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Books > Medicine > General issues > Health systems & services
In the United States alone, burns are the third leading cause of
death among children 0 to 14 years of age. In addition, each year
greater than 125,000 children suffer serious burn injuries, with a
disturbing percentage of those through abuse. Yet the number of
specialized burn centers in the U.S. is not near enough to be in
proximity or even accessible to the majority of these patients. The
situation is even worse in most other regions of the world.
Therefore, it is critical that the information in this book reaches
as many caregivers as possible because treatment of burn injuries
has undergone dramatic changes over time in every area, from
surgical procedures to respiratory and fluid resuscitation and even
nourishment and metabolic support. The ability to recognize and
react appropriately to pediatric injury can greatly affect the
outcome and prognosis, up to and including the patient's future
quality of life. It is in this context that this comprehensive
guide for the diagnosis, treatment and follow up of the burned
child from Time Zero through Long-term Rehabilitation was put
together. This book is essential for the medical professional
involved in attaining the most positive outcome possible for their
patients and their families.
This book offers a new approach by combining the disciplines of
history, psychology, and religion to explain the suicidal element
in both Western culture and the individual, and how to treat it.
Ancient Greek society displays in its literature and the lives of
its people an obsessive interest in suicide and death. Kaplan and
Schwartz have explored the psychodynamic roots of this problem--in
particular, the tragic confusion of the Greek heroic impulse and
its commitment to unsatisfactory choices that are destructively
rigid and harsh. The ancient Hebraic writings speak little of
suicide and approach reality and freedom in vastly different terms:
God is an involved parent, caring for his children. Therefore,
heroism, in the Greek sense, is not needed nor is the individual
compelled to choose between impossible alternatives.
In each of the first three sections, the authors discuss the
issues of suicide from a comparative framework, whether in thought
or myth, then the suicide-inducing effects of the Graeco-Roman
world, and finally, the suicide-preventing effects of the Hebrew
world. The final section draws on this material to present a
suicide prevention therapy. Historical in scope, the book offers a
new psychological model linking culture to the suicidal personality
and suggests an antidote, especially with regard to the treatment
of the suicidal individual.
In this issue of Physician Assistant Clinics, guest editors Kim
Zuber (Metropolitan Nephrology Associates, Alexandria, Virginia)
and Jane S. Davis (University of Alabama Medical Center) bring
their considerable expertise to the topic of Behavioral Health.
Provides in-depth, clinical reviews on Behavioral Health, 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.
Mental health is a growing field, but one still limited by a lack
of prior research and challenged by increased demand for new
solutions and treatments. Mobile and web-based technologies have
the potential to fill some of the gaps. Advanced Technological
Solutions for eHealth and Dementia Patient Monitoring provides
comprehensive coverage of issues in patient health and support from
the perspectives of doctors, nurses, patients, and caregivers. With
its focus on challenges and opportunities, as well as future
research in the field, this book is a vital reference for
researchers, scholars, advanced students, software developers,
managers, and stakeholders working at the forefront of eHealth
systems.
In a sense this book wrote itself. Excerpts from journals written
over nineteen years of workplace exposure to chemicals depict the
images and struggles within a gradually deteriorating brain that
had once been completely functional. The author's strong, healthy
body was breaking down as well. However, through her journey Ms.
Vitanza learned what the brain can do to heal itself. Much of what
she practiced was of benefit to her, until at last her mind found
piece. Her personal account of events and feelings is supplemented
by medical records, and by illustrations taken from drawings and
paintings that she made when experiencing particular symptoms.
Fumes and Fine Dust closes the long journey to rebirth. May those
who read this book benefit as well.
Employees of different labor sectors are involved in different
projects and pressed to deliver results in a specific period of
time, which increases their mental workload. This increase can lead
to a high mental workload, which in turn leads to a decline in job
performance. Therefore, strategies for managing mental workload and
promoting mental health have become necessary for corporate
success. Evaluating Mental Workload for Improved Workplace
Performance is a critical scholarly book that provides
comprehensive research on mental workload and the effects, both
adverse and positive, that it can have on employee populations as
well as strategies for decreasing or deleting it from the labor
sector. Highlighting an array of topics such as psychosocial
factors, critical success factors (CSF), and technostress, this
book is ideal for academicians, researchers, managers, ergonomists,
engineers, industrial designers, industry practitioners, and
students.
