, the nursing staff as a group exhibited a contrary and negative opinion. This could possibly be caused by insecurity, lack of information and lack of successful experiences. Next to patient outcome, the competent explanation and information regarding the disease and prognosis and the recurrent communication within the intensive care team, with respect to diagnostic and therapeutic measures are the deciding factors in the opinion formation regarding intensive care medicine.",
"genre": "article",
"id": "sg:pub.10.1007/s003900050325",
"isAccessibleForFree": false,
"isPartOf": [
{
"id": "sg:journal.1014494",
"issn": [
"0175-3851",
"1435-1420"
],
"name": "Intensivmedizin und Notfallmedizin",
"publisher": "Springer Nature",
"type": "Periodical"
},
{
"issueNumber": "3",
"type": "PublicationIssue"
},
{
"type": "PublicationVolume",
"volumeNumber": "37"
}
],
"keywords": [
"intensive care medicine",
"intensive care therapy",
"intensive care unit",
"nursing staff",
"care medicine",
"care therapy",
"care unit",
"intensive care measures",
"intensive care team",
"deceased patients",
"substitution therapy",
"care measures",
"patient outcomes",
"care team",
"therapeutic measures",
"length of employment",
"patients",
"medical staff",
"therapy",
"St\u00f6rungen i",
"physicians",
"medicine",
"staff",
"medical technology",
"medical questions",
"lack of information",
"prognosis",
"Intensivmedizin",
"negative attitudes",
"disease",
"months",
"measures",
"age",
"outcomes",
"lack of understanding",
"lack",
"Qualit\u00e4tsmanagement",
"recurrent communication",
"group",
"years",
"residents",
"opinion",
"units",
"factors",
"levels",
"cases",
"summary",
"personnel",
"team",
"successful experience",
"contrast",
"negative opinions",
"survey",
"experience",
"impression",
"family",
"extent",
"information",
"attitudes",
"current form",
"hand",
"length",
"insecurity",
"understanding",
"questions",
"form",
"turn",
"respect",
"formation",
"explanation",
"employment",
"objective view",
"communication",
"view",
"noise level",
"equipment",
"environment",
"technology",
"public opinion",
"reputation",
"opinion formation"
],
"name": "Die Intensivmedizin in der Sicht des Personals \u2013 Ausgangspunkt von St\u00f6rungen im Intensiv-Team und Faktor des Qualit\u00e4tsmanagements",
"pagination": "206-212",
"productId": [
{
"name": "dimensions_id",
"type": "PropertyValue",
"value": [
"pub.1013512613"
]
},
{
"name": "doi",
"type": "PropertyValue",
"value": [
"10.1007/s003900050325"
]
}
],
"sameAs": [
"https://doi.org/10.1007/s003900050325",
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1013512613"
],
"sdDataset": "articles",
"sdDatePublished": "2022-08-04T16:53",
"sdLicense": "https://scigraph.springernature.com/explorer/license/",
"sdPublisher": {
"name": "Springer Nature - SN SciGraph project",
"type": "Organization"
},
"sdSource": "s3://com-springernature-scigraph/baseset/20220804/entities/gbq_results/article/article_345.jsonl",
"type": "ScholarlyArticle",
"url": "https://doi.org/10.1007/s003900050325"
}
]
Download the RDF metadata as: json-ld nt turtle xml License info
JSON-LD is a popular format for linked data which is fully compatible with JSON.
curl -H 'Accept: application/ld+json' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s003900050325'
N-Triples is a line-based linked data format ideal for batch operations.
curl -H 'Accept: application/n-triples' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s003900050325'
Turtle is a human-readable linked data format.
curl -H 'Accept: text/turtle' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s003900050325'
RDF/XML is a standard XML format for linked data.
curl -H 'Accept: application/rdf+xml' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s003900050325'
This table displays all metadata directly associated to this object as RDF triples.
