Friday, February 20, 2009

Magnetic Healing or Cellulite Buster

Magnetic Healing: Advanced Techniques for the Application of Magnetic Forces

Author: Buryl Payn

This book shows how magnetic forces help the body to heal itself by stimulating the biochemistry of the body so natural healing can take place.



Interesting book: Preventative Law for Business Professionals or Career Development and Systems Theory

Cellulite Buster: The 30-Day Diet Plan

Author: Monica Grenfell

Here is a bright and breezy, no-nonsense book to tackle cellulite. Monica Grenfell is back with a clear 30-day diet plan with emphasis on soluble fibre, spring water, and 6 key foods. The book includes clear home exercises with measurement charts to keep tabs on your progress, as well as motivational beauty regimes.



Thursday, February 19, 2009

Blood or Healing with Spirit

Blood: An Epic History of Medicine and Commerce

Author: Douglas Starr

Powerfully involving narrative and incisive detail, clarity and inherent drama: Blood offers in abundance the qualities that define the best popular science writing. Here is the sweeping story of a substance that has been feared, revered, mythologized, and used in magic and medicine from earliest times--a substance that has become the center of a huge, secretive, and often dangerous worldwide commerce.

Winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, Blood was described by judges as "a gripping page-turner, a significant contribution to the history of medicine and technology and a cautionary tale. Meticulously reported and exhaustively documented."

Dallas Morning News

Reads like a thriller. Starr is a wonderful storyteller as well as a sober historian.

New Yorker

This rewarding book, filled with sharp science, has everything from a brief survey of bloodletting to an account of the massive mobilization of donated blood for the Allied invasion of Normandy. But its real subject is the postwar rise of the 'blood-services complex,' which controls the global market for blood products.

Scientific American

Blood should be included in all first- and second-year medical curricula.

Los Angeles Times

A gripping page-turner, a significant contribution to the history of medicine and technology and a cautionary tale.

Judges' citation

Houston Chronicle

[A] cast-of-thousands continent-spanning saga, complete with heroic physicians and dastardly entrepreneurs....Starr's history....inspires a more profound appreciation for a substance we sometimes take for granted.

Washington Post Book World

Thoroughly researched and often shocking.

Village Voice Literary Supplement

Starr writes like a wildly enthusiastic high school biology teacher who arrives each day bristling with excitement, leaping about before the chalkboard, cracking jokes, and zealously banging his fist on his desk. Even the most indifferent brats pay attention, and so too will readers....Starr has created what amounts to a history of the human race perceived through the filter of blood as medical product.

New England Journal of Medicine

Blood is a story of human frailty and courage, a book from which any reader could learn.

Newsday

Meticulously researched, elegantly told.

Entertainment Weekly

Starr's lively history . . . courses with greed, altruism, and woozily vivid detail.

Richard Bernstein

Riveting. . . . A fascinating history. . . . A rich story admirably told. —New York Times

Atlanta Journal

Definitive...an outstanding chronicle.

Boston Globe

Illuminating.

Entertainment Weekly - Megan Harlan

...[A] lively history....

Scientific American

Blood should be included in all first- and second-year medical curricula.

New York Review of Books

Fascinating...Starr's book is the story of blood, but it is also the story of money, and the dance of death the two of them have lately been doing.

Houston Chronicle

[A] cast-of-thousands continent-spanning saga, complete with heroic physicians and dastardly entrepreneurs. . . . Starr's history . . . inspires a more profound appreciation for a substance we sometimes take for granted.

Washington Post Book World

Thoroughly researched and often shocking.

New England Journal of Medicine

Blood is a story of human frailty and courage, a book from which any reader could learn.

Village Voice Literary Supplement

Starr writes like a wildly enthusiastic high school biology teacher who arrives each day bristling with excitement, leaping about before the chalkboard, cracking jokes, and zealously banging his fist on his desk. Even the most indifferent brats pay attention, and so too will readers. . . . Starr has created what amounts to a history of the human race perceived through the filter of blood as medical product.

New Yorker

This rewarding book, filled with sharp science, has everything from a brief survey of bloodletting to an account of the massive mobilization of donated blood for the Allied invasion of Normandy. But its real subject is the postwar rise of the 'blood-services complex,' which controls the global market for blood products.

Dallas Morning News

Reads like a thriller. Starr is a wonderful storyteller as well as a sober historian.

Publishers Weekly

The co-director of Boston University's graduate program in science journalism shows how it's done in this exemplary study of the role that blood has played in human affairs. Although Starr begins the story centuries ago, he concentrates on modern times. Throughout his coverage, information about advances in biology and physiology is introduced as needed, often enabling the reader to share in the excitement of scientific discovery. But this book is about much more than just biology. The politics of blood play a central role, from our race with the Germans during the Second World War to develop a system to enable battlefield transfusions to the squabbling and animosity present among the various blood collection agencies in the U.S. As Starr makes clear, as the global traffic in blood and blood products has expanded into a multibillion-dollar operation, the financial bottom line has begun to outweigh the importance of medical benefits. In riveting fashion, Starr explains how business practices enabled the AIDS virus to permeate the world's blood supply, leading to thousands of unnecessary deaths, particularly among hemophiliacs. Truly frightening are tales of the harvesting of blood and plasma from indigent and unhealthy third-world natives and the unwillingness of governments, third- and first-world alike, to take action to protect their citizens. Clear-eyed and wrought with superb attention to detail, this is first-class science writing, with a striking message. (PW best book of 1998).

Library Journal

Starr, codirector of the graduate program in science journalism at Boston University, energetically plunges into the social, ethical, and economic history of one of the most mysterious and culturally pertinent resources in human history: our very blood. He starts with the first blood transfusion, from a calf to a man, in 1667 Paris and runs through the changing mythological landscape, medical advances, and the political (and certainly military) power associated with possessing a rich blood supply. He closes with a discussion of contemporary issues, such as the threat posed by regarding blood as a commodity. This is science writing at its best: well researched, socially relevant, and highly enjoyable. (LJ 8/98)

Booknews

Starr (Journalism, Boston U.) briefly traces the role of blood in human history, health, and religion down the ages, but focuses on the scientific discoveries of the past couple of centuries that have made blood and its components into a five-billion-dollar a year worldwide business. He discusses the spread of AIDS through contaminated blood, the use of plasma to make drugs, various scandals that continue to erupt, and the latest attempts to make artificial blood.

Richard Bernstein

...[A] rich story admirably told... -- The New York Times

Business Week

An intriguing book with some important lessons for public health.

Deborah Blum

...Starr's book does not, in any sense, favor combat. His description of the carnage of the battlefield is unflinchingly grim....illustrates more than one of the real paradoxes of medicine. Practice balances...between detachment and compassion. -- The New York Times Book Review

The New Yorker

This rewarding book, filled with sharp science, has everything from a brief survey of bloodletting to the massive mobilization of donated blood for the invasion of Normandy. But its real subject is the postwar rise of the 'blood-services-complex,' which controls the global market for blood products.

NY Review of Books

Fascinating...Starr's book is the story of blood, but it is also the story of money, and the dance of death the two of them have lately been doing.

Megan Harlan

...[A] lively history.... -- Entertainment Weekly

The Advocate

An exhaustive expose of the world-wide business of blood. Starr traces the links between the AIDS crisis and the distribution of contaminated blood products in the early 80's...An unnerving must-read on how the politics of blood affects us all.

The Sciences

Spellbinding.

Kirkus Reviews

Seasoned journalist and former field biologist Starr writes an outstandingly lively history, based largely on archival research and interviews, of an unexpectedly dramatic topic: the international science, economics, and politics of blood transfusion. The topic subsumes several others: methods of collecting and storing blood, of deconstructing it (isolating out its several components, especially the clotting agent Factor VIII, so crucial to the health of hemophiliacs), and screening it for disease. The story begins in the 17th century, when the French doctor Jean-Baptiste Denis first transfused calf's blood into a crazed patient, inducing a fever that temporarily cured him of syphilis. It proceeds up until the late 20th century, when angry hemophiliacs, infected with HIV by contaminated blood, brought suits against doctors and blood banks in Japan, France, and America. In between, Starr recounts the heroic transfusing efforts of donors, doctors, and military personnel during WWII, which saved countless front-line soldiers' lives; the postwar competition among modern blood banks; and the rise of the blood-buying business, which too often exploited the poor and unhealthy. Several tensions move the drama: between medical professionals and service-minded laypeople; between government health agencies and business-oriented blood banks; and between views of blood as purchasable commodity and as humanitarian gift. The history of blood—sanguine though it is by definition—is thus far from uniformly rosy. Starr, an accomplished storyteller, weaves his plot around the great, eccentric, and sometimes tragic personalities of blood history, lightening it with humorous anecdotes,as of Bela Lugosi (alias Dracula) donating blood to American servicemen during WWII in order to make good on his 'ill-gotten gains.' A potentially dramatic tension Starr might have explored further, in his final chapters on AIDS, is between the two politically vocal—but otherwise very different—communities of HIV-infected hemophiliacs and gay men. Transfused into such good narrative history, Blood will interest even those who can't stand the sight of it.



