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Books > Medicine > General issues > Public health & preventive medicine > Personal & public health
This volume addresses hospital effluents in terms of their
composition and the management and treatment strategies currently
(being) adopted around the globe. In this context, one major focus
is on pharmaceutical compounds: their observed concentration range,
ecotoxicological effects, and the removal efficiency achieved by
the different technologies. Another focus is on management
strategies (dedicated hospital wastewater treatment, or a combined
approach also involving urban wastewater) and currently adopted
treatments to reduce the released pollutant load. Innovative and
promising technologies under investigation at the lab and pilot
scale are presented. A discussion of remaining knowledge gaps and
future research requirements rounds out the coverage. The
respective chapters, written by experts in the different fields,
provide useful information for a broad audience: scientists
involved in the management and treatment of hospital effluents and
wastewater containing micropollutants, administrators and
decision-makers, legislators involved in the authorization and
management of healthcare structure effluents, and environmental
engineers involved in the design of wastewater treatment plants, as
well as newcomers and students interested in these issues.
Meet consumer demand for information on health care and related
topics with the first authoritative reference work of current and
credible health care information every library can afford--and none
will want to ignore. This work features 151 full-text articles from
the National Cancer Institute, the Food and Drug Administration,
the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research, National Institute
on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease
Control, and other agencies.
This contributed volume is a real "who is who" in Latin American
psychology. Edited by the most prominent psychology researcher
alive in the region, the book presents a comprehensive panorama of
psychology in Latin America as a science, as a profession and as a
way of improving the quality of life of individuals and
communities. Despite its achievements, Latin American psychology is
little known by the international psychological community. In order
to fill this gap, Dr. Ruben Ardila has invited the most important
researchers and practitioners in the region to present an overview
of psychology as both a profession and a research field in Latin
America in the following areas: * Scientific research *
Professional issues * Clinical and health psychology *
Developmental psychology * Educational and school psychology *
Organizational and work psychology * Social psychology * Community
psychology * Legal and forensic psychology Psychology in Latin
America - Current Status, Challenges and Perspectives seeks to
place Latin American psychology on the map of international
psychology, and by doing so it aims to foster cooperation between
researchers, practitioners and students from the region with its
peers from all over the world.
The last few years have seen a growing consumer awareness of
nutrition and healthy eating in general. As a consequence, the food
industry has become more concerned with the nutritional value of
products and the maintenance of guaranteed micronutrient levels.
While the food industry has the responsibility of producing foods
that provide a realistic supply of nutrients, including vitamins,
it is now also required to offer produce with a high degree of
convenience and a long shelf life.
The fields of writing as healing and health coaching have expanded
to aid in the physical and emotional healing of patients. Using
writing as a healing method allows patients to create new
perspectives of their healing processes and professionals to
propose new methods of healing that promote and maintain a positive
outlook. Using Narrative Writing to Enhance Healing is an essential
scholarly publication that approaches healing through the fields of
education and medicine. Featuring a wide range of topics such as
collaborative narratives, patient education, and health coaching,
this book is ideal for writing instructors, physical therapists,
teachers, therapists, psychologists, mental health professionals,
medical professionals, counselors, religious leaders, mentors,
administrators, academicians, and researchers.
Mounting scientific evidence generated over the past decade
highlights the significant role of our cities' built environments
in shaping our health and well-being. In this book, the authors
conceptualize the 'urban health niche' as a novel approach to
public health and healthy-city planning that integrates the diverse
and multi-level health determinants present in a city system.The
authors trace the origins of public health and city planning,
drawing upon the shifting paradigms of epidemiology. Advanced
network analysis techniques are employed to examine multi-scale
associations between individual-level health outcomes and built
environment features such as density, land-use mix and road network
configuration. Healthy Cities will prove a fascinating read for an
interdisciplinary body of scholars, practitioners and policy makers
within the domains of public policy, regional and urban studies,
urban planning, spatial epidemiology, health geography, sociology,
public health and psychology.
The purpose of this volume is to describe the impact of the
increased demand for flexibility on employees and its impact on
their individual work life trajectories and health. The volume
offers concrete examples of interventions aimed to find innovative
ways of sustainable work careers for today's workers. We focus on
the school to work transition, job insecurity, job loss and
re-employment and retirement. The interventions described offer
strategies for implementing support in employment contracts,
increasing preparedness of individual employees with public
education programs or developing work arrangements and support
systems in work organizations.
