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Books > Medicine > General issues > Public health & preventive medicine > General
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.
Ensuring National Biosecurity: Institutional Biosafety Committees
reviews the various responsibilities and associated challenges
Institutional Biosafety Committees (IBCs) face and proposes changes
that may help improve this system and increase national biosecurity
and worker safety. In recent years IBCs in academic and other
institutions have been tasked with increasing levels of
responsibility, overseeing work with recombinant genetic material
and hazardous agents. IBC members often lack the training to
effectively ensure that the work performed is truly safe for
scientists and the general community, and so increasingly rely upon
the expertise of the researchers themselves. With the proposed US
dual-use research policies soon to be implemented, this strain may
increase. This book provides readers with the necessary information
to be able to enhance national biosecurity within the US, EU,
Australia, New Zealand, Japan and more. Ensuring National
Biosecurity is as an invaluable reference for biosafety
professionals or for researchers who need to understand the
regulatory landscape that impacts their research.
Healthy Babies Are Worth the Wait (R): A Collaborative Partnership
to Reduce Preterm Births in Kentucky through Community-based
Interventions 2007 - 2009 provides readers with an overview of the
problem of preterm birth in the US, also describing in detail the
design, implementation, evaluation, and outcomes of the Healthy
Babies Are Worth the Wait initiative conducted in Kentucky between
2007 and 2009. The reader will learn about a unique research
approach employing a mixed ecologic design that compared outcomes
between intervention sites and comparison sites and the use of
qualitative surveys and quantitative methods using state vital
records data to evaluate outcomes. Consumer messaging and
educational materials are discussed, along with the challenges of
implementation and key lessons learned.
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.
This authoritative and unbiased narrative—supported by 50 primary
source documents—follows the history of vaccination, highlighting
essential medical achievements and ongoing controversies. This
timely work provides a comprehensive overview of the scientific
breakthrough known as vaccination and the controversy surrounding
its opposition. A timeline of discoveries trace the medical and
societal progression of vaccines from the early development of this
medical preventive to the eradication of epidemics and the
present-day discussion about its role in autism. The content
presents compelling parallels across different time periods to
reflect the ongoing concerns that have persisted throughout history
regarding vaccination. Author Lisa Rosner provides a sweeping
overview of the topic, covering the development of modern vaccines
and practices, laws governing the distribution of vaccines,
patients' rights, consumer advocacy, and vaccination disasters.
Throughout the volume, primary source documents present the
perspectives of researchers, public health specialists, physicians,
patients, consumer advocates, and government officials, helping to
illuminate the past, present, and future of vaccines on a global
level.
A growing body of EU law and regulation is preoccupied with the
protection of EU citizens from health and environmental risks.
Which chemicals are safe and should be allowed on the market? How
should the EU respond to public health emergencies, such as Ebola
and other infectious diseases? Regulatory responses to these
questions confront deep uncertainty, limited knowledge and societal
contestation. In a time where the use of scientific expertise in EU
policy-making is particularly contested, this book offers a timely
contribution to both the academic and policy debate on the role of
specialised expertise in EU public decision-making on risk and
technology as well as on its intertwinement with executive power.
It draws on insights from law, governance, political sciences, and
science and technology studies, bringing together leading scholars
in this field. Contributions are drawn together by a shared
theoretical perspective, namely by their use of co-production as an
analytical lens to study the intricate interplay between
techno-scientific expertise and EU executive power. By so doing,
this collection produces highly original insights into the
development of the EU administrative state, as well as into the
role of regulatory science in its construction. This book will be
useful to scholars, practitioners, and policy-makers working on
risk regulation and the role of expertise in public
decision-making.
One of the most relevant social problems in contemporary American
life is the continuing HIV epidemic in the Black population. With
vivid ethnographic detail, this book brings together scholarship on
the structural dimensions of the AIDS epidemic and the social
construction of sexuality to assert that shifting forms of sexual
stories--structural intimacies--are emerging, produced by the
meeting of intimate lives and social structural patterns. These
stories render such inequalities as racism, poverty, gender power
disparities, sexual stigma, and discrimination as central not just
to the dramatic, disproportionate spread of HIV in Black
communities in the United States, but to the formation of Black
sexualities.
Sonja Mackenzie elegantly argues that structural vulnerability is
felt--quite literally--in the blood, in the possibilities and
constraints on sexual lives, and in the rhetorics of their telling.
