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Complications: A Surgeon's Notes on an Imperfect Science

by Atul Gawande

A surgeon writes about some of his most interesting patients.

Your Sixth Sense

by Belleruth Naparstek

activating your psychic ability

The Sensory Processing Disorder Answer Book: Practical Answers to the Top 250 Questions Parents Ask

by Tara Delaney

The Sensory Processing Disorder Answer Book provides advice and answers to your most pressing questions about SPD. Written in a question and answer format, The Sensory Processing Disorder Answer Book helps you understand SPD, conquer your fears, and seek help for your child when necessary.

An Unbreakable Cycle:Drug Dependency Treatment, Mandatory Confinement, and HIV/AIDS in China’s Guangxi Province

by Human Rights Watch

In China, illicit drug use is an administrative offense and Chinese law dictates that drug users "must be rehabilitated." In reality, police raids on drug users often drive them underground, away from methadone clinics, needle exchange sites, and other proven HIV prevention services. And every year Chinese police send tens of thousands of drug users to mandatory drug treatment centers, often for years, without trial or due process. This report finds that most mandatory treatment centers, while ostensibly meant to provide drug treatment, do not actually offer forms of drug dependence treatment internationally recognized as effective. Mostly, drug users are forced to work or to spend their days in crowded cells little different from prisons.

Future Forsaken: Abuses Against Children Affected by HIV/AIDS in India

by Human Rights Watch

This 209-page report documents how many doctors refuse to treat or even touch HIV-positive children. Some schools expel or segregate children because they or their parents are HIV-positive. Many orphanages and other residential institutions reject HIV-positive children or deny that they house them. Children from families affected by AIDS may be denied an education, pushed onto the street, forced into the worst forms of child labor, or otherwise exploited, all of which puts them at greater risk of contracting HIV.

Suffering in Silence: The Links between Human Rights Abuses and HIV Transmission to Girls in Zambia

by Human Rights Watch

Sexual abuse of girls in Zambia fuels the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the strikingly higher HIV prevalence among girls than boys, Human Rights Watch said today. Concerted national and international efforts to protect the rights of girls and young women are key to curbing the AIDS epidemic's destructive course.

Against Her Will

by Ronald J. Watkins

Richard and Victoria Tinyes feared the worst when their thirteen-year-old daughter Kelly Ann vanished from their quiet suburban community of Valley Stream, New York on March 3, 1989. But the nightmare to come was worse than they could ever imagine. Only five doors away, in the home of John and Elizabeth Golub, police found Kelly Ann's body stuffed in a plastic garbage bag. She'd been brutally beaten, stabbed, strangled and mutilated. After weeks of intense investigation, police arrested the Golubs' twenty-one-year--old son. Robert--a reclusive young man obsessed with bodybuilding and given to fits of rage. The sensational trial and subsequent conviction of Robert Golub shocked the nation and tore the once-peaceful community apart. Neighbors took sides. So did the media. And no one who lived on Horton Road would ever be the same.

Ice Bound: A Doctor's Incredible Battle for Survival at the South Pole

by Jerri Nielsen Maryanne Vollers

Dr. Jerri Nielsen accepts an assignment as a physician for the American research base in Antarctica. This is the story of her discovery that she has breast cancer, and a risky air lift of Nielsen for treatment.

If Only They Could Talk

by James Herriot

Animal stories from a vet's perspective.

Pasteur and Modern Science

by Rene Dubos

This is a fresh account of the extraordinary life of Louis Pasteur, and the monumental impact he had on biochemistry, microbiology, bacteriology and immunology.

Protecting America's Health: The FDA, Business, and One Hundred Years of Regulation

by Philip J. Hilts

The history of the operation of the Food and Drug Administration

Alex: The Life of a Child

by Frank Deford

Frank DeFord tells the heartbreaking, yet uplifting story of his daughter Alex's brief life. She died of cystic fibrosis at the age of eight.

Final Epidemic

by Earl Merkel

Causes: Unknown. At first, they thought it was a cold or maybe the flu. Then people started dropping where they stood. Symptoms: Unthinkable. It could kill in hours. There was no known cure, no vaccine, and the only antidote could kill millions.

Confessions of a Sin Eater: A Doctor's Reflections

by Therese Zink

Dr. Therese Zink, teacher, clinician and researcher, explores the burden, mystery and privilege of doctoring. As a family physician, the act of listening and holding stories is a vital part of healing for both the patients and the healer. In this collection, Dr. Zink shares stories she gathered while caring for patients in a domestic violence shelter, on the Navajo reservation, in Nazran, Ingushetia (Russia), on mission trips in Latin America and in her clinic in rural Minnesota. Confessions of a Sin Eater lays bare the human heart of the author and reveals the best and worst of our journeys as humans. Discussion questions are included.

Death Rounds (Dr. Earl Garnet #2)

by Peter Clement

Medical thriller

The Persecuted Drug: The Story of DMSO

by Pat Mcgrady

DMSO remains a truly amazing substance. It is a versatile solvent; it probably will dissolve more chemicals than any other solvent. It penetrates the skin and is in the bloodstream within seconds; and it carries many dissolved chemicals with it. It freezes at a couple of degrees below room temperature. As a runoff product of the paper industry, it is abundant and should be cheap. (With inflation and the middleman's profits, its price during the last half-dozen years has multiplied thirty fold. But considering its many uses, it still is cheap at the current $10 a pint.)

