Search results for ""author kathleen kendall-tackett""
Praeclarus Press Breast and Nipple Pain Volume 2
Nipple pain is one of the most common reasons for premature cessation of breastfeeding. Breast and Nipple Pain II is a follow up monograph for Breast and Nipple Pain and is a collection of articles with the latest insights on how to help mothers who experience it. Topics include: • Topical treatments for sore and damaged nipples • Mammary Dysbiosis • Ultrasound as an alternative treatment • Early Frenotomy improving breastfeeding outcomes • Management of common breastfeeding problems • The relationship between IBCLCs and Craniosacral Therapists • Acute, Subclinical, and Subacute Mastitis • Chronic Mastitis, Mastalgia, and Breast Pain Articles include: Topical Treatments Used by Breastfeeding Women to Treat Sore and Damaged Nipples Miranda L. Buck, RN, BA, MPhil, IBCLC Mammary Dysbiosis An Unwelcome Visitor During Lactation Marsha Walker, RN, IBCLC, RLCa Revisiting Nipple and Breast Pain A Conversation With Anne Eglash, MD An Alternative Treatment Using Ultrasound for Plugged Ducts—An Interview With Karen Lin Barbara D. Robertson, MA, IBCLC, RLC Early Frenotomy Improves Breastfeeding Outcomes for Tongue-Tied Infants Asti Praborini, MD, IBCLC Management of Common Breastfeeding Problems Nipple Pain and Infections—A Clinical Review Tipu V. Khan, MD, FAAFP IBCLCs and Craniosacral Therapists Strange Bedfellows or a Perfect Match? Patricia Berg-Drazin, IBCLC, RLC, CST Acute, Subclinical, and Subacute Mastitis Definitions, Etiology, and Clinical Management Carmela Baeza, MD, IBCLC, RLC Chronic Mastitis, Mastalgia, and Breast Pain A Narrative Review of Definitions, Bacteriological Findings, and Clinical Management Carmela Baeza, MD, IBCLC, RLC
£13.09
American Psychological Association Breastfeeding Doesn't Need to Suck: How to Nurture Your Baby and Your Mental Health
2023 Prose Award FinalistBreastfeeding Doesn’t Need to Suck shows mothers how to navigate their breastfeeding journey while also caring for their mental health. Breastfeeding Doesn’t Need to Suck contains information that you will not find in other breastfeeding books, such as a thorough discussion of breastfeeding’s impact on sleep, safe (and unsafe) bedsharing, and how where babies sleep impacts their mothers’ mental health. This book describes what effective help looks like and gives specific suggestions for partners, grandmothers, and friends who want to help. Mothers will also learn how to navigate healthcare systems that can often undermine breastfeeding and mental health. Postpartum is hard, no matter how you feed your baby. Yet formula companies tell mothers that all of their problems will be solved if only they would switch. It’s not true; these issues will still be there even if mothers stop breastfeeding. These are the five “I”s of new motherhood: idleness, isolation, incompetence, identity, and intensity. If mothers are unprepared for these feelings, they can undermine both her breastfeeding and her mental health.Breastfeeding Doesn’t Need to Suck provides information on common breastfeeding problems, such as nipple pain and low milk supply, while also keeping mothers’ mental health in mind. Breastfeeding, when it’s going well, protects mothers’ mental health. Conversely, breastfeeding problems increase the risk of depression and anxiety. Dr. Kathleen Kendall-Tackett is both a psychologist and an International Board-Certified Lactation Consultant, with more than 30 years’ experience in both lactation and mental health. Breastfeeding Doesn’t Need to Suck is an evidence-based guide full of practical advice with the goal of helping mothers and babies navigate postpartum and come through it happy, healthy, and securely attached.
£14.38
Praeclarus Press Your Baby's Sleep in the First Year: Excerpt from The Science of Mother-Infant Sleep
The Science of Mother-Infant Sleep is a compilation of recent articles that address these important questions. Our goal was to bring together recent evidence about the safety of sleep practices so that parents and professionals can make informed, evidence-based decisions. The Science of Mother-Infant Sleep is a collaborative project by an international working group of experts on mother-baby sleep. • Bedsharing • How can parents make it safe? • Does it increase the risk of SIDS? • What is its impact on breastfeeding? • Parental Decisions about Infant Sleep • What is normal infant sleep? • How can parents calm a crying baby?
