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Paediatrics: A Clinical Guide for Nurse Practitioners is a concise,
pragmatic and clinically focused text that outlines important
components to be considered when assessing and managing health
problems among infants, children and adolescents. It provides nurse
practitioners with information that has immediate relevance to
their practice in paediatrics, and brings together the expertise of
advanced paediatric nurse practitioners, paediatric specialist
nurses, and other paediatric professionals. Part One (Clinical
Issues in Paediatrics) contains practical information pertaining to
a variety of subjects that are intrinsic to paediatric advanced
nursing practice. Part Two (Common Paediatric Problems) outlines
the clinical assessment, diagnosis and management of ambulatory
conditions that are often encountered, assessed and/or managed by
nurse practitioners. This will be a 'bible' for competent
practise.Quick reference format that is easy to read and ideally
suited as a paediatric guideline text in busy clinical areas
'Paediatric Pearls' that highlight important information and key
tips for each topic An overview of the important paediatric issues
for the generically trained nurse practitioner A special section on
care of the adolescent The clinical expertise of over 50
contributors addressing ambulatory paediatric complaints
A richly reported and provocative look at the history of women's
sports and the controversy surrounding trans athletes by a leading
LGBTQ+ sports journalist. For decades women have been playing
competitive sports thanks in large part to the protective cover of
Title IX. Since passage of that law, the number of women
participating in sports and the level of competition in high
school, college, and professionally, has risen dramatically. In
Fair Play, award-winning journalist Katie Barnes traces the
evolution of women's sports as a pastime and a political arena,
where equality and fairness have been fought over for generations.
As attitudes toward gender have shifted to embrace more fluidity in
recent decades, sex continues to be viewed as a static binary that
is easily determined: male or female. It is on that very idea of
static sex that we have built an entire sporting apparatus. Now
that foundation is crumbling as a result of intense culture wars.
Whether we are talking about bathrooms, gender affirming care for
trans youth, or sports, the debate about who gets to decide gender
is being litigated every day in every community. Many transgender
and intersex athletes, from a South African runner, to a New
Zealand power lifter, to a wrestler in Texas, to Connecticut track
stars, have captured the attention of law and policy makers who
want to decide how and when they compete. Women's sports, since
their inception, have been seen as a separate class of competition
that requires protection and rules for entry. But what are those
rules and who gets to make them? Fair Play looks at all sides of
the issue and presents a reasoned and much-needed solution that
seeks to preserve opportunities for all going forward.
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