Friday, February 20, 2009

Return of the Tribal or Cancer Recovery Plan

Return of the Tribal: A Celebration of Body Adornment

Author: Rufus C Camphausen

A photographic exploration of the modern revival of piercing, tattooing, scarification, and body painting that reveals its origins in tribal culture and practices. 

Since earliest times, tribal cultures around the world have used body marks and modifications to indicate membership and rank within the group, identify with spiritual totems, express sacrifice and loss, and enhance physical attraction and sexual enjoyment. Today we are witnessing a renaissance of interest in body adornment that many interpret as a return to our tribal beginnings--a way to identify who we are in an urban world that has lost its sense of community. Return of the Tribal takes a non-judgmental look at a great variety of practices of body adornment and modification--from prehistoric and aboriginal to those of modern urban tribals in cities such as London, New York, Tokyo, and Amsterdam. From the beautiful to the bizarre, the author shows the many beautiful and bizarre ways people choose to alter their appearance. 

Alternative Publisher Review

The Return of the Tribal attempts to look at all types of body adornment from tribal to urban, from piercing to body painting, from scarification to tattoos, and from genital mutilation to structural modifications of the ears, legs & neck. And it does so with a cornucopia of full-color photos presented alongside a very readable text. This may well be the best book of its kind currently available.



Book about: The Industrial Revolution or Under 40 Financial Planning Guide

Cancer Recovery Plan: How to Increase the Effectiveness of Your Treatment and Live a Fuller, Healthier Life

Author: D Barry Boyd

Increase the effectiveness of your cancer treatment and live a fuller, healthier life.

According to oncologist D. Barry Boyd, controlling weight, becoming active, and reducing stress are not simply nuances of basic well-being; they are absolutely necessary for the successful treatment of cancer. Even with the best medical care, including chemotherapy, a patient's cancer treatment can be sabotaged if these areas are neglected.

In The Cancer Recovery Plan, Dr. Boyd presents his proven integrative program for maximizing the effectiveness of cancer treatment. He lays out a clear, practical nutrition and exercise plan to help cancer patients lose the weight that might impede their recovery, and describes how to reduce stress with such techniques as meditation, tai chi, massage, improving sleep, and building a support network. Along the way, stories from Dr. Boyd's patients-cancer survivors-provide motivation and inspiration. Cancer is not always a hopeless disease. The Cancer Recovery Plan offers readers the hope they need.

Library Journal

Boyd (director, Integrative Oncology, Greenwich Hosp., CT) and breast cancer survivor Betancourt believe that an overabundant diet affects the body's hormonal balance, which in turn predisposes an individual to uncontrolled cell growth that can lead to cancer. While aimed primarily at people undergoing cancer therapy, the book emphasizes the role that weight, insulin resistance, and the American lifestyle play in cancer development. The authors contend that patients can enhance the effects of therapy and those without cancer can lessen their chances of getting the disease by improving their diet, engaging in physical activity, and lowering stress levels. Yet their suggestions for dietary choices and supplements are very basic and their exercise and stress management tips minimal, particularly in relation to those who are undergoing chemo or radiation therapy. Even though Boyd and Betancourt make a strong case for the role of diet in cancer, the lack of concrete advice on changing one's lifestyle limits the book to larger collections. General readers should instead see Harmon Eyre and others' Informed Decisions: The Complete Book of Cancer Diagnosis, Treatment and Recovery.-Janet M. Schneider, James A. Haley Veterans' Hosp. Lib., Tampa Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.



Thursday, February 19, 2009

Barnes and Noble Basics Diabetes or How to Talk to Your Childs Doctor

Barnes and Noble Basics Diabetes

Author: Paul Heltzel

You've just learned you have diabetes, and you're scared: as the 17 million Americans suffering from the disease know, it's stressful caring for an illness that requires 24/7 monitoring. Will you need to give yourself shots? What happens if you accidentally take too much insulin? How can you avoid suffering the side effects diabetes can cause? This reassuring manual will show you what to do, guide you when you see your doctor, and help you feel in control of your illness. It includes all the latest treatments (traditional, alternative, nutritional) as well as cutting edge therapies involving stem cell transplants. But you'll also find out what life is like with diabetes, how to cope with the psychological impact of having a chronic disorder, and how to talk to friends, family, and co-workers about the illness.

Table of Contents:
Foreword6
Chapter 1Getting the Diagnosis7
Experiencing the symptoms8
Seeing your doctor10
Tests for diabetes12
Types of diabetes14
Getting a diagnosis16
Possible causes18
You are not alone20
Keeping a health journal22
Helpful resources24
Chapter 2Treatments25
Doing the work of the pancreas26
Glucose meters28
All about insulin30
Insulin injections32
Insulin pumps34
Pills for type 2 diabetes36
Big benefits from exercise38
Diet and weight loss40
Smart treatment tips42
Helpful resoruces44
Chapter 3Using the Internet45
Top health sites for laypeople46
Top medical research sites48
Nonprofit organizations50
Government agencies52
On top of the news54
Diet and exercise56
Keeping useful records58
Better searching60
Online support62
Mailing lists64
Helpful resources66
Chapter 4Putting Your Team Together67
Your primary care doctor68
Endocrinologist70
Diabetes educator72
Ophthalmologist74
Your advocate76
How to be a smart patient78
Support groups80
Helpful resources82
Chapter 5Eating Right83
Food fundamentals84
Eating for your health86
Hyperglycemia88
Hypoglycemia90
Using exchanges92
Counting carbohydrates94
Smart food shopping96
All about alcohol98
Eating on the go100
Diabetes at all ages102
Helpful resources104
Chapter 6Complementary Therapies105
Weighing your alternatives106
Massage & bodywork108
Stress management110
Meditation112
Yoga, the "mindful" exercise114
Beware of quackery116
Helpful resources118
Chapter 7Living Smart119
Exercise at work and play120
Sex and diabetes122
Finding insurance124
Eating out126
Traveling with diabetes128
Helpful resources130
Chapter 8Sick Days131
Dealing with flu and colds132
Testing when ill134
Over-the-counter medications136
Working from home138
Going to the hospital140
Helpful resources142
Chapter 9Preventing Complications143
Knowing the risks144
Heart disease and stroke146
Neuropathy148
Retinopathy150
Nephropathy152
Helpful resources154
Chapter 10On Stress and Comfort155
What is stress?156
Chronic stress158
Smart coping strategies160
Learning to relax162
Talking about it164
Your partner's concerns166
Managing the inconveniences168
Helpful resources170
Chapter 11The New You171
Life with diabetes172
Stages of adjustment174
Acceptance176
Overcoming setbacks178
Helpful resources180
Chapter 12Pregnancy181
Diabetes and pregnancy182
Gestational diabetes184
Pregnancy with type 1186
Pregnancy with type 2188
Helpful resources190
Chapter 13Children with Diabetes191
Stages of diabetes in children192
After the diagnosis194
I'm that child196
A family experience of illness198
Activities for children200
Helpful resources202
Chapter 14Cutting-edge Research203
Living history204
The transplant cure206
Improved testing and delivery208
Less painful testing210
Insulin improvements212
Helpful resources214
Glossary215
Index220

Look this: Southern Cooking to Remember or Innocent Smoothie Recipe Book

How to Talk to Your Child's Doctor: A Handbook for Parents

Author: Christopher Johnson

A two-year-old develops a nasty cough and after experiencing breathing problems, his concerned parents take him to the emergency room. The doctor on call diagnoses his symptoms as croup, prescribes treatment, but days later the cough is no better. After another trip to the emergency room, x-rays, respiratory therapy, and treatment for asthma, the little boy still cannot shake his cough and breathing difficulties. Finally, two weeks later, the family doctor suggests an examination by an ear-nose-and-throat specialist. Using a bronchoscope, the specialist finds a small piece of plastic from a toy lodged in the edge of the child's trachea. After removing the obstruction, the boy returns to normal within a day. In fact, he never had croup or asthma.