Table of Contents:
Preface
1The Blood of a Gentle Calf3
2"There Is No Remedy As Miraculous As Bleeding"17
3A Strange Agglutination31
4Blood on the Hoof53
5Prelude to a Blood Bath72
6War Begins88
7Blood Cracks like Oil101
8Blood at the Front122
9Dr. Naito147
10Dr. Cohn163
11The Blood Boom186
12Bad Blood207
13Wildcat Days231
14The Blood-Services Complex250
15Outbreak266
16"All Our Lots Are Contaminated"299
17Judgment322
Epilogue: Blood in a Post-AIDS Society345
Notes357
Acknowledgments415
Index419

New interesting textbook: Direzione della Fuori-de--Scatola

Healing with Spirit

Author: Caroline Caroline Myss

On this fascinating audiocassette, Carolyn Myss a pioneer in the field of energetic medicine who is able to diagnose illness by intuitive means, explains how past traumas, grudges, and illusions literally steal vital energy from our body tissues. The topics that Myss and New Dimensions Radio Host Michael Toms discuss include:

  • How "biography becomes biology" in your body;
  • Not blaming yourself for illness;
  • Why you may be afraid of being healthy;
  • The story of a young psychic's path;
  • How society focuses on the shadow side of emotion;
  • The biggest blocks to intuition and happiness . . . and much more!



Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Truth About Beauty or Everything Health Guide to PMS

Truth About Beauty: Transform Your Looks And Your Life From The Inside Out

Author: Kat James

The Truth about Beauty is a revolutionary guide to transforming your shape, your looks, and your life without drugs, deprivation, sweat, or surgery. Renowned holistic beauty expert and health advocate Kat James introduces pro-beauty lifestyle upgrades that will help readers shed the toxic mindsets and popular regimens that sabotage our bodies, and recreate ourselves from the inside-out with stunning physical rewards. Backed by current science and based on the author1s own remarkable transformation, this indispensable resource will help readers:

* Discover the three crucial elements missing from standard beauty and body approaches
* Learn why chemistry counts more than calories
* End food cravings and reshape their body
* Reverse wrinkles without acids and conquer chronic skin issues without drugs
* Convert dozens of autopilot routines into powerfully transforming beauty rituals

The book includes an extraordinary Resource Guide filled with the most affordable and appealing science-backed solutions that maximize your vitality and quality of life.

Kat James's advice has been featured on Today and MSNBC and in Vogue, O, Self, and Seventeen. Her clients have included both everyday women and celebrities such as Sarah Jessica Parker and Kate Hudson. She is a regular columnist for Better Nutrition and founder of the science-based Web site, InformedBeauty.com.



Read also Shape Magazines Shape Your Life or American Medical Association Essential Guide to Depression

Everything Health Guide to PMS

Author: Dagmara Scalis

Do you dread the days before your period? Are you curious about the latest traditional and alternative treatments that could quell your symptoms? Packed with resources, advice, treatment information, and clinical research, The Everything Health Guide to PMShelps you understand the symptoms, causes, risk factors, and types of PMS.

The Everything Health Guide to PMSalso gives dietary suggestions, explains the difference between PMS and more serious conditions like Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder (PMDD), and offers a PMDD self-test, as well as authoritative advice on:

  • What questions to ask your doctor
  • Treatments such as aromatherapy, acupuncture, and massage
  • Health issues stemming from PMS such as fibroids
  • Men and PMS
  • Perimenopause and menopause
The Everything Health Guide to PMS is a useful resource to help you feel and look your best during that otherwise challenging "time of the month."



Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Herbal Remedies or Twelve Steps to Self Improvement

Herbal Remedies: A Quick and Easy Guide to Common Disorders and Their Herbal Remedies

Author: Asa Hershoff

An essential reference to herbal remedies for the most common ailments.

Sharing twenty-five years of clinical expertise, Dr. Asa Hershoff has written a highly accessible and useful guide to hundreds of herbs and their uses for specific conditions. The book's unique format helps readers quickly assess health conditions. Margins on each page depict icons of body parts for very easy reference. An alphabetical listing of ailments provides information on each herb's source, dosage, and possible contraindications.

Integrating the best of herbal tradition and science, this authoritative book is an essential guide for tapping the healing power of herbs.

Author Bio: Asa Hershoff, N.D., D.C., is a chiropractor, naturopathic physician, and homeopath with practices in Los Angeles and New York City.

Andrea Rotelli, N.D., is a naturopathic physician.



Book about: Quantum Healing or Complete Yoga Book

Twelve Steps to Self-Improvement: A Crisp Assessment Profile

Author: Frederic H Jones

Optimism is a must in today's competitive world-it's often your edge up. This life-changing book uses twelve self-improvement profiles to help you gain a new focus on your personal life and career. Interactive exercises rate your self-esteem, wellness, human relation skills, assertiveness, attitude, and much more.



Monday, February 16, 2009

Helping a Loved One Live Smoke Free or Through the Goddess

Helping a Loved One Live Smoke-Free: What Works, What Won't, and Why

Author: Barbara White Melin

How many times have you nagged them? Sometimes you pleaded. And you've even tried bribing. It seems nothing has helped your loved one quit smoking. In this first of its kind how-to book for non-smokers, Barbara White Melin reveals the powerful dynamics of nicotine addiction and presents effective strategies for assisting a loved one who is trying to quit.

Drawing on the latest medical and psychological research, Melin examines new evidence about nicotine's effect on stress as well as the link between smoking and depression. Friendly, straightforward, and hopeful, Helping a Loved One Live Smoke-Free offers both the inspiration and the tools to support someone you love through this difficult change.

Key features and benefits

  • provides excellent explanation of why it's so hard to quit smoking
  • author is a leading spokesperson on issues related to tobacco use
  • offers commonsense advice and simple techniques



See also: Finanzbuchführungsbericht und Analyse

Through the Goddess: A Woman's Way of Healing

Author: Patricia Reis

Drawing on her wide background in depth psychology, art, and archeology, Patricia Reis gives a unique feminist reading to the meaning of the Goddess. Through personal experience and reflection, through women's creative productions, and above all through examples from the lives of women she has guided in her practice of therapeia, Through the Goddess shows the indwelling Goddess to be a much-needed resource for physical, spiritual, and psychological healing. Utilizing pre-patriarchal Goddess images for inspiration and information, Reis shows how the earliest Goddess images provide important bedrock symbols of female wholeness that are lacking in the later Greek Goddesses who are often patriarchally influenced and reflect instead the suffering and fragmented aspects of women, which correspond to contemporary women's struggles for self-acceptance. Reis further develops a newly emerging archetype: that of the female body. Through the work of women poets and artists, Reis shows how women today can heal personally and collectively from abuse, incest, eating disorders, and from the sometimes devastating effects of breast cancer by initiation into and through the Goddess.

