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Books > Medicine > General issues > Public health & preventive medicine > General
Critical Government Documents on Health Care reviews of many of the
major health issues facing us today. The book does not argue any
one viewpoint. Instead, it is an attempt to gather together
information from as many sources as possible and presents arguments
for and against the issues covered so that you the reader can come
to your own conclusions. Areas covered include killer diseases such
as heart disease, cancer, stroke, respiratory diseases, and
obesity. It discusses the arguments for and against immunization
and looks at issues which impact your health such as the
environment and pollution. There is a detailed section on
Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia and the problems it
poses for healthcare providers and caregivers, and this is coupled
with all the other issues that arise from a growing aging
population. Finally, the book discusses external threats such as
pandemics, Ebola, and other diseases that can rapidly spread from
continent to continent and what is and should be done to contain
them. About the Series: The Critical Documents Series looks at
critical issues of our times. It provides non-partisan information
with no spin about critical players, events, and information from
and about Washington from as many sources as possible - from
scientific journals and government reports to political manifestos
and lobby group publications. It presents arguments for and against
the issues covered so that you the reader can come to your own
conclusions.
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.
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.
Starting with a working definition, this comprehensive work defines
the attributes of the population health model. It clarifies what
population health is and is not. It discusses health disparities
and the social determinants of health and illness and provides new
ways of moving forward towards a more sustainable healthcare model
in a changing society, thereby pointing out the importance of
multi-sector collaboration for collective impact for community
health improvement. The book takes this further by providing
sources of data to support the population health model. As such,
this book provides a must-read for students and anyone working,
teaching or consulting in population healthcare.
Whether you are a doctor, nurse, student, or otherwise interested
reader, the stories here will help you to understand how medicine
works and how medical error can happen. The lifelong process of
learning that is a medical career requires healthcare workers to
find a way to live through these setbacks without either becoming
too adept at putting them 'down to experience' and forgetting their
social significance, or 'burning out' and leaving medicine. The
stories and discussions here present detailed narratives, analyses,
and reflections on medical errors through actions, omissions, and
misunderstandings. They offer a uniquely honest perspective on the
social implications of medical error and will enable healthcare
workers at all levels to analyse and learn from it without losing
sight of its impact.
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.
In this issue of Physician Assistant Clinics, guest editor
Stephanie L. Neary brings her considerable expertise to the topic
of Preventative Medicine. Provides in-depth, clinical reviews on
the latest updates in Preventative Medicine, providing actionable
insights for clinical practice. Presents the latest information on
this timely, focused topic under the leadership of experienced
editors in the field; Authors synthesize and distill the latest
research and practice guidelines to create these timely topic-based
reviews.
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open
Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com.
Global health arguably represents the most pressing issues facing
humanity. Trends in international migration and transnational
commerce render state boundaries increasingly porous. Human
activity in one part of the world can lead to health impacts
elsewhere. Animals, viruses and bacteria as well as pandemics and
environmental disasters do not recognize or respect political
borders. It is now widely accepted that a global perspective on the
understanding of threats to health and how to respond to them is
required, but there are many practical problems in establishing
such an approach. This book offers a foundational study of these
urgent and challenging problems, combining critical analysis with
practically focused policy contributions. The contributors span the
fields of ethics, human rights, international relations, law,
philosophy and global politics. They address normative questions
relating to justice, equity and inequality and practical questions
regarding multi-organizational cooperation, global governance and
international relations. Moving from the theoretical to the
practical, Global Health and International Community is an
essential resource for scholars, students, activists and policy
makers across the globe.
Healthcare Strategies and Planning for Social Inclusion and
Development: Volume One: Health for All - Challenges and
Opportunities in Healthcare Management examines health care
management, particularly in developing countries, along with the
key aspects of universal health required to address current global
health issues. This new volume begins with an overview of the
concept and definition of "Health for All." The book covers how
international organizations like the WHO support national health
authorities in managing their core healthcare systems, support
healthcare workforces, utilize technologies like health information
systems, ensure health coverage and funding, and provide primary
healthcare education. This volume is a useful resource to graduate
students in public health and health care policy, public health
professionals, health and social work researchers, and health
policy makers interested in global health and primary healthcare
services, particularly in developing countries.
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
This book aims to describe, though in a quite light way, the social
role of plant diseases, letting the reader know the topical
importance of plant pathology, as well as the role of plant
pathologists in our society. Plant diseases caused, in the past,
significant economic losses, deaths, famine, wars, and migration.
Some of them marked the history of entire countries. One example
among many: the potato late blight in Ireland in 1845. Today plant
diseases are still the cause of deaths, often silent, in developing
countries, and relevant economic losses in the industrialized ones.
This book, written with much passion, neither wants to be a plant
pathology text. On the contrary, it wants to describe, in simple
words, often enriched by the author's personal experience, various
plant diseases that, in different times and countries, did cause
severe losses and damages. Besides the so-called "historical plant
diseases", in the process of writing this book, she wanted to
describe also some diseases that, though not causing famine or
billions of losses, because of their peculiarity, might be of
interest for the readers. Thus, this book has not been conceived
and written for experts, but for a broader audience, of different
ages, willing to learn more about plant health and to understand
the reasons why so many people in the past and nowadays choose to
be plant pathologists. This is because plants produce most of the
food that we consume, that we expect to be healthy and safe, and
because plants make the world beautiful. The title "Spores" is
evocative of the reproduction mean of fungi. Spores are small,
light structures, often moving fast. The chapters of this book are
short and concise. Just like spores!
After heart disease and cancer, the third leading cause of death in
the United States is iatrogenic injury (avoidable injury or
infection caused by a healer). Research suggests that avoidable
errors claim several hundred thousand lives every year. The
principal economic counterforce to such errors, malpractice
litigation, has never been a particularly effective deterrent for a
host of reasons, with fewer than 3% of negligently injured patients
(or their families) receiving any compensation from a doctor or
hospital's insurer. Closing Death's Door brings the psychology of
decision making together with the law to explore ways to improve
patient safety and reduce iatrogenic injury, when neither the
healthcare industry itself nor the legal system has made a
substantial dent in the problem. Beginning with an unflinching
introduction to the problem of patient safety, the authors go on to
define iatrogenic injury and its scope, shedding light on the
culture and structure of a healthcare industry that has failed to
effectively address the problem-and indeed that has influenced
legislation to weaken existing legal protections and impede the
adoption of potentially promising reforms. Examining the weak
points in existing systems with an eye to using law to more
effectively bring about improvement, the authors conclude by
offering a set of ideas intended to start a conversation that will
lead to new legal policies that lower the risk of harm to patients.
Closing Death's Door is brought to vivid life by the stories of
individuals and groups that have played leading roles in the
nation's struggle with iatrogenic injury, and is essential reading
for medical and legal professionals, as well as lawmakers and
laypeople with an interest in healthcare policy.
"The Exposome: A Primer "is the first book dedicated to
exposomics, detailing the purpose and scope of this emerging field
of study, its practical applications and how it complements a broad
range of disciplines. Genetic causes account for up to a third of
all complex diseases. (As genomic approaches improve, this is
likely to rise.) Environmental factors also influence human disease
but, unlike with genetics, there is no standard or systematic way
to measure the influence of environmental exposures. The exposome
is an emerging concept that hopes to address this, measuring the
effects of life-long environmental exposures on health and how
these exposures can influence disease.
This systematic introduction considers topics of managing and
integrating exposome data (including maps, models, computation, and
systems biology), "-omics"-based technologies, and more. Both
students and scientists in disciplines including toxicology,
environmental health, epidemiology, and public health will benefit
from this rigorous yet readable overview.
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