All over the internet, good sources are
New England Journal of Medicine
Web-MD
Cigna Health
Metlife
Aetna and many other insurance companies
An article that is maritime-related is under related links.
I would start with worldwidehealth.com, they always have great health or health related articles, if that doesnt have all the answers you need, I would also check with some of the health sites like vitaminworld.com and runnersworld.com.
You can get health related articles on news sites, health blogs like Medicalnewstoday(MNT), Daily-healthy-tips, Health.com, and more.
at the bibliography at the end of the article
Read related article for best explanation you can find on web.
You could always go on the website WWW.heath.com where you can find several article's about your topic. Basically any health website should have documentation or some form of an article.
Yes. Look in the "Related links" below, for an article by Wikipedia. For further information, look at the bottom of their article for the bibliography and external links.
The fastest way would be to use the index in the set of encyclopedias or the bibliography at the end of the article.
This depends on which specific vitamins you're deficient in. Different deficiencies may cause different undesirable health conditions. You'll find them listed in the article linked to in the "Sources and related links" section below. It also lists conditions related to mineral deficiencies.
See the related link to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department article.
One could easily find health related articles on their government website. One should also type in the health issue or topic they want to learn about into Google to easily find a vast array of articles on that subject.
article includes a list of reference related reading or external links,... It uses material from the article material science