Health systems and services Books

1864 products


  • Save My Kid

    New York University Press Save My Kid

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisA frank analysis of the medical and emotional inequalities that pervade the healthcare process for critically ill children Families who have a child with a life-threatening illness face a daunting road ahead of them, one that not only upends their everyday lives, but also strikes at the very heart of parenthood. In Save My Kid, Amanda M. Gengler traces the emotional difficulties these families navigate as they confront a fundamentally unequal healthcare system in the United States. Gengler reveals the unrecognized, everyday inequalities tangled up in the process of seeking medical care, showing how different families manage their children's critical illnesses. She also uncovers the role that emotional goalsdeeply rooted in the culture of illness and medicineplay in medical decision-making, healthcare interactions, and the end of children's lives. A deeply compassionate read, Save My Kid is an inside look at inequality in healthcare among those with the most at stake.Trade ReviewGengler's measured yet empathetic tone sets an example for all sociologists writing on emotionally charged topics. As intense as her account oftentimes is, it never devolves into empty sensationalism. The result is an eloquent and memorable illustration of how social inequalities play out in hospitals—a solid contribution to medical sociology, the sociology of emotions, and scholarship on culture and inequality. * American Journal of Sociology *Amanda Gengler movingly captures the high-stakes world of families coping with severe childhood illness and their struggle to maintain hope as they navigate the contemporary health landscape where inequality abound. A vivid demonstration of health as an arena that intensifies inequalities between families. -- Amy Best, author of Fast Food Kids: Lunch Lines, French Fries and Social TiesWith deep empathy and drawing from personal experience, this mesmerizing ethnography explores the opportunities and pitfalls of hope when parents face the challenge of their child’s life threatening disease. Rather than pinning all our hopes on hope, Gengler calls for a broader and more flexible emotional spectrum in times of life-or-death health crises. -- Stefan Timmermans, co-author of Saving Babies: The Consequences of Newborn Genetic ScreeningAmanda Gengler is a gifted ethnographer whose compassion and insight illuminate parents’ harrowing efforts to maintain hope while seeking life-saving treatments for their children. In showing how emotions intersect with cultural health capital, this indispensable book exposes the complex ways social inequality affects our ability to hope and cope in times of crisis. -- Jennifer Lois, author of Home is Where the School is: The Logic of Homeschooling and the Emotional Labor of Mothering

    10 in stock

    £62.90

  • Save My Kid

    New York University Press Save My Kid

    Book SynopsisA frank analysis of the medical and emotional inequalities that pervade the healthcare process for critically ill children Families who have a child with a life-threatening illness face a daunting road ahead of them, one that not only upends their everyday lives, but also strikes at the very heart of parenthood. In Save My Kid, Amanda M. Gengler traces the emotional difficulties these families navigate as they confront a fundamentally unequal healthcare system in the United States. Gengler reveals the unrecognized, everyday inequalities tangled up in the process of seeking medical care, showing how different families manage their children's critical illnesses. She also uncovers the role that emotional goalsdeeply rooted in the culture of illness and medicineplay in medical decision-making, healthcare interactions, and the end of children's lives. A deeply compassionate read, Save My Kid is an inside look at inequality in healthcare among those with the most at stake.Trade Review"Gengler's measured yet empathetic tone sets an example for all sociologists writing on emotionally charged topics. As intense as her account oftentimes is, it never devolves into empty sensationalism. The result is an eloquent and memorable illustration of how social inequalities play out in hospitals—a solid contribution to medical sociology, the sociology of emotions, and scholarship on culture and inequality." * American Journal of Sociology *"Amanda Gengler movingly captures the high-stakes world of families coping with severe childhood illness and their struggle to maintain hope as they navigate the contemporary health landscape where inequality abound. A vivid demonstration of health as an arena that intensifies inequalities between families." -- Amy Best, author of Fast Food Kids: Lunch Lines, French Fries and Social Ties"With deep empathy and drawing from personal experience, this mesmerizing ethnography explores the opportunities and pitfalls of hope when parents face the challenge of their child’s life threatening disease. Rather than pinning all our hopes on hope, Gengler calls for a broader and more flexible emotional spectrum in times of life-or-death health crises." -- Stefan Timmermans, co-author of Saving Babies: The Consequences of Newborn Genetic Screening"Amanda Gengler is a gifted ethnographer whose compassion and insight illuminate parents’ harrowing efforts to maintain hope while seeking life-saving treatments for their children. In showing how emotions intersect with cultural health capital, this indispensable book exposes the complex ways social inequality affects our ability to hope and cope in times of crisis." -- Jennifer Lois, author of Home is Where the School is: The Logic of Homeschooling and the Emotional Labor of Mothering

    £23.74

  • Federalism and Decentralization in Health Care

    University of Toronto Press Federalism and Decentralization in Health Care

    Book SynopsisLooking at Canada, Brazil, Germany, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, South Africa and Switzerland, Federalism and Decentralization in Health Care examines the overall organization of the health system.Table of ContentsAn Introduction to Federalism and Decentralization in Health Care Switzerland: Subnational Authority and Decentralized Health Care Health Care in Canada: Interdependence and Independence Germany: The Increasing Centralization of the Health Care Sector Pakistan: Extreme Decentralization Health Care in South Africa: Interdependence and Independence Brazil: Local Government Role in Health Care Decentralization of Health Policy and Services in Mexico Federalism and the Health System in Nigeria Federalism and Decentralization in the Health Sector: An Overview of Eight Cases

    £48.45

  • Remaking Policy

    University of Toronto Press Remaking Policy

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn Remaking Policy, Carolyn Hughes Tuohy advances an ambitious new approach to understanding the relationship between political context and policy change.Table of ContentsPart I: Overview and theory Chapter One: Overview Chapter Two: Defining the Scale and Pace of Policy Change Part II: The Founding and Evolution of the Health care State to the 1980s Chapter 3: The Establishment and Evolution of the British and American Health Care States to the 1980s Chapter Four: The Establishment and Evolution of the Dutch and Canadian Health Care States to the 1980s Part III: remaking the Health Care State at the Millennium, 1987-2015 Chapter Five: British and American Health Care Reform Strategies, Late 1980s to Late 2000s Chapter Six: The American Mosaic 2009-2014 - Return to Unfinished Business Chapter Seven: The English Mosaic 2010-2014 - Evolution in Revolutionary Clothing Chapter Eight: The Dutch Blueprint 1987-2006 Chapter Nine: Canadian Incrementalism Reinforced, 1995-2004 Part IV: institutional entrepreneurs and the course of Market-oriented reform Chapter Ten: Institutional Entrepreneurs and Market-Based Reform: Theory and Experience in Britain, the Netherlands and the US Part v: Conclusion Chapter Eleven: Understanding Policy Change

    1 in stock

    £88.40

  • Nova Scotia

    University of Toronto Press Nova Scotia

    Book SynopsisTurning a critical eye to the health care system in Nova Scotia, Katherine Fierlbeck outlines the frameworks structuring provincial health care, while providing a detailed assessment of Nova Scotia's health financing, physical infrastructure, and service provision.Table of ContentsList of Figures, Tables, and Boxes Series Editor’s Foreword Preface and Acknowledgments List of Acronym 1 Introduction and Overview 1.1 Geography and sociodemography 1.2 Political context 1.3 Economic context 1.4 Health status of the population 1.5 Summary 2 Organization and Regulation 2.1 Overview and history 2.2 Organization of the provincial health system 2.2.1 The Nova Scotia Health Authority 2.2.2 Contractors (private not-for-profit) 2.2.3 Contractors (private for-profit) 2.3 Health system planning 2.4 Coverage and benefits 2.4.1 Eligibility for publicly insured benefits 2.4.2 Benefits (universal) 2.4.3 Targeted benefits for nonmedical services 2.5 Regulation 2.5.1 Providers 2.5.2 Facilities 2.5.3 Prescription drugs 2.5.4 Patient health information 2.6 Patients 2.7 Summary 3 Health Spending and Financing 3.1 Health expenditure and trends 3.2 Public revenue 3.3 Public financing flows 3.4 Summary 4 Physical Infrastructure 4.1 Hospitals and other treatment facilities 4.2 Long-term care facilities 4.3 Diagnostic facilities 4.3.1 Laboratory services 4.3.2 Diagnostic imaging 4.4 Public health facilities 4.5 Information and communications technology infrastructure 4.5.1 Core electronic information systems 4.5.2 Specialized electronic information systems 4.6 Research and evaluation infrastructure 4.7 Summary 5 Health Human Resources 5.1 Main workforce challenges 5.2 Physicians 5.3 Nurses 5.4 Other health care professionals 5.4.1 Paramedics 5.4.2 Pharmacists 5.4.3 Midwives 5.4.4 Medical laboratory technologists 5.4.5 Clinical assistants 5.4.6 Home care workers 5.5 HHR planning in Nova Scotia 5.6 Summary 6 Service and Program Provision 6.1 Public health 6.2 Primary care 6.3 Acute care 6.4 Long-term care 6.5 Prescription drugs 6.6 Workers’ Compensation Board programs 6.7 Mental health care 6.8 Dental health care 6.9 Targeted services 6.9.1 First Nations 6.9.2 African Nova Scotians 6.9.3 Acadian Nova Scotians 6.10 Palliative care 6.11 Assisted reproduction 6.12 Summary 7 Recent Health Reforms 7.1 The consolidation of district health authorities and the creation of the Nova Scotia Health Authority 7.2 The reorganization of the Department of Health and Wellness 7.3 Summary 8 Assessment of the Health System 8.1 The province’s strategic goals 8.1.1 Resource stewardship 8.1.2 Health of the population 8.1.3 Appropriate, good-quality care 8.1.4 Health system workforce 8.2 Equity in financing the health care system 8.3 Equity of access 8.4 Outcomes 8.4.1 Comparative outcomes 8.4.2 Chronological outcomes 8.4.3 Measuring and evaluating outcomes 8.4.4 User experience and satisfaction 8.5 Efficiency 8.6 Transparency and accountability 8.7 Summary 9 Conclusion Appendix: Laws on Health and Health Care in Nova Scotia References Index