Bloodborne Pathogens: Provider Handbook

by Dr Karl Disque

Welcome to the Save a Life Initiative: Bloodborne Pathogens Course. This course is intended to help you prepare to address the health concerns inherent in caring for others and the possible damage the microscopic world can inflict. Unlike traditional academic curricula, you will learn actionable ways to practice and prepare for the bacteria and pathogens you may encounter in your career. If you become exposed to bloodborne pathogens, you will have the knowledge to reduce the chances of disease transmission and protect others, including co-workers and patients, from possible infection. This course consists of the materials and information necessary to protect yourself and those around you from being exposed to blood or blood-containing items that you may come into contact with throughout the course of your job. This training may be required as part of your training for bloodborne pathogens by your employer. In addition, such training is required annually by the Occupational and Safety Health Administration (OSHA). Your employer will provide you with additional training, which will be referred to as an Exposure Control Plan (ECP), on bloodborne pathogens as indicated by your role and responsibilities in your organization. This course is written by Dr. Karl F. Disque, a board certified anesthesiologist and registered pharmacist. Dr. Disque has certified thousands of healthcare professionals with his courses in CPR, AED, and First Aid, Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS), Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS), and Basic Life Support (BLS). This is one of the most effective and user-friendly training manuals on the market because it was created by a team dedicated to life support education with the goal of training people to help save lives. This manual is the primary training material for certification courses provided by National Health Care Provider Solutions (www.nhcps.com).

Hypnotherapy

by Dave Elman

Classic work by a professional hypnotist who, for many years, taught physicians and other professionals the use of hypnosis.

Eminent Victorians

by Lytton Strachey

4 biographical essays first published in 1918.

An Indecent Obsession

by Colleen McCullough

To the battle-broken soldiers in her care, nurse Honour Langtry is a precious, adored reminder of the world before war. Then Michael Wilson arrives under a cloud of mystery and shame to change everything.

Over My Head

by Claudia L. Osborn

From the Book: A Doctor's own story of head injury from the inside looking out.

CareMore Health System

by Robert S. Huckman Brian W. Powers

CareMore Health System—a physician-founded care delivery system and health plan—had developed and refined an innovative care model for at-risk seniors enrolled in Medicare managed care (i.e., Medicare Advantage) plans. CareMore's President, Sachin Jain, and his colleagues believed their model achieved the elusive goal of improving outcomes while reducing costs. A key mandate for Jain was to scale the CareMore model beyond its current 75,000 Medicare Advantage members in California, Arizona, Nevada, and Virginia. One approach to scaling was to maintain a focus on Medicare Advantage but expand into new geographic markets. Alternatively, CareMore could focus on serving new populations. For example, CareMore had recently started serving Medicaid (i.e., younger, low-income) patients in Tennessee and Iowa. This case allows for a discussion of whether diversifying to serve these new populations was the key to ensuring CareMore’s successful growth or a distraction from its core competency of caring for seniors.

Ego States: Theory and Therapy

by John G. Watkins Helen H. Watkins

Describes techniques of brief hypnoanalysis that the authors have developed based largely on the psychoanalytic ego psychology of Paul Federn.

Il Dottore: The Double Life of a Mafia Doctor

by Ron Felber

Il Dottore is based on the true story of a Jewish kid from the Bronx, who, through a series of circumstances, became a mafia insider and physician to top New York Mafia Dons such as John Gotti, Carlo Gambino, Paul Castellano, and Joe Bonanno. As a result, the doctor began leading a double life: a well respected surgeon (then working at Manhattan's Mount Sinai Hospital) and socialite by day, and Il Dottore, a gambling and sex addict by night. As a result of his relationship to the mafia, the doctor was welcomed into an exciting and often glamorous underworld, which included disco, drugs, high-stakes gambling, and, of course, beautiful women.

Aetna and the Transformation of Health Care

by Rebecca Henderson Russell A. Eisenstat Matthew Preble

Mark Bertolini, chairman and CEO of the health insurer Aetna, faces a number of questions as he seeks to transform Aetna from a classic insurance company into a business that will engage much more deeply with its members around their personal health goals. His strategy depends on Aetna’s ability to facilitate behavioral changes amongst its members to live healthier lives and requires very significant investments in digital capabilities and on-the-ground community-orientated health care resources. Will it work? Can he implement it? The case explores both the strategic issues inherent in this potential transformation and the organizational and leadership questions that it raises. Bertolini is a highly purpose-driven leader, and the case allows for a rich discussion of the degree to which this changes both his strategic and his organizational options.

Juiced: Wild Times, Rampant 'Roids, Smash Hits, and How Baseball Got Big

by Jose Canseco

A star of Major League Baseball tells the story of wide-spread use of steroids throughout the sport.

The Double Edged Helix: Social Implications of Genetics in a Diverse Society

by Adrienne Asch Jon Beckwith Peter Conrad Lisa N. Geller Joseph Alper Catherine Ard

The authors address the medical and ethical implications of the new technologies, outlining potential positive and negative effects of genetic research on minorities, people with disabilities, and those of diverse sexual orientations. Presenting a wide array of perspectives, this book emphasizes the need to ensure that research into genetics does not result in discrimination against people on the basis of their DNA.

Some Choice: Law, Medicine, and the Market

by George J. Annas

The authors goal is to help open a deep and democratic dialogue on health and human rights that trancends slogans and chants, and can lead to local, national, and international cooperation to define, protect, and promote both health and human rights.