Library Journal

Reis is a proponent of feminist archetypal psychology, and presents in this work her thesis and the development of her methodology. Included is an analysis of Ken Kesey's novel One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (Viking, 1962) and frescoes in the Villa of Mysteries at Pompeii. At the outset, she states that current images of goddesses are reworked through the patriarchal imagination, leaving women voiceless and seeking their own images and mythologies. Using pre-patriarchal goddess images, Reis shows us a more earthy, many-faceted goddess in whom creation and destruction, life and death are all contained--a figure closer to women's experience of life than Greek and Roman examples. Recommended for most women's studies or psychology collections.-- Marilyn E. Schafer, Canadian Memorial Chiropractic Coll., Toronto



Table of Contents:
List of Illustrations and Plates9
Acknowledgments11
Preface13
Introduction: Theory and Practice17
IThe Mysteries of Creativity: Self-Seeding, Death, and the Great Goddess34
IIFacing Medusa: The Shadow Sister60
IIIGood Breast, Bad Breast, This Is the Cuckoo's Nest: Patriarchy Imagines Matriarchy86
IVRecovering Aphrodite: Healing the Abused Body111
VConfronting the High Priestess Necessitas: Healing the Wounded Body150
VIThe Mystery Is Always of the Body: A Mid-Life Meditation on the Villa of Mysteries at Pompeii177
Notes215
Copyright Acknowledgments225
Illustration and Plate Credits227
Index229

Saturday, February 14, 2009

Nutrition for Women or Everyday Low Carb Cooking

Nutrition for Women: How Eating Right Can Help You Look and Feel Your Best

Author: Elizabeth Somer

A revised edition of the comprehensive and
accessible guide that dispels the myths and explains the facts about nutrition and women's health

For many women, nutrition is more than a bit confusing. Diets abound, from the anti-heart disease diet to the PMS diet to the hundreds of weight loss diets. Nutrition for Women is a quick reference guide that simplifies this nutrition puzzle, combining the best advice into an eating plan designed specifically to address many of the disorders unique to women. Here readers will find the latest research on the role nutrition plays in the many stages of a woman's life, as well as the latest information on how to
- reduce the risk of osteoporosis, cancer, and heart disease
- lose weight and keep it off
- combat fatigue and boost energy
- look and feel younger This completely updated edition-based on the research of more than two thousand studies of women's health issues-cuts through the hype and dispels the myths, providing accurate, accessible information for every woman interested in the benefits of eating well.



Go to: Les Problèmes Globaux et la Culture de Capitalisme

Everyday Low Carb Cooking: 240 Great-Tasting Low Carbohydrate Recipes the Whole Family Will Enjoy

Author: Alex Haas

Low-carb eating continues to gain adherents as people discover that they can lose weight and help manage chronic conditions such as diabetes and high cholesterol by eating more low-carb foods. Everyday Low Carb Cooking—here in its third edition—contains 225 recipes from two dozen cuisines that provide a wide variety of low-carb options. The recipes are designed for the entire family to enjoy, and cover salads, soups, and a wide variety of seafood, chicken, beef, pork, and vegetable choices. Haas has already been praised for the incredible variety of his recipes and for offering low-carb versions of such foods as salad dressings, chicken wings, crab cakes, and coleslaws—that are not readily available in other low-carb cookbooks. Each recipe includes macronutrient counts for each ingredient. This is an accessible, proven book of low carbohydrate recipes for everyone who wants or needs to be on a low-carb diet.



Friday, February 13, 2009

Baby Steps or Alzheimers Disease and Marriage

Baby Steps: How Lesbian Alternative Insemination Is Changing the World

Author: Amy Agigian

Baby Steps is the first in-depth discussion of the issues and questions raised by lesbian insemination, and this book has been designed to serve the interests of general readers and health care providers as well as teachers and students in women's studies, gay and lesbian studies, sociology, legal studies, and bioethics.

"Patriarchy is a longstanding, durable institution and this book exhilarates any reader-heterosexual or lesbian-who is weary of living under its mantle."

Library Journal

In what appears to be an outgrowth of her doctoral dissertation, Agigian (sociology, Suffolk Univ.) examines the medical, legal, economic, and cultural issues surrounding lesbians' use of alternative insemination (A.I.). Agigian observes the obstacles facing lesbians desiring A.I., including state laws requiring a husband's consent before a woman can be inseminated, lack of insurance coverage for A.I. because lesbians do not fit the definition of infertile, and the absence of legal protections for the nonbiological mother in a lesbian family. She also considers some of the economic issues involved with A.I., including its high cost and the ethical questions surrounding the commodification of procreation. She closes with some suggestions on how society could change to ease the way for lesbian families and to give them an equal footing in society. Agigian includes good notes, an extensive bibliography, and an appendix about her methodology. This significant topic has received little attention, but the writing here is very dense and difficult. Recommended for academic libraries. Debra Moore, Cerritos Coll., Norwalk, CA Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.



Interesting book: Il mondo di modo

Alzheimer's Disease and Marriage

Author: Lore K Wright

What impact does Alzheimer's disease have on the marital relationship? What can a helping professional do to help the caregiving spouse? Carefully and thoughtfully documented, Alzheimer's Disease and Marriage peers deeply into caregiving research and personal data on individual relationships to uncover the profound effects of Alzheimer's disease on marriage. To date, existing research only dimly illuminates patterns of impact, response, and influence of this affliction on marriage; Alzheimer's Disease and Marriage now fills the void. The distinguished author presents her findings from the perspective of both the caregiver and the Alzheimer's disease afflicted spouse that results in a highly practical tool professionals can use for optimal intervention and assessment. The author shows how Alzheimer's disease invades various dimensions of marriage and how spouses retain or lose awareness of each other. Among the marital dimensions explored are day-to-day aspects of a relationship such as household tasks, tension, companionship, affection and sexuality, and commitment. For each of these dimensions, clinical assessment strategies and guidelines for interventions are described. Details on how to approach and interact with an afflicted spouse are also provided. Nurses in advanced practice, researchers, practitioners, and advanced students of gerontology, psychology, and social work will find Alzheimer's Disease and Marriage invaluable in bringing Alzheimer's disease and its impact more sharply into focus. "Lore K. Wright's monograph, building carefully on past research, breaks new ground as it explores the reality of marital relationships lived within the shadow of Alzheimer'sdisease. . . . Practical strategies are outlined in great detail, from the kinds of questions to ask during client visits to the kinds of support necessary and available for caregivers. It is Wright's ability to take the research findings and translate them into practice which provides the major contribution of this work."



Table of Contents:
Foreword
Overview
Household Aspects of Marriage
Tension Within the Marriage Relationship
Companionship Within the Marital Relationship
Affection and Sexuality Within the Marital Relationship
Commitment and the Marriage Relationship
Conclusions

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

The Golden Text of AA or Pregnancy and Birth

The Golden Text of A.A.: Early A.A., God, and Real Spirituality

Author: Dick B

This booklet is the second of a series containing the remarks of Dick B. at his annual seminars at The Wilson House. The booklet contains the sincere and surprising credit that Bill Wilson and Bill Dotson (A.A. #3) gave to God for curing them of the disease of alcoholism.



New interesting book: Die Volkswirtschaft von U S Gesundheitsfürsorge-Politik: Die Rolle des Marktes Zwingt

Pregnancy and Birth: Your Complete Guide from Conception to Birth

Author: Tina Ott

Our ways of handling pregnancy are always evolving, and doctors, nurses and midwives are constantly finding ways to improve the birth experience. In recent years, new thinking on the role of the partner, the importance of non-clinical caregivers, the value of exercise, and the challenge of single motherhood, has altered the ways in which we approach the process of giving birth. Every expectant mother needs sound guidance on what to expect. Written by a qualified midwife, long-time childbirth educator, and author of Positively Pregnant, it offers comprehensive advice on what to expect and how to cope with the challenges of pregnancy and birth. Postpartum topics such as the newborn’s appearance, breastfeeding, and recovering from childbirth are also discussed. 



Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Long Term Care or Psoriasis

Long-Term Care: Managing Across the Continuum

Author: John R Pratt

Even as you read this, the field of long—term care is undergoing a rapid redefinition of both its institutional and community—based providers.

Public policy makers are working to add much—needed alternative modes of delivery to traditional long—term institutional care. New rules, new levels, and new kinds of care are constantly being created. As a result, tomorrow's long—term care administrators will have to be flexible enough to adapt to different management settings, and to oversee an ever—expanding variety of services. They will need the skills essential to managing larger organizations, likely to include multiple aspects of long—term care. Long—Term Care: Managing Across the Continuum provides a solid, realistic foundation on which to build your expertise. You will understand the differences and similarities among the many long—term care services... how the various segments of long—term care fit together to form an overall system ...and the skills you will need to succeed in that system in the future.

Lori L. Popejoy

This book offers an overview of the long-term industry including discussions on types of services available, financing of services, consumers' roles, state and federal regulations, and quality assessment. The purpose is to offer a broad overview of information about long-term care. It is designed to be a practical, usable resource for managers in long-term care. This book is written as a reference for long-term care managers as well as a textbook for management students. It is written in distinct chapters about subjects related to long-term care. The editor discusses some important but controversial changes in the industry such as reimbursement, effects of consumer demands, and state regulations regarding service settings. Challenging issues such as technology, information management, and ethics are reviewed. Case studies are presented at the end of some of the chapters to help illustrate the benefits of different care settings such as nursing home services, homecare, subacute care, and adult day care. The editor covered this complex topic very comprehensively. This would be an excellent textbook for students of management and a valuable resource for managers in long-term care.