    £59.50

  • Wrapping Authority

    University of Toronto Press Wrapping Authority

    Book SynopsisSince around 2000, a growing number of women in Dakar, Senegal have come to act openly as spiritual leaders for both men and women. As urban youth turn to the Fay?a Tijaniyya Sufi Islamic movement in search of direction and community, these women provide guidance in practicing Islam and cultivating mystical knowledge of God. While women Islamic leaders may appear radical in a context where women have rarely exercised Islamic authority, they have provoked surprisingly little controversy. Wrapping Authority tells these women’s stories and explores how they have developed ways of leading that feel natural to themselves and those around them. Addressing the dominant perceptions of Islam as a conservative practise, with stringent regulations for women in particular, Joseph Hill reveals how women integrate values typically associated with pious Muslim women into their leadership. These female leaders present spiritual guidance as a form of nurturing motherhood; they Trade Review"Hill's study looks beyond the dualistic framework of inhabiting/subverting the norms and frames the pious disposition as significantly informed by materiality and conventional tropes of feminine performance. In locating the deeper nuances which engenders women’s pious narratives – marked by liminal states of trance, fissures, and transitions – the work has made a definitive contribution to the wide array of writings on gendered sacred experientialities." -- Simi K. Salim * Religion and Gender *"Hill does a good job of teasing out the diversity of women’s experiences, and his extensive knowledge of Muslim practices more broadly gives the work a useful comparative nature. This book would be especially valuable to scholars of religious studies, African Studies, anthropology, and women’s and gender studies. The chapters can stand alone so undergraduates could also read portions of the text." -- Katherine Ann Wiley, Pacific Lutheran University * Journal of Religion in Africa *Table of Contents1. An Emerging Urban Youth Movement 2. The New Muqaddamas 3. Wrapping 4. Motherhood Metamorphosis Metaphors 5. Cooking up Spiritual Leadership 6. “They Say a Woman’s Voice Is ʿAwra” 7. The Ascetic and the Mother of the Knowers Epilogue: Islam as a Numinous, Performative Tradition

    £68.85

  • Nova Scotia

    University of Toronto Press Nova Scotia

    Book SynopsisDespite notable variation in health care policy from province to province, most scholarship published on the health care system in Canada uses a broad national perspective. Focusing on the health care systems of individual Canadian provinces and territories, our new series, Health System Profiles, examines the social, political, economic, and epidemiological context of health care policy in each Canadian province. Turning a critical eye to the health care system in Nova Scotia, author Katherine Fierlbeck outlines the organizational and regulatory frameworks structuring provincial health care, while providing a detailed assessment of Nova Scotia’s health financing, physical infrastructure, service provision, and the efficacy of technological resources used in data tracking and health quality assessments. Structured for ease of comparison, Nova Scotia: A Health System Profile will, along with other volumes in the series, help scholars draw Table of ContentsList of Figures, Tables, and Boxes Series Editor’s Foreword Preface and Acknowledgments List of Acronym 1 Introduction and Overview 1.1 Geography and sociodemography 1.2 Political context 1.3 Economic context 1.4 Health status of the population 1.5 Summary 2 Organization and Regulation 2.1 Overview and history 2.2 Organization of the provincial health system 2.2.1 The Nova Scotia Health Authority 2.2.2 Contractors (private not-for-profit) 2.2.3 Contractors (private for-profit) 2.3 Health system planning 2.4 Coverage and benefits 2.4.1 Eligibility for publicly insured benefits 2.4.2 Benefits (universal) 2.4.3 Targeted benefits for nonmedical services 2.5 Regulation 2.5.1 Providers 2.5.2 Facilities 2.5.3 Prescription drugs 2.5.4 Patient health information 2.6 Patients 2.7 Summary 3 Health Spending and Financing 3.1 Health expenditure and trends 3.2 Public revenue 3.3 Public financing flows 3.4 Summary 4 Physical Infrastructure 4.1 Hospitals and other treatment facilities 4.2 Long-term care facilities 4.3 Diagnostic facilities 4.3.1 Laboratory services 4.3.2 Diagnostic imaging 4.4 Public health facilities 4.5 Information and communications technology infrastructure 4.5.1 Core electronic information systems 4.5.2 Specialized electronic information systems 4.6 Research and evaluation infrastructure 4.7 Summary 5 Health Human Resources 5.1 Main workforce challenges 5.2 Physicians 5.3 Nurses 5.4 Other health care professionals 5.4.1 Paramedics 5.4.2 Pharmacists 5.4.3 Midwives 5.4.4 Medical laboratory technologists 5.4.5 Clinical assistants 5.4.6 Home care workers 5.5 HHR planning in Nova Scotia 5.6 Summary 6 Service and Program Provision 6.1 Public health 6.2 Primary care 6.3 Acute care 6.4 Long-term care 6.5 Prescription drugs 6.6 Workers’ Compensation Board programs 6.7 Mental health care 6.8 Dental health care 6.9 Targeted services 6.9.1 First Nations 6.9.2 African Nova Scotians 6.9.3 Acadian Nova Scotians 6.10 Palliative care 6.11 Assisted reproduction 6.12 Summary 7 Recent Health Reforms 7.1 The consolidation of district health authorities and the creation of the Nova Scotia Health Authority 7.2 The reorganization of the Department of Health and Wellness 7.3 Summary 8 Assessment of the Health System 8.1 The province’s strategic goals 8.1.1 Resource stewardship 8.1.2 Health of the population 8.1.3 Appropriate, good-quality care 8.1.4 Health system workforce 8.2 Equity in financing the health care system 8.3 Equity of access 8.4 Outcomes 8.4.1 Comparative outcomes 8.4.2 Chronological outcomes 8.4.3 Measuring and evaluating outcomes 8.4.4 User experience and satisfaction 8.5 Efficiency 8.6 Transparency and accountability 8.7 Summary 9 Conclusion Appendix: Laws on Health and Health Care in Nova Scotia References Index

    £26.99

  • A Mohawk Memoir from the War of 1812

    University of Toronto Press A Mohawk Memoir from the War of 1812

    Book SynopsisA Mohawk Memoir from the War of 1812 presents the story of John Norton, or Teyoninhokarawen, an important war chief and political figure among the Grand River Haudenosaunee (or Iroquois) in Upper Canada. Norton saw more action during the conflict than almost anyone else, being present at the fall of Detroit; the capture of Fort Niagara; the battles of Queenston Heights, Fort George, Stoney Creek, Chippawa, and Lundy’s Lane; the blockades of Fort George and Fort Erie; and a large number of skirmishes and front-line patrols. His memoir describes the fighting, the stresses suffered by indigenous peoples, and the complex relationships between the Haudenosaunee and both their British allies and other First Nations communities. Norton’s account, written in 1815 and 1816, provides nearly one-third of the book’s content, with the remainder consisting of Carl Benn’s introductions and annotations, which enable readers to understand Norton’s fTrade Review“A significant achievement ... Benn’s work is a gift to those seeking to better understand the varied First Nations perspectives on the militarization and settlement of eastern North America, as well as the War of 1812 between Americans and British and their respective Native allies.” -- Carla J. Mulford, Pennsylvania State University * American Indian Culture and Research Journal *Table of ContentsAbbreviations Introduction Memoir of John Norton – Teyoninhokarawen 1. Uncertainties, Diplomacy, and the Outbreak of War, 1811-12 2. Opening Moves, Disunion, and the Capture of Detroit, 1812 3. Niagara and Victory at Queenston Heights, 1812 4. Ambiguity and Frustration on the Detroit Front, 1813 5. The Fall of Fort George, Desperate Moments, and the Battle of Stoney Creek, 1813 6. The Blockade of Fort George, Intrigue, and the Capture of Fort Niagara, 1813 7. Quebec, Burlington, and the Battle of Chippawa, 1814 8. Discredit, Battles at Lundy’s Lane and Fort Erie, Murders, and the Defence of Grand River, 1814 Epilogue Appendix A: The Six Nations Population on the Grand River, 1811 and 1814 Appendix B: John Norton’s Spelling of Native Names when it Differed from Current Practice Acknowledgements Image Credits Bibliography Index

    £26.99

  • Birthing the West

    University of Nebraska Press Birthing the West

    7 in stock

    Book SynopsisBirthing the West shows how mothers and midwives created an informal but dynamic health care system in the Rockies and Plains between 1860 and 1940. Over time, public health entities usurped their power, with lasting impacts for women, families, and American identity.Trade Review"An important and engaging read."—Meg Eppel Gudgeirsson, Journal of Arizona History"While the book is of immediate interest to scholars of women's and reproductive history, all historians of the US West and Plains would be wise to include childbirth in their accounts of the region's transformations. Childbirth is a major event in the private lives of men and women but remains at the periphery of academic history. As Jennifer J. Hill demonstrates, both the act of childbirth and its attendant cultural meanings was a central plank in the territorial expansion of the United States."—Rachel Miller, Nebraska History Magazine"This is an excellent resource book about a subject seldom in the forefront of Western literature."—Candy Moulton, True West"Hill provides a clear picture of the difficulties faced by pregnant women and the fundamentally important role that female community members—especially midwives—played in the settlement of the West."—Hannah Haksgaard, Montana: The Magazine of Western History"This book is a compelling addition to the historiography of the American West and the history of medicine. Further, it would serve as an excellent supplement to any U.S. West survey course, providing a compelling narrative to restructure how we understand the history of westward expansion, midwifery, and women's labor."—Gianna May Sanchez, South Dakota History"Birthing the West conveys how power in intimate spaces was negotiated by women and, later, men as the northern plains region of the West became increasingly incorporated into centralized power structures."—Meg Frisbee, Kansas History“Jennifer Hill puts women in the forefront of western history and shows the equal importance of women’s worlds in the settling of the West. She writes clearly, thoughtfully, and, in places, lyrically. Hill projects images wonderfully and makes her points well.”—Todd L. Savitt, author of Race and Medicine in Nineteenth- and Early-Twentieth-Century America“Hill’s work is very important to the historiography of the northern Great Plains states. Looking through the lens of childbirth provides unique perspectives on family formation, regional professionalization, and Great Plains settler colonialism. One of the exciting elements of this book is how women create community and ‘reproduce’ the state. There are good local stories here to enjoy.”—Molly P. Rozum, author of Grasslands Grown: Creating Place on the U.S. Northern Plains and Canadian PrairiesTable of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Birth in the Big Open 2. The Expertise of Women 3. Midwives among Us 4. The Practice of Birth 5. Death in the West 6. Birth Goes Public 7. Maternity Homes and Motherhood Conclusion: What We Lost Notes Selected Bibliography Index

    7 in stock

    £17.99

  • The Battle for Veterans Healthcare

    Cornell University Press The Battle for Veterans Healthcare

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn The Battle for Veterans'' Healthcare, award-winning author Suzanne Gordon takes us to the front lines of federal policymaking and healthcare delivery, as it affects eight million Americans whose military service makes them eligible for Veterans Health Administration (VHA) coverage.Gordon's collected dispatches provide insight and information too often missing from mainstream media reporting on the VHA and from Capitol Hill debates about its future. Drawing on interviews with veterans and their families, VHA staff and administrators, health care policy experts and Congressional decision makers, Gordon describes a federal agency under siege that nevertheless accomplishes its difficult mission of serving men and women injured, in myriad ways, while on active duty.The Battle for Veterans' Healthcare is an essential primer on VHA care and a call to action by veterans, their advocacy organizations, and political allies. Without lobbying efforts and broader public understaTrade Review""The Battle for Veterans’ Healthcare should be required reading for the Trump Administration, members of Congress, and anyone concerned about the fate of the Veterans Health Administration."—Garry Augustine, Washington Executive Director of Disabled American Veterans"""The Battle for Veterans’ Healthcare explains why the VHA’s many specialized services should be strengthened and expanded."—Michael Blecker, Executive Director of Swords to Plowshares and member of VA Commission on Care"""Suzanne Gordon skillfully rebuts the arguments of would-be privatizers, who are trying to discredit and then divert public funding from health care providers who actually care about their patients."—Phillip Longman, author of Best Care Anywhere: Why VA Health Care Is Better than Yours"

