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Books > Medicine > General issues > Public health & preventive medicine
Scientific output in low- and middle-income countries is greatly
challenged by numerous factors. This is particularly pronounced in
sub-Saharan African countries, despite the continent being the
world's second largest and second most-populous continent,
currently undergoing rapid economic growth. Financial constraints
and unclear areas of focus when funding is available, are among the
limiting factors, with the consequence being the development of
inadequate policies, especially those relating to environmental
protection and conservation. This 13-chapter book is a unique piece
in the field of microbiology, designed to stimulate some research
areas in Africa by illustrating interesting and informative
examples of the current applied research agenda in environmental
microbiology in selected countries within the continent. With
authors from the North, South, East and West of Africa, the book
touches diverse applied methods and approaches to meet the
pragmatic needs faced by environmental microbiologists in Africa.
Also included are topics on viruses, bacteria (including
cyanobacteria), and protozoa, and their importance in disease.
Sustainable agriculture and aquaculture, and eco-friendly oil and
hydrocarbon bioremediation and degradation approaches are
highlighted. Microbial involvement in different common indoor
(e.g., household kitchens, latrines, and hospitals) and outdoor
settings including air, soil, and water habitats, and their
resistance to commonly used antibiotics, are described. Hopefully,
the work presented here will stimulate the need for increasing
modern training and funding initiatives to prepare African
microbiologists to meet the challenges they face in African
universities and research laboratories.
There are various innovations and new technologies being produced
in the energy, transportation, and building industries to combat
climate change and improve environmental performance, but another
way to combat this is examining the world's food resources.
Currently, there are global challenges associated with livestock
and meat consumption, giving way to resource scarcity and the
inability to sustain animal agriculture. Environmental, Health, and
Business Opportunities in the New Meat Alternatives Market is a
pivotal reference source that provides vital research on the
development of plant-based foods and nutritional outcomes. Through
analyzing innovative and disruptive trends in the food industry, it
presents opportunities utilizing meat alternatives to create a more
engaged consumer, a stronger economy, and a better environment.
Highlighting topics such as meat consumption, nutrition, health,
and gender perspectives, this book is ideally designed for
policymakers, economists, health professionals, nutritionists,
technology developers, academicians, and graduate-level students.
This timely text examines the causes and consequences of population
displacement related to climate change in the recent past, the
present, and the near future. First and foremost, this book
includes an examination of patterns of population displacement that
have occurred or are currently underway. Second, the book
introduces a three-tier framework for both understanding and
responding to the public health impacts of climate-related
population displacement. It illustrates the interrelations between
impacts on the larger physical and social environment that
precipitates and results from population displacement and the
social and health impacts of climate-related migration. Third, the
book contains first-hand accounts of climate-related population
displacement and its consequences, in addition to reviews of
demographic data and reviews of existing literature on the subject.
Topics explored among the chapters include: Hurricane Katrina and
New Orleans Hurricane Maria and Puerto Rico The California
Wildfires Fleeing Drought: The Great Migration to Europe Fleeing
Flooding: Asia and the Pacific Fleeing Coastal Erosion: Kivalina
and Isle de Jean Charles Although the book is largely written from
the perspective of a researcher, it reflects the perspectives of
practitioners and policymakers on the need for developing policies,
programs, and interventions to address the growing numbers of
individuals, families, and communities that have been displaced as
a result of short- and long-term environmental disasters. Global
Climate Change, Population Displacement, and Public Health is a
vital resource for an international audience of researchers,
practitioners, and policymakers representing a variety of
disciplines, including public health, public policy, social work,
urban development, climate and environmental science, engineering,
and medicine.
The very best journalism from one of Britain's most admired and
outspoken science writers, author of the bestselling Bad Science
and Bad Pharma. In Bad Science, Ben Goldacre hilariously exposed
the tricks that quacks and journalists use to distort science. In
Bad Pharma, he put the $600 billion global pharmaceutical industry
under the microscope. Now the pick of the journalism by one of our
wittiiest, most indignant and most fearless commentators on the
worlds of medicine and science is collected in one volume.
