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Your knees are shaking, your throat is dry, and out in front of you
in the Lerenbaum Room of the Ramada Inn is the 167th Annual Meeting
of the Tucson Dentists Weekend Warrior Organization. You step to
the podium, there's a short crackle of microphone feedback, and all
eyes are on you. What do you say? Are you prepared enough? Will
your audience love you? Hate you? If these are your fears, put them
away and open up Professionally Speaking: Public Speaking for
Health Professionals. In it, you?ll learn how to turn weak knees
and wishy-washy introductions into confident gestures and words of
wisdom. Packed with examples and proven tips and techniques from
the front lines of public convention speaking, this helpful volume
has everything you need to transform your next presentation from
so-so to successful.Professionally Speaking will help you in both
professional speaking and teaching scenarios. You?ll find its
practical advice and helpful guidelines will enhance your
performance at the podium by one hundred percent. Specifically,
you?ll get page after page of useful direction in these and other
important but seldom-talked-about areas: how to select, write, and
deliver a talk use of voice speech preparation and the use of
slides icebreakers giving good introductions and avoiding
trail-offs keeping on the audience's "good side" chalk talks the
proper use of humorAnyone who has faced or will face the potential
disaster of addressing a large audience of colleagues--mental
health professionals, dentists, physicians, pharmacists, for
example--will want to consult Professionally Speaking before his or
her next scheduled speech. Useful as an introductory guide for
beginners or a supplementary text for seasoned veterans, this
practical, one-of-a-kind look at public speaking will change the
way you see your audience and improve the way they listen to you.
Your knees are shaking, your throat is dry, and out in front of you
in the Lerenbaum Room of the Ramada Inn is the 167th Annual Meeting
of the Tucson Dentists Weekend Warrior Organization. You step to
the podium, there s a short crackle of microphone feedback, and all
eyes are on you. What do you say? Are you prepared enough? Will
your audience love you? Hate you? If these are your fears, put them
away and open up Professionally Speaking: Public Speaking for
Health Professionals. In it, you ll learn how to turn weak knees
and wishy-washy introductions into confident gestures and words of
wisdom. Packed with examples and proven tips and techniques from
the front lines of public convention speaking, this helpful volume
has everything you need to transform your next presentation from
so-so to successful.Professionally Speaking will help you in both
professional speaking and teaching scenarios. You ll find its
practical advice and helpful guidelines will enhance your
performance at the podium by one hundred percent. Specifically, you
ll get page after page of useful direction in these and other
important but seldom-talked-about areas: how to select, write, and
deliver a talk use of voice speech preparation and the use of
slides icebreakers giving good introductions and avoiding
trail-offs keeping on the audience s "good side" chalk talks the
proper use of humorAnyone who has faced or will face the potential
disaster of addressing a large audience of colleagues--mental
health professionals, dentists, physicians, pharmacists, for
example--will want to consult Professionally Speaking before his or
her next scheduled speech. Useful as an introductory guide for
beginners or a supplementary text for seasoned veterans, this
practical, one-of-a-kind look at public speaking will change the
way you see your audience and improve the way they listen to you.
GIVING YOUR CHILD MEDICATION...SAFELY is best described by its
sub-title: A practical handbook for parents. For that is what it
is. It is practical, written in a conversational style, without
medical jargon or heavy scientific terms. It is a handbook -- a
volume to be referred to whenever there is any questions about
medication or your child: what the prescription is, how to
administer it, how to position the child most effectively without
too much trauma, and even a discussion of the psychological and
emotional aspects of administering these therapeutic agents.
Pleasant and easy reading and clearly-explained management of
medication for your child, backed by years of actual experience,
make this book a valuable addition to your medicine cabinet.
Melnick on Writing is a collection of the first ten years of
columns published in the American Medical Writers Association
Journal under that eponymous title -- forty in total. They
represent the author's comments on all phases of writing. The
columns range from serious commentaries about grammar and usages,
to writings about writing, to humorous commentaries, to managing
writer's block, to just plain cute thoughts -- most all with
medical slants. The columns are all practical and written in a
flowing, colloquial style. In a way, this anthology is a commentary
on present-day medical writing by showing the problems, solutions
and differing ideas on the state of medical writing (and sometimes
on writing in general).
Looking Back...at SECOM is the culmination of a long series of
human interest columns with that title by Dr. Melnick, published in
the school's magazine COM Outlook. In addition, Dr. Melnick has
added some personal insights about why and how this osteopathic
medical school came about. And he presents some views of the
earliest days of its founding. A major portion of this work is the
re-publishing of those original columns, and he has added a brief
overview of the eventual transition into today's Nova Southeastern
University College of Osteopathic Medicine. Dr. Melnick includes
recognition of the many osteopathic physicians and friends of the
school who were part of the founding effort.