    1 in stock

    £9.57

  • AntiVax

    Cornell University Press AntiVax

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisAntivaxxers are crazy. That is the perception we all gain from the media, the internet, celebrities, and beyond, writes Bernice Hausman in Anti/Vax, but we need to open our eyes and ears so that we can all have a better conversation about vaccine skepticism and its implications.Hausman argues that the heated debate about vaccinations and whether to get them or not is most often fueled by accusations and vilifications rather than careful attention to the real concerns of many Americans. She wants to set the record straight about vaccine skepticism and show how the issues and ideas that motivate itlike suspicion of pharmaceutical companies or the belief that some illness is necessary to good healthare commonplace in our society.Through Anti/Vax, Hausman wants to engage public health officials, the media, and each of us in a public dialogue about the relation of individual bodily autonomy to the state''s responsibility to safeguard citizens'' health. We needTrade ReviewSolid scholarship, clear writing, and a deep bibliography help this book stand out from others on this subject. Hausman's work is spot on and deserves a wide readership. * Choice *Table of ContentsPreface and Acknowledgments Introduction: Vaccination Stories and Why I Wrote This Book 1. So What Bothers You about Vaccines? 2. Immune to Reason 3. Whom Do You Trust? 4. Being a Responsible Parent 5. Is Vaccine Refusal a Form of Science Denial? 6. What Are Facts, and How Do We Trust Them? 7. Medicalization and Biomedicalization 8. Antimedicine in Theory and Practice 9. Viral Imaginations 10. Anti/Vax Conclusion: What Vaccination Controversy Can Teach Us about Medicine and Modernity Notes Bibliography Index

    1 in stock

    £22.79

  • More Than Medicine

    Cornell University Press More Than Medicine

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn More Than Medicine, LaTonya J. Trotter chronicles the everyday work of a group of nurse practitioners (NPs) working on the front lines of the American health care crisis as they cared for four hundred African American older adults living with poor health and limited means. Trotter describes how these NPs practiced an inclusive form of care work that addressed medical, social, and organizational problems that often accompany poverty. In solving this expanded terrain of problems from inside the clinic, these NPs were not only solving a broader set of concerns for their patients; they became a professional solution for managing difficult people for both their employer and the state. Through More Than Medicine, we discover that the problems found in the NP''s exam room are as much a product of our nation''s disinvestment in social problems as of physician scarcity or rising costs.Trade ReviewThe book's important contributions are unscored by Trotter's rich prose and her exceptional ability to weave intricate stories into a compelling, nuanced portrait of 21st-century health care. She brings her research subjects to life with steady-handed critique, avoiding both unnecessarily harsh criticism and uncritical adulation. * American Journal of Sociology *Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. Nursing's Expertise 2. From Medical Work to Clinic Work 3. Organizational Care Work 4. New Boundaries, New Relationships 5. Gaining Status, Losing Ground 6. The Contraction of Social Work 7. The Misrecognition of Social Problems

    1 in stock

    £97.20

  • More Than Medicine

    Cornell University Press More Than Medicine

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn More Than Medicine, LaTonya J. Trotter chronicles the everyday work of a group of nurse practitioners (NPs) working on the front lines of the American health care crisis as they cared for four hundred African American older adults living with poor health and limited means. Trotter describes how these NPs practiced an inclusive form of care work that addressed medical, social, and organizational problems that often accompany poverty. In solving this expanded terrain of problems from inside the clinic, these NPs were not only solving a broader set of concerns for their patients; they became a professional solution for managing difficult people for both their employer and the state. Through More Than Medicine, we discover that the problems found in the NP''s exam room are as much a product of our nation''s disinvestment in social problems as of physician scarcity or rising costs.Trade ReviewThe book's important contributions are unscored by Trotter's rich prose and her exceptional ability to weave intricate stories into a compelling, nuanced portrait of 21st-century health care. She brings her research subjects to life with steady-handed critique, avoiding both unnecessarily harsh criticism and uncritical adulation. * American Journal of Sociology *Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. Nursing's Expertise 2. From Medical Work to Clinic Work 3. Organizational Care Work 4. New Boundaries, New Relationships 5. Gaining Status, Losing Ground 6. The Contraction of Social Work 7. The Misrecognition of Social Problems

    5 in stock

    £16.19

  • The Caring Class

    Cornell University Press The Caring Class

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe number of elderly and disabled Americans in need of home health care is increasing annually, even as the pool of peoplealmost always womenwilling to do this job gets smaller and smaller. The Caring Class takes readers inside the reality of home health care by following the lives of women training and working as home health aides in the South Bronx.Richard Schweid examines home health care in detail, focusing on the women who tend to our elderly and disabled loved ones and how we fail to value their work. They are paid minimum wage so that we might be absent, getting on with our own lives. The book calls for a rethinking of home health care and explains why changes are urgent: the current system offers neither a good way to live nor a good way to die. By improving the job of home health aide, Schweid shows, we can reduce income inequality and create a pool of qualified, competent home health care providers who would contribute to the well-being of us all. Trade ReviewSchweid treats his subjects and their community with generosity of heart and purpose. He places these women and their stories in the foreground, and the entire book benefits from that choice. Schweid approaches the dilemmas within the home health aide profession from numerous informative angles, but his writing remains broadly accessible. As a result, The Caring Class is easy to imagine in the hands of undergraduates, or even thoughtful high schoolers, studying all manner of subjects related to the social sciences or public health. * Chapter 16 *The Caring Class is an extremely readable and informative book for researchers, policymakers, and practitioners alike. [The author] provides an excellent understanding for necessary reforms at a national scale. * ILR Review *[The Caring Class] provides necessary information to understand deficiencies and challenges in the current system of home health care and a potential leverage point for building a strong workforce that is needed to have a sustainable care system where older adults who need care can continue to live in their homes with safety and dignity. * The Gerantologist *Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. Not for the Fainthearted 2. Observe, Record, and Report 3. Home Care for Sale 4. Parasites of the Elderly 5. Graduation Day 6. Welcome to These Shores 7. "I Don't Do It for the Money"

    1 in stock

    £19.94

  • Stanford University Press A Miscarriage of Justice: Women’s Reproductive

    Book SynopsisA Miscarriage of Justice examines women's reproductive health in relation to legal and medical policy in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. After the abolition of slavery in 1888 and the onset of republicanism in 1889, women's reproductive capabilities—their ability to conceive and raise future citizens and laborers—became critical to the expansion of the new Brazilian state. Analyzing court cases, law, medical writings, and health data, Cassia Roth argues that the state's approach to women's health in the early twentieth century focused on criminalizing fertility control without improving services or outcomes for women. Ultimately, the increasingly interventionist state fostered a culture of condemnation around poor women's reproduction that extended beyond elite discourses into the popular imagination. By tracing how legal thought and medical knowledge became cemented into law and clinical practice, how obstetricians, public health officials, and legal practitioners approached fertility control, and how women experienced and negotiated their reproductive lives, A Miscarriage of Justice provides a new way of interpreting the intertwined histories of gender, race, reproduction, and the state—and shows how these questions continue to reverberate in debates over reproductive rights and women's health in Brazil today.Trade Review"Roth's remarkably wide-ranging research offers a comprehensive and nuanced analysis of the science, law, politics, and lived experiences surrounding women's reproduction in Rio de Janeiro in the first half of the twentieth century. Deeply contextualized in the social, economic, and cultural history of post-abolition Brazil, A Miscarriage of Justice interrogates the dialogue between local and global histories of medical and legal sciences while maintaining focus on individual women whose reproductive lives were increasingly pathologized and criminalized. This remarkable book is sure to become required reading in the fields of Latin American and gender history."—Sueann Caulfield, University of Michigan"With straightforward elegance, Roth conveys the harsh realities of women's reproductive experiences in Brazil in a time of great social transformation. Fully accounting for the historical, political, and cultural complexities of their interactions with the larger community and the state, the author documents both change over time and the continuity of women's legal—and even existential—disenfranchisement through varying political regimes."—Julia E. Rodriguez, University of New Hampshire"In A Miscarriage of Justice, Cassia Roth provides an innovative and unique history of reproduction in Brazil, weaving together medical and legal directives on childbirth, abortion, and infanticide alongside the intimate, embodied experiences of gendered 'crimes' and social inequalities in Rio de Janeiro. Taking a broad view of reproductive health that explores motherhood, infanticide, and abortion simultaneously, Roth argues that the surveillance and criminalization of women's reproductive practices and of their racialized bodies were critical anchors of Brazilian state-building, especially during the complex years of the authoritarian Estado Novo. This is a deeply researched, sophisticated, and insightful study with significant implications for understanding reproductive justice issues even in contemporary politics."—Okezi T. Otovo, Florida International University"Told with care and from a place of deep empathy, the heartbreaking stories in Miscarriage of Justice bring Brazilian women back into their own history, which has been told about them, but rarely through and with them. While a patriarchal legal system and medical institution tightened its control around women's reproductive lives, Roth shows through these women's stories that they wrested that control back in whatever way they could."—Leila A. McNeill, Lady Science"Cassia Roth's lively and well-researched book,A Miscarriage of Justice, is a welcome addition to [writing reproduction into the history of human society]. This exploration of the politics of reproduction in twentieth-century Rio de Janeiro operates on two levels. First, the author attends to the political, medical, and legal discourses and practices that constructed and, with varying degrees of success, sought to regulate women's reproductive lives. Second, she pays careful attention to the meanings and experiences of reproduction for pregnant and parturient women themselves, as well as for their families and communities."—Nara Milanich, H-LatAm"A Miscarriage of Justice is an impeccably researched feminist history of reproduction that centers the lives and deaths of women in the Brazilian capital of Rio de Janeiro during the early 20th century...Highly recommended."—B. A. Lucero, CHOICE"A Miscarriage of Justice's main contribution lies in contextualizing the stories of women who appeared in investigations and judicial courts as suspects of abortions and infanticides and bringing their lived experiences to the forefront of the scholarship on gender, law, patriarchy, and motherhood in the twentieth-century Latin America."—Ana Paula Nadalini Mendes, Journal of Global Slavery"Perhaps most powerfully, A Miscarriage of Justice deepens our historical understanding of the repressive laws and excessive medical interventions with which Brazilian women must contend in their experiences of fertility control, pregnancy, childbirth, and motherhood today."—Adam Warren, Bulletin of the History of Medicine"This is an outstanding historical study. Cassia Roth consistently demonstrates sensitivity to complexity and nuance without losing the thread of her argument. ... A Miscarriage of Justiceis an absorbing read."—Ann Varley, Bulletin of Latin American Research"This exhaustively researched and well-written book links criminal investigations for fertility control to the advent of republicanism in Brazil after the abolition of slavery in 1888, a gradual process that began with a 'Free Womb Law' manumitting the unborn babies of enslaved women.... Using a reproductive justice frame, Roth argues that while the Brazilian state promoted motherhood during the republican period, it did not take steps to provide all mothers equal access to the ability to raise a child free of poverty."—Rachel Nolan, Latin American Research ReviewTable of ContentsIntroduction: 1. The Law of Responsibility, the Medicine of Gender, the Science of Race 2. Constructing Motherhood: Obstetricians, Politicians, and the Creation of a Reproductive Healthcare System 3. Birthing Life and Death: Childbirth, Stillbirth, and Maternal Mortality 4. A "Plague of Criminal Abortions": Fertility Control and the Consolidation of Medical Authority 5. Ouvi Dizer [Heard Said]: Rumor, Sex, and Race in the Republican Capital 6. Policing Pregnancy: Statecraft, Poverty, and Reproductive Health 7. Prosecuting Honor, Defending Madness: Abortion and Infanticide in the Courts Conclusion:

    £92.80

  • Stanford University Press A Miscarriage of Justice: Women’s Reproductive

    Book SynopsisA Miscarriage of Justice examines women's reproductive health in relation to legal and medical policy in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. After the abolition of slavery in 1888 and the onset of republicanism in 1889, women's reproductive capabilities—their ability to conceive and raise future citizens and laborers—became critical to the expansion of the new Brazilian state. Analyzing court cases, law, medical writings, and health data, Cassia Roth argues that the state's approach to women's health in the early twentieth century focused on criminalizing fertility control without improving services or outcomes for women. Ultimately, the increasingly interventionist state fostered a culture of condemnation around poor women's reproduction that extended beyond elite discourses into the popular imagination. By tracing how legal thought and medical knowledge became cemented into law and clinical practice, how obstetricians, public health officials, and legal practitioners approached fertility control, and how women experienced and negotiated their reproductive lives, A Miscarriage of Justice provides a new way of interpreting the intertwined histories of gender, race, reproduction, and the state—and shows how these questions continue to reverberate in debates over reproductive rights and women's health in Brazil today.Trade Review"Roth's remarkably wide-ranging research offers a comprehensive and nuanced analysis of the science, law, politics, and lived experiences surrounding women's reproduction in Rio de Janeiro in the first half of the twentieth century. Deeply contextualized in the social, economic, and cultural history of post-abolition Brazil, A Miscarriage of Justice interrogates the dialogue between local and global histories of medical and legal sciences while maintaining focus on individual women whose reproductive lives were increasingly pathologized and criminalized. This remarkable book is sure to become required reading in the fields of Latin American and gender history."—Sueann Caulfield, University of Michigan"With straightforward elegance, Roth conveys the harsh realities of women's reproductive experiences in Brazil in a time of great social transformation. Fully accounting for the historical, political, and cultural complexities of their interactions with the larger community and the state, the author documents both change over time and the continuity of women's legal—and even existential—disenfranchisement through varying political regimes."—Julia E. Rodriguez, University of New Hampshire"In A Miscarriage of Justice, Cassia Roth provides an innovative and unique history of reproduction in Brazil, weaving together medical and legal directives on childbirth, abortion, and infanticide alongside the intimate, embodied experiences of gendered 'crimes' and social inequalities in Rio de Janeiro. Taking a broad view of reproductive health that explores motherhood, infanticide, and abortion simultaneously, Roth argues that the surveillance and criminalization of women's reproductive practices and of their racialized bodies were critical anchors of Brazilian state-building, especially during the complex years of the authoritarian Estado Novo. This is a deeply researched, sophisticated, and insightful study with significant implications for understanding reproductive justice issues even in contemporary politics."—Okezi T. Otovo, Florida International University"Told with care and from a place of deep empathy, the heartbreaking stories in Miscarriage of Justice bring Brazilian women back into their own history, which has been told about them, but rarely through and with them. While a patriarchal legal system and medical institution tightened its control around women's reproductive lives, Roth shows through these women's stories that they wrested that control back in whatever way they could."—Leila A. McNeill, Lady Science"Cassia Roth's lively and well-researched book,A Miscarriage of Justice, is a welcome addition to [writing reproduction into the history of human society]. This exploration of the politics of reproduction in twentieth-century Rio de Janeiro operates on two levels. First, the author attends to the political, medical, and legal discourses and practices that constructed and, with varying degrees of success, sought to regulate women's reproductive lives. Second, she pays careful attention to the meanings and experiences of reproduction for pregnant and parturient women themselves, as well as for their families and communities."—Nara Milanich, H-LatAm"A Miscarriage of Justice is an impeccably researched feminist history of reproduction that centers the lives and deaths of women in the Brazilian capital of Rio de Janeiro during the early 20th century...Highly recommended."—B. A. Lucero, CHOICE"A Miscarriage of Justice's main contribution lies in contextualizing the stories of women who appeared in investigations and judicial courts as suspects of abortions and infanticides and bringing their lived experiences to the forefront of the scholarship on gender, law, patriarchy, and motherhood in the twentieth-century Latin America."—Ana Paula Nadalini Mendes, Journal of Global Slavery"Perhaps most powerfully, A Miscarriage of Justice deepens our historical understanding of the repressive laws and excessive medical interventions with which Brazilian women must contend in their experiences of fertility control, pregnancy, childbirth, and motherhood today."—Adam Warren, Bulletin of the History of Medicine"This is an outstanding historical study. Cassia Roth consistently demonstrates sensitivity to complexity and nuance without losing the thread of her argument. ... A Miscarriage of Justiceis an absorbing read."—Ann Varley, Bulletin of Latin American Research"This exhaustively researched and well-written book links criminal investigations for fertility control to the advent of republicanism in Brazil after the abolition of slavery in 1888, a gradual process that began with a 'Free Womb Law' manumitting the unborn babies of enslaved women.... Using a reproductive justice frame, Roth argues that while the Brazilian state promoted motherhood during the republican period, it did not take steps to provide all mothers equal access to the ability to raise a child free of poverty."—Rachel Nolan, Latin American Research ReviewTable of ContentsIntroduction: 1. The Law of Responsibility, the Medicine of Gender, the Science of Race 2. Constructing Motherhood: Obstetricians, Politicians, and the Creation of a Reproductive Healthcare System 3. Birthing Life and Death: Childbirth, Stillbirth, and Maternal Mortality 4. A "Plague of Criminal Abortions": Fertility Control and the Consolidation of Medical Authority 5. Ouvi Dizer [Heard Said]: Rumor, Sex, and Race in the Republican Capital 6. Policing Pregnancy: Statecraft, Poverty, and Reproductive Health 7. Prosecuting Honor, Defending Madness: Abortion and Infanticide in the Courts Conclusion:

    £23.79

  • Conflicted Care: Doctors Navigating Patient

    Stanford University Press Conflicted Care: Doctors Navigating Patient

    Book SynopsisAn eye-opening and compelling ethnography about how doctors make decisions The oath that doctors take to "do no harm" suggests that patient welfare is at the center of what it means to be a successful medical professional. It is also understood, however, that hospitals are not only vessels for medical care—they are businesses, educational institutions, and complex bureaucracies with intricate codes of etiquette that dictate how each staff member should approach situations with patients. In Conflicted Care, Hyeyoung Oh Nelson provides an in-depth look at the decision-making processes of physicians at a large, prestigious academic medical center—that she calls Pacific Medical Center—and finds that more often than not patient wellbeing is only one of several factors governing day-to-day decisions. The steps physicians take reveal a kind of hidden curriculum of the medical world, one that is guided by status and hierarchy, bureaucracy, norms for consulting with third-parties, regulations for interactions with patients, and medical uncertainty. While at an institutional and individual level patient care continues to be integral to everything the physicians do, they are forced to reconcile that vow with these other, often-conflicting internal logics. Harm, Nelson argues, is thus built into the practice of medicine in the United States. This harm can take the form of unnecessary treatments and consultations or inadequate treatment for pain to motivate specialist intervention that would otherwise be resisted. These and other practices have the overall consequence of significantly driving up inpatient care costs, which then results in patients forgoing needed, ongoing treatment once they receive their medical bills. Drawing on a deep ethnography of physicians in the Internal Medicine Service unit, Nelson offers a sharp assessment of current policies aimed at alleviating medical costs and explains why they are ineffective. She concludes by offering novel policy and practice recommendations for health care practitioners, policy makers, and healthcare institutions. Trade Review"This impressive book makes important contributions to our understanding of the different types of pressures that add to the complexity of medical care in the United States today. The close, on-the-ground description of these concerns is a valuable addition to the sociology of medicine and health."—Michael Sauder, author of Engines of Anxiety"[Conflicted Care] presents a valuable framework for a careful evaluation of factors influencing medical decision-making that can be replicated in various settings and time periods. Recommended."—R. A. Brugna, CHOICETable of Contents1. Doctors' Dilemmas 2. Conflicting Logics 3. Notation 4. Consultations 5. Discharge 6. Costs

    £60.80

  • Conflicted Care: Doctors Navigating Patient

    Stanford University Press Conflicted Care: Doctors Navigating Patient

    Book SynopsisAn eye-opening and compelling ethnography about how doctors make decisions The oath that doctors take to "do no harm" suggests that patient welfare is at the center of what it means to be a successful medical professional. It is also understood, however, that hospitals are not only vessels for medical care—they are businesses, educational institutions, and complex bureaucracies with intricate codes of etiquette that dictate how each staff member should approach situations with patients. In Conflicted Care, Hyeyoung Oh Nelson provides an in-depth look at the decision-making processes of physicians at a large, prestigious academic medical center—that she calls Pacific Medical Center—and finds that more often than not patient wellbeing is only one of several factors governing day-to-day decisions. The steps physicians take reveal a kind of hidden curriculum of the medical world, one that is guided by status and hierarchy, bureaucracy, norms for consulting with third-parties, regulations for interactions with patients, and medical uncertainty. While at an institutional and individual level patient care continues to be integral to everything the physicians do, they are forced to reconcile that vow with these other, often-conflicting internal logics. Harm, Nelson argues, is thus built into the practice of medicine in the United States. This harm can take the form of unnecessary treatments and consultations or inadequate treatment for pain to motivate specialist intervention that would otherwise be resisted. These and other practices have the overall consequence of significantly driving up inpatient care costs, which then results in patients forgoing needed, ongoing treatment once they receive their medical bills. Drawing on a deep ethnography of physicians in the Internal Medicine Service unit, Nelson offers a sharp assessment of current policies aimed at alleviating medical costs and explains why they are ineffective. She concludes by offering novel policy and practice recommendations for health care practitioners, policy makers, and healthcare institutions. Trade Review"This impressive book makes important contributions to our understanding of the different types of pressures that add to the complexity of medical care in the United States today. The close, on-the-ground description of these concerns is a valuable addition to the sociology of medicine and health."—Michael Sauder, author of Engines of Anxiety"[Conflicted Care] presents a valuable framework for a careful evaluation of factors influencing medical decision-making that can be replicated in various settings and time periods. Recommended."—R. A. Brugna, CHOICE"[Conflicted Care] provides a sociological analysis of medical practice in today's clinical setting. It is precisely written and well crafted.... [T]his book is an excellent analysis of contemporary medical decision-making in a complicated work environment."—William C. Cockerham, Contemporary Sociology"By showing that the commodification of medicine comes alive for doctors every single day, [Conflicted Care] makes a powerful case for why medical students should acquire a much better understanding of how finance shapes health care provision."—Guillermina Altomonte, Social ForcesTable of Contents1. Doctors' Dilemmas 2. Conflicting Logics 3. Notation 4. Consultations 5. Discharge 6. Costs

