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This handbook for practitioners in environmental and public health,
environmental management, toxicology and ecotoxicology has been
prepared by an international group of experts from both developing
and developed countries and covers a wide range of topics in both
environmental impact assessment and environmental health impact
assessment.
Provides clinical descriptions, diagnostic guidelines, and codes
for all mental and behavioural disorders commonly encountered in
clinical psychiatry. The book was developed from chapter V of the
Tenth Revision of the International Statistical Classification of
Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10). The clinical
descriptions and diagnostic guidelines were finalized after field
testing by over 700 clinicians and researchers in 110 institutes in
40 countries, making this book the product of the largest ever
research effort designed to improve psychiatric diagnosis. Every
effort has been made to define categories whose existence is
scientifically justifiable as well as clinically useful. The
classification divides disorders into ten groups according to major
common themes or descriptive likeness, a new feature which makes
for increased convenience of use. For each disorder, the book
provides a full description of the main clinical features and all
other important but less specific associated features. Diagnostic
guidelines indicate the number, balance, and duration of symptoms
usually required before a confident diagnosis can be made.Inclusion
and exclusion criteria are also provided, together with conditions
to be considered in differential diagnosis. The guidelines are
worded so that a degree of flexibility is retained for diagnostic
decisions in clinical work, particularly in the situation where
provisional diagnosis may have to be made before the clinical
picture is entirely clear or information is complete. "...As
befitting a publication of considerable influence, the amount of
work that went into preparing ICD-10 has been formidable..." - The
International Journal of Social Psychiatry
This book describes a unique study on the usefulness of
benzodiazepine tranquilizers given in conjunction with and compared
to therapeutic counselling for the treatment of minor psychiatric
disorders. International collaboration under the sponsorship of the
WHO made this first cross-cultural comparative study possible.
Important methodological findings about measurement instruments, as
well as data about the effects of different treatments, resulted
from the study. It also demonstrated the possibility of using
quantitative scientific methods to measure milder forms of
psychiatric disorders and their changes.
The second edition of this popular textbook provides an
introduction to the principles and methods of epidemiology. Since
publication of the first edition in 1993, Basic epidemiology has
become a standard reference for education, training and research in
the field of public health and has been translated into more than
25 languages. It is used widely, for training public health and
environment professionals, undergraduate medical students, and
students in other health professions. The second edition provides
updated examples of how and why the basics of epidemiology are
essential to anyone who is required to understand and apply the
principles of disease causation and prevention. The book has a
particular emphasis on modifiable environmental factors and
encourages the application of epidemiology to the prevention of
disease and the promotion of health, including environmental and
occupational health. It prepares members of the health-related
professions to respond to the need for health services to address
all aspects of the health of populations, and to ensure that health
resources are used to the best possible effect. It shows how good
clinical practice is informed by clinical epidemiology; and its
lively, concise style is designed to stimulate a continuing
interest in the subject. This edition includes comprehensive
chapters on the nature and uses of epidemiology; the
epidemiological approach to defining and measuring the occurrence
of health-related states in populations; the strengths and
limitations of epidemiological study designs, causation, the
contribution of epidemiology to the prevention of disease, the
promotion of health and the development of health policy, and the
role of epidemiology in evaluating the effectiveness and efficiency
of health care. It enables students to describe the common causes
of death, disease and disability in her or his community; outline
appropriate study designs to answer specific questions concerning
disease causation, natural history, prognosis, prevention, and the
evaluation of therapy and other interventions to control disease,
and critically evaluate the literature.
A triaxial system (Axis I--Clinical diagnoses, Axis
II--Disabilities, Axis III--Contextual factors) is intended for use
in clinical, educational and research activities. It aims to ensure
that disabilities and factors relevant to the management of a
mentally ill patient's condition are systematically recorded. It
has been prepared and trialed by an international team of experts
and has proven easy to use, helpful and applicable to a wide range
of cultures and settings. This comprehensive manual provides
information on the development of the ICD-10 multiaxial system and
describes its structure and use. It details ICD-10 categories for
each axis of the system as well as instruments and instructions for
their application. The instruments include the ICD-10 multiaxial
diagnostic formulation form, WHO short disability assessment
schedule (SHO DAS-S) and Axis III checklist.
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Compendium of food additive specifications (Paperback)
Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives, Food and Agriculture Organization, World Health Organization; Contributions by John C Larsen
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These specifications provide information on the identity and purity
of food additives used directly in foods or in food production. The
main objectives are to identify the food additives that have been
subjected to testing for safety, to ensure that the additives are
of the quality required for use in food or in processing, and to
reflect and encourage good manufacturing practice. This publication
and other documents produced by JECFA are is useful to all those
who work with or are interested in food additives and their safe
use in food.
