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Books > Medicine > Nursing & ancillary services > Specific disorders & therapies > General
The twin epidemics of obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM)
continue to affect an ever increasing number of children,
adolescents, and young adults. Management of Pediatric Obesity and
Diabetes provides healthcare trainees and professionals with
practical, comprehensive, and contemporary approaches to the
pediatric patient at risk for obesity, T2DM, and related
conditions. A unique guide on the subject, this volume provides
clinical paradigms for diagnosis and management of pediatric T2DM
and related conditions, while succinctly describing
state-of-the-art basic and clinical sciences underlying these
problems. The chapters in this volume are independent and concise.
Each chapter focuses on a key clinical issue or mechanism of
disease. Providing practical, data-driven resources based upon the
totality of the evidence, this important text helps the reader
understand the basics of pediatric obesity and T2DM and implement
strategies to prevent and treat obesity and diabetes in children
and adolescents. Management of Pediatric Obesity and Diabetes
provides health professionals across many areas of research and
practice with up-to-date, well-referenced, and comprehensive
evidence on identification, treatment, and prevention of these
chronic, serious, metabolic diseases in children. This volume will
serve the reader as the most authoritative resource in the field to
date.
Dogs that visit patients with cancer have been convincingly shown
to reduce stress, loneliness, and mood disturbance that may
complicate cancer care. In addition, dogs may provide important
motivation for patients to maintain rehabilitation programs that
have been shown to reduce cancer risk and improve cancer survival.
Outlining all of these issues and many more, Therapy Dogs in Cancer
Care: A Valuable Complementary Treatment is a ground-breaking,
highly innovative addition to the literature on cancer care.
Detailing a comprehensive summary of truly impressive research
demonstrating the ability of dogs to serve an important therapeutic
role within the cancer arena and in other serious medical
conditions, the text provides highly practical advice and very
helpful "tips" to ensure that those who wish to employ dogs to
assist the cancer patient have the necessary knowledge and "tools"
to optimize outcomes. Authored by Dawn A. Marcus, MD, an expert in
both pain management and health improvement through human and dog
interaction, Therapy Dogs in Cancer Care: A Valuable Complementary
Treatment is an extremely well-organized, well-researched, and
highly readable book. Providing practical suggestions to
effectively incorporate dogs into cancer care, with detailed
instructions about requirements for therapy dogs to ensure visits
are safe and limit unwanted spread of infection, Therapy Dogs in
Cancer Care: A Valuable Complementary Treatment is an invaluable
reference that will inform and delight both the clinician desiring
a "how-to" text as well as the casual reader.
Stem Cell Therapy for Diabetes, one of the latest installments of
the Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine series, reviews the
three main approaches for generation of sufficient numbers of
insulin-producing cells for restoration of an adequate beta-cell
mass: beta-cell expansion, stem-cell differentiation, and nuclear
reprogramming. Adeptly collecting the research of the leading
scientists in the field, Stem Cell Therapy for Diabetes compares
the merits of employing autologous versus banked allogeneic cell
sources for generation of surrogate beta cells, and addresses
tissue engineering and ways for cell protection from recurring
autoimmunity and graft rejection. Stem Cell Therapy for Diabetes
provides essential reading for those especially interested in
tracking the progress in applying of one of the most exciting new
developments in bio-medicine towards a cure for diabetes.
America's emerging "fat war" threatens to pit a shrinking
population of trim Americans against an expanding population of
heavy Americans in raging policy debates over "fat taxes" and "fat
bans." These "fat policies" would be designed to constrain what
people eat and drink - and theoretically crimp the growth in
Americans' waistlines and in the country's healthcare costs.
Richard McKenzie's "HEAVY The Surprising Reasons America Is the
Land of the Free-And the Home of the Fat"offers new insight into
the economic causes and consequences of America's dramatic weight
gain over the past half century. It also uncovers the follies of
seeking to remedy the country's weight problems with government
intrusions into people's excess eating, arguing that controlling
people's eating habits is fundamentally different from controlling
people's smoking habits.
McKenzie controversially links America's weight gain to a
variety of causes: the growth in world trade freedom, the downfall
of communism, the spread of free-market economics, the rise of
women's liberation, the long-term fall in real minimum wage, and
the rise of competitive markets on a global scale.
In no small way - no, in a very BIG way - America is the "home
of the fat" "because "it has been for so long the "land of the
free." Americans' economic, if not political, freedoms, however,
will come under siege as well-meaning groups of "anti-fat warriors"
seek to impose their dietary, health, and healthcare values on
everyone else.
"HEAVY " details the unheralded consequences of the country's
weight gain, which include greater fuel consumption and emissions
of greenhouse gases, reduced fuel efficiency of cars and planes,
growth in health insurance costs and fewer insured Americans,
reductions in the wages of heavy people, and required
reinforcementof rescue equipment and hospital operating tables.
McKenzie advocates a strong free-market solution to how
America's weight problems should and should not be solved. For
Americans to retain their cherished economic freedoms of choice,
heavy people must be held fully responsible for their
weight-related costs and not be allowed to shift blame for their
weight to their genes or environment. Allowing heavy Americans to
shift responsibility for their weight gain can only exacerbate the
country's weight problems."
Over the past two decades considerable progress has been made in
developing specialist psychosocial treatments for borderline
personality disorder (BPD), yet the majority of people with BPD
receive treatment within generalist mental health services, rather
than specialist treatment centres. This is a book for general
mental health professionals who treat people with borderline
personality disorder (BPD). It offers practical guidance on how to
help people with BPD with advice based on research evidence. After
a discussion of the symptoms of BPD, the authors review all the
generalist treatment interventions that have resulted in good
outcomes in randomised controlled trials, when compared with
specialist treatments, and summarise the effective components of
these interventions. The treatment strategies are organised into a
structured approach called Structured Clinical Management (SCM),
which can be delivered by general mental health professionals
without extensive additional training. The heart of the book
outlines the principles underpinning SCM and offers a step-by-step
guide to the clinical intervention. Practitioners can learn the
interventions easily and develop more confidence in treating people
with BPD. In addition, a chapter is devoted to how to help families
- an issue commonly neglected when treating patients with BPD.
Finally the authors discuss the top 10 strategies for delivering
treatment and outline how the general mental health clinician can
deliver these strategies competently.
Castor oil was recommended in the Edgar Cayce readings more than
one thousand times. Dr. McGarey recounts case histories in which he
succeeded in using castor oil packs as a healing agent for a
variety of disorders.
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