Intended as a reference tool for college students, this book
examines the origins of and controversies associated with birth
control in the United States. Issues regarding access to, education
about, and practice of birth control have played a pivotal role in
religious, social, and political conflicts throughout the 19th and
20th centuries. In the 21st century, controversies surrounding
birth control remain at the forefront of current political debates
over topics as varied as women's rights, social welfare
initiatives, federal healthcare funding, consumer protection and
physician liability, and informed consent. Birth Control provides a
historical background of premodern practices, describes birth
control in the 19th-20th centuries, and discusses all currently
available types of contraceptive systems, including both artificial
and natural methods. The treatment of contemporary public debates
on birth control addresses questions posed on practical, ethical,
religious, and moral grounds, presented respectfully and in a
balanced fashion. Contains 20 primary document excerpts divided
into 8 thematic categories, including early birth-control manuals,
essays by Margaret Sanger, papal encyclicals, federal statutes,
Supreme Court cases, and executive orders from 4 presidents on the
subject of birth control Provides a bibliography of sources for
additional research Includes a glossary and index for quick access
to information about specific topics and terms
This book reviews the consequences of improper disposal of
greywater into the environment and the most appropriate treatment
technologies for developing countries, focusing on the potential to
reuse greywater as a production medium for biomass and
bio-products. It also describes the quantities and qualitative
characteristics, as well as the common practice of discharging
greywater in developing countries, and highlights the associated
health risks. Further, it compares the management of greywater in
developed and developing countries and explores the advantages and
disadvantages of various treatment technologies, discussing the
reuse of greywater for irrigation purposes in arid and sub-arid
countries, especially in the Middle East. The book shows the
benefits of greywater and introduces low-cost technologies based on
the available local facilities can be used to discharge, reuse, and
recycle it.
This book explores the social psychological aspects of trans
women's experiences of living with HIV in the UK. Drawing on
theories from social psychology, the author provides a fine-grained
analysis of the EXTRA Study - one of the first in-depth empirical
studies of trans women's experiences of living with HIV in the UK.
Trans Women and HIV: Social Psychological Perspectives examines
issues of identity, threat and coping among trans women - a key
population in the HIV epidemic - and presents a model for
describing and predicting health outcomes in this population.
Underpinned by the Health Adversity Risk Model, this book examines
the role of psychological constructs, such as identity, risk and
stigma, in behaviour and psychological wellbeing. This informative
and thought-provoking text is an invaluable resource for scholars,
clinicians and students working in the fields of HIV and trans
health.
Childhood obesity has become a central concern in many countries
and a range of policies have been proposed or implemented to
address it. This co-authored book is the first to focus on the
complex set of ethical and policy issues that childhood obesity
raises. Throughout the book, authors Kristin Voigt, Stuart G.
Nicholls, and Garrath Williams emphasize that childhood obesity is
a multi-faceted phenomenon, and just one of many issues that
parents, schools and societies face. They argue that it is
important to acknowledge the resulting complexities and not to
think in terms "single-issue" policies. After first reviewing some
of the factual uncertainties about childhood obesity, the authors
explore central ethical questions. What priority should be given to
preventing obesity? To what extent are parents responsible? How
should we think about questions of stigma and inequality? In the
second part of the book, the authors consider key policy issues,
including the concept of the aobesogenic environment,a debates
about taxation and marketing, and the role that schools can play in
obesity prevention. The authors argue that political debate is
needed to decide the importance given to childhood obesity and how
to divide responsibilities for action. These debates have no simple
answers. Nonetheless, the authors argue that there are reasons for
hope. There are a wide range of opportunities for action. Many of
these options also promise wider social benefits. "This book
provides a welcome re-appraisal of commonly-held beliefs about
child obesity and misconceptions about what needs to be done. The
authors expose the futility of holding parents responsible for
children's unhealthy behaviour, they challenge the assumption that
education and family support will solve the problem, and they
condemn the prejudice and stigma which surround the narrative of
blame. The book shows convincingly how the causes of obesity - and
the range of associated diseases - lie in the fabric of the modern
market economy: in the food supply which shapes our diets, the
social and physical environment which encourages sedentary
behaviour, and in the media which promote ever greater consumption.