Coping with Endometriosis

by Glenda Motta Robert H. Phillips

Sound, Compassionate Advice for Alleviating the Physical and Emotional Symptoms of This Frequently Misunderstood Illness

In the Shadow of Illness

by Myra Bluebond-Langner

What is it like to live with a child who has a chronic, life-threatening disease? What impact does the illness have on well siblings in the family? The author suggests that understanding the impact of the illness lies not in the identifying deficiencies in the lives of those affected, but in appreciating how family members carry on with their lives in the face of the disease's intrusion. She looks at how parents adjust their priorities and their idea of what constitutes a normal life, how they try to balance the needs of other family members while caring for the ill child, and how they see the future. Since the issues raised are not unique to cystic fibrosis but are common to other chronic and life-threatening illnesses, this book will be of interst to all who study, care for, or live with the seriously ill.

Fertility, Cycles and Nutrition

by Marilyn M. Shannon

How your diet affects your menstrual cycles and fertility.

Breaking the Vicious Circle: Toward Effective Risk Regulation

by Stephen Breyer

Reprinted lectures and thoughts from a United States Supreme Court justice.

Non-Sighted and Sighted Adults' Volumetric Perceptions of Functional Objects

by T. M. Nelson C. J. Ladan J. Epps

A report on the study of the manner in which sighted, sighted-but-blindfolded, late-blind (subsequent to 7 years of age), and congenitally blind (blind since birth) persons employ physical parameters in determining weight and volume of functional objects.

Retrolental Fibroplasia and Autistic Symptomatology: An Investigation into Some Relationships Among Neonatal, Environmental, Developmental and Affective Variables in Blind Prematures

by Joan B. Chase

In this monograph, based on a study of 263 subjects with RLF (Retrolental Fibroplasia-- an eye condition caused by excessive incubator oxygen), the author examines selected variables which may significantly affect subsequent development.

Sounds from Silence: Graeme Clark and the Bionic Ear Story

by Graeme Clark

The author's interest in the development of improved hearing devices for the deaf arose from his interactions with his own father, who lost his hearing. Having worked in a pharmacy, Graham Clark developed a keen interest in pursuing a medical degree. His research and tenacity led him to develop the multiple contact bionic ear. The book takes us on a journey with the author through his life and his perseverance to develp this device.

Conceiving Normalcy

by Elizabeth C. Britt

Through the processes of normalization, "fertile" and "infertile" become cultural categories that frame our understanding of families, parenting, gender roles, and more

The Long-Awaited Stork: A Guide to Parenting After Infertility

by Ellen Sarasohn Glazer

This book is about the pain of infertility that persists even after a couple becomes parents.

Say Goodbye to Back Pain

by Emile Hiesiger Marian Betancourt

DON'T LETBACK PAINRUN YOURLIFE!Anyone who experiences chronic or even minor back pain knows there are plenty of remedies for temporary pain relief -- but how do you know you're treating the correct problem in the most effective way? Top neurologist and pain management expert Emile Hiesiger draws on the newest medical information to target back pain at its source. From whiplash and sciatica to osteoporosis and spondylolysis, from faulty facets to herniated disks, Dr. Hiesiger identifies the origins of c...

T.O.s Finding Fitness

by Terrell Owens Buddy Primm Courtney Parker

At the top of his game and his sport, Dallas Cowboys' wide receiver Terrell Owens has a phenomenal body: Muscle & Fitness magazine said this when they chose T. O. for the cover, but anyone who's ever seen him play knows he has the best physique in football. Strong, fast, agile, and focused -- when T. O. takes the field, he's in complete control. Such mastery might seem out of reach for an ordinary athlete or someone just starting to think about getting in shape, but T. O. believes that everyone is c...

Chaudhary Group: Rebuilding Nepal

by Christopher J. Malloy Lauren H. Cohen Inakshi Sobti

Professors Christopher J. Malloy and Lauren H. Cohen and Associate Director Inakshi Sobti (India Research Center) prepared this case. It was reviewed and approved before publication by a company designate. Funding for the development of this case was provided by Harvard Business School and not by the company. HBS cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management.

Chaudhary Group: Rebuilding Nepal (B)

by Christopher J. Malloy Lauren H. Cohen Inakshi Sobti

Professors Christopher J. Malloy and Lauren H. Cohen and Associate Director Inakshi Sobti (India Research Center) prepared this case. It was reviewed and approved before publication by a company designate. Funding for the development of this case was provided by Harvard Business School and not by the company. HBS cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management.

The "Wonder Drug" that Killed Babies

by Joshua Lev Krieger Tom Nicholas Matthew Preble

"During the late 1950s and very early 1960s, thalidomide was considered a “wonder drug.”1 It could be used by patients suffering from sleeplessness or related issues, such as anxiety and depression, with apparently no risk from misuse or overdose.2 Pregnant women began taking thalidomide to alleviate severe morning sickness, and one user noted that “within a day, I was able to eat again.”3 Because the potential market was wide, Chemie Grünenthal (Grünenthal), the West German firm that owned thalidomide, was keen to promote the drug.4 One observer noted how Grünenthal claimed that it “could be ‘given with complete safety to pregnant women and nursing mothers without any adverse effect on mother and child.’”5 Another reporter said it was “marketed as ‘safer than sugar drops’ . . . .”6 Consumers could buy the drug through Grünenthal subsidiaries and licensees in 46 countries, and it was sold under such brand names as Contergan, Distaval, and Kevadon.7"

A Psychiatrist Works with Blindness

by Louis S. Cholden

Each patient will react to blindness in a manner characteristic for his personality. He will react to it as an emergency situation which will have most serious consequences for his future life plans. Besides the emergency aspect of the loss of vision, blindness in itself holds a number of special and deep meanings to the patient which must be considered in attempting to understand its effects. These meanings may be discussed from the psychologic, social and vocational points of view. But, because the patient will react to the problem of blindness in a way which is peculiar to him, one might predict within certain limits what the patient's reactions will be, providing we understand his personality structure.

