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Books > Medicine > General issues > Public health & preventive medicine > Personal & public health
The Nutritional Psychology of Childhood is a systematic account of
research on the psychological aspects of nutrition in children from
birth to adolescence. It deals with two major themes: the
development of eating and the effects of malnutrition on the
developing child. Robert Drewett discusses the developmental
problems that arise with eating and food intake, including nursing
and weaning in infancy, the handling of solids and the development
of food choice and eating habits. Nutritional problems are
considered in children born preterm or small for gestational age,
or whose growth is poor, in children who are iron deficient or more
generally malnourished, and in children with physical illnesses,
including phenylketonuria and cerebral palsy. The development of
eating disorders and obesity are also considered. Drawing on
research from both developing and industrialised countries, this
book will be of interest to students, researchers and professionals
in psychology, nutrition and child health.
This timely edited collection presents a holistic and
biopsychosocial analysis of LGBTQ People of Color well-being,
focused on heart, brain, and mental health, and employs a unique
incorporation of minority stress, intersectionality, and allostatic
load frameworks. Bringing together established and emerging
academics, its authors present a critical analysis of the latest
research that encompasses the study of both risk and resilience
factors in LGBTQ People of Color health. Across the book, they
highlight the precise nature of the behavioral health disparities
experienced by these communities, but further, they reveal the
unique roles of intersectional discrimination and structural stigma
as mechanisms for these disparities. With chapters also dedicated
to federal policies and public health, this multidisciplinary work
marks a seminal contribution that will pave the way for further
advances in research, theory, and practice. It offers a valuable
resource on an understudied population that will appeal to
researchers, practitioners and policy makers in the fields of
health psychology, public health, epidemiology, sociology, health
sciences and medicine.
The war in Vietnam is a watershed moment in United States history -
the first war lost by the U.S. despite its seemingly overwhelming
military might. Surviving Vietnam focuses on the psychological
consequences, especially posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), of
service in such a war for U.S. veterans. The diagnosis of PTSD,
termed following and significantly influenced by this war, stirred
controversy. Much of the initial controversy centered on a major
report in 1990 of what numerous critics regarded as unrealistically
high rates of this disorder in U.S. veterans. Controversy continues
about whether exposure to one or more potentially traumatic events
is more significant to the development and persistence of PTSD than
pre-exposure personal vulnerability factors, such as age, education
and prior psychiatric disorder. This book describes attempts to
resolve these controversies. Surviving Vietnam develops a unique
blend of historical material, military records, clinical diagnoses
of PTSD, and interviews with representative samples of veterans
surveyed approximately a decade (the National Vietnam Veterans
Readjustment Study) and nearly four decades (the National Vietnam
Veterans Longitudinal Study) after the war's conclusion. The book
begins with a history of the Vietnam war that provides context for
the discussions of mental health thereafter, the outcomes of the
severity of veterans' exposure to combat, their personal
involvement in harm to civilians and prisoners, their
race-ethnicity, and their military assignments. It discusses
nurses' experiences in Vietnam and the psychological impact of
veterans' chronic war-related PTSD on their families. Surviving
Vietnam then examines factors affecting veterans' post-war
readjustment, including the effects of changing public and veteran
attitudes toward the war and the veterans' own appraisals of the
impact of the war on their lives after the war. The authors
conclude with a discussion of the policy implications of the
research findings.
This volume brings together basic research on the nature of stress
reactivity with up-to-date research on the effectiveness and
mechanisms of mindfulness interventions. The chapters review the
major research areas that elucidate the impact of stress reactivity
on health, and explore the mechanisms and effectiveness of
mindfulness-based approaches for stress reduction and improved
physical and emotional health. The first section examines
biopsychosocial mechanisms of stress reactivity such as allostasis
and allostatic load, neurobiology of stress, biology of the
"fight-or-flight" and "tend-and-befriend" responses, and
psychoneuroimmunology. This section concludes by addressing the
roles of perception and appraisal, including the role of perceived
threat in stress reactivity as well as the role that negative
perceptions of the stress response itself play in compromising
health. The second section opens with review of leading
psychological models of mindfulness, including self-regulation,
reperceiving, and the Intention, Attention, Attitude (IAA)
triaxiomatic model. Subsequent chapters discuss mindfulness-based
interventions and mechanisms of change for stress and related
clinical conditions including chronic pain, traumatic stress,
anxiety and related disorders, and clinical depression. The final
chapter reviews possible neural networks and brain mechanisms
associated with mindfulness meditation practice. As the research on
stress reactivity and mindfulness-based stress reduction continues
to proliferate, this book offers readers a single volume covering
the most relevant information across this vast terrain. Other
available volumes offer in-depth coverage of stress research with
little mention of mindfulness and stress reduction. Conversely,
many texts on the topic of mindfulness and mindfulness-based
interventions do not adequately cover the biopsychosocial processes
of stress reactivity.
Practical nutrition tips for patients, caregivers, and the public.
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