Doody Review Services

Reviewer: Lori L. Popejoy, MSN, RN, CS (University of Missouri-Columbia)
Description: This book offers an overview of the long-term industry including discussions on types of services available, financing of services, consumers' roles, state and federal regulations, and quality assessment.
Purpose: The purpose is to offer a broad overview of information about long-term care. It is designed to be a practical, usable resource for managers in long-term care.
Audience: This book is written as a reference for long-term care managers as well as a textbook for management students.
Features: It is written in distinct chapters about subjects related to long-term care. The editor discusses some important but controversial changes in the industry such as reimbursement, effects of consumer demands, and state regulations regarding service settings. Challenging issues such as technology, information management, and ethics are reviewed. Case studies are presented at the end of some of the chapters to help illustrate the benefits of different care settings such as nursing home services, homecare, subacute care, and adult day care.
Assessment: The editor covered this complex topic very comprehensively. This would be an excellent textbook for students of management and a valuable resource for managers in long-term care.

Rating

3 Stars from Doody




Look this: Perinatal Stress Mood and Anxiety Disorders or Instyle Secrets of Style

Psoriasis

Author: Kendra Gail Bergstrom

Book offers practical answers to your questions about treatment options, coping strategies--for both patient and family. Written by two expert dermatologists specializing in treating psoriasis, and featuring insider advice from an actual patient.



Sunday, February 8, 2009

Balance Your Brain Balance Your Life or The Best Healthcare for Less

Balance Your Brain, Balance Your Life: 28 Days to Feeling Better Than You Ever Have

Author: Jay Lombard

Acclaim for Balance Your Brain Balance Your Life

"Balance Your Brain, Balance Your Life breaks new ground in psychology and medicine and promises to change the way we think about health and disease."
—Mehmet Oz, M.D.
bestselling author of Healing from the Heart

"This innovative and interesting book will help you feel great and live life to its fullest."
—Carol Colman
New York Times bestselling coauthor of Curves

"Dr. Lombard is at the forefront of the emerging field of neuropsychiatry and this book explains it all in a way that is practical and easily understood."
—Aidan Quinn, actor

"Anyone seeking greater balance in life can find much useful practical information in this book."
—David Simon, M.D.
Medical Director of the Chopra Center for Well Being
author of the Nautilus Award—winning Vital Energy

"This step-by-step guide gives clear treatment strategies to help you successfully navigate the complex interplay between the brain and the body—a holistic approach that shows you how to use the best of Eastern and Western medicines."
—Elizabeth DuPont Spencer, M.S.W.
coauthor of The Anxiety Cure and The Anxiety Cure for Kids

"Bravo! Dr. Lombard demonstrates that when it comes to the understanding and rational integration of traditional and alternative medicine he has no peer."
—Joseph A. Deltito, M.D.
Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, New York Medical College

"You’ll come away from reading Balance Your Brain, Balance Your Life with a new sense of awe and wonder at the exquisite relationship between mind and body. Whether you’re seeking to improve your mood, control your weight, or just plain feel better, Drs. Lombard and Renna have answers for you that encompass the totality of your life, not just a part."
—Toni G. Grant, Ph.D.
clinical psychologist and author of Being a Woman

This is a revolutionary program that shows you how to boost your health, energy, and happiness by balancing your brain chemistry.

Do you suffer from symptoms of anxiety, depression, chronic pain, overweight, fatigue, inability to focus, addiction, or more? Now there is hope for you. In this groundbreaking guide to feeling your best all the time, two prominent physicians explain how slight imbalances in your brain chemistry can cause a wide variety of health problems—and how you can overcome these problems and regain your health in 28 days.

Drs. Jay Lombard and Christian Renna show how your health and mood are directly connected to the balance of five neurotransmitters in your brain and body, especially dopamine and serotonin. They include a simple questionnaire that you can use to determine whether you have an excess or deficiency of one or more of these neurotransmitters, and they show the effects your imbalance can have on your health. A deficit of dopamine, for instance, may lead to weight gain, diminished sex drive, inability to focus, and addictions, whereas a deficit of serotonin may cause anxiety, depression, and an increased risk of heart disease.

Using breakthrough research along with dramatic case studies of patients who now feel great after following the authors’ program, Balance Your Brain, Balance Your Life provides easy-to-follow strategies for correcting most imbalances through customized 28-day programs of exercise, diet, supplements, and herbs.

In this groundbreaking guide to feeling terrific, you’ll learn how to:

  • Identify whether you are a warm type, a cool type, or a dual type
  • Select the customized 28-day mind-body plan that’s right for you
  • Conquer symptoms of anxiety, depression, chronic pain, fatigue, and more
  • Lose weight and improve your mood

By following the revolutionary new program in this book, you can make yourself healthier, more energetic, and happier in less than a month.

Author Biography: DR. JAY LOMBARD is Assistant Clinical Professor of Neurology at Cornell Medical School and the Director of the Brain Behavior Center in Rockland County, New York. He has appeared on Larry King Live and NBC News and is a nationally recognized speaker on brain-behavioral-related topics.
DR. CHRISTIAN RENNA is a nationally recognized expert on preventive medicine and the founder of LifeSpan Medicine clinics. He has appeared on 48 Hours, Extra!, and nationwide radio. With offices in Dallas and Beverly Hills, he has many celebrity patients.
ARMIN A. BROTT is a freelance writer. His books include The Expectant Father: Facts, Tips and Advice for Dads-to-Be and Father for Life: A Journey of Joy, Challenge, and Change.

Publishers Weekly

Neurologist Lombard and preventive medicine speaker Renna argue that we are all in a state of chemical imbalance. The authors' premise is that people who are too warm need more of the cooling neurotransmitter serotonin, while people who are too cool need more dopamine. Deficiencies of either chemical lead to certain personality characteristics and are even affiliated with medical conditions such as heart disease. People who are too warm are often restless and angry, while those who are too cool are often fatigued and anxious. As the authors explain, "When we say mind-body balance what we really mean is brain-body balance." Lombard and Renna provide a test so readers can determine whether they have a warming or cooling tendency, and then they offer tailored 28-day programs that include diet, dietary supplements, exercise, sleep and possible medical treatment. Although the authors say that people can have a dual deficiency, trying to fit into the categories may remind readers of trying to match up with an astrological sign. Interesting points are made, but still it will be hard for many to accept that so much of our mental and physical health is due to a neurotransmitter deficit. Additionally, while many of the authors' recommendations appear sound, they don't provide much evidence for their dietary or supplement advice. (Jan.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.



Books about: Making Ice Cream or Pasta

The Best Healthcare for Less: Saving Money on Chronic Medical Conditions and Prescription Drugs

Author: David M Nganel

Practical methods for reducing medical care costs for sufferers of chronic diseases

Millions of North Americans suffer from medical conditions such as Alzheimer’s, allergies, diabetes, and depression–conditions that can, over time, cause extreme financial hardships (not to mention emotional and professional hardships). This comprehensive resource helps the consumer identify the kinds of drugs, programs, hospitals, and strategies that will help significantly reduce out-of-pocket expenses. David Nganele explains how anyone can better afford healthcare–of whatever kind–without losing out on quality of care. From arthritis sufferers to people with asthma to anyone undergoing a procedure that is not covered by insurance, this guide provides hope and relief from one of the most stressful aspects of dealing with a serious illness.

David Nganele, PhD (Mt. Kisco, NY), is President of the Eden Center for Diverse Health Communications, a medical education company focused on improving access to healthcare through education. His work has received media coverage in such publications as the New York Times.



Table of Contents:
SECTION I. WHERE WE ARE AND WHERE WE SHOULD BE.

Chapter 1. Healthcare Costs: Where They Come From and Who Pays for Them.

Chapter 2. How Not to Get Sick: Primary Prevention.

SECTION II. PRESCRIPTION DRUGS.

Chapter 3. Prescription Drugs and Healthcare Cost.

Chapter 4. Saving on Prescription Drugs When You Have Drug Coverage.

Chapter 5. Prescription Drugs At No Cost or Low Cost: With or Without Insurance.

SECTION III. OTHER AREAS OF HEALTHCARE COST.

Chapter 6. Physician Services.

Chapter 7. Institution Care - Hospitals and Nursing Home.

Chapter 8. Employment and Family Issues.

SECTION IV. MANAGING THE COST OF COMMON CHRONIC DISEASES.

Chapter 9. Alzheimer's Disease.

Chapter 10. Arthritis.

Chapter 11. Asthma.

