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Books > Medicine > General issues > Public health & preventive medicine > General
The Measurement of Health and Health Status: Concepts, Methods and
Applications from a Multidisciplinary Perspective presents a
unifying perspective on how to select the best measurement
framework for any situation. Serving as a one-stop shop that
unifies material currently available in various locations, this
book illuminates the intuition behind each method, explaining how
each method has special purposes, what developments are occurring,
and how new combinations among methods might be relevant to
specific situations. It especially emphasizes the measurement of
health and health states (quality-of-life), giving significant
attention to newly developed methods. The book introduces
technically complex, new methods for both introductory and
technically-proficient readers.
The book will take a systematic look at nanoparticle risks within
the paradigm of risk assessment, consider the limitations of this
paradigm in dealing with the extreme uncertainties regarding many
aspects of nanoparticle exposure and toxicity, and suggest new
methods for assessing and managing risks in this context. It will
consider the occupational environment where the potential for human
exposure is the greatest as well as the issues relevant to
occupational exposure assessment (e.g., the exposure metric) and
the evidence from toxicological and epidemiological studies. A
chapter will be devoted to how conventional risk assessment can be
carried out for a candidate nanoparticle (e.g., carbon nanotubes),
and the limitations that arise from this approach. We will propose
several alternate methods in another chapter including screening
assessments and adapting the rich methodological literature on the
use of experts for risk assessment. Another chapter will deal with
non-occupational populations, their susceptibilities, and
life-cycle risk assessments. There will be a chapter on current
risk management and regulatory oversight frameworks and their
adequacy. This chapter will also include a discussion of U.S. and
E.U. approaches to risk assessment, as well as corporate
approaches.
This book on TENR discusses the basic Physics and Chemistry
principles of natural radiation. The current knowledge of the
biological effects of natural radiation is summarized. A wide
variety of topics, from cosmic radiation to atmospheric,
terrestrial and aquatic radiation is addressed, including radon,
thoron, and depleted uranium. Issues like terrorism and
geochronology using natural radiation are also examined.
Inside today's data-driven personalized medicine, and the time,
effort, and information required from patients to make it a reality
Medicine has been personal long before the concept of "personalized
medicine" became popular. Health professionals have always taken
into consideration the individual characteristics of their patients
when diagnosing, and treating them. Patients have cared for
themselves and for each other, contributed to medical research, and
advocated for new treatments. Given this history, why has the
notion of personalized medicine gained so much traction at the
beginning of the new millennium? Personalized Medicine investigates
the recent movement for patients' involvement in how they are
treated, diagnosed, and medicated; a movement that accompanies the
increasingly popular idea that people should be proactive,
well-informed participants in their own healthcare. While it is
often the case that participatory practices in medicine are
celebrated as instances of patient empowerment or, alternatively,
are dismissed as cases of patient exploitation, Barbara Prainsack
challenges these views to illustrate how personalized medicine can
give rise to a technology-focused individualism, yet also present
new opportunities to strengthen solidarity. Facing the future, this
book reveals how medicine informed by digital, quantified, and
computable information is already changing the personalization
movement, providing a contemporary twist on how medical symptoms or
ailments are shared and discussed in society. Bringing together
empirical work and critical scholarship from medicine, public
health, data governance, bioethics, and digital sociology,
Personalized Medicine analyzes the challenges of personalization
driven by patient work and data. This compelling volume proposes an
understanding that uses novel technological practices to foreground
the needs and interests of patients, instead of being ruled by
them.
Offers vivid narratives illuminating the challenges and
opportunities health professionals and policymakers face
Distinguished by abundant patient and health provider narratives
highlighting the impact of health disparities on health outcomes
worldwide, this scholarly yet practical text prepares RN-BSN, DNP,
and PhD students to work toward improving community health for a
variety of underserved and vulnerable populations. Grounded in the
population health approach addressed in AACN Essentials, the text
delivers practical steps nurses can take to address population
health goals, including the improvement of quality of care, access
to healthcare, improved outcomes, and cost management. The resource
is also unique in its reflection of the interconnected points of
view of the patient, the provider, and the health system. Written
by lawyers, physicians, social workers, statisticians and
economists, psychologists, ethicists, finance experts, population
health specialists, anthropologists, and nurses, the text
emphasizes an interdisciplinary approach to learning and all
components of health care-delivery of care, policy, research, and
teaching. It examines demographic differences, chronic and acute
health conditions, and the health needs of the unserved/underserved
across the life cycle. The book emphasizes the importance of
understanding the social determinants of health and discusses ways
to address health disparities through changes in public policy,
attitudes, beliefs, education, research, and advocacy. Objectives,
key terms, discussion questions, and exercises facilitate group
discussion about best practices. Key Features: Delivers practical
knowledge with detailed narratives and case studies of specific
populations from experienced interprofessional authors Highlights
the interwoven perspectives of patients, health providers, and
health systems to promote cultural competence Pinpoints health
disparities including a discussion of COVID-19 Presents selected
historical landmarks and cases that influence population health
outcomes among vulnerable groups Interdisciplinary approach
includes the perspectives of other health and social science
disciplines
The accounts of women navigating pregnancy in a post-conflict
setting are characterized by widespread poverty, weak
infrastructure, and inadequate health services. With a focus on a
remote rural agrarian community in northern Uganda, Global Health
and the Village brings the complex local and transnational factors
governing women's access to safe maternity care into view. In
examining local cultural, social, economic, and health system
factors shaping maternity care and birth, Rudrum also analyzes the
encounter between ambitious global health goals and the local
realities. Interrogating how culture and technical problems are
framed in international health interventions, Rudrum reveals that
the objectifying and colonizing premises on which interventions are
based often result in the negative consequences in local
healthcare.
Acrylamide in Food: Analysis, Content and Potential Health Effects
provides the recent analytical methodologies for acrylamide
detection, up-to-date information about its occurrence in various
foods (such as bakery products, fried potato products, coffee,
battered products, water, table olives etc.), and its interaction
mechanisms and health effects. The book is designed for food
scientists, technologists, toxicologists, and food industry
workers, providing an invaluable industrial reference book that is
also ideal for academic libraries that cover the domains of food
production or food science. As the World Health Organization has
declared that acrylamide represents a potential health risk, there
has been, in recent years, an increase in material on the formation
and presence of acrylamide in different foods. This book compiles
and synthesizes that information in a single source, thus enabling
those in one discipline to become familiar with the concepts and
applications in other disciplines of food science.
COVID-19 has made us all aware of the fact that we live in a world
full of invisible enemies. Normally, we don't even realize they're
there, but from time to time one of these microscopic creatures
becomes powerful enough to turn everything upside down. What are
these invisible enemies, and how can we prepare ourselves for the
pandemics of the future? A specialist in the cellular biology of
diseases, Salvador Macip explains, in a language everyone can
understand, what it means to share the planet with millions of
microbes - some wonderful allies, others terrible foes. He provides
a concise account of epidemics that changed history, and focuses on
the great modern plagues that are still causing millions of deaths
every year, from influenza, TB and malaria to COVID-19. Macip also
examines the methods we have used - from vaccines to improved
sanitation and social distancing - to try to control these
invisible enemies. This authoritative overview of modern epidemics
and the pathogens that cause them will be essential reading for
anyone who wants to understand our world today, a world in which
some of the greatest threats to the human species come from the
invisible microbes with which we share this planet.
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