    £19.79

  • Global Health Studies: A Social Determinants

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd Global Health Studies: A Social Determinants

    20 in stock

    Book SynopsisA global view of health offers a richer understanding of ways of measuring, improving and sustaining health both in individual national settings and in the context of a strongly interconnected world. This book draws on social scientific insights and explanations to examine trends in global health. Moving beyond an epidemiological analysis, the authors use a social determinants framework and life course approaches to offer a critical introduction to the study of global health. Through individual chapters focusing on topics such as health policy, global governance, health systems and health-related protests, the authors present the scope of global health studies and introduce readers to broader ranging issues such as globalization and political forces. Key themes such as power, inequality and inequity - and their impact on health on a global scale - recur throughout the book. International examples and case studies are used to illustrate the discussion, which is further supported by opportunities for reflection and further reading. This book will be an important resource for students studying global health and will have broad relevance to those undertaking health, health-related and allied health professional courses.Trade Review"This is an excellent reference book for students undertaking courses in global health. It introduces them to the many diverse issues that lie under the umbrella of global health studies, while encouraging them to think critically by including a set of intermittent questions aimed at the reader." David McCoy, Queen Mary University of London "Warwick-Booth and Cross examine global health from a perspective of health equity and critical human rights. This welcome and refreshing departure challenges both learners and researchers to develop innovations for a postcolonial world. With activities to facilitate deep learning and problem solving, this text makes a valuable contribution to the curriculum of service providers and prepares students to be globally responsible citizens."Karline Wilson-Mitchell, Ryerson University

    20 in stock

    £51.52

  • Telebehavioral Health: Foundations in Theory and

    Cognella, Inc Telebehavioral Health: Foundations in Theory and

    Book SynopsisTelebehavioral Health: Foundations in Theory and Practice for Graduate Learners provides readers with a comprehensive overview of telebehavioral health, including definitions and concepts, the benefits and barriers associated with practice, and an interprofessional framework for telebehavioral health competencies. The competencies outlined help readers develop an engaged, ethical, and effective telebehavioral health practice.The book discusses and provides examples of the knowledge, skills, and attitudes involved in the seven telebehavioral health competency domains. The chapters include differentiated content for novice, proficient, and authority practitioners throughout, allowing readers to adjust their exposure, in terms of depth and breadth, to each topical area. The text provides an overview of the characteristics and practices unique to telebehavioral health treatment, guidance for competent evaluation and care, review of legal and regulatory issues related to the use of technology, valuable insight for telepractice development, and more.Designed to help practitioners thoughtfully consider the use of technology to support optimal therapeutic experiences for their patients, Telebehavioral Health is an ideal text for students within the discipline. It can also serve as a beneficial reference for novice and seasoned practitioners.Trade ReviewTelebehavioral Health is a thoughtful and helpful book that practitioners need today. Telehealth services have come to the forefront as a result of the COVID-19 crisis. This book is a useful resource for a practitioner trying to provide services in this brave new world." Emil Rodolfa, Ph.D., Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Alliant International University, California School of Professional Psychology

    £51.00

  • Breathtaking: Asthma Care in a Time of Climate

    University of Minnesota Press Breathtaking: Asthma Care in a Time of Climate

    Book SynopsisAnalyzing asthma care in the twenty-first centuryAsthma is not a new problem, but today the disease is being reshaped by changing ecologies, healthcare systems, medical sciences, and built environments. A global epidemic, asthma (and our efforts to control it) demands an analysis attentive to its complexity, its contextual nature, and the care practices that emerge from both. At once clearly written and theoretically insightful, Breathtaking provides a sweeping ethnographic account of asthma’s many dimensions through the lived experiences of people who suffer from disordered breathing, as well as by considering their support networks, from secondary school teachers and coaches, to breathing educators and new smartphone applications designed for asthma control. Against the backdrop of unbreathable environments, Alison Kenner describes five modes of care that illustrate how asthma is addressed across different sociocultural scales. These modes of care often work in combination, building from or preceding one another. Tensions also exist between them, a point reflected by Kenner’s description of the structural conditions and material rhythms that shape everyday breathing, chronic disease, and our surrounding environments. She argues that new modes of distributed, collective care practices are needed to address asthma as a critical public health issue in the time of climate change.Trade Review"This elegant first monograph from the Asthma Files Project is written simply for all audiences and provides five practical recommendations. Breathtaking is social science at its best: experiential, explanatory, critical, and providing ways forward. Alison Kenner herself is an active participant as community social-scientist and as partner to someone who suffers disordered breathing. She guides us vividly across scales and registers."—Michael M.J. Fischer, author of Anthropology in the Meantime"Breathtaking is a sweeping ethnographic account of asthma and its treatments that expertly traverses questions of lived experience, medical technology, and critical ecology as they bear on the epidemic of disordered breathing. Beautifully written and poignant, this book makes a robust contribution to our understanding of the health effects of environmental degradation and climate change, deepens the critiques of biomedicalization, and heralds the promise of complementary and alternative medicine."—Anthony Ryan Hatch, author of Blood Sugar"Breathtaking is an engrossing read."—CHOICE"Breathtaking presents a compelling and very readable ethnographic overview of the ways that asthma is grappled with across a variety of 21st century American contexts. This book offers an insightful and multi-faceted account of a condition that affects so many around the world."—Somatosphere"Overall, Breathtaking takes asthma from the biomedical world, and using a multi-sited ethnography, traces connections between the experience of asthma, the environment and our bodies, allowing us to imagine new carescapes that could make the world more breathable."—LSE Review of Books"In the absence of swift and uncompromising action on the part of US legislators to combat climate change, Kenner advocates democratizing access to affordable health care; integrating breathing training into the doctor’s toolkit; and enacting policy, at all levels of government, to improve the indoor environments in which we spend the majority of our time."—H-EnvironmentTable of ContentsIntroduction1. Attuning to Asthma in Time and Place2. Three Modes of Control as Asthma Care3. Counting on Breath: Making Time with Respiratory Retraining4. The Datafication of Care5. Public Health Carescapes for Climate ChangeConclusionAcknowledgmentsNotesBibliographyIndex

    £19.79

  • Medical Necessity: Health Care Access and the

    University of Minnesota Press Medical Necessity: Health Care Access and the

    4 in stock

    Book SynopsisHow the politics of “medical necessity” complicates American health care The definition of medical necessity has morphed over the years, from a singular physician’s determination to a complex and dynamic political contest involving patients, medical companies, insurance companies, and government agencies. In this book, Daniel Skinner constructs a comprehensive understanding of the politics of defining this concept, arguing that sustained political engagement with medical necessity is essential to developing a health care system that meets basic public health objectives.From medical marijuana to mental health to reproductive politics, the concept of medical necessity underscores many of the most divisive and contentious debates in American health care. Skinner’s close reading of medical necessity’s production illuminates the divides between perceptions of medical need as well as how the gatekeeper concept of medical necessity tends to frame medical objectives. He questions the wisdom of continuing to use medical necessity when thinking critically about vexing health care challenges, exploring the possibility that contracts, rights, and technology may resolve the contentious politics of medical necessity.Skinner ultimately contends that a major shift is needed, one in which health care administrators, doctors, and patients admit that medical necessity is, at its base, a contestable political concept.Trade Review"Medical Necessity brings high-level theoretical concepts to bear on the idea of necessity, showing that this uniquely important aspect of contemporary medical administration appears and recedes in relation to a set of actors—doctors, patients, insurance companies, paraprofessionals, and lawyers—who manage the classification of treatments and negotiate the technical aspects of ‘need’ within their domains."—Cindy Patton, editor of Rebirth of the Clinic: Places and Agents in Contemporary Health Care

    4 in stock

    £80.00

  • Medical Necessity: Health Care Access and the

    University of Minnesota Press Medical Necessity: Health Care Access and the

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisHow the politics of “medical necessity” complicates American health care The definition of medical necessity has morphed over the years, from a singular physician’s determination to a complex and dynamic political contest involving patients, medical companies, insurance companies, and government agencies. In this book, Daniel Skinner constructs a comprehensive understanding of the politics of defining this concept, arguing that sustained political engagement with medical necessity is essential to developing a health care system that meets basic public health objectives.From medical marijuana to mental health to reproductive politics, the concept of medical necessity underscores many of the most divisive and contentious debates in American health care. Skinner’s close reading of medical necessity’s production illuminates the divides between perceptions of medical need as well as how the gatekeeper concept of medical necessity tends to frame medical objectives. He questions the wisdom of continuing to use medical necessity when thinking critically about vexing health care challenges, exploring the possibility that contracts, rights, and technology may resolve the contentious politics of medical necessity.Skinner ultimately contends that a major shift is needed, one in which health care administrators, doctors, and patients admit that medical necessity is, at its base, a contestable political concept.Trade Review"Medical Necessity brings high-level theoretical concepts to bear on the idea of necessity, showing that this uniquely important aspect of contemporary medical administration appears and recedes in relation to a set of actors—doctors, patients, insurance companies, paraprofessionals, and lawyers—who manage the classification of treatments and negotiate the technical aspects of ‘need’ within their domains."—Cindy Patton, editor of Rebirth of the Clinic: Places and Agents in Contemporary Health Care

    10 in stock

    £21.59

  • Living Data: Making Sense of Health Biosensing

    Bristol University Press Living Data: Making Sense of Health Biosensing

    Book SynopsisAs individuals increasingly seek ways of accessing, understanding and sharing data about their own bodies, this book offers a critique of the popular claim that ‘more information’ equates to ‘better health’. In a study that redefines the public, academic and policy related debates around health, bodies, information and data, the authors consider the ways in which the phenomenon of self-diagnosis has created alternative worlds of knowledge and practises which are often at odds with professional medical advice. With a focus on data that concerns significant life changes, this book explores the potential challenges related to people’s changing relationships with traditional health systems as access to, and control over, data shifts.Trade Review“This is an original and timely text – an absolute pleasure to read and a unique contribution to the field.” Emma Rich, University of Bath''This book presents a compelling account of people's engagements with biosensors. Drawing on their long history of research in science and technology studies, the authors elucidate how people can be helped or disappointed by these new technologies.'' Deborah Lupton, University of New South WalesTable of ContentsIntroduction: What Does Biosensing Do? Fertility Biosensing Biosensing Stress Platform Biosensing and Post- Genomic Relatedness Biosensing in Old Age Conclusion: What Might Biosensing Do?