Women's Moods: What Every Woman Must Know About Hormones, the Brain, and Emotional Health

by Deborah Sichel Jeanne Watson Driscoll

Discusses the ways menstruation and pregnancy affect mood disorders in women.

When the Brain Can't Hear: Unraveling the Mystery of Auditory Processing Disorder

by Teri James Bellis

The author, diagnosed with auditory processing disorder in adulthood, provides an explanation of the disorder and how to live with it.

Ce Soir-Là, Ils n‘Arrivent Plus Un par Un, Mais par Vagues: Coping with the Surge of Trauma Patients at L’Hôpital Universitaire La Pitié Salpêtrière—Friday, November 13, 2015

by Herman B. Leonard Emilie Billaud Arnold M. Howitt

HBS Professor Herman B. "Dutch" Leonard, Assistant Director Emilie Billaud (Europe Research Center), and Professor Arnold M. Howitt (Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University) prepared this case. It was reviewed and approved before publication by a company designate. Funding for the development of this case was provided by Harvard Business School and not by the company. HBS cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management.

Forever Ours: Real Stories of Immortality and Living from a Forensic Pathologist

by Janis Amatuzio

[From the Book Jacket] As a physician, forensic pathologist, and coroner for several Minnesota counties, I have had the extraordinary privilege of caring for families and their loved ones when death comes suddenly, unexpectedly, or traumatically. My job is to speak for the dead, to solve the mystery of "What happened?" However, I have occasionally been faced with mysteries I cannot solve or explain. These experiences always baffle me, partly because as a scientist I seek to reach a reasonable degree of medical certainty, a rational explanation. But I have come to realize that for some experiences there is no explanation, just a deep knowing that I have encountered the Divine. - JANIS AMATUZIO, MD

Ability Structure and Loss of Vision

by Jyrki Juurmaa

Psychological testing of the ability structures of the blind and sighted was commenced almost simultaneously during the first decades of this century. However, a majority of the studies concerning the blind, and the most crucial among them, sought to develop IQ-type test batteries, intended mainly for appraising their school achievement. By contrast, systematic studies have not been carried out to explore the relationships among different, mutually relatively independent traits and the quantitative contributions of such traits to different test performances. This lack of interest is perhaps due to the narrow range of occupations regarded as suitable for the blind: there has been no acute need for a more differentiated picture.

Memoirs of Childhood and Youth

by Albert Schweitzer

Autobiographical reflections on a boyhood that led to an astonishing intellectual career.

Trace Evidence

by Elizabeth Becka

A forensic thriller that unlocks criminal secrets...and criminal science. In the bestselling tradition of Patricia Cornwell and Kathy Reichs, comes a riveting forensic thriller by a dazzling new talent in crime fiction. This authentic, high-octane debut is inspired by Elizabeth Becka's own career and her experience using physical evidence recovered from crime scenes to unlock the secrets of the dead and bring justice to those who have no voice. "The combination of a credible, likeable hero, and a bizarre, chilling story is rare in crime fiction, but in Trace Evidence Elizabeth Becka makes the tumblers click perfectly

As I Live and Breathe: Notes of a Patient-Doctor

by Jamie Weisman

From the Publisher: Jamie Weisman was a patient long before she was a doctor. She was born with a rare defect in her immune system that leaves her prey to a range of ailments and crises and that, because it is treatable but not curable, will keep her a patient for life. Her history has graced her with a deeper perspective -- a second sight, in a sense -- on the body itself, in all its frailty, glory, and irreducible mystery. In this probing and inspiring book, Weisman brings her sojourns on both sides of the doctor-patient divide to bear on the issues of the flesh that preoccupy us all. She considers the randomness of illness, and the fears and fortitude it calls forth in those it strikes. She weighs the economic and moral value of sustaining any given life. She explores the vulnerabilities of the body and of those who care for it, including their capacity for error. And she conveys, by eloquent example, that the only cure for the fear of death is living. As I Live and Breathe is a view of medicine from both sides of the trenches, embracing the patient's fervent desire for health and the doctor's fervent desire to grant it. It is a worthy addition to the best that has been written about our physical selves, a meditation on our extraordinary powers of healing and the limitations that leave intact the miracle and tragedy of being.