Could this lengthy, frustrating experience have been avoided?

In this illuminating guide to communicating with your child's doctor, pediatrician Christopher M. Johnson shows parents how to talk more effectively to their doctors about their children's health. Johnson takes the nonmedical layperson into the mindset of the physician examining a sick child for the first time. He demonstrates how doctors evaluate symptoms, interpret answers to their questions, and decide on a course of treatment. The book invites and then empowers parents to join their child's doctor as a partner in the diagnostic and therapeutic process. Each chapter ends with a communication checklist to help parents find the right words while visiting the doctor.

Dr. Johnson covers the following topics:
• The medical history and why it is so important
• How and why the doctor examines your child
• How a doctor uses lab tests
• How a doctorarrives at a diagnosis
• Time-honored medical wisdom that all doctors rely on
• The difference between specific treatments and supportive care when a diagnosis is uncertain
• Consulting specialists along with the family physician

The final chapter encourages the reader to become a sort of "junior doctor" by presenting several real-life cases and challenging the reader to work through the problem as a physician would.

This jargon-free and completely accessible guidebook will enable you to assist your child's doctor in the vital work of effectively caring for your child in health and illness.



Wednesday, February 18, 2009

On Board Medical Emergency Handbook or Working with Colour Healing

On-Board Medical Emergency Handbook: First Aid at Sea

Author: Spike Briggs

The only boater’s emergency medical guide designed to provide fast answers in an emergency and to withstand the marine environment


Designed and packaged for use on your boat, this emergency medical handbook has waterproof covers and features 50 quick-reference flow charts to guide you through the proper responses to injuries and illnesses on board.



Dr. Spike Briggs is a consultant in intensive care medicine and anesthesia. He is a medical advisor/fleet medical officer to the Challenge Business, which runs ocean yacht races across the Atlantic and around the world.


Dr. Campbell Mackenzie is a retired Surgeon Commander, having served in the Royal Navy and Royal Naval Reserve. He is an instructor for the Royal Yachting Association First Aid course and an advisor on marine medicine for the British coast guard.



Books about: Administrative Law or Black Visions

Working with Colour Healing: How to Use Colour to Heal Your Body and Enhance Your Life

Author: Jane Struthers

Yellow generates happiness and stimulates our brains. Red feeds our sense of passion and energy. These and every other color have the power to enhance your life and improve your general sense of well-being. Make the most of the rainbow of colors around you with this attractive reference. Featuring beautiful images throughout that capture the essence of each hue, it explains how color healing works and provides practical exercises to try with every color. An in-depth study of the seven major colors of the spectrum reveals how they relate to the seven chakras of the body, and there’s also comprehensive advice on using crystals, light, color patterns in the home and garden, and color-related foods.



Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Low Carb 1 2 3 or Age Defying Beauty Secrets

Low Carb 1-2-3: 225 Simply Great 3-Ingredient Recipes

Author: Rozanne Gold

Low-carb cooking has never been this easy-or delicious!

Now 1-2-3 cooking goes low-carb, and the results are simply fabulous! Here readers learn how to create dishes that are not only low-carb but low in calories and saturated fat-from Pan-Seared Tuna Niçoise, Baked Eggs Splendido, and Wasabi-Stuffed Shrimp to Fresh Cherry Compote with Chocolate Drizzle-each using only three ingredients!

In Low Carb 1-2-3 readers will discover:
o Recipes that fit effortlessly into any low-carb or good-carb diet, including South Beach, Atkins, and Sugar Busters o 225 great-tasting dishes created by an award-winning chef o A focus on healthy eating with recipes that promote good fats and carbs; shun trans-fats; use whole, unprocessed, fresh ingredients; and eliminate white flour and sugar o An accurate carb count for each recipe, lists of low-glycemic index foods, and 100 menu plans Perfect for today's busy lifestyles, these recipes make it easy for anyone to eat more healthfully every day.



See also: Hospitalidade e Gestão de Restaurante

Age-Defying Beauty Secrets: Look and Feel Younger Each and Every Day

Author: Diane Irons

Discover the fountain of youth in your own home

From beauty-industry expert Diane Irons comes the ultimate collection of tips and tricks for defying your age.

Whether you’re looking to simply combat graying hair or considering something more dramatic, Age-Defying Beauty Secrets is an invaluable resource for the woman who wants to look great and feel even better--and do it all without breaking the bank.

--Learn how aging celebrities keep looking great
--Take off the years with foods and supplements
--Discover wrinkle-fighting skin-care solutions
--Concoct your own age-defying beauty bargains
--Find flattering fashion over 40
--Stay positive and healthy at any age



Table of Contents:

Acknowledgments
Introduction

1. Age-Defying Attitude
2. Age-Defying Skin
3. Age-Defying Bodies
4. Age-Defying Celebrities
5. Age-Defying Makeup
6. Age-Defying Style
7. Age-Defying Health
8. Age-Defying Nutrition
9. Age Defying on a Budget
10. Age-Defying Hair
11. Age-Defying Fast Fixes
12. Age-Defying Breakthroughs
13. Age-Defying Surgery
14. Real-Life Age Defying
15. Age-Defying Extremes
16. Age-Defying Problems/Solutions
17. Sites, Resources, and Freebies

Final Words
Index
About the Author

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Hair Matters or After a Fashion

Hair Matters: Beauty, Power, and Black Women's Consciousness

Author: Ingrid Banks

"Introduces the audience to consider the value of the insider/outsider relationship in another's culture"
National Women's Studies Association Journal

Long hair in the 60s, Afros in the early 70s, bobs in the 80s, fuschia in the 90s. Hair is one of the first attributes to catch our eye, not only because it reflects perceptions of attractiveness or unattractiveness, but also because it conveys important political, cultural, and social meanings, particularly in relation to group identity. Given that mainstream images of beauty do not privilege dark skin and tightly coiled hair, African American women's experience provides a starkly different perspective on the meaning of hair in social identity."
--National Women's Studies Association Journal

"Grab your copy at your local bookseller and get hip to what your hair is saying to others with regards to beauty, culture and politics. Learn about how culture has a love for coifs, because after all, so do you!"
Sophisticate's Black Hair Styles GuideDrawing on interviews with over 50 women, from teens to seniors, Hair Matters is the first book on the politics of Black hair to be based on substantive, ethnographically informed research. Focusing on the everyday discussions that Black women have among themselves and about themselves, Ingrid Banks analyzes how talking about hair reveals Black women's ideas about race, gender, sexuality, beauty, and power. Ultimately, what emerges is a survey of Black women's consciousness within both their own communities and mainstream culture at large.


