The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913797_5563
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT5) DURHAM, N.C. -- Feb. 12, 2001 -- SCI-STROKE-ER -- Of the estimated 730,000 Americans who have strokes each year, nearly 160,000 die and another 400,000 suffer varying degrees of disability. Yet, when stroke patients arrive at emergency rooms, medical experts say, they are not usually treated with the urgency required. The less-than-rapid response, in some cases, can make the difference between full recovery or death. Dr. Mark J. Alberts, second from right, and his stroke team at Duke Medical Center in Durham, N.C., recently assessed the status of Kathleen Puryear, who has suffered ministrokes. (Jenny Warburg/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2001-02-12
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Jenny Warburg/The New York Times/Redux
15271656
0,35MB
14cm x 9cm przy 300dpi
000, 12, 160, 2001, 400, 730, ALBERTS, AMERICANS, AND, ANOTHER, ARE, ARRIVE, ASSESSED, AT, BETWEEN, CAN, CASES, CENTER, DEATH, DEGREES, DIE, DIFFERENCE, DISABILITY, DR, DUKE, DURHAM, EACH, EMERGENCY, ESTIMATED, EXPERTS, FROM, FULL, HAS, HAVE, HIS, IN, JENNY, KATHLEEN, MAKE, MARK, MEDICAL, MINISTROKES, NEARLY, NEW, NOT, NYT5, OF, OR, PATIENTS, PURYEAR, RECENTLY, RECOVERY, REDUX, REQUIRED, RESPONSE, RIGHT, ROOMS, SAY, SECOND, SOME, STATUS, STROKE, STROKES, SUFFER, SUFFERED, TEAM, THE, THEY, TIMES, TREATED, URGENCY, USUALLY, VARYING, WARBURG, WHEN, WHO, WITH, YEAR, YET, YORK,