The social and behavioural aspects of HIV and AIDS have continued
to defy explanation. Often, the complex dynamics of the condition
are overlooked in the attempt to find a chemical answer. This book
examines the quest for appropriate prevention programmes for HIV,
based on an examination of its epidemiology. The transfer of
HIV/AIDS among people in any society is complex, but the author
argues that understanding how the virus moves socially can help in
prevention. There is a widespread agreement that the HIV pandemic
in southern Africa has reached catastrophic proportions. In
providing an analysis of the movement of the virus at a local and
regional level in southern Africa, Webb intends to make available
techniques and conceptual models which will allow researchers and
policy makers to understand the epidemic and respond effectively.
He traces the complex relation between the virus, the movement of
peoples and traditional sexual behaviour and examines HIV in the
context of "development" and political and structural change in
southern Africa.
This book offers an overview of the statistical methods used in
clinical and observational vaccine studies. Pursuing a practical
rather than theoretical approach, it presents a range of real-world
examples with SAS codes, making the application of the methods
straightforward. This revised edition has been significantly
expanded to reflect the current interest in this area. It opens
with two introductory chapters on the immunology of vaccines to
provide readers with the necessary background knowledge. It then
continues with an in-depth exploration of the analysis of
immunogenicity data. Discussed are, amongst others, maximum
likelihood estimation for censored antibody titers, ANCOVA for
antibody values, analysis of data of equivalence, and
non-inferiority immunogenicity studies. Other topics covered
include fitting protection curves to data from vaccine efficacy
studies, and the analysis of vaccine safety data. In addition, the
book features four new chapters on vaccine field studies: an
introductory one, one on randomized vaccine efficacy studies, one
on observational vaccine effectiveness studies, and one on the
meta-analysis of vaccine efficacy studies. The book offers useful
insights for statisticians and epidemiologists working in the
pharmaceutical industry or at vaccines institutes, as well as
graduate students interested in pharmaceutical statistics.
This forward-thinking volume outlines several approaches to
therapeutic treatment for individuals who have experienced complex
childhood and adult trauma, providing a novel framework for helping
patients with a number of challenging symptoms, with clinical
hypothesis testing and solid therapeutic relationships as a vital
foundation. Responding to the intense disagreement and competition
among clinicians championing their own approaches, the book
identifies the strengths and limitations of multiple therapeutic
approaches, addressing the need for qualified clinicians to be
versed in multiple theories and techniques in order to alleviate
suffering in their clients. Among the topics discussed: How to
choose specific therapeutic methods and when to shift techniques
The neurobiology of trauma and management of fear Cultural and
ethnic considerations in trauma treatment Addressing avoidance and
creating a safe therapeutic environment Management of dissociation,
substance abuse, and anger Treating Complex Trauma: Combined
Theories and Methods serves as a practical guide for clinicians
looking to expand their knowledge of approaches for treating
complex trauma. It aims to provide clinicians with options for
different therapeutic methods, along with the necessary context for
them to select the most effective approach in their treatments.
"For the first time in the professional literature we are finally
afforded a clear, cogent, and detailed explication of complex
trauma and the multifaceted parameters of treatment. Dr. Tamara
McClintock Greenberg provides perspicacious insight and clinical
wisdom only a seasoned career therapist can yield. Offering
sophisticated and nuanced distinctions between complex trauma and
PTSD, she shows how treatment is necessarily contextual and
tailored to the unique clinical and personality dynamics of the
sufferer that is thoroughly client specific within the therapeutic
dyad. She dispenses with simplistic and supercilious attitudes that
embarrassingly boast a uniform or manualized treatment to trauma,
instead carefully taking into consideration polysymptomatic,
neurobiological, and socialcultural differences that inform the
interpersonal, emotional, and safety milieu from the beginning of
treatment to stabilization, the working-through process, and then
onto successful recovery. This is a must-read book for those in
training and senior clinicians alike." --Jon Mills, PsyD, PhD,
ABPP, Faculty, Postgraduate Programs in Psychoanalysis &
Psychotherapy, Adelphi University, NY; author of Treating
Attachment Pathology "Dr. Greenberg has written an invaluable book
on treating complex trauma. She delves into multiple approaches,
assessing what techniques the client can tolerate at a given
therapeutic stage. She covers how to maintain consistency and
connection through a flexible approach and avoid pitfalls. This is
a must read for clinicians wishing to treat clients with complex
PTSD." --Louann Brizendine, MD, Clinical Professor UCSF; author of
The Female Brain
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