Lipid-based ready-to-use foods (RUFs) for the nutritional
management of moderate acute malnutrition (MAM) and severe acute
malnutrition (SAM) are provided to children from 6 months to 59
months of age within the context of emergency feeding programmes
supervised by governments. Based on the review, the expert
committee considered that children with SAM have an increase in
susceptibility to bacteraemia and sepsis that is probably between
twofold and fivefold compared with children who are not
malnourished and are of the same age and live in the same
communities. On the basis of its common occurrence as a cause of
infections and serious illnesses in children with SAM, and its
documented ability to contaminate, survive in, and cause outbreaks
of illness associated with low-moisture foods similar to RUFs, the
expert committee concluded that Salmonella is the pathogen of most
concern in lipid-based RUFs. Many outbreaks of foodborne
salmonellosis have been determined to be associated with
low-moisture foods that were contaminated at low levels. Therefore,
the expert committee carefully considered the qualitative
microbiological analyses of RUFs and the contamination levels that
could be inferred, and entered into an extended deliberation of
dose-response modelling to find a path toward a reasonable
approximation of the likely morbidity and mortality in SAM children
that could be anticipated from consumption of RUFs contaminated at
the estimated levels and observed frequency. The expert committee
described three approaches that purchasers of RUFs might use to
establish microbiological criteria to assure the safety of RUFs and
to communicate to manufacturers their safety expectations. These
approaches are: (i) reference to existing standards established for
similar low-moisture foods; (ii) determining an acceptable increase
in risk over the pre-existing baseline of illness from other
sources of exposure; and (iii) process verification sampling using
the moving window technique. The microbiological criteria derived
by each of these approaches accomplish different purposes, and
which is most appropriate is determined by the conditions of
manufacture and use
The longstanding debate over the optimal duration of exclusive
breastfeeding has centered on the so-called "weanling's dilemma" in
developing countries: the choice between the known protective
effect of exclusive breastfeeding against infectious morbidity and
the (theoretical) insufficiency of breast milk alone to satisfy the
infant's energy and micronutrient requirements beyond 4 months of
age. The primary objective of this review is to assess the effects
on child health, growth, and development, and on maternal health,
of exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months vs exclusive breastfeeding
for 3-4 months with mixed breastfeeding (introduction of
complementary liquid or solid foods with continued breastfeeding)
thereafter through 6 months.
Sets out internationally agreed diagnostic criteria specifically
designed for use when conducting research on mental and behavioral
disorders. Deliberately restrictive, the criteria are intended to
facilitate the selection of groups of individuals whose symptoms
and other characteristics resemble each other in clearly stated
ways, and thus to maximize the homogeneity of study groups and the
comparability of findings in multi-centre and international
studies. The book, which covers over 300 disorders, is derived from
chapter V(F) of the Tenth Revision of the International Statistical
Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10).
The research criteria were developed in collaboration with the
world's leading experts and finalized after testing by researchers
and clinicians in 32 countries, representing all the major
traditions and schools of psychiatry. Descriptions of clinical
concepts upon which the research criteria are based are contained
in the companion volume "Clinical Descriptions and Diagnostic
Guidelines." For each disorder, criteria are labeled with letters
or numbers to indicate their place in a hierarchy of generality and
importance. This hierarchy includes general criteria, which must be
fulfilled by all members of a group of disorders, obligatory
criteria for individual disorders, and further groups and
sub-groups of characteristics, of which only some are required for
the diagnosis. Where appropriate, the most commonly used exclusion
clause is also listed. A number of disorders of uncertain or
provisional status are described in two annexes. The first covers
affective disorders that have been the subject of recent research,
together with certain personality disorders. The second describes
several disorders that seem to appear almost exclusively in
particular cultures.
Diagnosis within psychiatry involves the consideration of a number
of different features of mental state. In making a diagnosis,
individual psychiatrists inevitably accord differing importance to
certain features. By regulating the order and number of conditions
to be recorded, a multiaxial framework provides for internationally
comparable descriptions of mental state. This volume provides the
psychiatric sections of ICD10 in a form that is adapted for ease of
use of those dealing with mental disorders in childhood and
adolescence. Descriptions have been grouped into axes which have
been chosen to provide unambiguous information of maximum clinical
usefulness in the greatest number of cases. Building on the popular
original framework of four axes, the system has been greatly
improved by the inclusion of a new axis for psychosocial situations
and by the addition of a further sixth axis on adaptive level which
enables clinicians to code an individual's current level of
disability.
