Showing posts with label public health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public health. Show all posts

9/24/2012

AIDS and Accusation: Haiti and the Geography of Blame (Comparative Studies of Health Systems and Medical Care) Review

AIDS and Accusation: Haiti and the Geography of Blame (Comparative Studies of Health Systems and Medical Care)
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Farmer's excellent historical ethnography of Haitian illness (as seen through the contemporary context of the world AIDS epidemic), proves the necessity of developing anthropological approaches to understanding health systems and implementing medical care. The diagnosis and analysis of sickness, disease, illness, and treatment should go hand-in-hand with the cultural understanding of local systems of blame, accusation, causation, and cure. Where most approaches to medicine are based on the "Westernized" first-world nations' understanding of the causes of illness (tainted as well, as Farmer shows, by systematic "blame the victim" and shame techniques), the adoption of these approaches in treating the illnesses of other peoples can be catastrophic. Three ethnographies make up the structure of a detailed historical inquiry )
The longstanding tradition of conceiving of illness through the lens of powerlessness shapes the contemporary lives of the people in Haiti with whom Farmer worked. Although they could see the effects of the illness, people in this region were obsessed with the cause of the illness, and felt the need to understand AIDS through a constructed narrative of blame. A deep belief in their religion led villagers to look for the source of witchcraft that could possibly be harming them, and elaborate stories about neighbors, jealousies, and rivalries flourished as a result. Any improvement in the standing of one member of the society (through wealth, status, relationships, acquisition of property or food, or political power through employment or marriage) adds to the structure of distrust and blame.
Farmer's book shows how disturbingly complex and deep the layers of mistrust, misinformation, and the effects of racism, are. Among the medical hypotheses for the probable exposure is the theory of Haitian sex-workers' contacts through gay tourists to the early strains of HIV. Farmer outlines the long history of Haiti as a gay tourist attraction, and Duvalier's encouragement of tourism as a boost to the domestic economy. Although the possible cause of the gay sex trade for HIV exposure has not been confirmed, medical establishments in the U.S. based their theories of causation on other factors, such as Haitian religious practices. These theories were, in truth, reinforcing longstanding ignorance and racist misunderstandings about Haitian vodou. Stereotypes and racial profiling of Haitian citizenship as a "risk factor" (one of the "Four H's" along with hemophiliac, homosexual, and heroin user), contributed to public policies against Haitian immigrants. Haitians' belief that they are being attacked by some evil sorcery in the guise of a fatal illness called sida falls into place amidst the context of extreme antagonism and injustice.
While reading this book, I was compelled to ask myself if there isn't some truth in Haitians' understanding of AIDS as the result of malicious sorcery. Haiti was the only American society to successfully result from the direct action of a revolution against slavery and colonialism. As such, the small nation governed by creoles and black ex-slaves presented a threat to North and South American colonial societies, which were firmly entrenched in slave labor economic systems. Historically, the threat of a repeat of the Haitian revolution must have terrified white European landowners. This terror of African power and strength has been passed on in a racist legacy, adapted to political policies and nationalist agendas, and still exists in ignorant beliefs about AIDS and its causes. Haitians believe that they are victims of a longstanding racist agenda, and they may in fact be right. Farmer's book begins to illuminate some of the complicated historical and ethnographic realities of the overlapping connections between illness and racism, and between causes and effects.

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9/10/2012

Scurvy: How a Surgeon, a Mariner, and a Gentlemen Solved the Greatest Medical Mystery of the Age of Sail Review

Scurvy: How a Surgeon, a Mariner, and a Gentlemen Solved the Greatest Medical Mystery of the Age of Sail
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This is a well-written, entertaining book. I read it mostly due to my interest in sea-faring and the "age of sail," as the author terms it. However, I found myself enjoying it just as much for the story it tells about the gradual discovery of a cure for a disease that crippled sea-faring nations for centuries. Particularly enlightening is the story of the bureacracy, the British Admiralty, that stubbornly ignored the potential cure, even as it suffered tremendous losses for its ignorance, and how vital privilege and influence is in challenging and changing such an establishment. The book's only minor flaw is that it focuses primarily on one country, Britain, without elaborating on how or why France or Spain failed to find a cause and a cure. I would recommend it highly.

