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Books > Medicine > General issues > Health systems & services
We cannot explain why people kill themselves. There are no
necessary or sufficient causes for suicide, so rather than
explaining suicide (looking for causes), perhaps we can understand
suicide, at least in one individual, a phenomenological approach.
This book begins by examining the diaries from eight individuals
who killed themselves. Using qualitative analyses, supplemented in
some cases by quantitative analyses, Lester seeks to uncover the
unique thoughts and feelings that led these individuals to take
their own lives. Lester has also studied suicide notes, the poems
of those who died by suicide (both famous poets and unpublished
poets), the letters written by suicides, blogs and twitter feeds,
and one tape recording of a young man who killed himself just an
hour or so after he recorded the tape. This book will give you
insights into the "I" of the storm, the suicidal mind. David Lester
has PhD's from Cambridge University (UK) and Brandeis University
(USA). He is a former President of the International Association
for Suicide Prevention and a leading scholar on suicide, murder,
the fear of death and other topics and thanatology.
In this groundbreaking book, experts show what a difference support
systems-family, friends, community and social programs-can make
towards the recovery of the millions of people who suffer a
traumatic brain injury each year. Health and Healing after
Traumatic Brain Injury: Understanding the Power of Family, Friends,
Community, and Other Support Systems stresses the importance of an
integrated and systems approach to healing. This book offers a
unique combination of practitioner perspectives on what works for
individual patients, consumer stories and learned insights over
time, as well as researcher insights from innovative programs. It
provides a holistic account of the important factors in living with
a brain injury that will inform and benefit health practitioners
and policy makers as well as people with brain injuries and their
family members and friends. The chapters explore the current best
evidence and contemporary views on healing that draw on optimism,
aspirational living, and meaningful partnerships. The authors focus
on the emergent area of the salutogenic experience of injury-how
brain injury changes and shapes lives in positive ways-and on the
variables within individuals and their environments that provide a
supportive influence in long-term healing. Presents multiple
viewpoints from the perspectives of consumers, practitioners,
researchers, and policy makers Advocates an integrated approach to
healing after brain injury that incorporates multiple strategies
Demonstrates how change and growth are possible after brain injury
Over the decades, the fields of health information systems and
informatics have seen rapid growth. Such integrative efforts within
the two disciplines have resulted in emerging innovations within
the realm of medicine and healthcare. The Handbook of Research on
Emerging Perspectives on Healthcare Information Systems and
Informatics provides emerging research on the innovative practices
of information systems and informatic software in providing
efficient, safe, and impactful healthcare systems. While
highlighting topics such as conceptual modeling, surveillance data,
and decision support systems, this handbook explores the
applications and advancements in technological adoption and
application of information technology in health institutions. This
publication is a vital resource for hospital administrators,
healthcare professionals, researchers, and practitioners seeking
current research on health information systems in the digital era.
Assessing, Diagnosing, and Treating Serious Mental Disorders
uniquely provides information that is useful across mental health,
psychopathology, practice, and human behavior and development
classes, particularly for psychopathology and advanced mental
health practice courses. DSM-IV-TR diagnostic criteria is provided
for each mental disorder discussed in the textbook. This book
represents a new wave of social work education, focusing on mental
disorders as an interaction among neurobiology, genetics, and
ecological social systems. Edward Taylor argues that most all
mental disorders have a foundation within the person's brain that
differentially interacts with the social environment. Therefore,
how the brain is involved in mental disorders is covered far more
comprehensively than found in most social work textbooks. However,
the purpose is not to turn social workers into neuroscientists, but
to prepare them for educating, supporting, and where appropriate
providing treatment for, clients and families facing mental
illness. Entire chapters are dedicated to explaining bioecological
and other related theories, family support and intervention, and
assessment methods. To help students conceptualize methods, the
book includes specific steps for assessing needs, joining, and
including families in mental health treatment decisions. Methods
for helping families become part of the treatment team and for
providing in-home interventions are highlighted. Throughout the
book, readers can find helpful outlines and illustrations for how
to understand, assess, and treat mental disorders.