Women Studies Association Journal

Introduces the audience to consider the value of the insider/outsider relationship in another's culture.

Library Journal

For this discussion on the politics of black hair, Banks, a professor of black studies at Virginia Tech, interviewed over 50 women, from teens to seniors, to determine how hair shapes ideas about race, gender, sexuality, beauty, and power. Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.



Table of Contents:
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Unhappy to Be Nappy1
1Why Hair Matters: Getting to the Roots21
2The Hair "Do's" and "Don'ts" of Black Womanhood41
3Splitting Hairs: Power, Choice, and Femininity69
4Women and Girls Speak Out: Five Hair-Raising Sessions99
5Black Hair, 1990s Style139
Conclusion147
App. I: Methods, Methodology, and the Shaping of Hair Matters157
App. II: Defining Black Hair and Hairstyling Practices171
App. III: Interviewee Demographics175
Notes179
References185
Index193
About the Author197

Books about: Cocktails or More Seasonal Cooking

After a Fashion: How to Reproduce, Restore, and Wear Vintage Styles

Author: Frances Grimbl

How do you design a Renaissance Fair costume? Restore a Victorian wedding dress? Bid on antique buttons at Internet auctions? The new edition of After a Fashion: How to Reproduce, Restore, and Wear Vintage Styles, answers all these questions and more. This practical, information-packed guide tells how to make authentic historic reproductions and how to mend and alter vintage clothes. It includes many techniques developed by the author, Frances Grimble. Detailed drawings by Deborah Kuhn enhance the style descriptions and step-by-step instructions.

After a Fashion covers medieval through Art Deco styles, for men and women. It guides readers through each stage of a reproduction project-planning, designing, choosing materials, and constructing. It advises them on all aspects of collecting vintage clothes-buying, restoring, altering, and wearing. The pattern-making and sewing instructions are useful to sewers at any experience level. Directions have been added for using the Internet to buy and sell, research styles, and contact costumers and collectors. An updated, expanded appendix lists over 600 sources (on-line and otherwise) for supplies, vintage clothes, and information.

Here's what readers say about the first edition: "One of the most wonderful sewing/historical costuming books I've ever read." "Whenever I'm trying to figure out how to restore a vintage piece, this is the book I turn to." "A wonderful work that has something for everyone-beginner to advanced." "Hard-to-find information is unified and clearly presented. I know I'll use it as a reference for a long time and recommend it often." "Like five books for the price of one." "Engaging, informative, well written-a wonderful resource!"



Saturday, February 14, 2009

Bodymakers or Birthing Fathers

Bodymakers: A Cultural Anatomy of Women's Body Building

Author: Leslie Heywood

Women with muscles are a recent phenomenon. While generating a good deal of interest, both positive and negative, their importance to the cultural landscape has yet to be acknowledged. Leslie Heywood looks at female body building as a metaphor for how women fare in our current political and cultural climate. BODYMAKERS reveals how female bodybuilders find themselves both trapped and empowered by their sport. 14 illustrations.



Book about: Meds Money and Manners or Discretionary Time

Birthing Fathers: The Transformation of Men in American Rites of Birth

Author: Richard K Reed

In the past two decades, men have gone from being excluded from the delivery room to being admitted; then invited, and, finally, expected to participate actively in the birth of their children. No longer mere observers, fathers attend baby showers, go to birthing classes, and share in the intimate, everyday details of their partners' pregnancies.

In this unique study, Richard Reed draws on the feminist critique of professionalized medical birthing to argue that the clinical nature of medical intervention distances fathers from child delivery. he explores men's roles in childbirth and the ways in which birth transforms a man's identity and his relations with his partner, his new baby, and society. In other societies, birth is recognized as an important rite of passage for fathers. Yet, in American culture, despite the fact that fathers are admitted into delivery rooms, little attention is given to their transition to fatherhood.

The book concludes with an exploration of what men's roles in childbirth tell us about gender and American society. Reed suggests that it is no coincidence that men's participation in the birthing process developed in parallel to changing definitions of fatherhood more broadly. Over the past twenty years, it has become expected that fathers, in addition to being strong and dependable, will be empathetic and nurturing.

Well-researched, candidly written, and enriched with personal accounts of over fifty men from all parts of the world, this book is as much about the birth of fathers as it is about fathers in birth.



Table of Contents:
1American fathers and hospital childbirth1
2Couvade in society and history32
3Standing vigil : fathers in the waiting room, 1920-197076
4Birthing revolution : men to the barricades104
5Birthing classes : training men to birth135
6Men's experience of birth161
7Fathers, birth, and society211

Friday, February 13, 2009

Raising Stable Kids in an Unstable World or Still Giving Kisses

Raising Stable Kids in an Unstable World: A Physician's Guide to Dealing with Childhood Stress

Author: David R Marks

In his ten years of medical experience, including working on the front lines of Ground Zero during the weeks after the World Trade Center tragedy, Dr. David Marks has witnessed today's children having to cope with stresses that their parents never had.

The statistics are disturbing - one out of three American children suffers from stress-related illnesses such as headaches, stomachaches, chest pains, dizziness, sleep and eating disorders and depression. In this groundbreaking book, Dr. David Marks shows how much of this suffering can be avoided, and treated without medication.

In today's mobile and global society children experience stresses resulting from an overload of organized activities, excessive pressure to succeed, ongoing exposure to violence, and perhaps the most stressful event of all: the catastrophic day of September 11, 2001, that forever changed the lives of American youth.

In this practical and informative book, Dr. Marks explains how parents and care-givers can help children of all ages cope with different types of stresses that, if not released or resolved, will result in harmful behaviors and illnesses. He explores the mind/body connection offering an engaging look at what can be done to treat and prevent stress reactions and suggests practical ways for parents to ease the stress level on their children.

Dr. Marks' findings are supported by the latest medical and psychological research and humanized by anecdotes of his experiences dealing with children as a physician and as a father.

