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Books > Medicine > General issues > Public health & preventive medicine
The Role of Functional Food Security in Global Health presents a
collective approach to food security through the use of functional
foods as a strategy to prevent under nutrition and related
diseases. This approach reflects the views of the Food and
Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the World Health
Organization, the World Heart Federation and the American Heart
Association who advise Mediterranean, Paleolithic, plant food based
diets, and European vegetarian diets for the prevention of
cardiovascular disease. In addition, the book also emphasizes the
inclusion of spices, herbs and millets, as well as animal foods.
This book will be a great resource to the food industry as it
presents the most efficient ways to use technology to manufacture
slowly absorbed, micronutrient rich functional foods by blending
foods that are rich in healthy nutrients.
From Michael Greger, M.D., the author of the New York Times bestseller How Not to Die, comes a full-color, fully illustrated cookbook that shares the science of long-term weight-loss success.
Greger offers readers delicious yet healthy options that allow them to ditch the idea of 'dieting' altogether. As outlined in his book How Not to Diet, Greger believes that identifying the twenty-one weight-loss accelerators in our bodies and incorporating new, cutting-edge medical discoveries are integral in putting an end to the all-consuming activity of counting calories and getting involved in expensive juice cleanses and Weight Watchers schemes.
The How Not to Diet Cookbook is a revolutionary addition to the cookbook industry: incredibly effective and designed for everyone looking to make changes to their dietary habits to improve their quality of life.
All recipes in this cookbook have been fully anglicized.
The Molecular Nutrition of Fats presents the nutritional and
molecular aspects of fats by assessing their dietary components,
their structural and metabolic effects on the cell, and their role
in health and disease. Subject areas include molecular mechanisms,
membranes, polymorphisms, SNPs, genomic wide analysis, genotypes,
gene expression, genetic modifications and other aspects. The book
is divided into three sections, providing information on the
general and introductory aspects, the molecular biology of the
cell, and the genetic machinery and its function. Topics discussed
include lipid-related molecules, dietary lipids and lipid
metabolism, high fat diets, choline, cholesterol, membranes,
trans-and saturated fatty acids, and lipid rafts. Other sections
provide comprehensive discussions on G protein-coupled receptors,
micro RNA, transcriptomics, transcriptional factors, cholesterol,
triacylglycerols, beta-oxidation, cholesteryl ester transfer,
beta-oxidation, lysosomes, lipid droplets, insulin mTOR signaling
and ligands, and more.
This book critically examines how countries across Europe have
dealt with the COVID crisis from a policing and security
perspective. Across the chapters, contributors from different
countries examine the data, press coverage, and provide
professional observations on how policing, law enforcement, police
powers and community relations were managed. They focus on how
security and governmental actors often failed to align with the
formal scripts that were specifically designed for
crisis-management, resulting in the wavering application of
professional discretion and coercive powers. Their different
approaches were evident: in some regions police were less
dominantly visible compared to other regions, where the police used
a top-down visible and repressive stance vis-a-vis public alignment
with COVID rules, including the imposition of lockdown and curfews.
Some contributors draw on data from the COROPOL (Corona Policing)
Monitor which collated data on crime, plural policing and public
order in Europe and around the world during the early phases of the
COVID crisis. Overall, this book seeks to provide comparative
critical insights and commentary as well as a practical and
operational understanding of security governance during the
COVID-19 crisis and the lessons learned to improve future
preparedness.
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