The Year of the Intern

by Robin Cook

The nurse is desperate. "Dr. Peters, the patient has stopped breathing and he doesn't have any pulse." "I'm on my way." Dr. Peters, in his fifteenth day of internship, is running again. True, he has been trained to run, through high school, the Ivy League, and a prestigious eastern medical school. Now he has run all the way to Hawaii for his year as an intern. He has run away from the pressure and competition of the mainland medical system. He is tired-tired and scared. And with good reason. After two weeks on call, his exhausted nervous system is in rebellion. Worse yet, three years of the best medical training this country has to offer have taught him too little of practical value. He knows less than a nurse about medication; his surgical knots won't hold; all his knowledge about Schwartzman reaction and other esotérica is useless in the practical hurly-burly of daily hospital life. As for the man who has stopped breathing- "What time did he die?" Peters asks the nurse. "He died when you pronounced him dead, Doctor." Some parts of Hawaii do not disappoint. The climate and the girls are joyful. But in his attempt to grow as a doctor, Peters on his own. As posstesor of a medical degree he is called "Doctor" he is a stage prop, a human mechanism holding retractors through endless operations, staring at the back of the surgeon, unable to see, to learn. On the ward, senior doctors see to it that Peters does the work-ups-fills out charts, draws blood, the "scut" work-and handles night calls. Thus Peters alternates between frustrating days and panic-filled nights. In the emergency room it is much the same. Amid the banality of common colds, backaches, and surfing lacerations, Peters delivers a baby, handles the multiple wreckage of an automobile accident, and deals as best he can with patients who need years of psychiatric care rather than a few hurried minutes with an intern.

DayTwo: Going to Market with Gut Microbiome

by Ayelet Israeli David Lane

DayTwo is a young Israeli startup that utilizes research on the gut microbiome and machine learning algorithms to deliver personalized nutritional recommendations to its users in order to minimize blood sugar (glycemic) spikes after meals. After a first year of trial rollout in Israel, CEO Lihi Segal and her team are devising a go-to-market plan for DayTwo. The team is considering several target markets ranging from people with diabetes to professional athletes, as well as several distribution strategies including selling direct to consumers or through partnerships with health-care professionals or insurance companies. These decisions affect DayTwo's costs, pricing, positioning, distribution channels, marketing efforts, and product development. <p><p>The case is designed to illustrate the challenges associated with bringing a new and complex product to market. It allows for a rich discussion of market segmentation and targeting, distribution channels, and business models. It allows for a debate around growth decisions, while considering the tradeoff of short term versus long term gains and success. The goal of the case is to come up with a go-to-market strategy for a new startup. Students have to analyze the company and its strengths and weaknesses, as well as its potential customers, collaborators, and competitive environment, and deliver a well-formulated action plan. This plan includes pricing, distribution, products, and advertising recommendation.

Facemaker

by William Katz

A prominent Plastic Surgeon offers his services to accident victims. His creations are experimental. But with a new face, the double victims are murdered.

Final Remedy

by Daniel Steven

Dr. Karen Moore confronts a multimillion-dollar malpractice suit and ugly accusations of racism when a patient dies of an apparent drug overdose, and her only ally is prosecuting attorney Elliot Roth. When a black man dies of an apparent overdose, everyone on the ER staff assumes he's the latest victim of D.C.'s drug epidemic--until he's identified. Now, under ugly accusations of racism, attending physician Dr. Karen Moore has become the target of a multimillion-dollar malpractice suit that could destroy her entire future.

Ward 402

by Ronald J. Glasser

Against all odds, an 11-year-old girl clings to the slender thread of life in a hospital. For the dedicated young physician, there were also human concerns.

The First Year of Nursing

by Barbara Finkelstein

Nurses from different walks of life and with different nursing specialties share the experiences they had when first entering the profession.

Genetics of Mental Disorders: What Practitioners and Students Need to Know

by Stephen V. Faraone Ming T. Tsuang Debby W. Tang

Introduces ideas about inherited genetically based mental disorders and how they combine with environmental factors. thinks about mental disorders with insight.

Is It Me or My Meds: Living with Antidepressants

by David A. Karp

This book gives voice to those who are depressed and to those who use medications so that they are not depressed. Full of useful information.

The Plague and I

by Betty Macdonald

Betty MacDonald had divorced her first husband, (meet him in "The Egg and I," which is available from Bookshare) and had moved back home with her two girls. She was working in an office when the overwhelming fatigue and exhausting cough began. Without much money, she had few choices, which is why she went to The Pines. This biographical book provides us with detailed looks at how tuberculosis was treated during the 1940s and what sanatoriums were like. Other books for adults and children by Betty MacDonald are available from Bookshare.

Hartland's Medical & Dental Hypnosis: Third Edition

by David Waxman

It is a tribute to the reputation and memory of the late Dr John Hartland that although more than twenty years have passed since Medical and Dental Hypnosis was first published, it has remained in demand throughout the world as one of the most popular textbooks of hypnotherapy. The present work has been extensively revised and updated while retaining the distinctive style of the original author. Much of the original content, now outdated, has been amended, deleted or extended, in order to bring the work into line with modern thinking and developments. The book contains 26 chapters divided into four parts: The History, Nature and Techniques of Hypnosis; Some Phenomena of Hypnosis and the Use of Advanced Techniques; The Clinical Application of Hypnosis and Other Uses and Some Abuses of Hypnosis. Although much of the material in the first two parts of the book is expository, it has nevertheless been extended to include more recent and better known techniques and this is reflected in more comprehensive reference lists at the end of each chapter. The third part, dealing with the clinical applications of hypnosis, is more fully documented. This is particularly so in the chapters dealing with treatment of neuroses, problems of personality and, most extensively, on hypnosis in the alleviation of pain and in surgery. New chapters dealing with the treatment of depression, the use of hypnotherapy in chronic and terminal illness and hypnosis with children are added. Part four is a completely new section covering the uses of hypnosis in competitive sports and criminal investigation as well as containing chapters on legal aspects and lay practitioners of hypnosis. The Appendix contains guidelines for the beginner in the proper application of hypnosis and the maintenance of ethical status and dignity.