Chapter 12. Cancers.

Chapter 13. Depression and Anxiety.

Chapter 14. Diabetes.

Chapter 15. Heart Disease.

Chapter 16. HIV/AIDS.

Chapter 17. Osteoporosis.

Appendix I. Directory of State Health and Insurance Agencies.

Appendix II. Directory of Health Associations.

Appendix III. Directory of Drug Companies' Patient Assistance Programs.

Appendix IV. List of Some Internet Pharmacies.

Appendix V. Directory of Some Discount Pharmacy Programs.

Read a Sample Chapter

The Best Healthcare for Less

Save Money on Chronic Medical Conditions and Prescription Drugs
By David Nganele

John Wiley & Sons

ISBN: 0-471-21849-9


Chapter One

Healthcare Costs

Where They Come From and Who Pays for Them

The Cost of Healthcare

The cost of healthcare is now over a trillion dollars a year. The benefactors of this money transfer are:

Hospitals $420 billion Physician and clinical services $289 billion Home and nursing care $133 billion Drug Manufacturers $130 billion

The rest goes to medical equipment and other services like dental care and research.

Take a look at the diagram on the next page. I call it the "the healthcare cost pyramid." Have you heard of the food pyramid? The food pyramid is a guide to help us achieve proper nutrition. The healthcare cost pyramid should serve as a guide to help us understand and, hopefully, control the cost of healthcare. A lot of money is being spent on healthcare; and the goal here is to show how we can spend wisely on healthcare and maybe even reduce the cost of healthcare by becoming educated consumers.

Explaining the Healthcare Cost Pyramid

Primary Prevention

At the top of the pyramid is primary prevention. Primary prevention is doing the things that prevent us from getting sick. This is achieved by living a healthy lifestyle, and it includes exercising, eating properly, and getting routine physical examinations. It also includes not doing the thingsthat can get us sick, such as smoking, illegal drug use, and excess alcohol intake. As you can see from the diagram, this is the smallest section of the pyramid. Primary prevention is the least costly thing we can do in terms of healthcare cost, so we need to educate ourselves to do everything we can to stay in that section of the pyramid. While everybody should be living healthy lifestyles to avoid getting sick, there are certain individuals who are at high risk for certain diseases and they need to pay particular attention to what it takes to prevent getting sick.

It can't be repeated enough: prevention is better than cure. Prevention is less expensive, too. With primary prevention, you not only prevent diseases from starting, you might actually catch the beginning of a disease and do the things that prevent it from becoming a full-blown illness. Chapter 2 deals with primary prevention. The goal is to show how we can practice healthy living even when we think we don't have the time or we don't know what to do.

Secondary Prevention

As we move down the pyramid, we get into secondary prevention. Secondary prevention is doing the things that prevent an illness we have from becoming complicated. With primary prevention, we do the things that prevent us from getting sick. A lot of individuals can, for example, prevent getting diabetes by watching their weight through proper nutrition and exercise. Unfortunately, sometimes even with the best of efforts, we still get sick. When we do get sick, we need to understand all we can about the disease, what it is, how we got sick, what we need to do to treat it, and very important, what will happen if we do not manage it effectively. This is secondary prevention. Part 4 of this book considers secondary prevention in light of some of the major chronic diseases. I have focused on these chronic diseases because these are the ones that people have to live with for very long periods of time. So as you can expect, chronic diseases are the most costly to manage.

The most important physician in your life is you. The things you do every day to yourself will determine your state of health much more than anything any physician can ever do. Your physician can tell you all you need to know and do to stay healthy, but unless you do what's suggested, it will all amount to zero. And your negligence could cost you a bundle down the road.

So, what happens if your doctor tells you have high blood pressure, high cholesterol, or diabetes? You now fall to the middle of the pyramid. The goal here is to do everything you can in order not to fall to the bottom of the pyramid, that of institutional care. As you can see from the size of the box, institutional care is bigger than secondary prevention, meaning that it costs a lot more. We prevent falling to the bottom of the pyramid by strictly following the instructions from our doctors and other healthcare professionals. Whether we practice only conventional therapy, also known as Western medicine, or add on to that complementary or alternative medicine-in other words nonconventional medicine -the goal should be the same: to do what it takes to properly manage the disease.

Pharmaceuticals play an increasing role in helping us effectively manage diseases and keep us in the secondary prevention box. However, as the costs of medications go up, many individuals stop taking their medicines or take them inappropriately to save on the cost. While this might reduce expenses in the short run, eventually this poor disease management will result in the type of complications that will push an individual down to the bottom box of the pyramid. He or she might end up in a hospital or a nursing home, or worse, die prematurely. The key, therefore, is to find the means to get the needed medication and take it as prescribed. Because of the importance of drugs, I have devoted a whole section-part two-to prescription drugs, to show how any individual, regardless of insurance status or income level, can get medications at low or no cost.

Institutional Care

At the bottom of the pyramid is institutional care. This is where you now have to leave the comfort of your home to get taken care of, either in a hospital or a nursing home, because your condition now requires a greater level of management. This is healthcare cost at its most expensive state. Half of all direct spending on diseases goes toward institutional care. We pay that much for hospitals and other kinds of institutional care because they provide the intensive care needed to keep us alive-and for that, we truly owe them our lives. The point here is that they are expensive, and to the extent that we can do things to prevent going to an institution, to postpone going to one, to reduce the amount of time spent there, or to minimize what they have to do to us there, the less expensive the cost of healthcare will be.

Who Pays for the Cost of Healthcare?

The government pays for almost half of the cost of healthcare and private insurance pays for a third. Most of the rest comes out of our pockets. The programs that are available to help us with the cost include the different government and private insurance programs.

Government Programs

Government insurance comes mostly in the form of:

Medicare Medicaid Child Health Insurance Program Coverage for the military

Medicare

Medicare was started in 1966 as a health insurance to assist the elderly. In 2000 it spent about $230 billion to take care of the medical needs of seniors and some disabled. The program is administered by the federal government. To have Medicare, you must meet the following requirements:

You are age 65 or older. You receive Social Security or railroad retirement benefits. You or your spouse worked in a Medicare-covered employment for 10 years or more.

You are a U.S. citizen or permanent resident, residing continuously in the United States for at least five years.

If younger than age 65, you have a disability that makes you eligible for government aid, or have permanent kidney disease that requires dialysis or transplant.

There are two parts to Medicare: Part A and Part B. Part A, also called Hospital Insurance, covers the cost of hospitalizations, some nursing home cost, and some medical care at home, as well as hospice care. Most people get Part A automatically once they turn 65. There are no premiums to be paid for Part A. Part B, also called Medical Insurance, covers doctor's fees, outpatient hospital care, laboratory services, medical equipment, ambulance services, and other services that Part A does not cover. You do not get Part B automatically. You have to enroll in it, and pay a premium that is adjusted each year. For 2000, the premium was $50 a month and this amount is automatically deducted from your Social Security or retirement check.

Annual deductibles must be met for hospital stays ($800 in 2001), doctor's visits ($100 in 2001), as well as coinsurance for daily hospital stays and most other medical care. A lot of Medicare recipients buy supplemental insurance, also known as Medigap, to cover these costs.

There is a third part to Medicare called Medicare+Choice, sometimes called Part C. In Part C, a Medicare recipient who has both Parts A and B can choose to enroll in a Managed Care Plan that accepts Medicare. A lot of Medicare recipients enroll in this program because the managed care plans provide prescription drug coverage. Medicare itself does not provide prescription drug coverage, and that has caused a lot of heated debates because seniors are increasingly needing prescription drugs. In 2000, the average annual cost of a prescription for the top 50 drugs used by seniors was about $1,000. Since some seniors take up to 15 different medications, the cost of medications can become a great financial burden.

There are a number of programs, usually administered by various states, to assist Medicare recipients pay for some of their medical costs. These programs all have income eligibility; that is, you have to have an income below a certain level to qualify.

If you have questions about your eligibility to join Medicare or about the benefits, or to enroll, call the Social Security Administration at (800) 772-1213.

Medicaid

Medicaid was started in 1965 to help pay for healthcare for individuals with low incomes. It is jointly funded by the federal government and the states but is administered by each individual state. The federal government sets broad national guidelines but each state does the following:

Establishes its own eligibility criteria Determines the type, amount, duration, and scope of services Sets the rate of payment for services Administers its own program

In general, for states to get federal funds, they must cover these individuals:

Those with low incomes who meet the requirement for the State's Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program, generally referred to as welfare People who are poor enough to be receiving supplemental security income (SSI) Children under age six and pregnant women whose family incomes are below 133 percent of the federal poverty guideline Recipients of adoption or foster care assistance Special protected groups, such as persons who lose SSI due to earnings from work or increased Social Security benefits, who may keep Medicaid for a period of time Certain Medicare beneficiaries who meet asset and income criteria

Because states have a lot of leeway in designing their programs, there is a lot of variation from state to state. Sometimes even within a state there may be different Medicaid programs.