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9/06/2012

The House of Hope and Fear: Life in a Big City Hospital Review

The House of Hope and Fear: Life in a Big City Hospital
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Dr. Young's new book is an engaging account of life at the large mission-driven county hospital in Seattle. I spent most of my 3rd year med school rotations there myself 12 years ago and am now working in a mission-driven community health center 18 miles away. My desire to serve the poor was a direct result of the dedication from the doctors and staff that I witnessed at Harborview. Now, I spend more than half my time educating and mentoring medical students and I plan on incorporating this book into our 2nd year curriculum.
The stories are diverse: some are about incredible patients and their challenging situations - socially, medically, psychologically; some are really more about the ethical dilemmas faced by providers, and faced by patient's families; other stories point out the inequities in healthcare, while demonstrating how this institution has creatively found a way to thrive financially while serving the least able to pay.
Most importantly to me - this book is hugely interesting, well written, easy to read, hard to put down and deserving of high praise. The reason this book is so good and the messages conveyed so well is that Dr. Young has incredible skill at portraying the humanity of her subjects. This is a book of true characters; unforgettable characters. The characters are patients, their loved ones and families, the infamous ER director, a remarkable specialist in nephrology, Dr. Young herself, and the staff of the hospital. I read their stories and can picture them on a gurney, in their offices, on the wards, in the ER; I can smell the smells again; and hear the sounds in the ICU.
This text can easily and effectively (each chapter is pretty well able to stand on its own as a separate reading - though together it reads as a cohesive story) be used regularly with medical students and public health and policy students - the examples in it are perfect for igniting debate about healthcare inequality, social justice, medical ethics, professional development, difficult patients, allocation of resources and care for the underserved.

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Opening with the view of an idealistic, young doctor entering her first post-graduate job at the local county hospital, The House of Hope and Fear explores not only the personal journey of one doctor's life and career, but also examines the health care system as a whole. The county hospital setting provides the author with a second education. With clear, eloquent text, she chronicles attempts made to treat those tossed aside by society along with the personal and ideological shifts that accompany this daunting task. All of the political aspects of the hospital's executive board are detailed in a gripping account of the hospital's inner workings, and a human face is expertly given to the healthcare crisis in America.

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8/26/2012

GIS and Public Health Review

GIS and Public Health
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This book provides a really excellent introduction and overview of the growing field of GIS applications in public health. Thorough and complete, well- and clearly-written, it covers everything a GIS student or beginning practitioner needs to know to get started in this young but rapidly expanding field. It is especially valuable when used in conjunction with a practical tutorial workbook such as GIS Tutorial for Health.

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This clearly written resource provides a comprehensive introduction to the use of geographic information systems (GIS) in analyzing and addressing public health problems. The book guides the reader through basic GIS concepts and methods, with an emphasis on practical applications. Described are ways that GIS can be used to map health events, identify disease clusters, investigate environmental health problems, understand the spread of communicable and vector-borne infectious disease, and more. Numerous tables, figures, and concrete examples are included. The companion website features downloadable GIS databases that allow readers to practice a variety of spatial analytical techniques.

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8/25/2012

Statistics for Epidemiology Review

Statistics for Epidemiology
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I had a chance to read this book cover to cover. All I can say is "absolutely outstanding", short of calling it a historical masterpiece in the field. Very rarely do I encounter an epidemiology or biostatistic textbook that reads so well. It is optimally reader friendly; the author appears to have such a talent in explaining some most sophisticated epidemiological and statistical concepts in such a simplified language. Yet he does not sacrifice the inclusion of some very advanced epidemiological and statistical concepts. New concepts such as causal graphs and instrumental variables are also included and explained beautifully. I strongly recommend this book to all early to intermediate graduate students majoring in Epidemiology. Established epidemiologists may wish to read this book to refresh and update their knowledge. I hope the author writes more textbooks with the same style.