Library Journal

From playground bullies and overfilled schedules to the aftershocks of the September 11 terrorist attacks, these books address contemporary childhood stresses. Marks, an M.D. who worked in a New York City trauma and burn center in the aftermath of the attacks, offers good, if general, observations (e.g., "Fear, loss of control, instability, and insecurity can cause a great deal of stress in children"), but his tone is ultimately alienating. Neither scientific nor journalistic, he attempts to persuade readers into accepting his personal rationale for what upsets children. Scenarios are directed at children of the suburban and urban upper class instead of a wider audience. This can grate, as when he implies that all Americans are materialistic, celebrity obsessed, and media manipulated (Marks himself is a health reporter for NBC). Not recommended; consider instead Sheldon Lewis and Sheila Kay Lewis's Stress-Proofing Your Child or Nancy Poffenberger's focused September 11, 2001: A Simple Account for Children. Like Marks, Greenspan (The Irreducible Needs of Children) notes that our culture can create "deep insecurity" but that children can become successful by creating and maintaining relationships with others. Unlike Marks, however, Greenspan did not cobble this together in response to September 11. Greenspan argues that the child who "can figure out the world and understand how emotions and relationships work" is termed "resilient." Against the backdrop of four guiding principles (spend time together, offer reassurance, express feelings, and help others), chapters illuminate developmental stages in nurturing resiliency. Offered tools include the adaptable "floor time," where adults follow "the child's lead helping him to engage with others, communicate," explore feelings, etc., in the "safe" environment of home. Greenspan's tone has a wise-old-man-on-the-mountaintop quality, but the book's brevity can make some material feel underdeveloped. Yet overall, his developmental approach is tried and true and will attract many readers looking for thoughtful advice. For all libraries. Douglas C. Lord, Connecticut State Lib., Hartford Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.



Interesting book: Early American Cookery or Far Out

Still Giving Kisses: A Guide to Helping and Enjoying the Alzheimer's Victim You Love

Author: Barbara A Smith M S OTR L

This book is the story of the author's mother as she succumbs to Alzheimer's disease over an eight year period. Readers will learn about therapeutic techniques, adaptations and behavioral interventions to promote function and quality of life. Extensive resources and medical, legal and care-giving information provide survival tools. The target audience is friends and family of an Alzheimer's disease victim and readers who enjoy a compelling memoir.



Thursday, February 12, 2009

Fresh Lipstick or Mitchells Story

Fresh Lipstick: Redressing Fashion and Feminism

Author: Linda M Scott

Fresh Lipstick shakes feminist fashion down to its Birkenstocks.

Linda M. Scott wants to put an end to the belief that American women have to wear a colorless, shapeless uniform to achieve liberation and equality.

A pointed attack on feminism's requisite style of dress, Fresh Lipstick argues that wearing high heels and using hair curlers does not deny you the right to seek advancement, empowerment, and equality. Scott asserts that judging someone on her fashion choices is as detrimental to advancement as judgments based on race, nationality, or social class. Fashion is an important mode of personal expression, not an indication of submission. She demonstrates that feminism's dogged reduction of fashion to sexual objectification has been motivated by a desire to control other women, not free them. This push for power has produced endless conflict from the movement's earliest days, hindering advances in women's rights by promoting exclusion. It is time for the "plain Jane" dress code of the revolution to be lifted, allowing all women to lead, even those wearing makeup and Manolos.

Marching through 150 years of American dress history, Scott rips down feminism's favorite positions on fashion-from the power of images to the purpose of makeup. The illustrative examples-from flappers to Twiggy to body-piercing-are often poignant, occasionally infuriating, but always illuminating and thought-provoking.

With Fresh Lipstick, Linda Scott gives women the ammunition to settle the fashion debate once and for all. She challenges feminists to move beyond appearances and to return their focus to the true mission of the movement: equality for all womeneverywhere.

Publishers Weekly

In this strident, well researched and sometimes exhausting critique of the women's movement's strains of "antibeauty ideology," Scott, an associate professor at the University of Illinois, argues that feminist doesn't have to mean frumpy. It won't be news to post Sex and the City "do-me" feminists, but adornment, Scott insists, is a natural, inherently positive way for women to express their identities; fashion is neither the instrument of male oppression that members of the mid-19th-century anti-corset "dress reform" movement insisted it was nor the vehicle for sexual exploitation (or signal of antifeminist backlash) that some contemporary feminists suggest it is. Beginning with Susan B. Anthony's prudish rejection of stylish Elizabeth Oakes Smith at the 1852 Women's Convention, academic and upper-class feminists have consistently discredited women (especially of lower classes) who don't fit the mold, Scott argues. Scott's analysis extends to what she sees as today's antibeauty books and films (e.g., Naomi Wolf's The Beauty Myth, Jean Kilbourne's Killing Us Softly movies), which she argues are hypocritical, reductionist and, at worst, classist. Scott is most convincing when she argues for the liberating capacity of fashion: "By ignoring the way that self-decoration expresses the human force of creative expression...[;] and by denying the strength these practices can bring at depression, dislocation, and even death, the antibeauty critique engages in cultural cruelty." But she sometimes falters, as when she glosses over the media and fashion industry's relationship to the very real danger of eating disorders. (Jan.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Scott (advertising & women's studies, Univ. of Illinois) contends that leaders in the women's movement-from Susan B. Anthony to Gloria Steinem-have misled women by suggesting what they ought (and ought not) be wearing. Scott disputes the claim that a patriarchal fashion industry has been oppressing women and offers a detailed and revealing analysis of women's magazines and advertisements with a focus on the women involved in their publication. Scott argues that, from the beginning, the feminist movement has been dominated by white, educated, financially comfortable women who have not considered the concerns of women from other social classes or ethnic groups. She observes that body decoration is practiced by men and women in cultures worldwide and is a valid means of self-expression, arguing that feminists should stop being concerned with what women wear and focus on important issues like jobs and discrimination. This well-researched, enlightening, and provocative book is recommended for academic and large public libraries.-Debra Moore, Cerritos Coll., Norwalk, CA Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.



Table of Contents:
Introduction : tossing down the glove1
Ch. 1The natural fallacy11
Ch. 2Dress reform and domination23
Ch. 3Making the myth53
Ch. 4Reading the popular image89
Ch. 5The power of fashion127
Ch. 6Sex, soap, and Cinderella165
Ch. 7Rethinking necessities191
Ch. 8Freudian feminism and commercial conspiracy223
Ch. 9Something different251
Ch. 10Style and substance in the second wave281
Ch. 11Exclusive rights311
Ch. 12Fresh lipstick327

Go to: Neurochemistry of Abused Drugs or Clinical Handbook of Co existing Mental Health and Drug and Alcohol Problems

Mitchell's Story: Living with Cerebral Palsy

Author: Jeff Parkin

Mitchell's Story. . . . Living with Cerebral Palsy is about a mother who has a touching and somewhat sad tale to tell about her only son who contracted the frustrating disease called cerebral palsy.
The remarkable thing about this book is the courage displayed by Lynda and Grant Thompson as they began a daily struggle to give their son as normal of a life as they possibly could.
Lynda feels that this book can be of great assistance to those who are just now finding out that their son or daughter has this awful disease. She speaks of obstacles she has encountered which can prepare the new parents of CP kids for the challenges that lie ahead.
Part of the book deals with the help she received as she was dealing with her son on a day to day basis. Inside the book is information that new parents might find valuable in dealing with and helping their child.
We hope that everyone who reads her story will find that it helped him or her in some way.



Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Como entender y superar la Anorexia Nervosa or YOGA

Como entender y superar la Anorexia Nervosa

Author: Lindsey Hall

This book offers Spanish-language readers a complete understanding of the eating disorder of self-starvation. It provides straightforward information for sufferers, their families, and therapists. Included are self-help suggestions, insights from recovered anorexics, and guidelines for healthy eating and weight restoration.