In making a diagnosis, individual psychiatrists inevitably accord differing importance to various features in a patient's history. By regulating the order and number of conditions to be recorded, a multiaxial framework provides for internationally comparable descriptions of mental state. This volume provides the psychiatric sections of ICD-10 in a form that is adapted for ease of use by those dealing with mental disorders in childhood and adolescence. Descriptions have been grouped into axes that have been chosen to provide unambiguous information of maximum clinical usefulness in the greatest number of cases. Building on the popular original framework of four axes, the system has been greatly improved by the inclusion of a new axis for psychosocial situations and by the addition of yet another axis on adaptive level that enables clinicians to code an individual's current level of disability.
THIS IS THE LARGE PRINT VERSION OF "ICF" FOR THE VISUALLY
IMPAIRED"International Classification of Functioning " (ICF) is a
classification of health and health-related domains that provides a
standard language for describing how people live with their health
condition. It covers body functions and structures, activities and
participation, from both individual and societal perspectives. The
"ICF" puts the notions of health and disability in a new light.
Disability is not something that only happens to a minority of
humanity. It acknowledges that every human being can undergo a
decrement in health and thereby experience some degree of
disability. The "ICF" thus mainstreams the experience of disability
and recognizes it as a universal human experience. By shifting the
focus from cause to impact, it places all health conditions on an
equal footing allowing them to be compared using a common metric
the ruler of health and disability. Furthermore, "ICF" takes into
account the social aspects of disability and does not see
disability only as medical or biological dysfunction. It also takes
into account the impact of the environment on the person's
functioning. "ICF" is useful in understanding and measuring health
outcomes. It can be used in clinical settings, health services or
surveys at the individual or population level.In view of the
differing needs of different types of users, "ICF" is presented in
multiple formats and versions: ICF Full VersionA conclusive volume
with glossary definitions and full list of codes including all
details. Available in all official WHO languages (Arabic, Chinese,
English, French, Russian and Spanish).ICF Pocket VersionThe pocket
size version contains main 2 level codes (max. 99 per list) for
practical purposes.ICF on CD-ROMThe CD-ROM includes ICF in 6
official WHO and other languages and provides the following
functionality: 1. Allows browsing the classification in its tree
structure2. Can display two languages at the same time3. Provides
advanced search functions4. Cross-references via hyperlinks5.
Allows the user to select and work on subsets of the classification
6. Internet based upgrading facility which allows incorporating
future modifications in the classification and additional language
versions7. Allows user to send comments and feedback to WHO ICF
Full version in Large Print (for the visually impaired)"
This volume distills what is known about environmental health
during an emergency or disaster. It draws on results from the
International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction, and on
experience with sustainable development between the two Earth
Summits, in Rio de Janeiro and Johannesburg. It is intended for
practitioners, as well as for policy-makers and researchers, and
thus covers both general and technical aspects of environmental
health. In Part I of this volume, a conceptual framework is
presented for understanding environmental health issues in the
context of disaster management. The framework covers the entire
disaster-management cycle, from preparedness and warning, to
recovery and prevention. Guidelines are also suggested for planning
and reducing the effects of extreme events on public health, and
practical guidance is given in organizational and logistical
matters. Throughout, the need for flexibility and innovation at the
local level is emphasized, combined with solid advance planning.
There is also a focus on the vulnerability of populations during an
emergency or disaster, with the implication that such people have
capacities and local knowledge that should be integrated into
efforts to secure both environment and development against extreme
events. The creative potential of balancing "top-down" and
"bottom-up" approaches is emphasized in chapters on health
promotion and community participation, and on human resources. Part
II of this book is a detailed compendium of best practices and
strategies for risk reduction and response in the fields of: *
Shelter and emergency settlements; * Water supply; * Sanitation; *
Food safety; * Vector and pest control; * Control of communicable
diseases and prevention of epidemics; * Chemical incidents; *
Radiation emergencies; * Mortuary service and handling of the dead;
* Health promotion and community participation; and * Human
resources. This book will be useful in planning for, responding to,
and recovering from the movements of displaced persons and refugees
in humanitarian crises, as well as the floods, storms, earthquakes
and other extreme events that could confront health workers in the
first decade of the 21st century. Given trends in the 1990s, it is
unlikely that humanity has seen the last of these challenges.