    £43.19

  • Collaborative Management in Health Care:

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Collaborative Management in Health Care:

    Book SynopsisShows how health care administrators and clinical leaders can improve organizational effectiveness and responsiveness by fostering collaboration among different disciplines within their institutions. Provides six original case studies that show how integrative approaches can be applied in practice. Offers useful guidelines for choosing people to serve in key integrative positions, supporting the new structure through reward and information systems, and carrying out the change process.Table of ContentsPart One: Effective Organization Design and Change 1. The Challenges of Improving Organization Effectiveness 2. The Continuum of Organization Structures 3. Leadership Skills for Integrative Managers 4. Reward Systems That Support Integrative Management andChange 5. Matching Integrative Structures and Information Systems 6. Implementing (and Surviving) the Change Process 7. Product Line Management: A Special Case of Integration Part Two: From the Field: Lessons in Design andImplementation 8. Are Two Hats Better Than One? Biscayne Hospital 9. Involving Physicians and Trustees: Philadelphia Hospital MedicalCenter 10. Multiple Approaches to Integration: Hilltop HealthServices 11. Managing Key Factors in a Triad Structure: Bayview MedicalCenter 12. Strengths and Disadvantages of a Service Line Structure:Hanna-Thorndike Hospital 13. Implementing an Integrative Structure: Waller MemorialHospital 14. Using Organization Design to Facilitate Innovation

    £64.76

  • Creating the New American Hospital: A Time for

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Creating the New American Hospital: A Time for

    Book SynopsisTransforming the American Hospital Provides an exciting, values-centered approach to leadingorganizational change that produces rapid and lastingresults. --Coyla Anderson, executive vice president, operations, Holy CrossHealth System At a time when the health care industry is going through acrisis--closures, layoffs, soaring costs, dissatisfied customers,and increased turnover--some hospitals have dramatically improvedquality, productivity, and profitability. How? They have met the challenges of operating in today's health careenvironment through a complete, revolutionary transformation in howhospitals are managed. This book offers health care leaders anin-depth picture of how this new hospital operates and presentsdetailed, proven guidance for undertaking the transition.Trade Review"This hands-on guidebook is full of useful suggestions for makingAmerica's hospital's the caring--and cost-effective--places theyshould be. From managing by key results areas to employeeempowerment to strategies for putting the customer first, ClaytonSherman brings the best of new management wisdom to health care."(Rosabeth Moss Kanter, author of When Giants Lean to Dance andcoauthor of The Challenge of Organizational Change) "A superb book, containing many ideas that will ensure the successof those who manage hospitals. A thought-provoking book written ata most appropriate time as our nation moves forward with muchneeded health reform." (Richard E. Meiers, president and CEO,Hawaii Hospital Association) "Provides an exciting, values-centered approach to leadingorganizational change that produces rapid and lasting results. Mustreading for the emerging health care leaders of the next century."(Coyla Anderson, Executive vice president, operations, Holy CrossHealth System) "As hospitals enter into a period of substantial health carereform, Creating the New American Hospital provides hospitalleaders, trustees, medical staffs, and other personnel withpractical guidelines for ensuring that quality health care isdelivered in an affordable and effective way." (Terry TownsAnd,CAE, president and CEO of the Texas Hospital Association)Table of ContentsBUILDING A BRIGHTER FUTURE FOR AMERICAN HEALTH CARE. Why Hospitals Fail. Reinventing the American Hospital. HOW THE NEW AMERICAN HOSPITAL FUNCTIONS. Unleashing People for Contribution. Delivering the Service Strategy. The Quality-Productivity-Innovation Equation. A Streamlined Management System. Optimizing Organizational Structure. SUCCEEDING IN ORGANIZATIONAL RENEWAL. Leading the Transition. Managing Wide-Scale Change and Reconstruction. Preparing for Transformation. Implementing the Renewal Strategy. Accelerating the Change Process. Driving Change with Rewards.

    £56.66

  • Restructuring Health Care: The Patient-Focused

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Restructuring Health Care: The Patient-Focused

    Book SynopsisA Patient-Focused Paradigm Brilliant and timely, thoughtful and practical. Regradless of the final shape of health care reform in the U.S., the patient-focused idea can and must be implemented. Bravo! --Tom Peters, coauthor of In Search of Excellence and author of Liberation Management This in-depth book offers advice on how health care operations can shift from hierarchical organization structures to patient-focused approaches. Uses a wealth of examples to illustrate the challenges faced by organizations that have undertaken this type of restructuring.Trade Review"Philip Lathrop's book is brilliant and timely, thoughtful, and practical. Regradless of the final shape of health care reform in the U.S., the patient-focused idea can and must be implemented. Bravo!" (Tom Peters, coauthor of In Search of Excellence and author of Liberation Management)Table of Contents1. What's the Big Problem? 2. The Nature of Structural Change. 3. Compartmentalization and Its Discontents: High Cost and Poor Service. 4. Patient Focus Begins with Demand. 5. The Structure of a New Paradigm. 6. Patient Aggregation: From Nursing to Patient Care Centers. 7. Initial Deployment Decisions. 8. Enablers for Change. 9. Does It Work? Epilogue: The Patient-Focused Enterprise.

    £62.65

  • Public Relations in Health Care: A Guide for

    John Wiley & Sons Inc Public Relations in Health Care: A Guide for

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis comprehensive guide to everything you need to know about PR provides a theoretical overview and practical advice for PR professionals new to health care and new ideas and insights for veterans. The authors explain how the PR function can contribute to the success of the contemporary health care organization.Table of ContentsList of Figures and Tables. About the Author. Preface. Acknowledgments. 1. Introduction. 2. The Role of Public Relations in Health Care. 3. Integrating the Public Relations Function within the Organization and the System. 4. Senior Public Relations Officer-CEO Relationship. 5. Organizing the Public Relations Function. 6. Public Relations and Institutional Planning. 7. The Role of Research in Health Care Public Relations. 8. Developing Stakeholder Relationships: The Core of Health Care Public Relations. 9. Identifying and Managing Issues. 10. Community Relations. 11. Media Relations. 12. Crisis Communication. 13. Publications. 14. Marketing Communications. 15. Other Public Relations Methods. 16. Relationships with Special Audiences: Employees. 17. Relationships with Special Audiences: Customer (Patients, Members, Subscribers, Families). 18. Relationships with Special Audiences: Physicians. 19. Relationships with Special Audiences: Payers and Intermediaries (Employers, Insurers, and Managed Care Organizations). 20. Building Relationships with Special Audiences: Legislators and Policy Makers. 21. Special Challenges: Ethical and Legal Issues. 22. Evaluation. 23. Looking Ahead. Appendix A. Community Assessment: A Model "How-To" Based on Two Communities' Experience. Appendix B. General Guide for the Release of Patient Information by the Hospital. Appendix C. Riding the Wave: The Future of Health Care Marketing and Public Relations.

    1 in stock

    £73.10

  • Make the Day Matter!: Promoting Typical

    Brookes Publishing Co Make the Day Matter!: Promoting Typical

    20 in stock

    Book SynopsisAn introduction to the volume addresses the background and evolution of day services, national trends, and guiding principles for meaningful daytimes. Chapters discuss: transition from school to meaningful lives, how individuals have used their own initiative to create work and work alternatives, lifelong learning/adult education, promoting community relationships and connections, self-advocacy, promoting meaningful daytimes for older people, organizational issues (innovative organizational structures and practices, organizational conversion from facility-based to community-based services), and policy and practice in promoting quality daytime supports. Focus will be placed on examples, case studies, and practical strategies, themes of self-determination, cultural diversity, and collaboration.

    20 in stock

    £25.46

  • The Politics of Health Policy: The U.S. Reforms,

    John Wiley and Sons Ltd The Politics of Health Policy: The U.S. Reforms,

    Book SynopsisThis book analyzes the federal health policies followed by Reagan, Bush, and Clinton and by the Democratic-controlled Congress. The book shows the connection between the crisis of health care and the correlation of class forces in America. Addresses one of the key areas of contemporary public policy in the US, challenging complacent assumptions and demonstrating the enduring popularity of the welfare state The author was part of the Clinton team responsible for health reform Trade Review"The Politics of Health Policy constitutes an important contribution to the debate of a crucial issue. However, the reach of Professor Navarro's book goes well beyond health policy: it is also a powerful and well-documented rebuttal of the many obfuscations which mask the reality of politics in the United States. It offers a sustained and effective challenge to conventional thinking and deserves very close attention." Ralph Miliband "This book should become a very interesting reference in the growing literature of the welfare state. Navarro's way of analyzing health and social policy issues, while well accepted in Europe, is not frequently heard in the US. His is a strong voice of a committed social reformer speaking with the force of an empirical scientist." Professor Goran Therborn, Gothenburg UniversityTable of ContentsIntroduction: The Politics of the US Welfare State. 1. The 1980 and 1984 US Elections and the New Deal: An Alternative Interpretation. 2. Class Politics and Social Movements in the US. 3. The 1988 US Elections - The Primaries: The Rediscovery of the National Health Program by the Democratic Party, A Chronicle of the Jesse Jackson Campaign. 4. The 1988 Presidential Election. 5. The Welfare State and Its Redistributive Effects: Part of the Problem or Part of the Solution?. 6. Production and the Welfare State: The Political Context of Reforms. 7. Why Some Countries have National Health Insurance, Others Have National Health Services, and the US Has Neither. 8. The 1992 Presidential Election and the Clinton Adminstration Policies: The Politics of Health Care Reform.

    £38.90

  • Case and Care Management

    Emerald Publishing Limited Case and Care Management

    Book SynopsisThis is the sixth volume in a series dedicated to publishing current research and conceptual papers in the broad ranging area of the sociology of health.Table of ContentsOrganisational theory in the case and care management of health care, Gary L. Albrecht and Karen E. Peters; com-munities of care - a theoretical perspective on case manage-ment models in mental health, Bernice A. Pescosolido, Eric R. Wright and Patrick Sullivan; case management across organ-isational boundaries, Susan Hughes; case management - it is "cost" management for employee health benefits?, Judith Barr; professionals and laypeople in the management of a chronic illness in children - the care performed by families compared to medical teams, Renee Waissman; community-based case management for active injecting drug users, Judith A. Levy, Teri Strenski and Daniel J. Amick; developing community resources for a stigmatised population, Lawrence J. Ouellet, Matta Kelley, Andrea Coward and W. Wayne Wiebel; case manager and client - process analysis of the relationship in a short-term programme for drug injection users and sex partners, Victor Lidz and Martin Y. Iguchi; the impact of short term case management on cancer patients' needs and quality of life, Vince Mor, Margaret Wool, Edward Gundagnoli and Susan Allen; assessing the implementation of a case management intervention for the homeless, Cheryl I. Hultman, Kendon J. Conrad, Annie R. Pope, William C. Baxter, Joe Lisiecki and Phil Elbaum; database management systems for case management programmes, Colleen Monahan, Mary Szpur, Rosemary Manago, and Kathryn Smith; evaluating the cost effectiveness of case management, Robert J. Rydman.