Look this: Sports Nutrition or Carbohydrate Addicts Program for Success

YOGA: Yoga, Tantra and Meditation in Daily Life

Author: Swami Janakananda Saraswati

Yoga, Tantra And Meditation In Daily Life offers an alternative to the approach of most books on yoga, which maintain the misconception that the practice of yoga, tantra and meditation requires adopting a new lifestyle. This book demonstrates how the reader can practice Tantric Yoga and go on living life as usual.



Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Stress Free Traveler or Principles of Gender Specific Medicine

Stress-Free Traveler: Simple Exercices and Stretches to Keep Your Cool on Trains, Planes, and Automobiles

Author: Sandy Paton

On-the-go relaxation techniques for any traveler

Perfectly portable for business trips, vacations, or even daily commutes, this fully illustrated new handbook offers stress-busting techniques to reduce the physical and emotional effects of traveling. It includes a complete program of easy exercises that can be performed sitting in a chair or standing in lines, as well as personal relaxation rituals and mind-body methods to beat motion sickness.

Specially designed by a certified yoga instructor, these simple but effective strategies can help you to:

  • Feel peaceful and well rested in stressful situations
  • Soothe headaches, stiffness, soreness, and fatigue
  • Recharge and restore energy in the hotel or at home
  • Calm negative thoughts or fears
  • Increase vitality and stamina, even in confined spaces
  • Overcome travel rage

Sandy Paton is a certified yoga instructor who has taught for the past ten years. A freelance medical writer and frequent business traveler, she lives in Pottstown, Pennsylvania.

Lonni Sue Johnson is a professional illustrator whose works have been featured in the New Yorker and the New York Times.



Book about: Electronic Office Machines or Principles of Cost Benefit Analysis for Developing Countries

Principles of Gender-Specific Medicine

Author: Marianne J Legato

Principles of Gender-Specific Medicine examines how normal human biology differs between men and women and how the diagnosis and treatment of disease differs as a function of gender. This revealing research covers various conditions that predominantly occur in men, and as well conditions that predominantly occur in women. Among the subjects covered are cardiovascular disease, mood disorders, the immune system, lung cancer as a consequence of smoking, osteoporosis, diabetes, obesity, and infectious diseases.

* Gathers important information in the field of gender-based biology and clinical medicine, proving that a patient's sex is increasingly important in preventing illness, making an accurate diagnosis, and choosing safe and effective treatment of disease
* Addresses gender-specific areas ranging from organ transplantation, gall bladder and biliary diseases, to the epidemiology of osteoporosis and fractures in men and women
* Many chapters present questions about future directions of investigations



Sunday, February 8, 2009

Breast Cancer Prevention Plan or Exercise Physiology

Breast Cancer Prevention Plan: 20 Proven Steps for Reducing Your Breast Cancer Risk

Author: Edward J Conley

A breakthrough 20-step program that reducesbreast cancer risk and gives you thelatest information on new therapies

Written by the host of the PBS special ”ReducingYour Breast Cancer Risk,” this book outlinesthe 20 proven steps women can take to significantlylower breast cancer risk, and shatters generally-acceptedmyths about breast cancer and hormonereplacement therapy. With information on supplementsthat can bolster your breast cancer suppression genes,antioxidants that can protect breasts from damage, andhousehold chemicals that silently increase risk, TheBreast Cancer Prevention Plan is essential reading.

Edward Conley, M.D., is an assistant clinical professor of medicine at Michigan State University and an affiliate physician of the Cleveland Clinic. He is the author of America Exhausted and host of the PBS special "10 Secrets to Reducing Your Breast Cancer Risk," airing on 100 stations in the United States and Canada.

Library Journal

Conley, assistant clinical professor of medicine at Michigan State University, reveals "secrets" that may "lower your breast cancer risk by 90% or more." He discusses estrogen and its role in the disease as well as nutrients and antitoxins. Though most of Conley's suggestions-e.g., get more rest, eat more fruits and vegetables-certainly can't hurt, the secretive nature and tone of the presentation are off-putting. For inclusive collections. Surgeon Horner considers natural foods and relaxation as a means for women "to influence [their] state of health more than [they] ever imagined." Thinking organic and avoiding toxins are basic to her approach for empowerment. Appropriate for alternative/complementary health collections. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.



Go to: Sistemi d'informazione di impresa: Un metodo Modello-Basato

Exercise Physiology: Human Bioenergetics and Its Applications with Powerweb

Author: George A Brooks

Considered a standard in the field, this text integrates Bioenergetics into every chapter and provides a comprehensive survey of current data and research in exercise physiology. In-depth discussion of all areas of exercise physiology makes this text an invaluable resource for students in exercise science, kinesiology, sports medicine, human biodynamics, and physical education.

Michael Kalinski

This multiauthored textbook is written at an advanced level. The authors integrate traditional and classical exercise physiology with more current approaches in cell and molecular biology. The focus is on human bioenergetics and attempts to describe muscle performance in terms of energy transduction at the cellular level. The authors, all distinguished professionals, describe this as a departure from existing texts in the field and as a contribution to the evolution of exercise biochemistry. This text is intended for graduate students. I am using it successfully for graduate courses such as Exercise Energy Metabolism and Energy Metabolism and Body Composition at Kent State University. The authors are eminently qualified and recognized for their expertise. For several decades they have been in the forefront of the exercise physiology profession. They do a good job providing readers with current information on the subject. A very broad scope of topics is covered to link physiological systems, metabolism, nutrition, and exercise performance. The text is very well organized and adequately referenced. Overall there are several strengths: in-depth technical discussions based on expertise and research experience, inclusion of the authors' original data and interpretation of the events within the broader discipline of biological science, and a sufficient number of recent as well as historical references. Chapters 5-10 are unique in depth and in presentation of innovative biochemical concepts, which are particularly useful in teaching. They are highly readable and immensely informative. This is an excellent addition to an already extensive list of teaching texts in traditional exercisephysiology. This text is well written and I would highly recommend it as a graduate text for exercise physiology/exercise biochemistry oriented students around the world. This book compares very favorably to other textbooks used for courses in exercise physiology. The design makes it superior to similar texts on the market. My graduate students respectfully describe it as a very solid and serious textbook. I have completed 30 years of teaching experience in the field of exercise biochemistry on both sides of Atlantic, including 20 years of teaching at Kyiv Institute of Physical Education in Ukraine. There I also served 19 years as the Chair of the Department of Exercise Biochemistry. Having the experience of writing three monographs on the biochemical adaptation to exercise and coauthoring the text ""Exercise Biochemistry,"" which has been a most usable textbook in the field in the former Soviet Union for more than a decade, I would state here that there is no other advanced book of such quality in the field of exercise physiology. I give this text the highest marks.

