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Beaver County (Hardcover)
Ph. D. Hodges, Harold Kachel, Joe Lansden
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R719
R638
Discovery Miles 6 380
Save R81 (11%)
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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For many years, what has been known about recovery from addictive
behaviors has come solely from treatment studies. Only recently has
the study of recoveries in the absence of formal treatment or
self-help groups provided an alternative source of information.
This book on the process of self-change from addictive behaviors is
the first of its kind, as it presents more than research findings.
Rather, it presents the process of self-change from several
different perspectives - environmental, cross-cultural, prevention
and interventions at both societal and individual level. It
provides strategies for how health care practitioners and
government policy makers alike can aid and foster self-change.
Directions for future research priorities are also presented.
For many years, what has been known about recovery from addictive
behaviors has come solely from treatment studies. Only recently has
the study of recoveries in the absence of formal treatment or
self-help groups provided an alternative source of information.
This book on the process of self-change from addictive behaviors is
the first of its kind, as it presents more than research findings.
Rather, it presents the process of self-change from several
different perspectives - environmental, cross-cultural, prevention
and interventions at both societal and individual level. It
provides strategies for how health care practitioners and
government policy makers alike can aid and foster self-change.
Directions for future research priorities are also presented.
One way to significantly improve the delivery of health care is to
teach the health professionals who provide care to work together,
to communicate with each other across professional boundaries, and
to start to think and act like a team that has the patient at its
center. The team-based care movement is at the heart of major
changes in medical education and will become an element in the new
accreditation standards. Through its Centre for Interprofessional
Education, the pioneering approach in this area taken by the
University of Toronto has attracted international attention. The
role of the Centre for IPE, a formal partnership between the
University of Toronto and the Toronto Academic Health Sciences
Network, is to create a hub for the university and the many
teaching hospitals where all core parties can be actively engaged
in redesigning this new model of health care. In Creating the
Health Care Team of the Future, Sioban Nelson, Maria Tassone, and
Brian D. Hodges give a brief background of the Toronto Model and
provide a step-by-step guide to developing an IPE program.
Medical competence is a hot topic surrounded by much controversy
about how to define competency, how to teach it, and how to measure
it. While some debate the pros and cons of competence-based medical
education and others explain how to achieve various competencies,
the authors of the seven chapters in The Question of Competence
offer something very different. They critique the very notion of
competence itself and attend to how it has shaped what we pay
attention to and what we ignore in the education and assessment of
medical trainees.
Two leading figures in the field of medical education, Brian D.
Hodges and Lorelei Lingard, draw together colleagues from the
United States, Canada, and the Netherlands to explore competency
from different perspectives, in order to spark thoughtful
discussion and debate on the subject. The critical analyses
included in the book's chapters cover the role of emotion, the
implications of teamwork, interprofessional frameworks, the
construction of expertise, new directions for assessment, models of
self-regulation, and the concept of mindful practice. The authors
juxtapose the idea of competence with other highly valued ideas in
medical education such as emotion, cognition and teamwork, drawing
new insights about their intersections and implications for one
another."
The seven Feasts of the Lord, given to the Children of Israel
through Moses, teach us many different lessons. One, revealed by
comparing the feasts and the development of a child in the womb,
shows a pattern of spiritual development in the Christian life.
Americans find themselves in genuine confusion and dismay
concerning the actions of President Obama's administration. None of
Obama's most important campaign promises--ending the Iraq war,
abolishing torture, closing Guantanamo, changing Washington's
culture of corruption--has come to pass. Instead, he has bailed out
the bankers, escalated the conflict in Afghanistan, launched a new
war in Libya, and institutionalized the civil rights abuses of the
Bush regime.
Roger D. Hodge makes the provocative case that substantive
reform was never even on the table. Behind the euphoria of Obama's
victory was in fact a business-as-usual corporate machine. Obama's
presidency has demonstrated that mere hope is never enough, that
change will come only when the American people take charge of their
own politics. A brilliantly crafted call to arms, The Mendacity of
Hope offers an essential analysis of the American political system
and the powerful interests that control our government.
The question, "Where is the United States in Bible Prophecy?" is
one that has been asked by teachers and students of the Bible for
many years. Some say one thing and some another. Many say that the
most prosperous and powerful nation in the history of the world,
and the only nation founded upon Christian principles, is nowhere
to be found in the Bible. The author respectfully disagrees with
that conclusion. The problem is that most Bible students have used
an invalid starting point for their search. They begin with the
United States, searching for scriptures that might apply to her.
The result is either no success, or scriptures that they think
might refer to America. "Where is the United States in Bible
Prophecy?" takes a different approach to this timeless question,
arriving at a most amazing and eye-opening conclusion, finding the
United States where you might least expect to find her.
On paper, Jerrod Brookshire is the most eligible bachelor in Texas.
His blonde hair and steel blue eyes compliment his perfectly fit
frame. His charming conversational skills flow easily from his 172
point IQ. The mansion, the millions, and the flashy Porsche were
just icing on the cake. Every single woman in Dallas wants to land
him, blind to his vicious dark side and the trail of dead bodies he
unleashes monthly. When Jerrod randomly selects your number there
is no charming conversation, just an ominous warning. You, or one
of your relatives will have 31 days to die. His unusual style of
egotistical killing pits his resources and decades of hunting
skills against the best and brightest law enforcement officers
around. The best chance Dallas has is the deceptively capable
detective Austin Moore, who has plenty of blood on his own hands.
Unflinchingly gritty and gruesome, "31 Days to Die" delivers a
no-holds barred race to stop the highest profile serial killer the
world has ever known... before he retires a legend and vanishes
forever.
How Patients Think
At age twenty-one, Chloe Atkins began suffering from a
mysterious illness, the symptoms of which rapidly worsened.
Paralyzed for months at a time, she frequently required intubation
and life support. She eventually became quadriplegic, dependent
both on a wheelchair and on health professionals who refused to
believe there was anything physically wrong with her. When test
after test returned inconclusive results, Atkins's doctors
pronounced her symptoms psychosomatic. Atkins was told not only
that she was going to die but also that this was her own fault;
they concluded she was so emotionally deranged that she was willing
her own death.
My Imaginary Illness is the compelling story of Atkins's
decades-long battle with a disease deemed imaginary, her
frustration with a succession of doctors and diagnoses, her
immersion in the world of psychotherapy, and her excruciating
physical and emotional journey back to wellness. As both a
political theorist and patient, Atkins provides a narrative
critique of contemporary medicine and its problematic handling of
uncertainty and of symptoms that are not easily diagnosed or known.
She convincingly illustrates that medicine's belief in
evidence-based practice does not mean that individual doctors are
capable of objectivity, nor that the presence of biomedical ethics
invokes ethical practices in hospitals and clinics.
A foreword by Bonnie Blair O'Connor, who teaches medical
students how to listen to patients, and a clinical commentary by
Dr. Brian David Hodges, a professor of psychiatry, enrich the
book's narrative with practical guidance for medical practitioners
and patients alike."
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