Practicing for Practice is a handbook created for resident
physicians who are on the threshold of entering practice and in the
process of analyzing potential practice sites. The author believes
there is sufficient information and enough advisors available on
the business aspects, so those are not included. Rather, the
emphasis is on the human aspects of choosing a practice and on
understanding interpersonal relationships, topics that are
extremely important but less frequently recognized by residents.
This book will be especially valuable for residents in Internal
Medicine, Family Medicine, Pediatrics and Obstetrics-Gynecology
because it relates humanity to hands-on patient care. All of this
is accomplished in an upbeat, conversational tone, giving residents
a viewpoint from which to evaluate potential opportunities at the
time they are considering life-changing possibilities.
Osteopathic Tales is a collection of actual incidents that help
paint a picture of osteopathic practice and progress over a period
of 70 years. Viewing them gives the reader a moving-picture
experience as the profession marched along in its progress forward.
Through anecdotes, it traces osteopathic medicine's move from
obscurity, rejection and isolation to widespread acceptance and
recognition -- not only from the public and from federal, state and
local governmental agencies but also in many allopathic circles,
including specialty organizations, hospitals and medical schools.
Effective Medical Communication shares the insights of pediatrician
Arnold Melnick, DO, a columnist for The DO, the news and feature
magazine of the American Osteopathic Association. A collection of
six years' worth of Dr. Melnick's columns, this book offers
osteopathic physicians, MDs and other health professionals
practical advice for improving their medical writing and medical
speaking. Emphasizing the importance of communicating well with
patients, this anthology provides many helpful suggestions on using
and recognizing body language, asking the right questions, training
office personnel and interacting with patients via telephone.
Organized into sections titled "Medical Writing," "Medical
Speaking" and "Patient Communication," Effective Medical
Communication is written in an easygoing, colloquial style, ideal
for browsing here and there according to a reader's interest or for
cover-to-cover reading.
In this book, twelve captivating and down-to-earth ethical dilemmas
are presented in an interactive learning mode. "Ethics" generally
conjures up visions of unusual life-and-death problems. However,
health professionals - at every level and in every field -- sooner
or later face more mundane situations involving ethical and moral
decisions. Twelve of these interesting, challenging, day-to-day
situations are thoroughly presented in this work. Each of these
(some actual, some created to illustrate) is isolated on an
individual page, allowing the reader an unhampered chance to apply
his or her own thoughts, ideas and options. On the page following,
the author presents a set of possible action-options from which
health professional can choose; again, the reader, without the
distraction of "answers" on the same page, can think through the
problems alone - and even select the "best" one. This is followed
by the author's discussion/opinion of each option and concludes
with some general ethical considerations. Supplementing this is an
unusual presentation: each situation is followed by a Second
Opinion, offered by a health professional expert other than the
author -- some in agreement, some not. Together, this approach
exposes the reader to multiple choices and an opportunity to
consider actively a number of ethical problems. This creates a
self-instructive, inter-active learning process, something not
generally found in print. On the other hand, this work can be read
strictly as a pleasurable book, transmitting ethical information
and allowing the reader to enjoy and think about these situations.
This book provides a global introduction to Medical Writing for
health professions students and for practicing health professionals
who are just starting to do some writing. At the same time, it is
sufficiently sophisticated to offer valuable tips to experienced
writer. Besides scientific articles, students and residents need
help for their practical needs: writing histories, progress notes
and case summaries. And later, they will need the ability to write
letters and prepare reports - topics included in this book. So
often, the need for such training in the other health professions
is ignored - dentistry, nursing, podiatry, optometry, pharmacy,
physician assistant, public health, occupational therapy and
physical therapy, as examples. Therefore, Medical Writing 101 is a
practical help for all healthy professionals. This comprehensive
book can serve several purposes: a textbook for an actual course,
or a self-study manual, or a refresher for the occasional writer -
or all three. Included are important items - usually unknown o the
novice and rarely offered I print - as where to find material for
writing articles, formats to use, deciding where to submit an
article, and knowing what happens when the manuscript or book goes
to the editor or publisher. Medical Writing 101 includes material
on other writings: letters, charts, reports and records - all so
essential to the health professional's career and for which he or
she is rarely given guidance. This is a "how-to" book, written in a
lucid and informal and interesting style - actually a
conversational tone. Replete with strongly illustrative and
practical examples, it emphasizes what a tutor might offer in
person. To add to the enjoyment of the book, the author uses humor
from time to time - sometimes subtle and sly, sometimes overt - to
help emphasize important points.
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