Doody Review Services

Reviewer: Michael Kalinski, PhD, FACSM (Kent State University)
Description:This multiauthored textbook is written at an advanced level. The authors integrate traditional and classical exercise physiology with more current approaches in cell and molecular biology.
Purpose:The focus is on human bioenergetics and attempts to describe muscle performance in terms of energy transduction at the cellular level. The authors, all distinguished professionals, describe this as a departure from existing texts in the field and as a contribution to the evolution of exercise biochemistry.
Audience:This text is intended for graduate students. I am using it successfully for graduate courses such as Exercise Energy Metabolism and Energy Metabolism and Body Composition at Kent State University. The authors are eminently qualified and recognized for their expertise. For several decades they have been in the forefront of the exercise physiology profession. They do a good job providing readers with current information on the subject.
Features:A very broad scope of topics is covered to link physiological systems, metabolism, nutrition, and exercise performance. The text is very well organized and adequately referenced. Overall there are several strengths: in-depth technical discussions based on expertise and research experience, inclusion of the authors' original data and interpretation of the events within the broader discipline of biological science, and a sufficient number of recent as well as historical references. Chapters 5-10 are unique in depth and in presentation of innovative biochemical concepts, which are particularlyuseful in teaching. They are highly readable and immensely informative. This is an excellent addition to an already extensive list of teaching texts in traditional exercise physiology.
Assessment:This text is well written and I would highly recommend it as a graduate text for exercise physiology/exercise biochemistry oriented students around the world. This book compares very favorably to other textbooks used for courses in exercise physiology. The design makes it superior to similar texts on the market. My graduate students respectfully describe it as a very solid and serious textbook. I have completed 30 years of teaching experience in the field of exercise biochemistry on both sides of Atlantic, including 20 years of teaching at Kyiv Institute of Physical Education in Ukraine. There I also served 19 years as the Chair of the Department of Exercise Biochemistry. Having the experience of writing three monographs on the biochemical adaptation to exercise and coauthoring the text "Exercise Biochemistry," which has been a most usable textbook in the field in the former Soviet Union for more than a decade, I would state here that there is no other advanced book of such quality in the field of exercise physiology. I give this text the highest marks.

Booknews

A text for an advanced undergraduate course, or reference for beginning graduate students, on the functioning of the body during exercise. The focus is on human bioenergetics and the description of performance in terms of energy transduction from cell to whole-body levels. This revised edition reflects the growth and expansion of the field since the first edition was published in 1984. The authors support their conclusions with original data sets, which are included. Also included are original figures, tables, and graphs. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Rating

5 Stars from Doody




Saturday, February 7, 2009

Heinermans Encyclopedia of Juices Teas and Tonics or Universal Beauty

Heinerman's Encyclopedia of Juices, Teas and Tonics

Author: John Heinerman

From a medical anthropologist's files, here are juices, teas and tonics for hundreds of today's most common health problems.From coltsfoot tea for asthma and a tomato brew for constipation, to a 'weed' from the Southwest that wards off arthritis and oregano juice for varicose veins, this remarkable guide offers an array of practical, tasty ways to use the healing power of common herbs and foods to relieve over 100 health conditions.



Book about: Cut the Cord The Consumers Guide to VoIP or Handbook of Marketing and Society

Universal Beauty: The Miss Universe Guide to Beauty

Author: Cara Birnbaum

The MISS UNIVERSE Pageant represents the international ideal of beauty, and this unique beauty guide has the inside tips from all over the world that only members of this very exclusive club can tell. Beauty writer Cara Birnbaum and former Miss Universe winners bring together the diverse tips, insights, and secrets that have set these women apart and brought them to the pinnacle of beauty. Former title holders will share their beauty regimens as will the professionals who work with contestants to achieve the Miss Universe look. Readers with busy schedules will benefit from tips that will take them from daytime looks to ultraglamour in a matter of minutes.

Because Miss Universe is international, all races, skin tones, hair types, and body types will be included. Former title holders of different ages will address how personal care and beauty regimens change over time to continue to achieve a fantastic appearance.

Library Journal

Former Miss Universe winners and professionals who work with the contestants share beauty regimens, tips, and insights in this guide by beauty editor and writer Birnbaum. The beauty advice, whether for skin, hair, or makeup, is standard stuff (e.g., apply sunscreen, wear moisturizer). As a result, the guide works better as a pictorial history and behind-the-scenes look at the Miss Universe pageant. Also included are a foreword by Donald Trump, who along with NBC owns the Miss Universe Organization; a short chapter on teen beauty by Miss Teen USA winners, which seems out of place; and a Q&A with Miss Universe title holders, which ends the guide. Recommended only for large public libraries.-Christine Holmes, San Jose State Univ. Lib., CA Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.



Friday, February 6, 2009

Ninjitsu for Women or Back Off Ill Lose Weight When Im Ready

Ninjitsu for Women: Ninja Secrets of Defensive Fighting

Author: Ashida Kim

Showing how women are getting their "kicks" nowadays, this guide instructs on how to defend against any attacker and how to distract, disable, disarm, and then disappear. 150 illustrations.



Look this: Kostenmanagement: Eine Strategische Betonung

Back Off! I'll Lose Weight When I'm Ready: A Weight Loss Guide for Teens and Their Crazed Parents

Author: Debi Davis

Back Off! is the perfect combination of information and empowerment. The short, easy-to-read chapters will enable the reader to learn about themselves while mastering their ability to create behavior and nutritional changes that fit into their personal family lifestyle. It can provide a source of information on a variety of topics that can be referenced by specific challenges:



Thursday, February 5, 2009

Bodywork Shiatsu or Sharp Spear Crystal Mirror

Bodywork Shiatsu: Bringing the Art of Finger Pressure to the Massage Table

Author: Carl Dubitsky

For the first time, an expert in the Asian art of finger-pressure massage shifts the practice of shiatsu from the floor to the massage table--increasing the comfort of the patient, conserving the energy of the therapist, and augmenting the effects of the treatment. Skillfully integrating current Western scientific research with traditional energetic concepts and techniques of shiatsu, Carl Dubistsky provides a new perspective on this ancient healing art. His analysis of the muscular anatomy of the points and pathways is unique in Western literature, making shiatsu techniques more accessible and comprehensible to health professionals and bodyworkers of all schools.

BodyWork Shiatsu grounds its discussion of shiatsu in a thorough review of traditional Asian medical theory, explaining the concepts of yin and yang, the five elements, and the flow of life energy, qi, along with the meridians of the body. These concepts form the basis of the health professional's approach to examination and treatment. The heart of the book contains detailed instructions in applying shiatsu to the massage table--from basic finger technique to choosing equipment--with specific recommendations for treating each part of the body. The fruit of the author's many years of immersion in both Eastern and Western systems of massage, BodyWork Shiatsu is an invaluable aid to all those interested in advanced applications of shiatsu as well as those wishing to incorporate basic principles of finger-pressure massage into their health-care practice.



Interesting textbook: Introduction to Catering or 100 Best Grilling Recipes

Sharp Spear, Crystal Mirror: Martial Arts in Women's Lives

Author: Stephanie T Hopp

• Twenty-four women martial artists discuss the physical and spiritual challenges of martial arts training and how it helps bring meaning and purpose to their lives

• Women aged 12 to 83 are interviewed on the importance and meaning of martial arts in their lives.