The effective delivery of healthcare services is vital to the
general welfare and well-being of a country's citizens. Financial
infrastructure and policy reform can play a significant role in
optimizing existing healthcare programs. Health Economics and
Healthcare Reform: Breakthroughs in Research and Practice is a
comprehensive source of academic material on the importance of
economic structures and policy reform initiatives in modern
healthcare systems. Highlighting a range of pertinent topics such
as clinical costing, patient engagement, and e-health, this book is
ideally designed for medical practitioners, researchers,
professionals, and students interested in the optimization of
healthcare delivery.
This volume delineates the ways in which key areas of healthcare,
well-being, patient safety and organisational change overlap with
and contribute to unhealthy workplaces for healthcare
professionals. There is a growing realisation within healthcare
that healthcare worker well-being, patient outcomes and
organisational change are symbiotically linked. Burnout and stress
in healthcare workers and toxic organisational cultures can lead to
a cycle of patient neglect, medical errors, sub-optimal care and
further stress. This topical volume therefore outlines the ways in
which worker well-being, patient outcomes and organisational change
can be aligned to contribute to a healthy workplace and therefore
better medical care. The volume includes an array of authors from
different disciplines including primary care, clinical medicine,
psychology, sociology, management, clinical governance, health
policy and health services research. It succeeds in integrating
different voices and reaches meaningful conclusions to address the
challenges facing the healthcare workforce.
This open access book introduces the National Health Insurance
(NHI) system of Taiwan with a particular emphasis on its
application of digital technology to improve healthcare access and
quality. The authors explicate how Taiwan integrates its strong
Information and Communications Technology (ICT) industry with 5G to
construct an information system that facilitates medical
information exchange, collects data for planning and research,
refines medical claims review procedures and even assists in
fighting COVID-19. Taiwan's NHI, launched in 1995, is a
single-payer system funded primarily through payroll-based
premiums. It covers all citizens and foreign residents with the
same comprehensive benefits without the long waiting times seen in
other single-payer systems. Though premium rate adjustment and
various reforms were carried out in 2010, the NHI finds itself at a
crossroads over its financial stability. With the advancement of
technologies and an aging population, it faces challenges of
expanding coverage to newly developed treatments and diagnosis
methods and applying the latest innovations to deliver telemedicine
and more patient-centered services. The NHI, like the national
health systems of other countries, also needs to address the
privacy concerns of the personal health data it collects and the
issues regarding opening this data for research or commercial use.
In this book, the 12 chapters cover the history, characteristics,
current status, innovations and future reform plans of the NHI in
the digital era. Topics explored include: Income Strategy Payment
Structure Pursuing Health Equity Infrastructure of the Medical
Information System Innovative Applications of the Medical
Information Applications of Big Data and Artificial Intelligence
Digital Health Care in Taiwan is essential reading for academic
researchers and students in healthcare administration, health
policy, health systems research, and health services delivery, as
well as policymakers and public officials in relevant government
departments. It also would appeal to academics, practitioners, and
other professionals in public health, health sciences, social
welfare, and health and biotechnology law.
With the collapse of the Eastern Bloc, Central and Eastern
European states have had to confront fundamental changes in
economic, social, and governmental structures. So far, many of
these countries in transition from a command to a market-based
system have experienced rapid deterioration of socioeconomic
conditions and standards of living. Although there have been
successes in some areas, such as greater political and consumer
choices, the overall situation has reached crisis proportions, as
evidenced by increased unemployment, crime, and family
disorganization.
The essays in this collection address significant issues dealing
with the frameworks of social justice and equality, policies for
families and women, implications for the welfare state, and the
impact on health care. As such, the collection is invaluable for
all scholars and researchers involved with contemporary Central and
Eastern European public policy and social conditions.
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