£7.79
Praeclarus Press What You Should Know About Cry It Out: Excerpt from The Science of Mother-Infant Sleep
The Science of Mother-Infant Sleep is a compilation of recent articles that address these important questions. Our goal was to bring together recent evidence about the safety of sleep practices so that parents and professionals can make informed, evidence-based decisions. The Science of Mother-Infant Sleep is a collaborative project by an international working group of experts on mother-baby sleep. • Sleep-Training and Cry-It-Out Techniques • Do they impact infant health and development? • What should parents know? • Parental Decisions about Infant Sleep • What is normal infant sleep? • How can parents calm a crying baby?
£7.79
Taylor & Francis Ltd Trauma, Dissociation and Health: Casual Mechanisms and Multidimensional Pathways
This book explores the impact of trauma and dissociation on physical health throughout the lifespan. Important chronic conditions, such as cardiovascular disease and chronic pain, are examined. In addition, trauma in childbearing women is considering, specifically examining the short- and long-term effects of the birth experience itself. Dissociation’s effect on long-term health is also described, and how it might manifest in patients in health care settings.This book was based on a special issue of Journal of Trauma & Dissociation.
£89.99
American Psychological Association The Psychoneuroimmunology of Chronic Disease: Exploring the Links Between Inflammation, Stress, and Illness
Recent years have witnessed considerable growth in the field of psychoneuroimmunology, which describes how psychological factors, such as stress and depression, impact the neurological and immune systems. Research increasingly indicates that psychological states play a key role in the development and exacerbation of inflammatory diseases such as heart disease, diabetes, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's, and autoimmune disorders. In this book, editor Kathleen Kendall-Tackett and an elite group of researchers explore the ways physical and psychological stressors such as poor sleep, PTSD, and depression, trigger the inflammatory response and increase the risk of disease. They approach this material from a variety of perspectives. Chapters in Part I describe the biological processes involved in inflammation, focusing on both the typical bodily response to threat as well as on the long-term deleterious effects of stress upon the immune system; while chapters in Part II examine the role of psychosocial stress in disease etiology. Throughout, chapter authors present evidence of connections between mind and body, and emphasize the need for improved communication between physicians and mental health care providers. This book will be a valuable resource for researchers as well as practitioners who hope to share the benefits of these findings with their clients.
£55.00
Praeclarus Press The Science of Mother-Infant Sleep: Current Findings on Bedsharing, Breastfeeding, Sleep Training, and Normal Infant Sleep
The Science of Mother-Infant Sleep is a compilation of recent articles that address these important questions. Our goal was to bring together recent evidence about the safety of sleep practices so that parents and professionals can make informed, evidence-based decisions. The Science of Mother-Infant Sleep is a collaborative project by an international working group of experts on mother-baby sleep. Topics include: • Bedsharing What should parents avoid and how can they make it safe? Does it increase the risk of SIDS? What is its impact on breastfeeding? • Sleep-Training and Cry-It-Out Techniques Do they impact infant health and development? What should parents know? • Involving Parents in Decisions about Infant Sleep What is normal infant sleep? How can parents calm a crying baby?
£14.42
Praeclarus Press Clinics in Human Lactation - How Breastfeeding Protects Maternal Health: The Psychoneuroimmunology of Human Lactation
Researchers are discovering that breastfeeding is more protective of maternal health than previously imagined and that it dramatically lowers women's risk of cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome, and diabetes during middle and old age--common causes of premature mortality. Previously, the health benefits of breastfeeding were mainly focused on the infant. New data suggests that breastfeeding may have life-long effects for both mother and baby. Psychoneuroimmunology is an emerging, interdisciplinary science that considers the ways in which the human mind and the immune system interact and influence each other. Over the past 40 years, a body of evidence clearly shows that stress and coping may produce changes in immunity. These changes can result in health effects that contribute to disease. In this book, authors Maureen Groer, RN, PhD, FAAN, and Kathleen Kendall-Tackett, PhD, IBCLC, FAPA cover: -Why breastfeeding protects maternal health -Basic concepts of breast differentiation, lactogenesis, and lactation -Basic overview of the human stress response -Introduction to psychoneuroimmunology and the immunology of pregnancy and postpartum -Lactational stress resistance -Breastfeeding, mental health, and the risk of cardiovascular disease and metabolic syndrome -Breastfeeding and immunity -Implications of an anti-inflammatory response to enhancing the health effects of breastfeeding throughout women's lives This monograph provides the latest evidence on how breastfeeding and human milk are the biological norms for mother and baby, and how artificial feeding puts both at risk for health problems throughout their lives. It presents information on the science of psychoneuroimmunology and applies it to the maternal-infant breastfeeding dyad, presenting the latest evidence that will inform practice and, hopefully, policy.
£12.21