|
|
Showing 1 - 25 of
96 matches in All Departments
Osteoarthritis Health Professional Training Manual addresses
current gaps in knowledge and the skills and confidence that are
necessary to deliver evidence-based OA care that is consistent with
international guidelines and for effective translation to clinical
practice for health professionals. Written for health care
professionals that meet patients with osteoarthritis in the clinic,
like GPs, physiotherapists, rheumatologists, orthopedic surgeons,
and MDs and PTs in training, medical students and basic researchers
on osteoarthritis who want an update on the clinical aspects of OA,
this book addresses the urgent need to improve health professional
knowledge in managing patients with osteoarthritis.
Social geography has been one of the most important growth areas
within the field of geography in recent decades. It has brought
within geographical analysis a wide range of new topics, such as
ethnic segregation, crime and environment and inner city problems.
First published in 1986, this edited collection surveys the field
of social geography. Using key international case studies from
across Europe, North America, Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia,
authors discuss the different trends, leading figures and issues of
concern in social geography throughout the world. This is a
comprehensive and accessible study that will be of particular
interest to students of social and human geography, urban and
environmental planning.
This book, originally published in 1983, drawing material from
Europe, the USA, the Soviet Union and the Developing World,
provides a comprehensive review of the key issues in medical
geography. It sets the central problems of medical geography in a
broad social context as well as in a spatial one and analyses
changing conceptions of health and illness in detail. It also
explores the pathological relationship between people and their
environment and illustrates that social phenomena form spatial
patterns which provide a good starting point for the examination of
the relationship between medicine, health and society.
This book considers the social and geographical context in which
the National Health Service (NHS) operated during the 1970s and
1980s. It argues that disease and health care systems are the
product to a large degree of the wider social and cultural context.
It explores the relationship between health, work, poverty,
housing, class and culture. examines how resource allocation and
social policies are determined by the wider social and cultural
context. discusses how the health of the nation, broadly defined
should best be managed. As relevant today as when it was originally
published, comments on the nature of welfare geography, assesses
the impact of integrated approaches on the policy process and
points the way forward to geographies rather than a geography of
the national health.
Much of the scientific work on environmental health research has
come from the clinical and biophysical sciences. Yet contributions
are being made from the social sciences with respect to economic
change, distributional equities, political will, public perceptions
and the social geographical challenges of the human
health-environments linkages. Offering the first comprehensive and
cohesive summary of the input from social science to this field,
this book focuses on how humans theorize their relationships to the
environment with respect to health and how these ideas are mediated
through an evaluation of risk and hazards. Most work on risk has
focused primarily on environmental problems. This book extends and
synthesizes these works for the field of human health, treating
social, economic, cultural and political context as vital. Bringing
disparate literatures from across several disciplines together with
their own applied research and experience, John Eyles and Jamie
Baxter deal with scientific uncertainty in the everyday issues
raised and question how social theories and models of the way the
world works can contribute to understanding these uncertainties.
This book is essential reading for those studying and researching
in the fields of health geography and environmental studies as well
as environmental sociology, social and applied anthropology,
environmental psychology and environmental politics.
A significant body of theoretical and empirical studies describes
'sense of place' as an outcome of interconnected psychological,
social and environmental processes in relation to physical
place(s). Sense of place has been examined, particularly in human
geography, in terms of both the character intrinsic to a place as a
localized, bounded and material entity, and the sentiments of
attachment/detachment that humans experience and express in
relation to specific places. Scholars in a wide range of
disciplines are increasingly exploring the relationship between
place and health, and recently, the field of public health has been
encouraged to recognize sense of place as a potential contributing
factor to well-being. It is evident that over the last few decades,
sense of place has developed into a versatile construct. This
important book brings together work related to sense of place and
health, broadly defined, from the perspective of a variety of
fields and disciplines. It will give the reader an understanding of
both the range of applications of this construct within approaches
to human health as well as the breadth of research methodologies
employed in its investigation.
This book considers the social and geographical context in which
the National Health Service (NHS) operated during the 1970s and
1980s. It argues that disease and health care systems are the
product to a large degree of the wider social and cultural context.
It explores the relationship between health, work, poverty,
housing, class and culture. examines how resource allocation and
social policies are determined by the wider social and cultural
context. discusses how the health of the nation, broadly defined
should best be managed. As relevant today as when it was originally
published, comments on the nature of welfare geography, assesses
the impact of integrated approaches on the policy process and
points the way forward to geographies rather than a geography of
the national health.
This book, originally published in 1983, drawing material from
Europe, the USA, the Soviet Union and the Developing World,
provides a comprehensive review of the key issues in medical
geography. It sets the central problems of medical geography in a
broad social context as well as in a spatial one and analyses
changing conceptions of health and illness in detail. It also
explores the pathological relationship between people and their
environment and illustrates that social phenomena form spatial
patterns which provide a good starting point for the examination of
the relationship between medicine, health and society.