The Bible Cure for Heart Disease

by Don Colbert

No matter what condition your heart is in today, there is hope for health and recovery in the future. Are you suffering from heart disease? In this concise, easy-to-read book you'll discover a wealth of information to help you reverse and overcome heart disease! Learn biblical secrets on health and the latest medical research that can set you free from heart disease. You'll discover findings that your doctor may never have told you! Ways you can reverse clogged arteries Key foods to avoid-and vital foods to eat-for heart health and healling Amazing antioxidants-your powerful weapons against heart disease Discover how to prevent or lower high blood pressure You want to be healthy. God wants you to be healthy. Now at last here's a source of information that will help you get healthy-body, mind and spirit.

The Bible Cure for High Cholesterol

by Don Colbert

Lower your cholesterol, and feel better naturally. Don't let a diagnosis of high cholesterol scare you. This easy-to-understand book uncovers a dynamically unique strategy for gaining control and living in vibrant, divine health--naturally. Reclaim God's very best for you, and get ready to win! You will: identify cholesterol-busting foods that can dramatically reduce your cholesterol levels; learn how powerful supplements can restore your health; discover what foods sabotage your cholesterol health. You want to be healthy. God wants you to be healthy. At last, here's a source of information that will help you live in health--body, mind and spirit.

WASSP: The Wright & Ayre Stuttering Self-Rating Profile

by Louise Wright Anne Ayre

The authors describe WASSP and give sample profiles of WASSP.

Avian Gut Function in Health and Disease

by G. C. Perry

This book focuses on the current interest of the phasing out of antibiotic use in poultry and covers in-depth interactions between the bird, its diet and potential pathogens.

Songs from the Black Chair: A Memoir of Mental Interiors

by Charles Barber

Day after day, night after night, the desperate men come and sit in the black chair next to Charles Barber's desk in a basement office at Bellevue and tell of their travails, of prison and aids and heroin, of crack and methadone and sexual abuse, and the voices that plague them. In the silence between the stories, amid the peeling paint, musty odor, and flickering fluorescent light, Barber observes that this isn't really where he is supposed to be. How this child of privilege, product of Andover and Harvard and Columbia, came to find himself at home among the homeless of New York City is just one story Barber tells in Songs from the Black Chair. Interlaced with his memoir, and illuminating the nightmare of mental illness that gripped him after his friend's suicide, are the stories of his confidants at Bellevue and the "mental health" shelters of Manhattan-men so traumatized by the distortions of their lives and minds that only in the chaotic aftermath of 9/11 do they feel in sync with their world. In the intertwined narrative of these troubled lives and his own, Charles Barber brings to shimmering light some of the most disturbing and enduring truths of human nature. Charles Barber is an associate of the Yale Program for Recovery and Community Health, Yale University School of Medicine.

Domina

by Barbara Wood

Other women would have considered themselves blessed if they had been granted Samantha Hargrave's striking loveliness. But in the Victorian world, her beauty was just one more reason the male medical establishment could not see her as a doctor. Samantha vowed to open their eyes to her dedication, her skill, her desire to make the kind of contribution that only her knowledge both of medicine and of women's special problems could make. And Samantha would fight for her burning dreams until she won--even if it meant closing her heart to Dr. Joshua Masefield, the brilliant mentor whose aid had saved her career ... and whose passion threatened to destroy it. Even if it meant forsaking her memories of Dr. Mark Rawlins, in whose arms she had discovered what it meant to be a complete woman.

The Social Sources of Adjustment to Blindness

by Irving Faber Lukoff Martin Whiteman

The impact of society on the blind is a complex issue, and many different tacks are necessary even if we are to only make little headway through the eddies and currents that alter and modify people's lives. This study is focused on the social forces that influence the adaptation of blind persons. The information derives from almost 500 interviews with blind persons selected from all walks of life.

The New Menopausal Years: Wise Woman Ways

by Susun S. Weed

Susun S. Weed spent 13 years talking with more than 50,000 women about menopause. Here are the remedies, the wisdom, and the humor she found. Whether your menopause is natural or induced, you, too, will treasure this book called "the menopausal bible" by millions of women. All the remedies women know and trust plus 100 new pages including: Fibromyalgia Hairy Problems Restless Leg Syndrome Fertility After Forty Thyroid Health Interstitial Cystitis Herbs for Women on ERT/HRT Memory Problems

Medicare and You 2011

by Department of Health Human Services

The official government handbook with important information about: new changes to Medicare; your Medicare benefits; choosing a health plan that's right for you; & your Medicare privacy rights.

Cheating Destiny, Living with Diabetes America's Biggest Epidemic

by James S. Hirsch

Describes living with diabetes in America's healthcare system

Coronavirus - COVID-19

by Hesperian Health Guides

COVID-19 is a disease caused by a coronavirus, which is a small germ (too small to see without a microscope), that can spread between people. Hesperian Health Guide's COVID-19 fact sheet helps clearly answer the following important questions: What is COVID-19? How does the coronavirus spread? Who does coronavirus infect? How can you prevent infection?