176 TRIPLES
20 PREDICATES
106 URIs
98 LITERALS
6 BLANK NODES
Subject | Predicate | Object | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | sg:pub.10.1007/s003900050325 | schema:about | anzsrc-for:11 |
2 | ″ | ″ | anzsrc-for:1110 |
3 | ″ | schema:author | Ne653aec42f984a2f9823a00406545c01 |
4 | ″ | schema:datePublished | 2000-04 |
5 | ″ | schema:datePublishedReg | 2000-04-01 |
6 | ″ | schema:description | Summary The measures taken in intensive care medicine are rated differently by the patients, their family, and personnel. A lack of understanding for intensive care therapy can lead to a negative attitude towards intensive care medicine, which in turn makes an impression on public opinion, and disturbs the reputation of the co-workers in intensive care medicine.¶ To form an objective view, we carried out a survey of 40 co-workers (11 physicians, 23 from the nursing staff, and 6 ancillary personnel) regarding the medical technology, the environment in the unit, general medical questions, and the extent of intensive care therapy. The length of employment in the intensive care unit ranged from 1–240 months (median 18 months), the ages ranged from 21 to 53 years (median 30 years). Of those questioned 73% found intensive care medicine in its current form to be purposeful: 100% of the physicians and only 57% of the nursing staff were of this opinion. Only 9% of the physicians believed the equipment to be fear-inducing for the patients; in contrast, 61% of the nursing staff believed this to be true. The noise level was rated as very disturbing by 65% of the nursing staff and 45% of the physicians. Only 22% of the nursing staff believed that the patients felt comfortable and protected on the intensive care unit; 48% felt that they were unhappy or even miserable. Of the physicians 46% believed that the patients were comfortable. Of the nursing staff 100% were of the opinion that for the deceased patients, organ substitution therapy had continued too long. On the other hand, only 45% of the residents shared this opinion.¶ The medical staff rated the intensive care measures as purposeful, less disturbing for the patients and more effective than did the nursing staff. In many cases, the nursing staff as a group exhibited a contrary and negative opinion. This could possibly be caused by insecurity, lack of information and lack of successful experiences. Next to patient outcome, the competent explanation and information regarding the disease and prognosis and the recurrent communication within the intensive care team, with respect to diagnostic and therapeutic measures are the deciding factors in the opinion formation regarding intensive care medicine. |
7 | ″ | schema:genre | article |
8 | ″ | schema:isAccessibleForFree | false |
9 | ″ | schema:isPartOf | N76c2d3387e6d4a5693057c1695752261 |
10 | ″ | ″ | Nd80719ab056d48da82da7afe7e0137bc |
11 | ″ | ″ | sg:journal.1014494 |
12 | ″ | schema:keywords | Intensivmedizin |
13 | ″ | ″ | Qualitätsmanagement |
14 | ″ | ″ | Störungen i |
15 | ″ | ″ | age |
16 | ″ | ″ | attitudes |
17 | ″ | ″ | care measures |
18 | ″ | ″ | care medicine |
19 | ″ | ″ | care team |
20 | ″ | ″ | care therapy |
21 | ″ | ″ | care unit |
22 | ″ | ″ | cases |
23 | ″ | ″ | communication |
24 | ″ | ″ | contrast |
25 | ″ | ″ | current form |
26 | ″ | ″ | deceased patients |
27 | ″ | ″ | disease |
28 | ″ | ″ | employment |
29 | ″ | ″ | environment |
30 | ″ | ″ | equipment |
31 | ″ | ″ | experience |
32 | ″ | ″ | explanation |
33 | ″ | ″ | extent |
34 | ″ | ″ | factors |
35 | ″ | ″ | family |
36 | ″ | ″ | form |
37 | ″ | ″ | formation |
38 | ″ | ″ | group |
39 | ″ | ″ | hand |
40 | ″ | ″ | impression |
41 | ″ | ″ | information |
42 | ″ | ″ | insecurity |
43 | ″ | ″ | intensive care measures |
44 | ″ | ″ | intensive care medicine |
45 | ″ | ″ | intensive care team |
46 | ″ | ″ | intensive care therapy |
47 | ″ | ″ | intensive care unit |
48 | ″ | ″ | lack |
49 | ″ | ″ | lack of information |
50 | ″ | ″ | lack of understanding |
51 | ″ | ″ | length |
52 | ″ | ″ | length of employment |
53 | ″ | ″ | levels |
54 | ″ | ″ | measures |
55 | ″ | ″ | medical questions |
56 | ″ | ″ | medical staff |
57 | ″ | ″ | medical technology |
58 | ″ | ″ | medicine |
59 | ″ | ″ | months |
60 | ″ | ″ | negative attitudes |
61 | ″ | ″ | negative opinions |
62 | ″ | ″ | noise level |
63 | ″ | ″ | nursing staff |
64 | ″ | ″ | objective view |
65 | ″ | ″ | opinion |
66 | ″ | ″ | opinion formation |
67 | ″ | ″ | outcomes |
68 | ″ | ″ | patient outcomes |
69 | ″ | ″ | patients |
70 | ″ | ″ | personnel |
71 | ″ | ″ | physicians |
72 | ″ | ″ | prognosis |
73 | ″ | ″ | public opinion |
74 | ″ | ″ | questions |
75 | ″ | ″ | recurrent communication |
76 | ″ | ″ | reputation |
77 | ″ | ″ | residents |
78 | ″ | ″ | respect |
79 | ″ | ″ | staff |
80 | ″ | ″ | substitution therapy |
81 | ″ | ″ | successful experience |
82 | ″ | ″ | summary |
83 | ″ | ″ | survey |
84 | ″ | ″ | team |
85 | ″ | ″ | technology |
86 | ″ | ″ | therapeutic measures |
87 | ″ | ″ | therapy |
88 | ″ | ″ | turn |
89 | ″ | ″ | understanding |
90 | ″ | ″ | units |
91 | ″ | ″ | view |
92 | ″ | ″ | years |
93 | ″ | schema:name | Die Intensivmedizin in der Sicht des Personals – Ausgangspunkt von Störungen im Intensiv-Team und Faktor des Qualitätsmanagements |
94 | ″ | schema:pagination | 206-212 |
95 | ″ | schema:productId | N1b448e37222041c2836355ccdf32f723 |
96 | ″ | ″ | Nc910066f8d264f77b461c380168a5c7f |