This book provides a collection of ten protocols for conducting
rapid health assessments in the immediate aftermath of different
types of emergencies. Noting the vital importance of rapid and
accurate information in the earliest stage of an emergency, the
protocols respond to the urgent need for common standardized
technical tools for assessing damage, gauging health risks, and
gathering the information immediately needed by decision-makers at
the national and international level. The protocols were prepared
by WHO in collaboration with a large number of international
agencies and experts with broad experience in the field of
emergency management. Although all protocols follow a common
format, each is specific to the circumstances, potential hazards,
and immediate information needs that characterize a distinct type
of emergency. Emphasis is placed on the exact information needed,
the best sources of data and methods for rapid collection, and the
specific questions that need to be answered in order to draw
initial conclusions and direct immediate actions.Although the
advantages of using experienced assessments teams are stressed, the
book also explains how the protocols can be used to train general
health workers as part of emergency preparedness. The book opens
with an introductory protocol covering the aims and methods,
responsibilities, complexities, and inherent difficulties of rapid
health assessments. Addressed to health authorities as well as
assessment teams, the chapter also includes abundant advice on
preparedness for emergencies. Details range from the comparative
need for speed in different types of emergencies, through a
suggested format for presenting the results of assessments, to a
list of common logistic, organizational, and technical errors.
Advice on the best working practices, including ways to avoid being
an "emergency tourist", is also provided. Against this background,
the additional nine protocols are presented according to a common
format which covers the purpose of the assessment, preparedness,
the steps to follow during the assessment, assessing the impact on
health, assessing local response capacity and immediate needs, and
presenting results.A general protocol on epidemics of infectious
origin is followed by protocols specific to meningitis outbreaks,
outbreaks of viral haemorrhagic fever, including yellow fever, and
outbreaks of acute diarrhoeal disease, with information specific to
dysentery and cholera. Sudden-impact natural disasters are covered
in the next protocol, which includes a day-by-day list of
information priorities for different stages of the disaster. A
protocol dealing with sudden population displacements offers
guidelines for conducting rapid health assessments in all
emergencies caused by sudden displacement of refugees or population
groups within a country. Included are a sample checklist for rapid
assessments and a sample form for weekly reports on morbidity and
mortality. Subsequent protocols deal with the special situations of
nutritional emergencies and chemical emergencies, including those
caused by food contaminated with chemicals or toxins. The final
protocol addresses the difficult task of conducting assessments in
complex emergencies in which the cause of the emergency, as well as
the assistance to the afflicted, is complicated by intense levels
of political considerations.The protocol includes a form which has
recently been used for rapid health assessment at local level in
Bosnia and Herzegovnia. The book concludes with a brief summary of
survey techniques, followed by a tabular presentation of reference
values for assessing needs, hazards, and logistic requirements in
developing countries.
The monographs in this volume summarize the safety data on 11
pesticides that could leave residues in food commodities. These
pesticides are aminopyralid, atrazine, azinphos methyl,
lamba-cyhalothrin, difenoconazole, dimethomorph, flusilazole,
procymidone, profenofos, pyrimethanil and zoxamide. The data
summarized in the toxicological monographs served as the basis for
the acceptable daily intakes and acute reference doses that were
established by the Meeting.This volume and previous volumes of JMPR
toxicological evaluations, many of which were published in the "FAO
Plant Production and Protection Paper" series, contain information
that is useful to companies that produce pesticides, government
regulatory officers, industrial testing laboratories, toxicological
laboratories and universities.
A systematic authoritative classification of the many procedures
used in different branches of medicine. Chapters cover procedures
for medical diagnosis laboratory procedures preventive procedures
surgical operations other therapeutic procedures and ancillary
procedures. The volume, which follows the structure and system of
coding used in the International Classification of Diseases,
includes a tabular list of procedures followed by a detailed
alphabetical index.
A triaxial system (Axis I--Clinical diagnoses, Axis
II--Disabilities, Axis III--Contextual factors) is intended for use
in clinical, educational and research activities. It aims to ensure
that disabilities and factors relevant to the management of a
mentally ill patient's condition are systematically recorded. It
has been prepared and trialed by an international team of experts
and has proven easy to use, helpful and applicable to a wide range
of cultures and settings. This comprehensive manual provides
information on the development of the ICD-10 multiaxial system and
describes its structure and use. It details ICD-10 categories for
each axis of the system as well as instruments and instructions for
their application. The instruments include the ICD-10 multiaxial
diagnostic formulation form, WHO short disability assessment
schedule (SHO DAS-S) and Axis III checklist.