Medicaid is more generous than Medicare in what it covers. Most states have added benefits to their programs that are not required by the federal government. This includes coverage for prescription drugs and payment for nursing home care.

To learn more about your eligibility for Medicaid and what services are covered in your state, call the state's health department. The phone numbers are listed in appendix A at the back of this book.

Child Health Insurance Program (CHIP)

This program was started in 1997 as a way to expand the State's Medicaid program to cover children who do not qualify for Medicaid. These are the criteria:

Children under age 19.

Family income below 200 percent of the federal poverty level ($34,100 for a family of four in 2001). Some states cover children in families with higher incomes.

Must not be eligible for Medicaid coverage.

Parents do not have to be U.S. citizens or even legal immigrants.

CHIP is very generous and usually covers:

Well-child programs Immunizations Doctor's visits

Laboratory and diagnostic tests Hospitalizations Prescription drugs

Other medical services

States usually charge a small monthly premium that is based on income, sometimes as low as $4 per child per month. To learn more about your child's eligibility and how to enroll, call (877) KIDS NOW (877-543-7669) or your state's health office (see appendix A for the state's phone numbers).

Coverage for the Military

Present and past members of the armed forces have programs that provide them with health coverage and services. The most widely known is the Veteran Affairs (VA) Health System. There are 172 VA hospitals around the country. To be eligible for VA assistance:

You must have enlisted in the armed forces before September 7, 1980.

If enlisted after September 7, 1980, or entered active duty after October 16, 1981, you must have 24 continuous months of active duty service or have completed the full period of time for which you were called or ordered to active duty.

You must have been discharged or released from active duty under conditions other than dishonorable.

You must be recently discharged from the military for a disability determined incurred or aggravated in the line of duty.

Active duty and retired military individuals and their families can also use the various military hospitals around the country. Retirees and spouses and children of active duty, retired, and deceased members of the armed forces can be covered by an insurance program called the Civilian Health and Medical Program of the Uniformed Services (CHAMPUS). This program will pay for the use of nonmilitary medical services.

Private Insurance

Almost 100 percent of all large businesses (200-plus workers) and 60 percent of small businesses (three to nine workers) provide some type of health insurance for their employees. The health insurance coverage for employees usually moves in step with the economy. When the economy is soft, there is less coverage provided by businesses, especially small employers.

Continues...


Excerpted from The Best Healthcare for Less by David Nganele Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

Humor and Wellness in Clinical Intervention or Your Guide to Lung Cancer

Humor and Wellness in Clinical Intervention

Author: Waleed A Salameh

Presenting a cutting-edge theory for using humor in psychotherapy, counseling, and clinical intervention, this volume brings together a group of outstanding experts in the field of clinical intervention. Each chapter shows how humor can play a vital role in the promotion of wellness in general and in mental health wellness in particular. It provides specific theoretical perspectives aimed at helping readers develop both their awareness of humor as a clinical tool and dexterity in using humor to facilitate productive change during the therapeutic process.



Books about: Alternative Treatment for Cancer or Principles of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Your Guide to Lung Cancer

Author: David Gilligan

The Royal Society of Medicine's Your Guide to Lung Cancer is the patient's ultimate source of essential and invaluable information. Providing all the necessary facts, guidance and support, this book will enable the reader to make informed choices and regain conrol of their life.
Written by Drs. David Gilligan and Robert Rintoul, world-renowned experts in this area of oncology, this book uncovers everthing you need to know about lung cancer. From explaining exactly what lung cancer is, what causes it and its symptoms to the diagnosis, what exactly the tests involve and every treatment available, this book gives you advice that will inform, reassure and support you when you need it most.
The clear, straightforward design of the book together with original features such as myth/fact boxes, key terms, question and answer sections and a chapter on who the patient/carer might meet in the NHS and their role in the treatment of the disease will prepare the reader for all that may lie ahead.



Friday, February 6, 2009

The Biopsychosocial Approach or The Fit Traveler

The Biopsychosocial Approach: Past, Present, Future

Author: Richard M Frankel

For thousands of years, Western culture has dichotomized science and art, empiricism and subjective experience, and biology and psychology. In contrast with the prevailing view in philosophy, neuroscience, and literary criticism, George Engel, an internist and practicing physician, published a paper in the journal Science in 1977 entitled 'The Need for a New Medical Model: A Challenge for Biomedicine. ' In the context of clinical medicine, Engel made the deceptively simple observation that actions at the biological, psychological, and social level are dynamically interrelated and that these relationships affect both the process and outcomes of care. The biopsychosocial perspective involves an appreciation that disease and illness do not manifest themselves only in terms of pathophysiology, but also may simultaneously affect many different levels of functioning, from cellular to organ system to person to family to society. This model provides a broader understanding of disease processes as encompassing multiple levels of functioning including the effect of the physician-patient relationship. This book, which contains Engel's seminal article, looks at the continuing relevance of his work and the biopsychosocial model as it is applied to clinical practice, research, and education and administration. Contributors include: THOMAS INUI, RICHARD FRANKEL, TIMOTHY QUILL, SUSAN McDANIEL, RONALD EPSTEIN, PETER LeROUX, DIANE MORSE, ANTHONY SUCHMAN, GEOFFREY WILLIAMS, FRANK deGRUY, ROBERT ADER, THOMAS CAMPBELL, EDWARD DECI, MOIRA STEWART, ELAINE DANNEFER, EDWARD HUNDERT, LINDSEY HENSON, ROBERT SMITH, KURT FRITZSCHE, MANFRED CIERPKA, MICHAEL WIRSCHING, HOWARD BECKMAN, and THEODORE BROWN.



Table of Contents:
Tables and Figures
Foreword
Acknowledgements
1The Clinical Application of the Biopsychosocial Model1
2Introduction to the Biopsychosocial Approach21
3Clinical Practice and the Biopsychosocial Approach33
4Fourteen Years of Colds, Conflicts, Cardiac Disease, and Cancer: A Clinical Narrative Illustrating the Biopsychosocial Approach67
5A Biopsychosocial Perspective on Mental Disorders: Depression in the Primary Care Setting82
6Psychoneuroimmunology: Basic Research in the Biopsychosocial Approach93
7The Science of the Art of Medicine: Research on the Biopsychosocial Model of Health Care109
8Evidence for the Patient-Centered Clinical Method as a Means of Implementing the Biopsychosocial Approach123
9Medical Education Reform at the University of Rochester and the Biopsychosocial Tradition135
10An Evidence-Based Infrastructure for Patient-Centered Interviewing148
11Improving Biopsychosocial Competence of German Primary Care Physicians in Diagnosing and Treating Somatoform Disorders164
12Relationship-Centered Administration: A Case Study in a Community Hospital Department of Medicine180
13George Engel and Rochester's Biopsychosocial Tradition: Historical and Developmental Perspectives199
14Systems Theory and the Biopsychosocial Model219
15Analysis of a Biopsychosocial Correspondence: Models, Mentors, and Meanings231
16The Future of the Biopsychosocial Approach255
AppThe Need for a New Medical Model: A Challenge for Biomedicine269
Contributors287
Index291

Books about: Everyday Low Carb Desserts or La Magia de la Sal y El Limon

The Fit Traveler: Take Your Workout With You

Author: Kari Eid

Free stretch band with guide explaining and illustrating the top-20 exercises, in color. Hard case binding with pocket for storing the stretch band. Lay-flat, concealed wire-O-binding. Program delivers a full-body workout, including upper body, lower body, and target areas like thighs and abdomen. Travel, exercise, and diet tips help round out this concise and effective program.



Thursday, February 5, 2009

Simply Strength or Deliver This

Simply Strength: Personal Training at Home (Fitness DVD Range Series)

Author: Andrew Jobling

Everyone can be lean, fit and healthy - but sometimes we all need a little guidance on how to achieve our goals. All too often, we start an exercise program, maybe even join a gym - but after the initial enthusiasm, we get too busy, the weather's bad that day, the gym is too busy, and so on.

But with Simply Strength, you too can attain all your strength and fitness goals - there's no need for fancy equipment or gym membership, you can do it all in the comfort of your own home.