Over the last twenty years integrated care has been touted as a
solution to many issues in health services, such as insufficient
coordination between services, cumbersome organizational
boundaries, interrupted patient journeys, as well as spiraling
health care costs. However, despite volumes of research, the field
has seen few innovative advances in recent years. In particular,
prevailing integrated care implementation practice and research
appear to be very health science centred, spurning approaches from
other disciplines. Axel Kaehne argues that it is time to
re-evaluate how we investigate care integration. He asks us to
radically question our assumptions about integrated care as a
managerial, organisational and behavioural endeavor. This is a
profound departure from conventional thinking about integration in
health and social care. Kaehne reveals the tacit assumptions we
make when we manage and change health services and offers a fresh
perspective on care integration whilst inviting readers to examine
long established research orthodoxies. This eclectic conceptual and
theoretical approach produces surprising insights for everyone who
is ready to see things anew.
Improvements in hospital management and emergency medical and
critical care services require continual attention and dedication
to ensure efficient and proper care for citizens. To support this
endeavor, professionals rely more and more on the application of
information systems and technologies to promote the overall quality
of modern healthcare. Implementing effective technologies and
strategies ensures proper quality and instruction for both the
patient and medical practitioners. Hospital Management and
Emergency Medicine: Breakthroughs in Research and Practice examines
the latest scholarly material on emerging strategies and methods
for delivering optimal emergency medical care and examines the
latest technologies and tools that support the development of
efficient emergency departments and hospital staff. While
highlighting the challenges medical practitioners and healthcare
professionals face when treating patients and striving to optimize
their processes, the book shows how revolutionary technologies and
methods are vastly improving how healthcare is implemented
globally. Highlighting a range of topics such as overcrowding,
decision support systems, and patient safety, this publication is
an ideal reference source for hospital directors, hospital staff,
emergency medical services, paramedics, medical administrators,
managers and employees of health units, physicians, medical
students, academicians, and researchers seeking current research on
providing optimal care in emergency medicine.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, many people had to cope with
isolation due to lockdown policies that forced them to engage in
fewer social activities. People were confined to the small space of
their dwellings and felt constrained and socially isolated and
deprived of meaningful social interaction and affection, which
caused stress and anxiety. Several initiatives were put in place to
help diminish the effects of isolation, such as those involving
literature either through writing or reading. Managing Pandemic
Isolation With Literature as Therapy explains the positive medical
and psychological effects of literature and writing during a
pandemic at a time when isolation prevented people from engaging
with others socially. Covering topics such as clinical psychology,
brain neurology, and stress, this reference work is ideal for
psychologists, medical professionals, policymakers, government
officials, researchers, scholars, academicians, practitioners,
instructors, and students.
This volume contains an Open Access Chapter The Sustainability of
Health Care Systems in Europe provides a comprehensive
understanding of the sustainability of health systems in Europe.
Furthermore, it includes an introduction to how EU action in
supporting health- care policies in the EU Member States, looking
both at implemented actions and describing current priorities for
the future. There has been a rapid evolution of the structure of
society and the economy over the last few decades which has created
new demands for healthcare services. This has placed pressure on
policy makers to ensure the sustainability of the health care
sector. Policy makers understand the efficiency of the healthcare
delivery system needs to be improved, the shortage of health
professionals must be tackled, and that there are growing health
inequalities and inequity in access to healthcare. These challenges
are exacerbated by recent economic shocks including the 2008
recession, the uncertainty related to Brexit, and the crisis
induced by the COVID-19 pandemic, which have impacted the ability
of European health systems to finance the health care sector. This
book is a must read for researchers and students of health
economics and health policy.
This is a homeopathic repertory with a difference. In contrast to
the standard repertory structure, this text is formed entirely from
clinically confirmed remedies as recommended by some of the world's
greatest homeopaths, and constructed into concordance tables for
clinically defined conditions. Where they're available, human,
animal and in-vitro clinical trials are also used to confirm the
remedy selection. With entries for over 3200 individual diseases,
this text is the ultimate authority on clinically confirmed
homeopathy and is an essential text for any serious prescriber or
user of homeopathic medicine.
Technology has become an integral part of our daily interactions,
even within the hospitals and healthcare facilities we rely on in
times of illness and injury. New technologies and systems are being
developed every day, advancing the ways that we treat and maintain
the health and wellbeing of diverse populations. Reshaping Medical
Practice and Care with Health Information Systems explores the
latest advancements in telemedicine and various medical
technologies transforming the healthcare sector. Emphasizing
current trends and future opportunities for IT integration in
medicine, this timely publication is an essential reference source
for medical professionals, IT specialists, graduate-level students,
and researchers.
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