Obesity is not the problem: it is the symptom of a more complex
social and economic malaise encouraging poor health. The case for
interventions by governments to promote health and wellbeing above
crude economic growth is comprehensively proven." - Dr. Tim
Lobstein, Director of Policy and Programmes, The International
Association for the Study of Obesity and The International Obesity
Task Force A well-researched, highly critical, but carefully
balanced examination of everyday assumptions about childhood
obesity and its prevention from an intensely moral perspective.
Although the authors demonstrate that no intervention is without
ethical complications or effective entirely on its own, they call
for immediate actions to reduce the stigma of childhood obesity,
support parents, and create food environments healthier for
children, adults, and the environment.- Marion Nestle, Paulette
Goddard Professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health,
NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development
Pharmacy Management of Long-term Medical Conditions shows you how
you can use your expertise to improve health outcomes and quality
of life for people with LTMCs by ensuring they get the best out of
their medicines.It contains 17 chapters with each chapter focusing
on one of the most prevalent long-term medical conditions that you
may encounter day-to-day including an overview, diagnosis, pharmacy
input, pharmacy review and management/treatment.Pharmacy Management
of Long-term Medical Conditions features useful resources and case
studies at the end of each chapter to help bring guidelines to life
and into the practice setting.Written by expert pharmacists in
their respective fields, it provides practical information that can
be easily implemented in practice to make a difference to patient
care and outcomes.This book is designed to support primary care
pharmacists working in community and GP practice pharmacy
Focusing on two central themes--the psychobiological evolution from
youth to adult and the effects of drugs on the developing central
nervous system--this important reference elucidates the mechanisms
of chemical dependency in adolescents. Its multidisciplinary
coverage analyzes addiction across major domains of human
functioning against the backdrop of hormonal, cognitive, and other
changes that accompany the transition to adulthood. Chapters
discuss legal as well as illicit drugs, examine age-related social
contexts, and present the latest findings on links between drug use
and mental disorders. Throughout, the contributors make clear that
education is more valuable to understanding--and
preventing--substance abuse than are prohibition and zero-tolerance
thinking. Included among the topics: Cognitive development,
learning, and drug use. Neurobiology of the action of drugs of
abuse. Findings in adolescents with substance dependence based on
neuroimaging tests. Alcohol abuse in adolescents: relevance of
animal models. Effects of chronic drug abuse on the chronobiology
of sleep in adolescents. Neurological and cognitive disorders
arising from the chronic use of drugs of abuse. The multiple lenses
for understanding its subject and the sensitivity with which causal
nuances are treated make Neuroscience of Drug Abuse in Adolescence
an invaluable resource for clinical and child psychologists,
psychiatrists, social workers, and addiction counselors.
Specialists join forces in this new volume to offer a complete,
practical guide for understanding and treating obesity and eating
disorders. The contributors provide a solid background on the
problem, give relevant, detailed discussions of prominent issues,
and suggest treatment methods from case studies. With this book in
hand, professional counselors including social workers,
psychologists, nutritionists, psychiatrists, nurses, dieticians,
and health directors will have the information they need to handle
specific problems of weight control.
This is the first book on the market that explores the importance
of curcumin for the treatment of neurological disorders. It has
been estimated that 35.6 million people globally had dementia in
2010 and the prevalence of dementia has been predicted to double
every 20 years. Thus, 115.4 million people may be living with
dementia in 2050. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the leading cause of
dementia and is present in 60%-70% of people with dementia. Unless
new discoveries are made in the prevention or treatment of AD, the
number of cases in the US alone is estimated to increase threefold,
to 13.2 million by the year 2050. Thus, it is important to focus on
delaying and treating the onset of AD by curcumin may be an
important step for controlling AD. Regular consumption of healthy
diet containing curcumin enriched foods, moderate exercise, and
regular sleep may produce beneficial effects not only on motor and
cognitive functions, but also on memory deficits that occur to some
extent during normal aging and to a large extent in AD. Delaying
the onset and progression of AD and improving its symptoms by few
years with regular consumption of curcumin may relieve some of the
burden on health care systems. In service of this goal, this volume
gives readers a comprehensive and cutting edge description of the
importance of curcumin for the treatment of AD in cell culture and
animal models in a manner that is useful not only to students and
teachers but also to researchers, dietitians, nutritionists and
physicians. It can be used as supplement text for a range of
neuroscience and nutrition courses. Clinicians, neuroscientists,
neurologists and pharmacologists will find this book useful for
understanding molecular aspects of AD treatment by curcumin.
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