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  1. Richard Alan John Asher FRCP (3 April 1912 – 25 April 1969) was an eminent British endocrinologist and haematologist. As the senior physician responsible for the mental observation ward at the Central Middlesex Hospital he described and named Munchausen syndrome in a 1951 article in The Lancet.

    • Physician
    • 25 April 1969 (aged 57), London, England
  2. Richard Alan John Asher, MD, FRCP (* 3. April 1912 in Brighton, Großbritannien; † 25. April 1969 in Marylebone, Großbritannien) war ein britischer Mediziner am Central Middlesex Hospital. Leben. Der Internist Asher benannte in einem Artikel zur Beschreibung des dazugehörigen Krankheitsbildes erstmals das Münchhausen-Syndrom.

    • Asher, Richard Alan John (vollständiger Name)
    • britischer Mediziner am Central Middlesex Hospital
    • 3. April 1912
    • Asher, Richard
  3. Die Bezeichnung Münchhausen- Syndrom prägte 1951 der Londoner Psychiater Sir Richard Asher nach dem „Lügenbaron“ Münchhausen. Foto: picture alliance/akg-images. Die Strategie der...

  4. So, what do you do for a living? I’m a writer, a journalist, a translator, a voice artist, a proofreader, a sports broadcaster and a few other things besides.

  5. 26. Jan. 2002 · With this opening statement, Richard A J Asher began his classic description of Munchausen's syndrome in The Lancet in 1951. The son of a clergyman, Richard Asher was born in 1912 and trained at the London Hospital. After graduating in 1936, he worked at the London and West Middlesex Hospitals, before being appointed senior physician ...

  6. 10. Juni 2015 · Asher, an English physician and writer, is mainly unknown to those under fifty. He was appointed as physician to the Central Middlesex Hospital in 1943, and worked there until his resignation in 1964. He was a general physician, with interests in haematology, endocrinology, hypnosis, and the physical basis of mental illness.

  7. 1. Apr. 2020 · Published April 1, 2020. N Engl J Med 2020;382: 1295 - 1297. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMp1917038. VOL. 382 NO. 14. Abstract. “Stupidity” and “mental laziness” are two of the seven sins of medicine enumerated...