The Serotonin Power Diet

by Judith J. Wurtman Nina Frusztajer

Food plan with various stages to it. Its intent is to keep serotonin levels in the body high. Contains recipes.

Natural Obsessions: The Search for the Oncogene

by Natalie Angier Lewis Thomas

The discovery of these genes and their role in human malignancy has been one of the most dramatic events in biology in the late twentieth century. In this book, Angier describes scientist Bob Weinberg, his research lab, and the dozens of scientists who work towards understanding the oncogene. She describes the dynamic of the lab and its workers as well as the details of each gene experiment.

You Don't Have to Be Your Mother

by Gayle Feldman

A woman 8 months pregnant discovers she has breast cancer. This is a true story and a step-by-step walk, through her discovery, diagnosis, birth of her baby, her breast surgery, and post surgery. A must-read for anyone facing this disease.

Breast Cancer Basics And Beyond

by Delthia Ricks

all aspects of breast cancer covered here, discovery, treatmentt, surgeries of all types, frank patients opinions of cancer treatment, and at the end of the book is a list of resources to help all cancer patients. A must read for all women, and families dealing with breast cancer.

Rethinking Informed Consent in Bioethics

by Neil C. Manson Onora O'Neill

Manson and O'Neill show why informed consent cannot be fully specific or fully explicit, and why more specific consent is not always ethically better.

The World's Healthiest Foods

by George Mateljan

What are the best foods to eat? In his previous books, George Mateljan shared the basics of how to eat healthier. In The World's Healthiest Foods, he takes healthy eating to a whole new level by providing in-depth understanding of which foods are the best and why. George spent ten years with a team of nutritional scientists to write the World's Healthiest Foods, the most complete guide for the healthiest way of eating that has ever been published in one book. In The World's Healthiest Foods George reveals for the first time his secrets, recipes, and menus that make the Healthiest Way of Eating enjoyable, practical, convenient and easy. Easy to read and easy to understand, this book can help anyone to eat healthier. The Healthiest Way of Eating Plan helps you eat healthier by focusing on the delicious nutrient-rich World's Healthiest Foods, which provide the greatest number of nutrients for the least number of calories. The Plan features some of the book's 500 recipes, many of which take less than 7 minutes to prepare. He also shares with you how you can make a five course meal for two in 15 minutes using these recipes! Most Effective Way to Lose Weight and stay slim because the World's Healthiest Foods are not fattening foods but foods that provide a rich concentration of vitamins, minerals, antioxidants (and other important nutrients) instead of calories. The Healthiest Way of Cooking Method is the culmination of George's lifelong passion for food. George wanted to improve on the traditional methods of cooking, which he found could result in a 50-80% loss of the nutrients in food. George spent years in the kitchen working to develop a better way of cooking that is healthier as well as fast and easy. It also preserves the most nutrients and brings out the great flavor of The World's Healthiest Foods without damaging fats or oils by exposure to high heat.

I Served on Bataan

by Juanita Redmond

The true story of an Army nurse trapped in the Philippines during the beginning of America's entrance in WWII.

The Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases from a State Hospital Attic

by Darby Penney Peter Stastny

This book grew out of ten years of research conducted by two journalists who discovered a trove of abandoned trunks and suitcases in an attic at Willard State Hospital in New York. Through extensive research they were able to reconstruct the histories of ten patients who were hospitalized at Willard during the years before deinstitutionalization. Through the microcosm of individual lives the authors humanize the tragedy of our treatment of people deemed to be mentally ill.

Sick Girl

by Amy Silverstein

At twenty-four, Amy was a typical type-A law student: smart, driven, and highly competitive. With a full course load and a budding romance, it seemed nothing could slow her down. Until her heart began to fail. Amy chronicles her harrowing medical journey from the first misdiagnosis to her astonishing recovery, which is made all the more dramatic by the romantic bedside courtship with her future husband, and her uncompromising desire to become a mother. In her remarkable book she presents a patient's perspective with shocking honesty that allows the reader to live her nightmare from the inside-an unforgettable experience that is both disturbing and utterly compelling.

Multiple Blessings: Surviving to Thriving with Twins and Sextuplets

by Jon Gosselin Kate Gosselin Beth Carson

Autobiography of a couple who had twins, and three years, sextuplets. Kate chronicles the emotional and exhausting challenges she and Jon faced from conception of the babies through their first two years of life.

The Middle Place

by Kelly Corrigan

The Middle Place is memoir at its highest form. For Kelly Corrigan, family is everything. At thirty-six, she had a marriage that worked, two funny, active kids, and a weekly newspaper column. Then she went to the doctor...

The Death Committee

by Noah Gordon

At Suffolk County General Hospital, three brilliant young men are brought together by their ambition and passionate dedication to life. But they work in the shadow of the Death Committee, a formidable hospital tribunal where doctors sit in judgment of their peers, deciding who is to blame when a death could have been prevented. During an unforgettable year of love and fear, failure and victory, the young doctors must face the crucial dramas and triumphs of hospital life.

