|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
When you can't breathe, nothing else matters. If you are one of the
15 million Americans diagnosed with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary
Disease (COPD), you know what it's like to struggle to breathe. You
know what it's like to sacrifice your favourite activities to a
chronic illness that changes everything from your work life to how
you take your meals. But there is help,and hope. Respiratory
Therapist Dawn Lesley Fielding shares the program she has used in
her own practice,with an astonishing 100% success rate,offering
techniques and tools to make breathing easier and improve your
overall health. This practical, accessible, step-by-step guide
explains...what COPD is and how it affects your breathingthe most
up-to-date medication and treatment optionshow to track symptoms
and medicationsessential breathing techniques to improve oxygen
intakestrategies for healthy nutrition and gentle exercisewhat to
eat and what to avoid, with lists of key COPD foodsWith stories
from others with this condition, easy charts for managing
everything from your medications to your symptoms, as well as
hands-on tips for you and your loved ones, The COPD Solution is
your guide to reclaiming your life and living fully with COPD.
The living world runs on genomic software - what Dawn Field and
Neil Davies call the 'biocode' - the sum of all DNA on Earth. In
Biocode, they tell the story of a new age of scientific discovery:
the growing global effort to read and map the biocode, and what
that might mean for the future. The structure of DNA was identified
in 1953, and the whole human genome was mapped by 2003. Since then
the new field of genomics has mushroomed and is now operating on an
industrial scale. Genomes can now be sequenced rapidly and
increasingly cheaply. The genomes of large numbers of organisms
from mammals to microbes, have been mapped. Getting your genome
sequenced is becoming affordable for many. You too can check
paternity, find out where your ancestors came from, or whether you
are at risk of some diseases. Some check out the pedigree of their
pets, while others turn genomes into art. A stray hair is enough to
crudely reconstruct the face of the owner. From reading to
constructing: the first steps to creating artificial life have
already been taken. Some may find the rapidity of developments, and
the potential for misuse, alarming. But they also open up
unprecedented possibilities. The ability to read DNA has changed
how we view ourselves and understand our place in nature. From the
largest oceans, to the insides of our guts, we are able to explore
the biosphere as never before, from the genome up. Sequencing
technology has made the invisible world of microbes visible, and
biodiversity genomics is revealing whole new worlds within us and
without. The findings are transformational: we are all ecosystems
now. Already the first efforts at 'barcoding' entire ecological
communities and creating 'genomic observatories' have begun. The
future, the authors argue, will involve biocoding the entire
planet.
The living world runs on genomic software - what Dawn Field and
Neil Davies call the 'biocode' - the sum of all DNA on Earth. In
Biocode, they tell the story of a new age of scientific discovery:
the growing global effort to read and map the biocode, and what
that might mean for the future. The structure of DNA was identified
in 1953, and the whole human genome was mapped by 2003. Since then
the new field of genomics has mushroomed and is now operating on an
industrial scale. Genomes can now be sequenced rapidly and
increasingly cheaply. The genomes of large numbers of organisms
from mammals to microbes, have been mapped. Getting your genome
sequenced is becoming affordable for many. You too can check
paternity, find out where your ancestors came from, or whether you
are at risk of some diseases. Some check out the pedigree of their
pets, while others turn genomes into art. A stray hair is enough to
crudely reconstruct the face of the owner. From reading to
constructing: the first steps to creating artificial life have
already been taken. Some may find the rapidity of developments, and
the potential for misuse, alarming. But they also open up
unprecedented possibilities. The ability to read DNA has changed
how we view ourselves and understand our place in nature. From the
largest oceans, to the insides of our guts, we are able to explore
the biosphere as never before, from the genome up. Sequencing
technology has made the invisible world of microbes visible, and
biodiversity genomics is revealing whole new worlds within us and
without. The findings are transformational: we are all ecosystems
now. Already the first efforts at 'barcoding' entire ecological
communities and creating 'genomic observatories' have begun. The
future, the authors argue, will involve biocoding the entire
planet.
|
|