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Statistical ideas have been integral to the development of epidemiology and continue to provide the tools needed to interpret epidemiological studies. Although epidemiologists do not need a highly mathematical background in statistical theory to conduct and interpret such studies, they do need more than an encyclopedia of "recipes."Statistics for Epidemiology achieves just the right balance between the two approaches, building an intuitive understanding of the methods most important to practitioners and the skills to use them effectively. It develops the techniques for analyzing simple risk factors and disease data, with step-by-step extensions that include the use of binary regression. It covers the logistic regression model in detail and contrasts it with the Cox model for time-to-incidence data. The author uses a few simple case studies to guide readers from elementary analyses to more complex regression modeling. Following these examples through several chapters makes it easy to compare the interpretations that emerge from varying approaches.Written by one of the top biostatisticians in the field, Statistics for Epidemiology stands apart in its focus on interpretation and in the depth of understanding it provides. It lays the groundwork that all public health professionals, epidemiologists, and biostatisticians need to successfully design, conduct, and analyze epidemiological studies.

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7/22/2012

Six Months in Sudan: A Young Doctor in a War-Torn Village Review

Six Months in Sudan: A Young Doctor in a War-Torn Village
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Many thanks to Dr. Maskalyk for going to Sudan and for writing about it. This is a moving and troubling account of life without the many safety nets that hold us. Clean water, reliable electricity, access to medical care, more food than we need, education--these are all sorely lacking in Abyei. Dr. Maskalyk shares what he sees and experiences, and by omission, how troubling what he witnesses is to his soul. I couldn't put this book down and am so grateful for the opportunity to learn about a part of the world I knew very little about.

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7/12/2012

Managerial Epidemiology for Health Care Organizations (Public Health/Epidemiology and Biostatistics) Review

Managerial Epidemiology for Health Care Organizations (Public Health/Epidemiology and Biostatistics)
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My students find the book easy to read and understand but are frustrated by the multiple errors and missing data in Chapter five data examples and end of chapter questions.

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Managerial Epidemiology for Health Care Organizations provides readers with a thorough and comprehensive understanding of the application of epidemiological principles to the delivery of health care services and management of health care organizations. As health administration becomes evidence- and population-based, it becomes critical to understand the impact of disease on populations of people in a service area. This book also addresses the need of health organizations' to demonstrate emergency preparedness and respond to bioterrorism threats. A follow-up to the standard text in the field, this book introduces core epidemiology principles and clearly illustrates their essential applications in planning, evaluating, and managing health care for populations. This book demonstrates how health care executives can incorporate the practice of epidemiology into their various management functions and is rich with current examples, concepts, and case studies that reinforce the essential theories, methods, and applications of managerial epidemiology.

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7/07/2012

Time to Heal: American Medical Education from the Turn of the Century to the Era of Managed Care Review

Time to Heal: American Medical Education from the Turn of the Century to the Era of Managed Care
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Time to Heal surveys the state of American medical education from the turn of the century to modern HMO times, providing a sweeping survey of American medical education in modern times and examining how American medical education evolved. From the transformation of medical schools and student learning processes to social programs which affected research, this provides an important history for any aspiring medical student.

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7/02/2012

The Good Doctors: The Medical Committee for Human Rights and the Struggle for Social Justice in Health Care Review

The Good Doctors: The Medical Committee for Human Rights and the Struggle for Social Justice in Health Care
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John Dittmer relates the history and development of the Medical Committee for Human Rights and the involvement of the Committee and its members in not only the civil rights movement, but in every "social justice" movement of the 1960s and early 1970s. His stated intent was to give credit to the medical professionals who put themselves into difficult and sometimes dangerous situations in the interest of advancing medical care to blacks, to the poor, and to anyone deprived of access to care because of his or her status in the community. Unfortunately, despite the author's apparent substantial knowledge of the era, the book is so poorly written that it can only leave the interested reader frustrated.
At the outset, many scenes and individuals were described in a way that made me feel they were being flashed on a screen. I have read a few books about the civil rights movement, but only after I had read about two-thirds of the book did I have a real sense of who were the significant individual participants in the movement. Someone with no prior knowledge of the events of the times would be at a complete loss to understand and follow the narrative.
There are occasional glimpses of how good this book and the telling of this story could be. Chapter 6, The Last March, and Chapter 7, The War at Home, are focused and cohesive. Most of the rest of the book, however, gave the impression of reading newspaper or magazine reports that were thrown together in an attempt to write a book. The writing was anecdotal. Analysis was lacking and there were often sweeping generalizations resulting in unsupported conclusions. Transitions between chapters, and sometimes between paragraphs, were choppy and bordered on the illogical.
For those of us interested in the civil rights movement and social justice issues of the era, the subject the author tries to illuminate holds great interest. Perhaps Dittmer wrote this book in a rush. Certainly his editors did him no favors. The information is there; I would like to see the author "take a Mulligan" and do it over.