Diese definitive Anleitung wurde von Grund auf uberarbeitet und auf
den neuesten Stand gebracht fur alle Laboratorien, die sich mit der
Analyse des menschlichen Ejakulates beschaftigen. Das Handbuch
liefert fundamentale Labortechniken fur die Diagnose der mannlichen
Infertilitat. Der Text beschreibt die Zusammenstellung eines
konventionellen Samenprofils anhand von standardisierten
Protokollen fur verschiedene fakultative diagnostische Verfahren.
Solche Techniken sind unentbehrlich fur die Evaluierung infertiler
Paare sowie der Fertilitat von Mannern, deren Spermienproduktion
durch potentielle mannliche Kontrazeptiva oder toxische Substanzen
unterdruckt wird. Auch fur die Gerichtsmedizin und kunstliche
Insemination sind sie von Interesse. Vorangehende Auflagen dieses
Manuals haben sich auf dem Gebiet der Erforschung und Behandlung
der mannlichen Fertilitat etabliert; diese Neuauflage fuhrt diese
Tradition fort und wird als Standard fur zukunftige strengere
Massstabe dienen."
This annual edition presents the most recent statistics of over 50
health indicators for WHO's 193 Member States. It includes an
expanded set of core statistics and a section with 10 highlights in
global health statistics for the past year. This book has been
collated from publications and databases of WHO's technical
programmes and regional offices. The core set of indicators was
selected on the basis of relevance for global health, availability
and quality of data, and accuracy and comparability of estimates.
The statistics for the indicators are based on an interactive
process of data collection, compilation, quality assessment, and
estimation between WHO technical programmes and its Member States.
In this process, WHO strives to maximize accessibility, accuracy,
comparability, and transparency of country health statistics. In
addition to national statistics, this publication presents
statistics on the distribution of selected health outcomes and
interventions within countries, disaggregated by gender, age,
urban/rural setting, wealth/assets, and educational level. Such
statistics are primarily derived from the analysis of household
surveys and are only available for a limited number of countries.
Adherence to therapies is a primary determinant of treatment
success. Poor adherence attenuates optimum clinical benefits and
therefore reduces the overall effectiveness of health systems.
Medicines will not work if you do not take them. Medicines will not
be effective if patients do not follow prescribed treatment - yet
in developed countries only 50% of patients who suffer from chronic
diseases adhere to treatment recommendations. In developing
countries, when taken together with poor access to health care,
lack of appropriate diagnosis, and limited access to medicines,
poor adherence is threatening to render futile any effort to tackle
chronic conditions such as diabetes, depression and HIV/AIDS. This
report is based on an exhaustive review of the published literature
on the definitions, measurements, epidemiology, economics, and
interventions applied to nine chronic conditions and their risk
factors. These are: asthma, cancer (palliative care), depression,
diabetes, epilepsy, HIV/AIDS, hypertension, tobacco smoking, and
tuberculosis. Intended for clinical practitioners, health managers
and policy-makers, this report provides a concise summary of the
consequences of poor adherence for health and economics. It also
discusses the options available for improving adherence, and
demonstrates the potential impact on desired health outcomes and
health care budgets. It is hoped that this report will lead to new
thinking on policy development, and action on adherence to
long-term therapies.
Reference to Medical Technology and Radiation Medicine, including
radiatiion dosage, protection, quality control and adverse effect
levels; a manual of radiography standards.
WHO in collaboration with the International Commission for
Radiologic Education (ICRE) of the International Society of
Radiology (ISR) and the other members of the Global Steering Group
for Education and Training in Diagnostic Imaging is creating a
series of "Manuals of Diagnostic Imaging." The full series of
manuals will primarily cover the examination techniques and
interpretation of conventional diagnostic X-ray procedures. These
manuals will replace and update the WHO Manual of Radiographic
Interpretation for General Practitioners and the WHO Manual of
Radiographic Technique.The present volume in this series, the
manual Radiographic Anatomy and Interpretation of the
Musculoskeletal System, provides an exhaustive description of
radiographic normal anatomy as well as pathologic changes most
frequently seen in musculoskeletal system including trauma,
infections in bone and joints, metabolic, endocrine, and toxic
disorders, tumours, congenital and developmental disorders. Backed
by high-quality reproduction of radiographs, this manual will prove
essential reading to general practitioners, medical specialists,
radiographers and radiologists in any medical settings, although
focusing specifically on needs in small and mid-size hospitals.
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