• Explores in-depth why many women are dedicating themselves to the martial arts.

• An inspiration for anyone concerned with enhancing the physical, spiritual,  and social dimensions of life, and for those interested in women's self-defense and safety.

Sharp Spear, Crystal Mirror explores in depth how, why, and to what effect considerable numbers of women are dedicating themselves to the martial arts. The twenty-four women interviewed here discuss the physical and spiritual challenges of martial arts training and how it helps to bring meaning and purpose to their lives. Their disciplines include T'ai Chi Ch'uan, Aikido, Capoeira, Wing Chun, Judo, Kajukenbo, Jujutsu, Tae Kwon Do, Karate, and Kung Fu, and their backgrounds are equally diverse. Some were accomplished athletes before beginning, while others had never been comfortable with their physical bodies until discovering the martial arts. All have received deep spiritual nourishment through their practice, integrating and healing their bodies and minds as well as enriching community bonds. Those interested in women's studies will find a wonderful sample of contemporary American women who speak articulately about the forces that have shaped their lives.

Journal of ... Eastern Health & Fitness

An intriguing gracefully written book of interviews . . . Hoppe knows what questions to ask in order to help herself—and us—probe the discoveries and mysteries that come with the serious pursuit of a martial art on all its levels. This is a book about training the mind, body, and spirit, and has something to offer anyone striving for excellence in any field. . . . Women are influencing the face and direction of the martial arts. . . . Sharp Spear Crystal Mirror is an important contribution to this movement. It recognizes the work of a number of outstanding women and is helping to spread their knowledge and wisdom. Anyone engaged in martial arts—male or female, student or teacher—can deepen and reinforce their experience with this book. And those considering taking up the study will be inspired to do so.

What People Are Saying

Coleen Gragen
I see women coming to the martial arts as a young movement, a new growth in the martial arts that will transform it forever in a very deep way. The martial arts will never be the same again for this influence, and that's been what my life has been about, sitting right on that cusp and being engaged in that process. (Coleen Gragen, fifth-degree black belt Kajukenbo instructor)




Table of Contents:

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Healing in the History of Christianity or Ed Schoen M D on Circumcision

Healing in the History of Christianity

Author: Amanda Porterfield

Healing is one of the most constant themes in the long and sprawling history of Christianity. Jesus himself performed many miracles of healing. In the second century, St. Ignatius was the first to describe the eucharist as the medicine of immortality. Prudentius, a 4th-century poet and Christian apologist, celebrated the healing power of St. Cyprian's tongue. Bokenham, in his 15th-century Legendary, reported the healing power of milk from St. Agatha's breasts. Zulu prophets in 19th-century Natal petitioned Jesus to cure diseases caused by restless spirits. And Mary Baker Eddy invoked the Science of Divine Mind as a weapon against malicious animal magnetism. In this book Amanda Porterfield demonstrates that healing has played a major role in the historical development of Christianity as a world religion. Porterfield traces the origin of Christian healing and maps its transformations in the ancient, medieval, and modern worlds. She shows that Christian healing had its genesis in Judean beliefs that sickness and suffering were linked to sin and evil, and that health and healing stemmed from repentance and divine forgiveness. Examining Jesus' activities as a healer and exorcist, she shows how his followers carried his combat against sin and evil and his compassion for suffering into new and very different cultural environments, from the ancient Mediterranean to modern America and beyond. She explores the interplay between Christian healing and medical practice from ancient times up to the present, looks at recent discoveries about religion's biological effects, and considers what these findings mean in light of ages-old traditions about belief and healing. Changing Christian ideas ofhealing, Porterfield shows, are a window into broader changes in religious authority, church structure, and ideas about sanctity, history, resurrection, and the kingdom of God. Her study allows us to see more clearly than ever before that healing has always been and remains central to the Christian vision of sin and redemption, suffering and bodily resurrection.

Publishers Weekly

Tell the story of healing throughout Christian history in under 250 pages--a daunting task? Absolutely. But Porterfield, a religion professor at Florida State University, pulls it off admirably. In her view, healing encompasses more than just dramatic miracles worked by Jesus or his followers. Learning to live with chronic pain can be seen as a form of healing, as can repentance and the experience of being forgiven. The early church frequently described Christ as a physician and suggested that spiritual healing could protect believers from physical illness. Christians nursed the sick in a conscious emulation of Christ's ministry. The medieval church developed the idea that the body parts of long-dead saints could heal, and icons were considered "vehicles of healing power." This book is boldly global in scope--the chapters on the early modern and modern eras travel from China to South Africa--yet one wishes that Porterfield, who cut her scholarly teeth on colonial New England, would have written a bit more about the U.S. Nonetheless, she proves that healing is a central theme in Christian history, and is a fascinating lens through which to examine the Christian faith. Indeed, she has produced not just a history of healing in Christianity, but a history of Christianity itself. (Nov.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.



Table of Contents:
1Jesus : exorcist and healer21
2Healing in early Christianity43
3Healing in medieval Christianity67
4Healing in early modern Christianity93
5Healing in Western Christianity's global expansion119
6Christianity and the global development of scientific medicine141
7Christian healing in the shadow of modern technology and science159

See also: Whats Cooking America or Donna Dewberrys Designs For Entertaining

Ed Schoen M. D. on Circumcision: Timely Information for Parents and Professionals from America's #1 Expert on Circumcision

Author: Ed Schoen

Although circumcision is the number one surgical procedure, up to date information on this controversial subject is hard to find. All too often juried studies and peer review have been replaced with hysteria and hype delivered by lay "experts" lacking medical credentials. Now Ed Schoen, M.D., chair of an American Society of Pediatrics Study Group on Circumcision and Clincial Professor of Pediatrics at the University of California, San Francisco, offers straightforward answers to questions about this vital newborn health issue. Drawing on the latest research findings, Schoen presents the facts parents and practitioners need to know to make an informed decision on circumcision.



Monday, February 2, 2009

Behavioral Sciences and Health Care or Seizures and Epilepsy in Childhood

Behavioral Sciences and Health Care

Author: Olle Jane Sahler

This book is designed for medical students and trainees. It presents succinct information about the wide variety of behavioral, social, and psychological sciences that comprise the behavioral sciences relevant to health and wellness. Brain and behavior, culture and ethnicity, complementary medicine, clinical decision-making, and psychopathology are featured sections. Each chapter begins with guidance questions and ends with current recommended readings and review questions. A complete 300+ question-and-answer USMLE-type review section not only allows readers and students to check how well they have learned the material, but also highlights important points and adds additional specific information to supplement the text.