97 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1013512613 |
98 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1007/s003900050325 |
99 | ″ | schema:sdDatePublished | 2022-08-04T16:53 |
100 | ″ | schema:sdLicense | https://scigraph.springernature.com/explorer/license/ |
101 | ″ | schema:sdPublisher | Nf5f33b670ef04717acbfeacb926b4ecf |
102 | ″ | schema:url | https://doi.org/10.1007/s003900050325 |
103 | ″ | sgo:license | sg:explorer/license/ |
104 | ″ | sgo:sdDataset | articles |
105 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:ScholarlyArticle |
106 | N0a6a8750b2fa4c02b0bfa9457b90a199 | rdf:first | sg:person.01032163334.25 |
107 | ″ | rdf:rest | Nc8c06e8379cc43b08e0f03e0eef4faf6 |
108 | N1b448e37222041c2836355ccdf32f723 | schema:name | dimensions_id |
109 | ″ | schema:value | pub.1013512613 |
110 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PropertyValue |
111 | N76c2d3387e6d4a5693057c1695752261 | schema:volumeNumber | 37 |
112 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PublicationVolume |
113 | N8d8cee9644e340b3b773b8b2d586cad3 | rdf:first | sg:person.01015166345.71 |
114 | ″ | rdf:rest | N0a6a8750b2fa4c02b0bfa9457b90a199 |
115 | N93d691542b4144e1ad4c7779ae4561f3 | rdf:first | sg:person.01304771406.87 |
116 | ″ | rdf:rest | N8d8cee9644e340b3b773b8b2d586cad3 |
117 | Nc8c06e8379cc43b08e0f03e0eef4faf6 | rdf:first | sg:person.0634640016.01 |
118 | ″ | rdf:rest | Nfaccdeed95ca4334a124437df6a3f0cc |
119 | Nc910066f8d264f77b461c380168a5c7f | schema:name | doi |
120 | ″ | schema:value | 10.1007/s003900050325 |
121 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PropertyValue |
122 | Nd80719ab056d48da82da7afe7e0137bc | schema:issueNumber | 3 |
123 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PublicationIssue |
124 | Ne653aec42f984a2f9823a00406545c01 | rdf:first | sg:person.01255770623.93 |
125 | ″ | rdf:rest | N93d691542b4144e1ad4c7779ae4561f3 |
126 | Nf5f33b670ef04717acbfeacb926b4ecf | schema:name | Springer Nature - SN SciGraph project |
127 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |
128 | Nfaccdeed95ca4334a124437df6a3f0cc | rdf:first | sg:person.0712775056.68 |
129 | ″ | rdf:rest | rdf:nil |
130 | anzsrc-for:11 | schema:inDefinedTermSet | anzsrc-for: |
131 | ″ | schema:name | Medical and Health Sciences |
132 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:DefinedTerm |
133 | anzsrc-for:1110 | schema:inDefinedTermSet | anzsrc-for: |
134 | ″ | schema:name | Nursing |
135 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:DefinedTerm |
136 | sg:journal.1014494 | schema:issn | 0175-3851 |
137 | ″ | ″ | 1435-1420 |
138 | ″ | schema:name | Intensivmedizin und Notfallmedizin |
139 | ″ | schema:publisher | Springer Nature |
140 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Periodical |
141 | sg:person.01015166345.71 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.5802.f |
142 | ″ | schema:familyName | Dutkowski |
143 | ″ | schema:givenName | P. |
144 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01015166345.71 |
145 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
146 | sg:person.01032163334.25 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.5252.0 |
147 | ″ | schema:familyName | Maier |
148 | ″ | schema:givenName | M. |
149 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01032163334.25 |
150 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
151 | sg:person.01255770623.93 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.5802.f |
152 | ″ | schema:familyName | Wahl |
153 | ″ | schema:givenName | W. |
154 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01255770623.93 |
155 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
156 | sg:person.01304771406.87 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.5802.f |
157 | ″ | schema:familyName | Kirsch |
158 | ″ | schema:givenName | D. |
159 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01304771406.87 |
160 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
161 | sg:person.0634640016.01 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.5802.f |
162 | ″ | schema:familyName | Schrapers |
163 | ″ | schema:givenName | S. |
164 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.0634640016.01 |
165 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
166 | sg:person.0712775056.68 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.5802.f |
167 | ″ | schema:familyName | Junginger |
168 | ″ | schema:givenName | Th. |
169 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.0712775056.68 |
170 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
171 | grid-institutes:grid.5252.0 | schema:alternateName | Orthopädische Klinik am Klinikum Großhadern, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Marchioninistr. 15, D-81366 München, DE |
172 | ″ | schema:name | Orthopädische Klinik am Klinikum Großhadern, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Marchioninistr. 15, D-81366 München, DE |
173 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |
174 | grid-institutes:grid.5802.f | schema:alternateName | Klinik und Poliklinik für Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE |
175 | ″ | schema:name | Klinik und Poliklinik für Allgemein- und Abdominalchirurgie der Johannes-Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Langenbeckstr. 1, D-55131 Mainz, DE |
176 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |