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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.

  2. 26 de jan. de 2002 · In 1964, after the decision to transfer the care of patients on the mental observation ward to a psychiatrist, Richard Asher retired from medicine. He died 5 years later at the age of 57.

    • Joanne Turner, Steven Reid
    • 2002
  3. RESUMO. Descrita pela primeira vez pelo médico inglês Richard Asher, em 1951, a síndrome de Munchausen (SM) é um transtorno factício em que o paciente se mostra aguda e dramaticamente doente, com a habilidade de mimetizar sinais e sintomas de forma a necessitar de internações prolongadas, procedimentos de diagnósticos invasivos, longo ...

    • Ana Paula T de Menezes, Érica de M Holanda, Virgínia Angélica L Silveira, Kelma Cristina da S de Oli...
    • 2002
  4. 17 de jul. de 2023 · O médico e escritor britânico Richard Asher era um desses observadores argutos da medicina do século XX e não tinha papas na língua quando o assunto era provocar o pensamento crítico da comunidade médico-científica de sua época.

  5. 10 de jun. de 2015 · A tribute to Richard Asher, an English physician and writer, who coined the term "Munchausen's Syndrome" and advocated for generalism and clarity in medicine. Learn about his life, work, style, and legacy from Seamus O'Mahony, a consultant physician in Cork.

  6. 13 de nov. de 2020 · I recently came across the work of Dr Richard Asher who described Munchausen's syndrome. 1 He was a giant of his time, a well-known English physician of the 1930–1960s who wrote broadly on various topics that intersected with clinical medicine.

  7. Richard Asher, an endocrinologist, is best known for the description of Munchausen syndrome in 1951 and the controversy that followed: A serious psychiatric disorder of self-harm was named after a largely fictionalized literary German Baron. 6