Andrew and Sally Jobling, qualified gym instructors and trainers, show you how it's done. They take you through exercises, designed to give you increasing strength, fitness and the athletic look. The exercises are carefully graded, and have variations and alternatives you can tailor for your own fitness and performance needs.

So don't delay, take the Simply Strength way to better fitness - and you might just find yourself more easily achieving your other life goals also, as your health and confidence improves.

Take the Simply Strength way to better health, fitness and happiness today!



Table of Contents:
Introduction5
The Benefits6
Training Considerations9
Preparing to Start10
Workout Considerations13
Core Stabilisations16
Transversus Abdominis17
The Gluteals17
The Program18
Push Ups20
Bent Over One Arm Row22
Shoulder Press24
Side Lying Rotator Cuff26
Bench or Chair Dips28
Bicep Curls30
Squats32
Lunge Squats34
Lower Abdominals36
Reverse Hyperextension38
Circuits40
Structuring Your Program42
Stretching Overview44
The Stretches45
Cardio Training Overview48
Q&A50
Nutrition Overview52
The Facts54
Meal Suggestions56
Record Keeping58
Glossary62
Conclusion63
About the Authors64

Interesting textbook: Cathedrals of the Flesh or Driving with Confidence

Deliver This!: Make the Childbirth Choice That's Right for You . . . No Matter What Everyone Else Thinks

Author: Marisa Cohen

A woman's decision about what kind of childbirth experience she wants to have is central to her politics, identity, and personality. Today's moms and moms-to-be are better informed about their options than ever before, but, perhaps not surprisingly, they confront rigid judgment from women who choose a different path. Women who opt for home birth are criticized for being reckless--what if there's a medical emergency? Women who opt for elective C-sections are considered selfish--their life is so busy they have to schedule an appointment to give birth?

Deliver This! provides a thorough overview of today's options: home birth; birthing centers; vaginal birth in a hospital (with or without anesthetics); elective and medically necessary C-sections. Author Marisa Cohen, who delivered both her daughters in a high-tech hospital, is both engaging and curious in her quest to understand why women make alternative choices--and why they feel fiercely defensive about them. In interviews with over one hundred women, Cohen listened to the debates over the best birthing experience, and explored creative solutions that bridge seemingly conflicting goals.

Smart, appealing, and personable, Deliver This! is equally valuable for first-time moms and those who are pregnant with their second or third child.



Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Eating and Healing or Pilates Pregnancy Guide

Eating and Healing: Traditional Food as Medicine

Author: Andrea Pieroni

Discover neglected wild food sources that can also be used as medicine!

The long-standing notion of food as medicine, medicine as food, can be traced back to Hippocrates. Eating and Healing: Traditional Food As Medicine is a global overview of wild and semi-domesticated foods and their use as medicine in traditional societies. Important cultural information, along with extensive case studies, provides a clear, authoritative look at the many neglected food sources still being used around the world today. This book bridges the scientific disciplines of medicine, food science, human ecology, and environmental sciences with their ethno-scientific counterparts of ethnobotany, ethnoecology, and ethnomedicine to provide a valuable multidisciplinary resource for education and instruction.

Eating and Healing: Traditional Food As Medicine presents respected researchers' in-depth case studies on foods different cultures use as medicines and as remedies for nutritional deficiencies in diet. Comparisons of living conditions in different geographic areas as well as differences in diet and medicines are thoroughly discussed and empirically evaluated to provide scientific evidence of the many uses of these traditional foods as medicine and as functional foods. The case studies focus on the uses of plants, seaweed, mushrooms, and fish within their cultural contexts while showing the dietary and medical importance of these foods. The book provides comprehensive tables, extensive references, useful photographs, and helpful illustrations to provide clear scientific support as well as opportunities for further thought and study. Eating and Healing: Traditional Food As Medicine explores the ethnobiology of:

  • Tibet antioxidants as mediators of high-altitude nutritional physiology
  • Northeast Thailand wild food plant gathering
  • Southern Italy the consumption of wild plants by Albanians and Italians
  • Northern Spain medicinal digestive beverages
  • United States medicinal herb quality
  • Commonwealth of Dominica humoral medicine and food
  • Cuba promoting health through medicinal foods
  • Brazil medicinal uses of specific fishes
  • Brazil plants from the Amazon and Atlantic Forest
  • Bolivian Andes traditional food medicines
  • New Patagonia gathering of wild plant foods with medicinal uses
  • Western Kenya uses of traditional herbs among the Luo people
  • South Cameroon ethnomycology in Africa
  • Morocco food medicine and ethnopharmacology

Eating and Healing: Traditional Food As Medicine is an essential research guide and educational text about food and medicine in traditional societies for educators, students from undergraduate through graduate levels, botanists, and research specialists in nutrition and food science, anthropology, agriculture, ethnoecology, ethnobotany, and ethnobiology.

Library Journal

In the specialized fields of ethnobotany, ethnopharmacology, and ethnomedicine, food and medicine have traditionally been considered separate realms of study. Recently, the two have begun to be studied in conjunction, as this book demonstrates. Editors Pieroni (pharmacognosy, Univ. of Bradford, U.K.) and Price (sociology of consumers and households, Wageningen Univ., the Netherlands) have compiled primary research from 26 contributors on wild and semidomesticated foods and their use as medicine in traditional or indigenous cultures in Africa, Asia, North and South America, Europe, and the Caribbean (the South Pacific/Australia and Arctic regions are not represented). Each chapter is, in essence, a scientific paper documenting the overlap of medicine and food in one region (e.g., northern Spain, New Patagonia). Although the book's scope is broad, each paper is quite specific-readers should not anticipate an overview of the field. Pieroni and Price have produced what would be an excellent accompaniment to a course textbook in applicable university settings. Recommended for academic libraries.-Andy Wickens, King Cty. Lib. Syst., Seattle Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

What People Are Saying

Nina L. Etkin PhD
Nina L. Etkin, PhD, Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Hawaii
THIS IMPORTANT VOLUME showcases the convergence of medicinal and culinary practices. Scholars as well as popular consumers of food knowledge will be nourished by the insights they gain from this book. Its publication coincides with a growing interest in the West regarding the healthful qualities of foods, among both the scientific and lay communities. The research findings of the contributors represent various disciplinary perspectives and illustrate the rich diversity of cultural constructions and social negotiations of foods and medicines in traditional populations from all continents. Several contributors cast their work in the frame of ethnopharmacology by linking medical ethnography to the biology of therapeutic action. Others emphasize the importance of wild food sin traditional pharmacopoeias and diets, and link the erosion of that knowledge to problems of diminished biodiversity in the modern era. A minor but important theme illustrates the gendered nature of botanical knowledge as reflected in asymmetrical use patterns of certain plants. Issues of globalization are apparent as well in discussions of sourcing for the contemporary, primarily Western, nutraceutical and herbal products industry.


Timothy Johns PhD
Timothy Johns, PhD, Professor of Human Nutrition, McGill University
In drawing on current research and methodologies at the interface between the biological and social sciences, THE AUTHORS OFFER EXCITING NEW INSIGHTS into an under-explored theme in the ethnobotanical literature, and provide a timely focus of theoretical and practical importance linking human health the conservation and use of biodiversity. The fact that traditional systems, once lost, are hard to recreate underlines the imperative for the kind of documentation, compilation, and dissemination of eroding knowledge of biocultural diversity represented by this book.




Read also Clarke Spurriers Fine Wine Guide or In 60 Ways

Pilates Pregnancy Guide: Optimum Health and Fitness for Every Stage of Your Pregnancy

Author: Lynne Robinson


Body Control Pilates® for the full nine months of pregnancy and beyond.

Pilates specializes in building core muscles to create a "girdle of strength." This is crucially important in pregnancy, when the body is under tremendous stress and strain by the added weight and changes in posture. Pilates Pregnancy Guide features a series of exercises tailored to condition these core muscles for a more comfortable pregnancy, an easier labor and a faster recovery.

Suitable for women at all fitness levels -- with or without Pilates experience -- this book provides a comprehensive program during the entire period of pregnancy, with exercises specific to each trimester. Features include:


  • Preparing for pregnancy

  • The benefits of Pilates during pregnancy

  • The basics of Body Control Pilates®

  • A program for the first six weeks after the birth

  • A continuing program for staying in shape.



Workout menus designed for each stage of the pregnancy offer recommended exercises complete with guidelines and warnings. Illustrated with color photographs, each exercise sequence is outlined in specific stages: Aim, Starting Position, Action, and Watchpoints. This exercise program ensures controlled and safe routines throughout the pregnancy and beyond.

