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This title is intended to assist pharmaceutical scientists in the
development of stable protein formulations during the early stages
of the product development process, providing a comprehensive
review of mechanisms and causes of protein instability in
formulation development, coverage of accelerated stability testing
methods and relevant analytical methods, and an overview of the
drug substance manufacturing process. Preformulation and the
development of traditional solutions and lyophilized formulations
frequently used for intravenous delivery and non-traditional
formulations are also addressed. Because many developments in the
field have emerged since the publication of the First Edition, this
Second Edition addresses important new patient-friendly
developments in the field, such as formulation for implantable
devices, needle-free formulation and delivery approaches, and oral
delivery of proteins.
According to a major health survey, nearly half of all Americans
have been mentally ill at some point in their lives-more than a
quarter in the last year. Can this be true? What exactly does it
mean, anyway? What's a disorder, and what's just a struggle with
real life? This lucid and incisive book cuts through both
professional jargon and polemical hot air, to describe the intense
political and intellectual struggles over what counts as a "real"
disorder, and what goes into the "DSM," the psychiatric bible. Is
schizophrenia a disorder? Absolutely. Is homosexuality? It was-till
gay rights activists drove it out of the DSM a generation ago. What
about new and controversial diagnoses? Is "social anxiety disorder"
a way of saying that it's sick to be shy, or "female sexual arousal
disorder" that it's sick to be tired? An advisor to the DSM, but
also a fierce critic of exaggerated overuse, McNally defends the
careful approach of describing disorders by patterns of symptoms
that can be seen, and illustrates how often the system medicalizes
everyday emotional life. Neuroscience, genetics, and evolutionary
psychology may illuminate the biological bases of mental illness,
but at this point, McNally argues, no science can draw a bright
line between disorder and distress. In a pragmatic and humane
conclusion, he offers questions for patients and professionals
alike to help understand, and cope with, the sorrows and
psychopathologies of everyday life.
How can we design places that fulfill urgent needs of the
community, achieve environmental justice, and inspire long-term
stewardship? By bringing community members to the table, we open up
the possibility of exchanging ideas meaningfully and transforming
places powerfully. Collaboration like this is hands-on democracy in
action. It's up close. It's personal. For decades, participatory
design practices have helped enliven neighborhoods and promote
cultural understanding. Yet, many designers still rely on the same
techniques that were developed in the 1950s and 60s. These
approaches offer predictability, but hold waning promise for
addressing current and future design challenges. Design as
Democracy: Techniques for Collective Creativity is written to
reinvigorate democratic design, providing inspiration, techniques,
and case stories for a wide range of contexts. Edited by six
leading practitioners and academics in the field of participatory
design, with nearly 50 contributors from around the world, Design
as Democracy shows how to design with communities in empowering and
effective ways. The flow of the book's nine chapters reflects the
general progression of community design process, while also
encouraging readers to search for ways that best serve their
distinct needs and the culture and geography of diverse places.
Each chapter presents a series of techniques around a theme, from
approaching the initial stages of a project, to getting to know a
community, to provoking political change through strategic
thinking. Readers may approach the book as they would a cookbook,
with recipes open to improvisation, adaptation, and being created
anew. Design as Democracy offers fresh insights for creating
meaningful dialogue between designers and communities and for
transforming places with justice and democracy in mind.
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Mr. Bluebeard (Paperback)
Frederic Solomon; Created by John Cheever Goodwin, John J. McNally
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R344
Discovery Miles 3 440
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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A Grandfather's perspective on bringing up children to have a
strong sense of the difference between right and wrong and thereby
enable them to have Integrity and understand the meaning of
Accountability. Our country is in the grip of an epidemic of
corruption. The leadership in the United Staes of America has
neither the intestinal fortitude or interest to stop it. This
should come as no surprise when, for instance, our government
leaders are crafting an Ethics Bill directed to stopping themselves
from participating in Insider Trading. They had excluded themselves
from prosecution for participating in this corrupt practice when
they passed the original Insider Trading Bill When our children
become fully fledged grown up citizens with strong Integrity and a
knowledge of the meaning of Accountability, we can look forward to
a sea change in society insofar as to what it accepts as the norm
for ethics and the way we lead our lives. Our country will then
change for the better and become a happier place to live in.
Are horrific experiences indelibly fixed in a victim's memory? Or
does the mind protect itself by banishing traumatic memories from
consciousness? How victims remember trauma is the most
controversial issue in psychology today, spilling out of consulting
rooms and laboratories to capture headlines, rupture families,
provoke legislative change, and influence criminal trials and civil
suits. This book, by a clinician who is also a laboratory
researcher, is the first comprehensive, balanced analysis of the
clinical and scientific evidence bearing on this issue--and the
first to provide definitive answers to the urgent questions at the
heart of the controversy.
Synthesizing clinical case reports and the vast research
literature on the effects of stress, suggestion, and trauma on
memory, Richard McNally arrives at significant conclusions, first
and foremost that traumatic experiences are indeed unforgettable.
Though people sometimes do not think about disturbing experiences
for long periods of time, traumatic events rarely slip from
awareness for very long; furthermore, McNally reminds us, failure
to think about traumas--such as early sexual abuse--must not be
confused with amnesia or an inability to remember them. In fact,
the evidence for repressed memories of trauma--or even for
repression at all--is surprisingly weak.
A magisterial work of scholarship, panoramic in scope and
nonpartisan throughout, this unfailingly lucid work will prove
indispensable to anyone seeking to understand how people remember
trauma.
Dr. McNally critically examines well over 150 years of Oblate and
general Catholic history in Canada's western-most province with
special emphasis on the Native people and Euro-Canadian settlers.
It is the first survey history of the Catholic Church in British
Columbia.
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