Chance of Loving you

by Terri Blackstock Candace Calvert Susan May Warren

Beloved authors Terri Blackstock, Candace Calvert and Susan May Warren bring you three delightful stories about the risks we take for love. by Terri Blackstock Trying to launch her own design firm while waitressing on the side, Julie Sheffield was drawn to the kind man she waited on at the restaurant last night... until he stiffed her on the tip by leaving her half of a sweepstakes ticket. The Recipe by Candace Calvert Hospital dietary assistant Aimee Curran is determined to win the Vegan Valentine Bake-Off to prove she's finally found her calling. But while caring for one of her patients--the elderly grandmother of a handsome CSI photographer--Aimee begins to question where she belongs. Hook, Line & Sinker by Susan May Warren Grad student Abigail Cushman has agreed to enter Deep Havens annual fishing contest. She's a quick learner, even if she doesn't know difference between a bass and a trout. But nothing could prepare her for competing against the handsome charmer she's tried to forget since grief tore them apart. One chance for each woman to change her life but will love be the real prize?

House Calls and Hitching Posts: Stories from Dr. Elton Lehman's Career Among the Amish

by Dorcas Sharp Hoover

Stories from the life of a doctor to the Amish.

Prioritization, Delegation, and Assignment: Practice Excercises for the NCLEX Exam

by Linda A. LaCharity Shirley M. Hosler Candice K. Kumagai

Prepare for the Next-Generation NCLEX-RN® Exam (NGN) and gain the clinical judgment skills you need to manage patient care safely and effectively! Prioritization, Delegation, and Assignment: Practice Exercises for the NCLEX-RN® Examination, 5th Edition is the first and the most popular NCLEX-RN Exam review book focused exclusively on building management-of-care clinical judgment skills. What’s more, this bestselling review is now enhanced for the NGN with new NGN-style questions! Beginning with concepts relating to prioritization, delegation, and assignment decisions, the workbook guides you through patient care scenarios and exercises progressing from simple to complex. All of the book’s questions are provided in an interactive online format on the Evolve website in tests that simulate the latest NCLEX-RN Exam. Written by a team of noted educators led by Linda A. LaCharity, this review prepares you for success on the NGN and in clinical practice like no other! <p><p> Management-of-care focus addresses the emphasis on prioritization, delegation, and patient assignment in the NCLEX-RN® Examination. <p><p> Three-part organization first establishes foundational knowledge and then provides exercises with scenarios of increasing difficulty to help you build confidence in your prioritization, delegation, and patient assignment skills. <p><p> Part One: Introduction provides a concise foundation and practical guidelines for making prioritization, delegation, and patient assignment decisions. <p><p> Part Two: Prioritization, Delegation, and Assignment in Common Health Scenarios provides practice in applying the principles you’ve learned to relatively straightforward health scenarios involving single patients or simple patient assignments. <p><p> Part 3: Prioritization, Delegation, and Assignment in Complex Health Scenarios includes unfolding cases involving patients with progressively more complicated health problems or challenging assignment issues, demonstrating the progression of typical health scenarios and helping you learn to "think like a nurse." <p><p> Answer keys follow each chapter and provide the correct answer plus a detailed rationale. <p><p> Practice quizzes on the Evolve website include all of the book’s questions in an interactive format that allows you to create a virtually unlimited num

Nurse

by Peggy Anderson

Alzheimer's Diagnostic Guideline Validation: Workshop Summary

by Diana E. Pankevich

Scientific advances during the last decade now indicate that Alzheimer's disease is a continuous, progressive cognitive disease, most likely beginning many years before dementia is apparent. To discuss the next steps in validating new diagnostic guidelines for Alzheimer's disease, the IOM Forum on Neuroscience and Nervous System Disorders hosted a public workshop session at the Alzheimer's Association International Conference.

Aging in Asia: Findings from New and Emerging Data Initiatives

by James P. Smith

The population of Asia is growing both larger and older. Demographically the most important continent on the world, Asia's population, currently estimated to be 4.2 billion, is expected to increase to about 5.9 billion by 2050. Rapid declines in fertility, together with rising life expectancy, are altering the age structure of the population so that in 2050, for the first time in history, there will be roughly as many people in Asia over the age of 65 as under the age of 15. It is against this backdrop that the Division of Behavioral and Social Research at the U.S. National Institute on Aging (NIA) asked the National Research Council (NRC), through the Committee on Population, to undertake a project on advancing behavioral and social research on aging in Asia. Aging in Asia: Findings from New and Emerging Data Initiatives is a peer-reviewed collection of papers from China, India, Indonesia, Japan, and Thailand that were presented at two conferences organized in conjunction with the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Indian National Science Academy, Indonesian Academy of Sciences, and Science Council of Japan; the first conference was hosted by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing, and the second conference was hosted by the Indian National Science Academy in New Delhi. The papers in the volume highlight the contributions from new and emerging data initiatives in the region and cover subject areas such as economic growth, labor markets, and consumption; family roles and responsibilities; and labor markets and consumption.

Animal Doctor

by Lucas Younker

Nutrition Scoreboard

by Michael Jacobson

This book provides information on eating right and staying healthy by rating various foods.

How and When to Be Your Own Doctor

by Isabelle A. Moser Steve Solomon

Dr. Isabelle A. Moser and Steve Solomon collaborated on How and When to Be Your Own Doctor. When Solomon reached his late thirties, he began looking for healthy alternatives. He met Moser and began the practice of a yearly fast to cleanse his body. This book contains their combined knowledge on healing. Topics include How I Became a Hygienist, The Nature and Cause of Disease, Fasting, Colon Cleansing, Diet and Nutrition, Vitamins and Other Food Supplements and The Analysis of Disease States--Helping the Body Recover.

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