Thorough and encouraging, with reliable general information about pregnancy, Pilates Pregnancy Guide will be a natural first choice for any expectant mother.



Table of Contents:

  1. The Benefits of Pilates During Pregnancy

    • Why is Pilates So Perfect for Pregnancy?

    • The Importance of Good Posture

    • When Is It Not Safe to Exercise?


  2. What Is Pilates?

    • The Eight Principles of Body Control Pilates

    • Joseph Pilates and the Origins of the Pilates Method

    • The Development of Body Control Pilates


  3. The Pregnancy Program: How to Use this Book

    • Preparing for Pregnancy

    • If You Have Done Pilates Before You Became Pregnant

    • Taking Up Pilates in Your Pregnancy

    • Working with a Teacher

    • Other Advice


  4. Before You Begin


  5. The Basics of Body Control Pilates

    • Breathing

    • Alignment

    • Centering: Pilates Core Strength


  6. Preparing for Your Pregnancy

    • Why Prepare?

    • Preparatory Exercises

    • Workouts


  7. The First Trimester (0-12 weeks)

    • What's Happening to Your Body

    • Guidelines for Exercise in the First Trimester

    • Recommended Exercises for the First Trimester

    • First Trimester Workouts


  8. The Second Trimester (13-26 weeks)

    • What's Happening to Your Body

    • Taking Up Pilates in the Second Trimester

    • Guidelines for Exercising in the Second Trimester

    • Recommended Exercises for the Second Trimester

    • Second Trimester Workouts


  9. The Third Trimester (27-34weeks)

    • What's Happening to Your Body?

    • Getting Onto and Up from the Floor in the Third Trimester and Up to Six Weeks After the Birth

    • Guidelines for Exercising in the Third Trimester

    • Recommended Exercises for the Third Trimester

    • Third Trimester Workouts


  10. The First Six Weeks After the Birth

    • Normal Deliveries

    • Pelvic Floor Exercises

    • Exercise Program for the First Six Weeks After the Birth

    • Cesarean Birth

    • Circulation Exercises

    • Breathing Exercise

    • Exercise Program for the First Six Weeks After the Birth


  11. Getting Back Into Shape (Six Weeks Plus

    • Normal Deliveries

    • The "Rec" Check

    • Cesarean Births

    • Getting Back Into Shape Workouts



    Bibliography

    Further Information

Monday, February 2, 2009

Crab Wars or Inside Out Beauty Book

Crab Wars: A Tale of Horseshoe Crabs, Bioterrorism, and Human Health

Author: William Sargent

Surviving almost unmolested for 300 million years, the horseshoe crab is now the object of an intense legal and ethical struggle involving marine biologists, environmentalists, U.S. government officials, biotechnologists, and international corporations. The source of this friction is the discovery twenty-five years ago that the blood of these ancient creatures serves as the basis for the most reliable test for the deadly and ubiquitous gram-negative bacteria. These bacteria are responsible for such life-threatening diseases as meningitis, typhoid, E. coli, Legionnaire's Disease, and toxic shock syndrome. Because every drug certified by the FDA must be tested using the horseshoe crab derivative known as Limulus lysate, a multimillion-dollar industry has emerged involving the license to "bleed" horseshoe crabs and access rights to their breeding grounds.



Read also Organization Transformation and Learning or Medieval Islamic Economic Thought

Inside-Out Beauty Book: Tips and Tools for Girls Like You

Author: Sandra Byrd

In a fun, interactive format, Sandra Byrd presents a balanced approach to personal care. With sections like "More Than a Mirror," "Face the Facts," and "Tress Distress," Sandra offers personal care ideas, nutrition and health pointers, recipes for natural beauty products, and answers to real questions from her readers. Sidebars and illustrations add interest and visual appeal. Each section introduces readers to "A Girl Like You"- real-life girls with remarkable insight into both inner and outer beauty.



Sunday, February 1, 2009

Explosive Power and Strength or Just a Little Too Thin

Explosive Power and Strength: Complex Training for Maximum Results

Author: Donald A Chu

The best in sports conditioning now combines plyometric, resistance, and sprint training. Explosive Power and Strength not only offers these three training methods in one, but also shows you how to create individualized, sports-specific programs. The book features 33 resistance and 45 plyometric exercises with 115 detailed illustrations, plus three ready-to-use workouts for each of 11 sports.

Journal of Triathlon Training

This book will provide an excellent resource to show you a variety of activities that will develop strength and power.

What People Are Saying

Todd Martin
Don's complex training allows an athlete to maximize his strength and power without ignoring their sport skills.

Al Vermiel
This book is an excellent overview of how to use complex training and integrate it into a variety of sports.
— Al Vermiel, MA, CSCS Strength and Conditioning Coach Chicago Bulls


Rob Panariello
Don's organization and presentation of this advanced form of training will enhance both the condition and performance of athletes at all levels of competition. This book is an excellent reference for the coach, athlete, and exercise specialist.
— Rob Panariello, MS, PT, ATC, CSCS Regional Vice President, Professional Sports Care Former Head Strength and Conditioning Coach St. John's University




Table of Contents:

Interesting book: DNA or Fasting Path

Just a Little Too Thin: How to Pull Your Child Back from the Brink of an Eating Disorder

Author: Michael A Strober

Some diets are just that-a brief episode of calorie or fat counting; they are merely attempts to lose weight for the sake of a smaller skirt size. Other diets, however, are a prelude to the kind of problem with food that has nothing to do with shape or size but rather emotional issues which, left undetected, could bring a child to the brink of a serious eating disorder. The line between one and the other is sometimes hard to determine and many girls slip over that line quickly and quietly. Outlining the findings of Dr. Michael Strober's original research--that there are three distinct stages of eating disorders--Just a Little Too Thin helps parents detect the severity of a child's weight issues and helps them steer her clear of--or maneuver herself off--a slippery slope that could lead to Anorexia Nervosa. Offering expert guidance on how to talk about weight and eating in ways that won't alienate the child in question, it also provides parents with the tools to help them cope with the emotional issues that are feeding their child's obsession with their weight. No matter where a child rests on the continuum of eating behaviors, Just a Little Too Thin is an invaluable aid for parents intent on keeping their children emotionally and physically healthy in a world of unprecedented pressures.

Psychiatric Services

Not only terrific for therapists, but also for parents. Offers concrete advice on what to say, look for, and do.

Publishers Weekly

As the title indicates, this thorough and informative guide targets teens who are teetering on the edge of a potential eating disorder, exhibiting warning signs yet still on the brink. At this delicate and precarious point, there are preventive measures concerned parents can take, which eating disorder authority Strober and psychologist Schneider clearly delineate in a user-friendly, approachable style. The dual authorship allows for not only a variety of illustrative anecdotes, but also for both the male and female perspective on body image. The book alerts parents to signs they may not have otherwise noticed, and presents a number of realistic scenarios and suggestions for parents to counter almost any situation that may arise in regard to burgeoning eating disorders. Although some of the advice may seem forced--such as initiating more conversations about "feelings"--the book's suggestions are easily adaptable. The call for more direct communication as well as a comprehensible breakdown of the various behaviors that can indicate a potential eating problem will give readers a firm grip on the issue, its dangers and ways to step in before it's too late. Agent, Carol Mann. (Sept.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

During the past decade, a plethora of books on adolescent eating disorders has been published. Strober, director of the Eating Disorders and Adolescent Mood Disorders Programs at the Neuropsychiatric Institute at UCLA, and therapist Schneider, who specializes in treating adolescents and their families, attempt to carve a new niche in this area. Their focus is the "slippery slope that leads to poor health, even if it is not a diagnosed eating disorder," and they divide this slope into three stages-innocent, exhilarated, and obsessed-spending the bulk of the book defining the warning signs and characteristics of each stage. Numerous case studies provide examples of teenage girls who are excessively weight-conscious or abnormally preoccupied with dieting. Although the authors contend that parents can be highly effective in treating potential eating disorders, they offer little substantial advice; instead, they merely suggest that parents encourage and talk to their children and, when that doesn't work, seek professional help. A much more useful selection is Marcia Herrin's The Parent's Guide to Childhood Eating Disorders, which provides specific guidelines for dealing with confronting resistance, ensuring that a child's health is not damaged, setting limits on strenuous exercise, and educating the child to make sound food choices. Not recommended.-Ilse Heidmann, Washington State Lib., Olympia Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.