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The untold story of the courageous doctors and nurses who fought the battle for racial justice in hospitals, in clinics, and on the streets in the 1960s.

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5/07/2012

Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health Care Programmes (Oxford Medical Publications) Review

Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health Care Programmes (Oxford Medical Publications)
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This book is a jewel since it provides the essentials for economic analysis of health care in a very friendly and interesting way.

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Since its publication in 1987, Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health Care Programmes has become the standard textbook in this field world-wide. Over the past ten years, the field of economic evaluation in health care has expanded considerably, with a rapid rise in the number of published studies, and wider recognition of their use in health care decision-making. Developments in economic evaluation have also led to the publication of several guidelines for study methodology, most recently those proposed by the United States Public Health Services Panel. The new edition of Methods for the Economic Evaluation of Health Care Programmes follows the same basic structure as the first edition. The key methodological principles are outlined using a critical appraisal checklist that can be applied to any published study. The methodological features of the basic forms of analysis (cost analysis, cost-effectiveness analysis, cost-utility analysis, and cost-benefit analysis) are then explained in more detail. The book has been greatly revised and enlarged, especially with respect to cost-utility and cost- benefit analysis, where major methodological developments have taken place.New to this edition are chapters on collecting and analysing data, and presenting and using economic evaluation results. The new edition will be required reading for anyone commissioning, undertaking, or using economic evaluations in health care, and will be popular with health service professionals, health economists, and health-care decision makers. Reviews of the first edition: 'An important contribution to studies on the economic evaluation of medical care...' (British Medical Journal) 'This is essential reading. Only if all managers are aware of the powers of economic techniques will they be used sensibly' (The Health Service Journal (UK) 'The methodological chapters on cost analysis and cost utility analysis are gems...should become the standard text on the subject at the intermediate level at which it is aimed.' (Medical Decision Making) 'It leaves nothing important in economic evaluation analysis untouched.' (Health Policy and Planning) This book is intended for health care management students, Health care professionals, economists, and decision makers.

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4/24/2012

Radiation in Medicine: A Need for Regulatory Reform Review

Radiation in Medicine: A Need for Regulatory Reform
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I am majoring in medical radiology.I have read this book several times.I think this book can give you some new idea and make you think deeply. It is a good reference book.

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Does radiation medicine need more regulation or simply better-coordinated regulation? This book addresses this and other questions of critical importance to public health and safety. The issues involved are high on the nation's agenda: the impact of radiation on public safety, the balance between federal and state authority, and the cost-benefit ratio of regulation. Although incidents of misadministration are rare, a case in Pennsylvania resulting in the death of a patient and the inadvertent exposure of others to a high dose of radiation drew attention to issues concerning the regulation of ionizing radiation in medicine and the need to examine current regulatory practices. Written at the request from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), "Radiation in Medicine" reviews the regulation of ionizing radiation in medicine, focusing on the NRC's Medical Use Program, which governs the use of reactor-generated byproduct materials. The committee recommends immediate action on enforcement and provides longer term proposals for reform of the regulatory system.The volume covers: sources of radiation and their use in medicine; levels of risk to patients, workers, and the public; current roles of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, other federal agencies, and states; and criticisms from the regulated community. The committee explores alternative regulatory structures for radiation medicine and explains the rationale for the option it recommends in this volume. Based on extensive research, input from the regulated community, and the collaborative efforts of experts from a range of disciplines, "Radiation in Medicine" will be an important resource for federal and state policymakers and regulators, health professionals involved in radiation treatment, developers and producers of radiation equipment, insurance providers, and concerned laypersons.