Social geography has been one of the most important growth areas
within the field of geography in recent decades. It has brought
within geographical analysis a wide range of new topics, such as
ethnic segregation, crime and environment and inner city problems.
First published in 1986, this edited collection surveys the field
of social geography. Using key international case studies from
across Europe, North America, Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia,
authors discuss the different trends, leading figures and issues of
concern in social geography throughout the world. This is a
comprehensive and accessible study that will be of particular
interest to students of social and human geography, urban and
environmental planning.
A significant body of theoretical and empirical studies describes
'sense of place' as an outcome of interconnected psychological,
social and environmental processes in relation to physical
place(s). Sense of place has been examined, particularly in human
geography, in terms of both the character intrinsic to a place as a
localized, bounded and material entity, and the sentiments of
attachment/detachment that humans experience and express in
relation to specific places. Scholars in a wide range of
disciplines are increasingly exploring the relationship between
place and health, and recently, the field of public health has been
encouraged to recognize sense of place as a potential contributing
factor to well-being. It is evident that over the last few decades,
sense of place has developed into a versatile construct. This
important book brings together work related to sense of place and
health, broadly defined, from the perspective of a variety of
fields and disciplines. It will give the reader an understanding of
both the range of applications of this construct within approaches
to human health as well as the breadth of research methodologies
employed in its investigation.
Christian Tourist Attractions, Mythmaking, and Identity Formation
examines a sampling of contemporary Christian tourist attractions
that position visitors as the inheritors of ancient, sacred
traditions and make claims about the truth of the historical
narratives that they promote. Rather than approaching these
attractions as sacred expressions of religious experience or as
uncontested accounts of history, the book applies recent work on
mythmaking and identity formation to argue that these presentations
of the past function as strategic discourses that serve material
concerns in the present. From an approach informed by social and
materialist theories of religion, the volume draws upon a variety
of methodological approaches that enable readers to understand the
often-bewildering array of objects, claims, demands, and activities
(not to mention the seemingly endless array of gifts and personal
items available for purchase) that appear at attractions including
Ark Encounter, the Creation Museum, the Holy Land Experience, Bible
Walk Museum, Christian Zionist tours of Israel, and the recently
opened Museum of the Bible. Discourse analysis, practice theory,
rhetorical criticism, and embodied theories of cognition help make
sense not only of the Christian tourist attractions under
examination but also of the ways that "religion" is entangled with
contemporary social, political, and economic interests more
broadly.
Much of the scientific work on environmental health research has
come from the clinical and biophysical sciences. Yet contributions
are being made from the social sciences with respect to economic
change, distributional equities, political will, public perceptions
and the social geographical challenges of the human
health-environments linkages. Offering the first comprehensive and
cohesive summary of the input from social science to this field,
this book focuses on how humans theorize their relationships to the
environment with respect to health and how these ideas are mediated
through an evaluation of risk and hazards. Most work on risk has
focused primarily on environmental problems. This book extends and
synthesizes these works for the field of human health, treating
social, economic, cultural and political context as vital. Bringing
disparate literatures from across several disciplines together with
their own applied research and experience, John Eyles and Jamie
Baxter deal with scientific uncertainty in the everyday issues
raised and question how social theories and models of the way the
world works can contribute to understanding these uncertainties.
This book is essential reading for those studying and researching
in the fields of health geography and environmental studies as well
as environmental sociology, social and applied anthropology,
environmental psychology and environmental politics.
A new edition of the classic reference will be even more useful for
collectors of 19th and 20th century Lambeth wares: it includes more
than 400 illustrations featuring designs by leading studio artists
as well as many examples by lesser-known assistants. All different
types of Doulton Lambeth wares are depicted in full color so that
collectors can identify pieces when they appear on the market.
Detailed sections on marks and monograms make it the most
comprehensive book ever published on the subject.
In much of the scholarship on Paul, activities such as speaking in
tongues, prophecy, and miracle healings are either ignored or
treated as singular occurrences. Typically, these practices are
categorized in such a way that shields Paul and his followers from
the influence of so-called paganism. In Signs, Wonders, and Gifts,
Jennifer Eyl masterfully argues that Paul did, in fact, engage in
range of divinatory and wonder-working practices that were widely
recognized and accepted across the ancient Mediterranean. Eyl
redescribes, reclassifies, and recontextualizes Paul's repertoire
vis-a-vis such widespread, similar practices. Situating these
activities within the larger framework of reciprocity that
dominated human-divine relationships in antiquity, she demonstrates
that divine powers and divine communication were bestowed as
benefactions toward Paul and his gentile followers in proportion to
their faithfulness and loyalty.
|
|