The circulation of structural intimacies in daily life and in the
political domain reflects possibilities for seeking what Mackenzie
calls "intimate justice" at the nexus of cultural, economic,
political, and moral spheres. "Structural Intimacies" presents a
compelling case: in an era of deepening medicalization of HIV/AIDS,
public health must move beyond individual-level interventions to
community-level health equity frames and policy changes
How do trees help reduce violence? What do roads have to do with
chronic disease? Prevention Diaries examines the unexpected yet
empirically predictable relationships that shape our health,
providing the keys to realizing vitality and health across our
society. With passion, wisdom, and humor, internationally
recognized prevention expert Larry Cohen draws on his three decades
of experience to make a case for building health into the everyday
fabric of our lives-from health care to workplaces, urban planning
to agriculture. Prevention Diaries envisions an alternate model of
American health care, one less predicated on treating sickness and
more focused on preventing it. Doing so requires a shift in how our
society perceives and approaches health - first recognizing our
overreliance on individual solutions, then building an environment
conducive to preventing problems before they occur. Through
first-person vignettes and scientific data, Cohen shows that
prevention is the cure what ails us. By creating greater
opportunities for health and safety - things like safe access to
parks and healthful housing - the US sets a foundation for a
healthier country. Prevention Diaries makes it clear that as the US
works to ensure everyone can access medical services, we also must
make health, not just health care, the ultimate goal.
Healthcare Strategies and Planning for Social Inclusion and
Development: Volume Two: Social, Economic, and Health Disparities
of Rural Women examines rural women, particularly in developing
countries, and how social and economic constraints they experience
impact their ability to advocate for their own health and impede
their access to healthcare. This volume discusses the economic and
social barriers rural women confront in exercising their right to
health care. It explains how geographical isolation, economic
instability, healthcare provider shortages, lack of appropriate
funding, resource limitations, and lack of health education are
just few factors that make rural health care difficult. The book
also covers the impact of social isolation on the health needs of
rural women which include chronic diseases, mental health, and
OB/GYN services as well as how the lack of opportunities for formal
education restrict rural women from working outside the household.
This volume will be a useful resource to graduate students in
public and global health, public health professionals, health and
social work researchers, and health policymakers interested in
women's health, especially in developing countries.
Exam Board: Pearson BTEC Academic Level: BTEC National Subject:
Health and Social Care First teaching: September 2016 First Exams:
Summer 2017 Our revision resources are the smart choice for those
revising for externally assessed Unit 2 in Health and Social Care
BTEC Nationals. This book contains four full-length practice
assessments, helping you to: Prepare, by familiarising yourself
with the structure and process for completing your assessment
Practise by writing responses straight into the book Perfect your
external assessment skills for this unit, with targeted hints,
guidance and support for every question, along with answers
'Punchily written ... He leaves the reader with a sense of the
gross injustice of a world where health outcomes are so unevenly
distributed' Times Literary Supplement 'Splendid and necessary'
Henry Marsh, author of Do No Harm, New Statesman There are dramatic
differences in health between countries and within countries. But
this is not a simple matter of rich and poor. A poor man in Glasgow
is rich compared to the average Indian, but the Glaswegian's life
expectancy is 8 years shorter. The Indian is dying of infectious
disease linked to his poverty; the Glaswegian of violent death,
suicide, heart disease linked to a rich country's version of
disadvantage. In all countries, people at relative social
disadvantage suffer health disadvantage, dramatically so. Within
countries, the higher the social status of individuals the better
is their health. These health inequalities defy usual explanations.
Conventional approaches to improving health have emphasised access
to technical solutions - improved medical care, sanitation, and
control of disease vectors; or behaviours - smoking, drinking -
obesity, linked to diabetes, heart disease and cancer. These
approaches only go so far. Creating the conditions for people to
lead flourishing lives, and thus empowering individuals and
communities, is key to reduction of health inequalities. In
addition to the scale of material success, your position in the
social hierarchy also directly affects your health, the higher you
are on the social scale, the longer you will live and the better
your health will be. As people change rank, so their health risk
changes. What makes these health inequalities unjust is that
evidence from round the world shows we know what to do to make them
smaller. This new evidence is compelling. It has the potential to
change radically the way we think about health, and indeed society.
Handbook on the Toxicology of Metals, Volume II: Specific Metals,
Fifth Edition provides complete coverage of 38 individual metals
and their compounds. This volume is the second volume of a
two-volume work which emphasizes toxic effects in humans, along
with discussions on the toxic effects of animals and biological
systems in vitro when relevant. The book has been systematically
updated with the latest studies and advances in technology. As a
multidisciplinary resource that integrates both human and
environmental toxicology, the book is a comprehensive and valuable
reference for toxicologists, physicians, pharmacologists, and
environmental scientists in the fields of environmental,
occupational and public health.
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