எங்கள் குழு ஒவ்வொரு ஆண்டும் அமெரிக்கா, ஐரோப்பா மற்றும் ஆசியா முழுவதும் 1000 அறிவியல் சங்கங்களின் ஆதரவுடன் 3000+ உலகளாவிய மாநாட்டுத் தொடர் நிகழ்வுகளை ஏற்பாடு செய்து 700+ திறந்த அணுகல் இதழ்களை வெளியிடுகிறது, இதில் 50000 க்கும் மேற்பட்ட தலைசிறந்த ஆளுமைகள், புகழ்பெற்ற விஞ்ஞானிகள் ஆசிரியர் குழு உறுப்பினர்களாக உள்ளனர்.
அதிக வாசகர்கள் மற்றும் மேற்கோள்களைப் பெறும் திறந்த அணுகல் இதழ்கள்
700 இதழ்கள் மற்றும் 15,000,000 வாசகர்கள் ஒவ்வொரு பத்திரிகையும் 25,000+ வாசகர்களைப் பெறுகிறது
Siddhartha Chaturvedi
Behavioural conditions (PDs) can be depicted as the appearance of outrageous character characteristics that disrupt regular day to day existence and add to critical torment, useful restrictions, or both. They are normal and are often experienced in basically all types of medical care. PDs are related with a sub-par personal satisfaction (QoL), chronic weakness, and untimely mortality. The Etiology of PDs is complicated and is impacted by hereditary and natural elements. The clinical articulation changes between various PD types; the most widely recognized and centre perspective is connected with a failure to assemble and keep up with solid relational connections. This perspective adversely affects the association between medical care experts and patients with a PD. From being discrete and downright sickness substances in past order frameworks, the current idea of PD, reflected in the recently proposed ICD-11, is a layered portrayal in view of the seriousness of the upset working rather than on the kind of clinical show. Knowledge about the attributes of PDs among clinical experts is restricted, which is mostly in light of the fact that people don’t look for medical services for their PD, however rather for other clinical issues which are clouded by their fundamental character issues. What should be accentuated is that PDs influence both the clinical show of other clinical issues and the result of these, in a negative way and that the coordinated impacts of having a PD are an abbreviated future. Appropriately, PDs should be perceived in clinical practice to a more noteworthy degree than already.