    £85.99

  • Alternative Health Care

    Temple University Press,U.S. Alternative Health Care

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn November of 1998 The Journal of the American Medical Association devoted an entire issue to alternative medicine for the first time in its publishing history. According to survey results reported in the journal, 83 million Americans used some form of alternative medicine to preserve and maintain their health in 1997, a sharp increase from the 61 million who turned to alternative forms of care in 1990. Michael S. Goldstein's Alternative Health Care is the first comprehensive account of the growing presence of alternative medicine in American society. Beginning with the basic premises of alternative medicine, Goldstein's book examines the clinical, economic, and political realities of the broad range of alternative care options and practices in the United States and explains why alternative medicine has become a viable choice for so many people who are ill or who seek to remain healthy. Bringing history, policy, practice, personal experience, and in-depth sociological analysis together into one comprehensive volume, Goldstein -- one of the first recipients of funding from the National Institute of Health for research on alternative medicine -- also studies the complexities of the relationship between spirituality and alternative medicine and the changing role of alternative medicine in the larger context of American health care. Probing such issues as the corporatization of medicine, the role of alternative medicine in health care, and the dynamic relationship between conventional and alternative treatments, Goldstein's Alternative Health Care is more than the long-awaited introduction to the many forms of alternative medicine. It is also the measure of the implications of such care for practitioners, businesses, policymakers, and patients alike. Alternative Health Care is the definitive guide for the millions of Americans interested in alternative medicine and treatment, American health care, the sociology of medicine, and American social issues.Trade Review"An important book and an informative, challenging and fun read. Goldstein's Alternative Health Care is the first, and greatly needed, extended overview of alternative health care, its development, and its impact." -Alexandra Todd, Professor and Chair of Sociology at Suffolk University "...[C]learly supportive of alternative medicine, [Goldstein] provides a logical explanation for its popularity that might enlighten its opponents. He explains alternative health care in the context of the problems with conventional health care. Indeed, looking at how these two worlds fit together or react to each other yields valuable information on how each field can respond better to patients." -Los Angeles Times "The author looks at the ethos of alternative medicine and examines broader questions of a possible 'paradigm shift' in medicine and whether alternative medicine might be integrated into mainstream medicine, given the current state of health care. Goldstein describes the range of alternative care, explores its popularity, its relation to spirituality, and its place in both the medical market and the current political climate." -The Hastings Center ReportTable of ContentsCONTENTS The Emergence of Alternative Medicine Victims of Medicine Mind and Body Health and Community Preventing versus Curing Crisis and Change in the Health Care System The Synergy of Complaint: Birth of a Grievance The Core of Alternative Medicine: Age Old Wisdom Made New Holism The Interpenetration of Mind, Body, and Spirit Health as a Positive State on a Continuum with Illness Life Suffused by the Flow of Energy Vitalism The Healing Process The Core of Alternative Medicine Medicine and the Spirit Spirituality in America Science and Spirit Conventional Medicine's Response Turning Religion into Medicine Turning Medicine into Religion Spirituality's Impact on the Future of Alternative Medicine Is There Really an Alternative Medicine? Alternative Medicine as a Professional Entity Gaining Legal Acceptance Recognition by Conventional Medicine The Mass Media and the Public Alternative Medicine as an Identity Freedom and Health The Politics of Alternative Medicine: Personal and Practical The Personal as Political Taking Responsibility: Community Empowerment and Coalitions Counterculture Politics Practical Politics Certification and Credentialing Licensure and Power Evaluating Alternative Approaches Federal Legislation The Office of Alternative Medicine (OAM) Alternative Medicine, Mainstream Markets Alternative Medicine as Small Business Alternative Medicine as Big Business The Convergence into Mainstream Health Care Alternative Medicine as Corporate Medicine From Care to Commodity The Future of Alternative Medicine Assimilation and Cooptation: An Identity Movement

    1 in stock

    £25.19

  • Communicating in the Clinic: Negotiating

    Hampton Press Communicating in the Clinic: Negotiating

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis book addresses the question of how health care teams function on a daily basis through an innovative ethnography of communication in an interdisciplinary geriatric team. To illustrate the complexity of teamwork, backstage communication processes among team members are richly described, their effects on frontstage communication with patients delineated,m and a model of embedded teamwork developed. The presentation enables readers to explore the relationships among epistemology, methodology, and writing practices in health care.

    1 in stock

    £19.76

  • The Gold Standard: The Challenge Of

    Temple University Press,U.S. The Gold Standard: The Challenge Of

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisThe first book to explore the effects of dramatic changes in the delivery of medical careTrade Review"The Gold Standard is an engaging, well thought-out examination of a timely topic-evidence-based medicine. Timmermans and Berg raise taken-for-granted concepts such as power, objectivity, standardization, EBM and discuss them in innovative and complicated interpretations. The arguments presented here provide clarity on animportant subject, highlighting the always interesting impact of unintended consequences."-Alexandra Dundas Todd, Department of Sociology, Suffolk University, and author of Double Vision, An East-West Collaboration for Coping with Cancer "The Gold Standard is an intelligent and well-written analysis of crucial developments in biomedical practice over the past century. Timmermans and Berg provide us with a comprehensive study of the growing movement to standardize biomedicine, calling attention to the risks and benefits for doctors and patients alike. This unique and important book should attract interest among medical sociologists, science studies scholars, bioethicists, health policy analysts, and all those who care about the practice of medicine today."-Steven Epstein, Department of Sociology, University of California, San Diego, and author of Impure Science: AIDS, Activism, and the Politics of Knowledge "This book sets the standard for the study of standardization in medicine. Focusing on evidence based medicine's meteoric rise and influence, Timmermans and Berg go beyond the professional rhetoric to examine its impact on the practice of medicine. Well-written and replete with sociological case studies, this book is must reading for social scientists, physicians and policy-makers."-Peter Conrad, Harry Coplan Professor of Social Sciences, Brandeis University "It is rare to find a book that can serve both as an excellent introduction to its subject for people who have not previously given it much thought or study and also as an advanced reading for people who know the subject area well. Happily, The Gold Standard is such a book."-The Journal of Legal Medicine "This eminently readable book is recommended to healthcare industry personnel and to policy makers who would be interested in a thoughtful study of the political, ethical, and functional aspects of the standardization of clinical behavior."-Quality Management in Health Care "[T]his is a surprising work...its scope places it in the realm of monumental works like Paul Starr's Pulitzer-Prize winning [book]. This book is highly recommended...especially to those grappling with the challenge of creating consistently high-quality health care at a cost our nation can afford."-Inquiry "...a highly readable and comprehensive book... I can recommend this book to everyone who is interested in the subject."-Medicine Health Care and Philosophy: A European Journal (pdf) "This book is helpful to physicians and healthcare executives who need to have a better understanding of the evolution and application of evidence-based medicine."-The Journal of the National Medical AssociationTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction: The Politics of Standardization1. Standardization in Medicine in the Twentieth Century: The Emergence of the Paper-Based Patient Record2. Standards at Work: A Dynamic Transformation of Medicine3. From Autonomy to Accountability? Clinical Practice Guidelines and Professionalization4. Guidelines, Professionals, and the Production of Objectivity in Insurance Medicine5. Evidence-Based Medicine and Learning to Doctor6. Standardizing Risk: A Case Study of ThalidomideEpilogue: The Quest for QualityNotesBibliographyIndex

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Business Expert Press Management Skills for Clinicians, Volume I: Transitioning to Administration

    Book SynopsisThis book introduces new healthcare managers to the skills they need to transition and succeed in their managerial roles.More experienced managers can benefit, too, from examples and collected insights of other managers who were interviewed and from examples in recent and revisited literature. The author covers both “hard” business skills and “soft” people/organizational skills. We draw from books, articles, examples, and managerial experience of the author and colleagues at different organizational levels and throughout healthcare settings and professions.

    £21.80

  • Quick Reference Guide to Pediatric Care 3rd Ed.

    American Academy of Pediatrics Quick Reference Guide to Pediatric Care 3rd Ed.

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Pediatric Psychopharmacology for Primary Care 4th

    American Academy of Pediatrics Pediatric Psychopharmacology for Primary Care 4th

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis

    Out of stock

    £999.99

  • Coaching Families for Resilience How

    American Academy of Pediatrics Coaching Families for Resilience How

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £50.96

  • Pediatric Clinical Practice Guidelines  Policies

    American Academy of Pediatrics Pediatric Clinical Practice Guidelines Policies

    2 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    2 in stock

    £115.20

  • Taking Care of Time

    Michigan State University Press Taking Care of Time

    Book SynopsisFor poet and nurse practitioner Cortney Davis, the truth revealed through poetry is similar to what she has experienced in the heightened and urgent dramas that occur in health care - those suspended moments in which a dying heart might be revived or unbearable suffering relieved. We are vulnerable, her poems say, and we are dependent on one another - on the ways in which we care or fail to care for one another, in how we love or fail to love.In poems that are sensual, emotionally searing, and yet unfailingly tender, Davis shines a caregiver’s light on the most intimate details of the human body and the spirit within - how the flesh might betray, how it endures, and how ultimately it triumphs.

    £19.27

  • Grey House Publishing Inc Complete Resource Guide for People with Chronic

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis resource guide provides a comprehensive overview of the support services and information resources available for people diagnosed with a chronic illness. It details the wide range of organizations, educational materials, books, newsletters, web sites, periodicals and databases that address 88 specific chronic illnesses.

    1 in stock

    £131.20

  • Business Expert Press Improv to Improve Healthcare: A System for Creative Problem-Solving

    Book SynopsisHealthcare organizations cry out for a toll to decrease untoward events and bridge the communication gap between professional clinical teams and clients. Discover how to guide your team to creatively problem-solve, build emotional and social intelligence, increase workplace safety and employee retention, and guarantee client satisfaction with the results-don't-lie Improv to Improve Healthcare system.