Doody Review Services

Reviewer: William Miles, MD (Rush University Medical Center)
Description: This is a structured textbook of the behavioral sciences, examining how human behavior is governed by the connection of biology, psychology, and the social sciences.
Purpose: The purpose is to offer a comprehensive examination of human behavior, how to approach it in the medical field, and to identify and examine the many variables that govern this behavior. These are certainly worthwhile objectives, particularly in the field of psychiatry.
Audience: The author states that the book is written for medical students as well as for students in other behavior-related fields. However, the subject matter is too important to be limited to only students of human behavior. Residents and practicing clinicians will also find it invaluable.
Features: The book examines the clichйd "biopsychosocial" model so often discussed (but so poorly understood) in psychiatry. The book expands on this concept, and attempts to identify the many mechanisms that interconnect these variables. A tremendous variety of topics is covered in an attempt to do this. The many sections of the book (each divided into several chapters) discuss such things as the evolution of the modern health care model, human developmental stages, and contemporary social issues, and each section discusses how these various subjects relate to the field of human behavior and how they impact the biopsychosocial model. Each chapter begins with bulleted questions focusing on key points covered in the chapter. A thorough answer key (with discussion) to these questions is found at the end of the book. Two excellent appendixes review basic epidemiology and biostatistics. No references are provided.
Assessment: This is one of the better books I have reviewed in the past several academic years. It provides an excellent history and summation of the biopsychosocial model, but then goes further to examine the interrelationship between these concepts and how hey are influenced by other variables. The multiplicity of factors that can compromise human behavior and the relationships between these factors should be understood by any practicing clinician. Anyone who has ever struggled to understand the biopsychosocial model and its true impact on human health should read this book.

Rating

4 Stars! from Doody




Table of Contents:
About the Editors
Contributors
Table of Contents
SectThe Behavioral Sciences and Health1
1Evolving Models of Health Care5
Sect. IIBiological Mediators of Behavior13
2Neuronal Structures and Functions15
3Brain Structures and Their Functions23
4Chronobiology and Sleep29
5Predisposition35
Sect. IIIIndividual-Environmental Interaction41
6Sensation43
7Learning47
8Cognition, Emotion, and Stress55
Sect. IVDevelopment Through the Life Cycle63
9Pregnancy and Infancy65
10The Preschool Years71
11The School Years79
12The Adult Years87
13Selected Theories of Development95
Sect. VThe Individual and Social Groups103
14Social Behavior and Groups105
15Theories of Social Relations109
16Culture and Ethnicity115
17Health Care in Minority and Majority Groups123
18The Family129
19Human Sexuality and Sexual Disorders139
Sect. VISocietal Health Problems151
20Obesity153
21Poverty and Homelessness157
22Substance Abuse161
23Interpersonal Violence167
24Suicide175
Sect. VIIProviding Health Care181
25Complementary Medicine183
26The Health Care System193
27Ethical and Legal Issues in Patient Care203
28The Physician-Patient Relationship213
29The Medical Encounter219
30The Clinical Decision Making Process225
Sect. VIIIPsychopathology231
31Introduction to Psychopathology233
32Adjustment Disorders and Somatization241
33Eating Disorders247
34Anxiety Disorders253
35Major Mood Disorders259
36Dissociative Disorders and Cognitive Disorders265
37Schizophrenia and Other Psychotic Disorders269
38Personality Disorders and Impulse Control Disorders275
39Disorders of Childhood and Adolescence281
App. AEpidemiology291
App. BBiostatistics297
Review Questions - Answer Key305
Practice USMLE Exam307
Practice USMLE Exam Answers355
Subject Index401

New interesting book: Tales of Alaskas Bush Rat Governor or Henry Kissinger and the American Century

Seizures and Epilepsy in Childhood: A Guide

Author: John M Freeman

The award-winning Seizures and Epilepsy in Childhood is the standard resource for parents in need of comprehensive medical information about their child with epilepsy. Now in its third edition, this highly praised book has been thoroughly revised and updated to reflect the latest approaches to the diagnosis and treatment of epilepsy in childhood, including the use of the ketogenic diet as a treatment for children who either do not respond to traditional drug therapy or who suffer intolerable side effects from medications.

In addition to providing up-to-date information about new diagnostic techniques as well as new drugs, diet, and surgical treatments, the authors have included a chapter addressing routine health care for children with epilepsy and a new chapter on complementary and alternative therapies. Also new to this edition are discussions of the progress made in the evaluation for surgery, a chapter on insurance issues, and a section detailing additional resources.

"No child's life should be defined by seizures. If we understand how the brain works, what happens during seizures, and how to cope with epilepsy, we can overcome the mythology of epilepsy and fight society's prejudices, allowing every child with epilepsy to reach his or her full potential." -- From Seizures and Epilepsy in Childhood

Eric R. Hargis

This remarkable book has been empowering parents with vital information for more than ten years, and the new edition promises to do the same. It is committed to making parents active partners in their children's care and will be a vital resource for families everywhere.

Seizures and Epilepsy in Childhood

No child's life should be defined by seizures. If we understand how the brain works, what happens during seizures, and how to cope with epilepsy, we can overcome the mythology of epilepsy and fight society's prejudices, allowing every child with epilepsy to reach his or her full potential.

Doody Review Services

Reviewer: Paula M Cotruta, M.D. (University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine)
Description: This is an excellent reference for the public, both parents of children with epilepsy and for patients with epilepsy. It addresses not only diagnosis and treatment but also deals in detail with coping and living with epilepsy.
Purpose: The book is an approach to seizures and epilepsy written for the public, but it also is helpful for medical students, nurses, and general practitioners. The book is needed, given the many implications of this condition in a person's life, and given the fact that these questions are sometimes incompletely addressed during a regular doctor visit. The book meets the author's objectives.
Audience: It is written for the general public, medical students, nurses, general practitioners.
Features: The book covers seizures, epilepsy, treating epilepsy, and living with it. I found particularly useful the differentiation between being epileptic and having a seizure, also the information about the current diagnostic methods used (CT, EEG, MRI, blood tests). A unique feature of this book is the detailed approach of living with epilepsy.
Assessment: This a thorough look at epilepsy aimed at the general public. It educates parents on the diverse field of childhood epilepsy.

Rating

3 Stars from Doody




Sunday, February 1, 2009

The Healing Power of Herbs or Beating Prostate Cancer without Surgery

The Healing Power of Herbs: The Enlightened Person's Guide to the Wonders of Medicinal Plants

Author: Michael T Murray ND

If you don't believe the 80% of the world's population who depend on herbal remedies to treat common ailments, there is now a wealth of scientific research to substantiate the claims. If used properly, herbal medicine is powerful, effective and simple. THE HEALING POWER OF HERBS draws on scientific research to corroborate what many have known for years: herbs are the key to a longer, more healthful life. Inside you will find a directory to 37 common medicinal plants along with recommendations for treating 34 common health problems.
Discover:
• How licorice can be used to heal canker sores
• How ginkgo biloba can be used to delay the effects of Alzheimer's disease
• How garlic can be used to improve cholesterol levels
• How green tea can be used to help prevent cancer
• How bromelain can be used to heal athletic injuries



Books about: Good Carb Meals in Minutes or Barbecues and Grilling

Beating Prostate Cancer without Surgery

Author: James D Priest

Surgery is the most common means of treating prostate cancer, but many survivors later suffer from embarrassing quality-of-life issues, including incontinence and impotence. In this book, a retired surgeon and prostate cancer survivor discusses treatment options with less risk of these and other side effects.



Table of Contents:
Foreword by Archbishop Desmond Tutu