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4/16/2012

Medical Anthropology: A Biocultural Approach Review

Medical Anthropology: A Biocultural Approach
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Since I have a student account I got this book in exactly 2 days after I ordered it. It is also brand new and in perfect condition. Happiness

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Intended as the primary text for introductory courses on medical anthropology, this book integrates human biological data relevant to health and disease with both evolutionary theory and the social environments that more often than not produce major challenges to health and survival. Because students who take this fastest-growing anthropology course come from a variety of disciplines (anthropology, biology, especially pre-med students, and health sciences, especially), the text does not assume anything beyond a basic high-school level familiarity with human biology and anthropology. The authors first present basic biological information on a particular health condition and then expand their analysis to include evolutionary, historical, and cross-cultural perspectivesAmong the topics covered are nutrition, infectious disease, stress, reproductive health, behavioral disease, aging, race/racism and health, mental health, and healers and healing.

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4/14/2012

Fads, Fallacies And Foolishness in Medical Care Management And Policy Review

Fads, Fallacies And Foolishness in Medical Care Management And Policy
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Marmor is a bit iconoclastic - instead of promoting a specific policy for US healthcare, he points out how vaporous or inept many of the current dialogs are. His point is a bit like Al Gore in "Assault on Reason" - the level of dialog and clear thinking is too insufficient to make progress on major health care problems. This is a book of several essays, most printed in the last few years in health policy academic journals. He also fits in a priceless sense of humor.

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3/21/2012

Who Killed the Queen?: The Story of a Community Hospital and How to Fix Public Health Care (McGill-Queen's/Associated Medical Services Studies in History of Medicine, Health, & Society (Hardc) Review

Who Killed the Queen: The Story of a Community Hospital and How to Fix Public Health Care (McGill-Queen's/Associated Medical Services Studies in History of Medicine, Health, and Society (Hardc)
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This is a book that every Canadian should read. It provides new insights into the health care situation and how government is responding. Something every baby boomer needs to know!

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"Who Killed the Queen?" is the first sustained investigation ever attempted into the mass closures of hospitals and hospital beds in Canada during the mid-1990s, showing the effects that the loss of 20 per cent of beds has had on health care across the country. It provides very strong evidence as to who and what was responsible for bed losses that are unparalleled in the history of any other industrialized country. It also provides well-supported templates for saving and strengthening the entire Canadian health care system despite this attack. "Who Killed the Queen?" makes its arguments by means of a particularly dramatic and telling case-study. It investigates the life and death of the exemplary, 100 year-old Canadian community hospital, the Queen Elizabeth of Montreal, site of many national and international medical firsts, which nonetheless became a typical victim of the mass closures in the mid-1990s.

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3/06/2012

Medical Biostatistics (Chapman & Hall/CRC Biostatistics Series) Review

Medical Biostatistics (Chapman and Hall/CRC Biostatistics Series)
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I have long been looking for a book that makes biostatistics simple and readable to medical professionals. This book on Medical Biostatistics by Indrayan and Sarmukaddam (Marcel Dekker) is a very sincere attempt in making the subject of biostatistics look like a medical discipline. This is one of the objectives stated in the book, and seems to have been very adequately achieved. The language used is friendly to the medical fraternity. A large number of statistical methods have been discussed that are commonly used in medicine and health. Mathematics is minimal and explantions appeal to the common sense. Statistical fallacies are also discussed. Strongly recommended for all professionals and students of medical related disciplines who collect, disseminate or use data in any form.

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2/23/2012

Surviving HIV/AIDS in the Inner City: How Resourceful Latinas Beat the Odds (Studies in Medical Anthropology) Review

Surviving HIV/AIDS in the Inner City: How Resourceful Latinas Beat the Odds (Studies in Medical Anthropology)
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Unlike many academic treatises, Surviving HIV/AIDS in the Inner City is written clearly and understandably. Unfamiliar terms are clearly defined without interrupting the flow of the writing, and the writing style is smooth and simple. There's no jarring intrusion of the author's persona, only a clear and compelling explanation of her research and conclusions.
Ms. Chase does an excellent job of making abstract anthropological concepts like habitus and cultural capital meaningful and clearly relates the quality of care received to how well a patient can play to her audience. The inequities in care due to cultural differences are crystal clear in the stories she tell.
On that subject, what stories they are! I'm still laughing over my favorite quote: "...hello! I'm not taking any chances. I'm going to kill a chicken..." Through a series of well chosen anecdotes, Ms. Chase takes the reader into the lives of her study subjects, clearly showing their humanity, the devastating impact of an HIV/AIDS diagnosis on their lives and most importantly how their quality of care is directly related to their cultural expertise.

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