    £21.80

  • Technology in Healthcare: Introduction, Clinical Impacts, Workflow Improvement, Structuring and Assessment

    now publishers Inc Technology in Healthcare: Introduction, Clinical Impacts, Workflow Improvement, Structuring and Assessment

    Book SynopsisHealthcare systems around the world are grappling with several major challenges such as the growing prevalence of chronic diseases, rising healthcare costs, and a shortage of healthcare workers. Without action, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development has estimated that the average public spending on healthcare costs will increase to 10% of GDP. The shortage of healthcare workers has been a long-standing issue in Europe, even before the COVID-19 pandemic. According to a 2018 report by the European Commission's Joint Research Centre, there was a shortage of over 1 million healthcare workers across the European Union. Such shortages have resulted in longer waiting times for patients, increased workload and stress for healthcare workers, and lower quality of care for patients. The pandemic has further underscored the importance of addressing this issue and ensuring that healthcare systems have adequate capacity to meet the needs of patients, both now and in the future. It is clear that the healthcare sector needs to undergo radical changes to ensure that future generations have easy access to quality care that is also affordable. One way to achieve this is by leveraging the increasing use of digitisation in the sector. According to a 2019 report by the European Commission, the volume of healthcare data in the EU could reach 2.8 zettabytes by 2020, with an annual growth rate of 36%. The question then is, how can we leverage the insights that lie within this vast amount of data to transform the healthcare sector and address its most pressing issues, namely cost, quality, and accessibility of care. This book captures the learnings from the BigMedilytics project, funded by the EC from 2018 to 2021. The project aimed to transform Europe’s healthcare sector by using state-of-the-art Big Data technologies to achieve breakthrough productivity in the sector by reducing cost, improving patient outcomes, and delivering better access to healthcare facilities, covering the entire Healthcare Continuum. The project executed 12 real-life, in-hospital, big data pilots across three different themes: (i) Population health and chronic disease management, (ii) Oncology, and (iii) Industrialisation of healthcare. The pilots spanned 8 European countries, the health data of 11 million patients, involved 35 consortium partners, and incorporated diverse data sets originating from the public health sector, insurance companies, IoT devices, pharmaceutical industry, and public data sets.

    £109.25

  • Transformative Learning in Healthcare and Helping

    Information Age Publishing Transformative Learning in Healthcare and Helping

    Book SynopsisTransformative Learning in Healthcare and Helping Professions Education: Building Resilient Professional Identities is a co-edited book (Carter, Boden, and Peno) with invited chapters from educators who share our passion for learning in healthcare and the helping professions. The purpose of the book is to introduce professional learners (students, residents, and others in professional training) to transformative learning for building resilient professional identities amid practice environments that include widespread burnout and compassion fatigue. With a diverse set of authors engaged in clinical and educational practice in academic medicine, nursing, dentistry, physical therapy, mental health counseling, science education, psychology, social work, and inter-professional collaborative practice, we offer strategies for building resilience throughout the years of professional training and into professional practice. We do so through the experiences of authors involved in healthcare and the helping professions to illustrate how some are coping with the challenges of burnout and compassion fatigue through learning that can be transformative.This book explores the nature of professional identity formation by examining ways that professionals in training can thrive amid the challenges of today’s stressful practice environments. First-hand stories of resilience illustrate how learners, as well as educators in these professions, are addressing adversity, career decision-making, service to the underserved, and the self-care needed to provide excellent care for others. The prominence of transformative learning within adult learning theory is illustrated for its potential to revise the meaning that learners make of their experiences and open up new possibilities for renewed vitality in professional education and practice environments.The book has two primary audiences: professional learners in healthcare and helping professions education, and their educators who are often professional practitioners themselves. These educators have a significant role in influencing the next generation of professionals by serving as mentors, role models, and teachers. The importance of fostering learning that is transformative has never been more important than it is today for those who will work in these demanding professions. We invite readers to discover experiences and strategies for achieving individual wellbeing, as well as opportunities for building a culture within professional education and practice settings that will foster resilience.

    £49.95

  • Transformative Learning in Healthcare and Helping

    Information Age Publishing Transformative Learning in Healthcare and Helping

    Book SynopsisTransformative Learning in Healthcare and Helping Professions Education: Building Resilient Professional Identities is a co-edited book (Carter, Boden, and Peno) with invited chapters from educators who share our passion for learning in healthcare and the helping professions. The purpose of the book is to introduce professional learners (students, residents, and others in professional training) to transformative learning for building resilient professional identities amid practice environments that include widespread burnout and compassion fatigue. With a diverse set of authors engaged in clinical and educational practice in academic medicine, nursing, dentistry, physical therapy, mental health counseling, science education, psychology, social work, and inter-professional collaborative practice, we offer strategies for building resilience throughout the years of professional training and into professional practice. We do so through the experiences of authors involved in healthcare and the helping professions to illustrate how some are coping with the challenges of burnout and compassion fatigue through learning that can be transformative.This book explores the nature of professional identity formation by examining ways that professionals in training can thrive amid the challenges of today’s stressful practice environments. First-hand stories of resilience illustrate how learners, as well as educators in these professions, are addressing adversity, career decision-making, service to the underserved, and the self-care needed to provide excellent care for others. The prominence of transformative learning within adult learning theory is illustrated for its potential to revise the meaning that learners make of their experiences and open up new possibilities for renewed vitality in professional education and practice environments.The book has two primary audiences: professional learners in healthcare and helping professions education, and their educators who are often professional practitioners themselves. These educators have a significant role in influencing the next generation of professionals by serving as mentors, role models, and teachers. The importance of fostering learning that is transformative has never been more important than it is today for those who will work in these demanding professions. We invite readers to discover experiences and strategies for achieving individual wellbeing, as well as opportunities for building a culture within professional education and practice settings that will foster resilience.

    £87.40

  • Transforming Healthcare with Big Data and AI

    Information Age Publishing Transforming Healthcare with Big Data and AI

    Book SynopsisHealthcare and technology are at a convergence point where significant changes are poised to take place. The vast and complex requirements of medical record keeping, coupled with stringent patient privacy laws, create an incredibly unwieldy maze of health data needs. While the past decade has seen giant leaps in AI, machine learning, wearable technologies, and data mining capacities that have enabled quantities of data to be accumulated, processed, and shared around the globe. Transforming Healthcare with Big Data and AI examines the crossroads of these two fields and looks to the future of leveraging advanced technologies and developing data ecosystems to the healthcare field. This book is the product of the Transforming Healthcare with Data conference, held at the University of Southern California. Many speakers and digital healthcare industry leaders contributed multidisciplinary expertise to chapters in this work. Authors’ backgrounds range from data scientists, healthcare experts, university professors, and digital healthcare entrepreneurs. If you have an understanding of data technologies and are interested in the future of Big Data and A.I. in healthcare, this book will provide a wealth of insights into the new landscape of healthcare.

    £44.96

  • Transforming Healthcare with Big Data and AI

    Information Age Publishing Transforming Healthcare with Big Data and AI

    Book SynopsisHealthcare and technology are at a convergence point where significant changes are poised to take place. The vast and complex requirements of medical record keeping, coupled with stringent patient privacy laws, create an incredibly unwieldy maze of health data needs. While the past decade has seen giant leaps in AI, machine learning, wearable technologies, and data mining capacities that have enabled quantities of data to be accumulated, processed, and shared around the globe. Transforming Healthcare with Big Data and AI examines the crossroads of these two fields and looks to the future of leveraging advanced technologies and developing data ecosystems to the healthcare field. This book is the product of the Transforming Healthcare with Data conference, held at the University of Southern California. Many speakers and digital healthcare industry leaders contributed multidisciplinary expertise to chapters in this work. Authors’ backgrounds range from data scientists, healthcare experts, university professors, and digital healthcare entrepreneurs. If you have an understanding of data technologies and are interested in the future of Big Data and A.I. in healthcare, this book will provide a wealth of insights into the new landscape of healthcare.

    £82.80

  • Marketing in Healthcare-Related Industries

    Information Age Publishing Marketing in Healthcare-Related Industries

    Book SynopsisMarketing in Healthcare-Related Industries captures the concepts and complexities of marketing healthcare in today’s environment. The book provides detailed conceptual and practical insights that will be of great benefit to healthcare scholars and practitioners. Topics on healthcare marketing have been carefully selected to provide wide coverage and are illustrated by mini-cases with a highly practical marketing tool kit for healthcare managers included.The healthcare sector in the 21st century face a multiplicity of challenges, which include changing disease patterns, more technology-driven health interventions, a more assertive and quality conscious clientele, as well as a rapidly growing for-profit segment of the industry. This places more responsibilities on healthcare service providers in both the public and private sectors, to deliver value-for-money services at competitive costs. To respond to the changing business environment, a carefully crafted marketing approach is needed by all players in the industry to create value and sustain the confidence of clientele and stakeholders.Trade ReviewMarketing in Healthcare-Related Industries is a timely book as the healthcare industry grows more customer-focused and faces increasing pressure to deliver high-quality service at more affordable costs. This book will serve as a roadmap for practitioners as it synthesizes insights from many marketing researchers into useful and actionable advice. It should also help students easily master the application of marketing principles to the healthcare industry with tools like review questions at the end of each chapter and mini-cases to apply marketing concepts."" -Dr. Bruce A. Huhmann, Department Chair and Professor of Marketing,Virginia Commonwealth University""Marketing In Healthcare-related Industries could not have come at a better time. Just as theepidemiological and demographic transitions have changed the cycle of planning, resource allocation, delivering, monitoring and evaluating healthcare (especially in developing countries), shrinking domesticand donor resources for health, and ambitious agendas like the Universal Health Coverage 2030 Agenda, make it imperative that healthcare providers do more with less. This book provides a clear road map to a MARKETING TRANSITION, which links healthcare and marketing in a way hitherto not so clearly outlined. The Toolkit will be a valuable tool for undergraduate and graduate students in healthcare provision, as well as health practitioners who have traditionally not been trained in this area. I commend it highly as a must-read book in this area."" -Dr. Victor Asare Bampoe - Former Deputy Minister of Health, Ghana and currently Director & Coordinator, Global Financing & Technical Support, Joint United Nation Programme on HIV&AIDS, Geneva""A truly remarkable scholarly work of our time. An easy-to-read and insightful book that captivates the reader, whether practitioner or student."" -Dr. Abigail Mensah - Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, Ghana""This book is well-written, easy-to-understand, and very up-to-date in its approach to marketing in healthcare-related industries. It is useful for undergraduate and graduate students as well as healthcare practitioners.""- Dr. Gouher Ahmed, Professor of Strategic Leadership & International Business, Skyline University College, UAETable of Contents Foreword. Preface. CHAPTER ONE: An Introduction to Marketing in Healthcare. CHAPTER TWO: Services Marketing as the Bedrock of Healthcare Marketing. CHAPTER THREE: The Evolving Societal and Healthcare Context. CHAPTER FOUR: Public Sector Marketing in Healthcare. CHAPTER FIVE: Strategic Planning in Healthcare Marketing. CHAPTER SIX: Managing Innovation in Healthcare Institutions. CHAPTER SEVEN: Healthcare Stakeholders. CHAPTER EIGHT: Consumer Behavior in Healthcare Service Encounters. CHAPTER NINE: Positioning Healthcare Services in Competitive Markets. CHAPTER TEN: Balancing Healthcare Service Demand and Capacity. CHAPTER ELEVEN: Managing Relationships and Building Loyalty in Healthcare Industries. CHAPTER TWELVE: Marketing Tool Kit for Healthcare Managers. About the Authors.

    £47.45

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