Diet and Health
Title | Diet and Health PDF eBook |
Author | National Research Council |
Publisher | National Academies Press |
Pages | 765 |
Release | 1989-01-01 |
Genre | Medical |
ISBN | 0309039940 |
Diet and Health examines the many complex issues concerning diet and its role in increasing or decreasing the risk of chronic disease. It proposes dietary recommendations for reducing the risk of the major diseases and causes of death today: atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases (including heart attack and stroke), cancer, high blood pressure, obesity, osteoporosis, diabetes mellitus, liver disease, and dental caries.
The Plant Disease Bulletin
Title | The Plant Disease Bulletin PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 626 |
Release | 1918 |
Genre | Plant diseases |
ISBN |
The Dread Disease
Title | The Dread Disease PDF eBook |
Author | James T. PATTERSON |
Publisher | Harvard University Press |
Pages | 397 |
Release | 2009-06-30 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0674041933 |
Relates the cultural history of cancer and examines society's reaction to the disease through a century of American life.
Cartographies of Disease
Title | Cartographies of Disease PDF eBook |
Author | Tom Koch |
Publisher | Esri Press |
Pages | 389 |
Release | 2005 |
Genre | Medical |
ISBN | 9781589481206 |
Cartographies of Disease: Maps, Mapping, and Medicine, new expanded edition, is a comprehensive survey of the technology of mapping and its relationship to the battle against disease. This look at medical mapping advances the argument that maps are not merely representations of spatial realities but a way of thinking about relationships between viral and bacterial communities, human hosts, and the environments in which diseases flourish. Cartographies of Disease traces the history of medical mapping from its growth in the 19th century during an era of trade and immigration to its renaissance in the 1990s during a new era of globalization. Referencing maps older than John Snow's famous cholera maps of London in the mid-19th century, this survey pulls from the plague maps of the 1600s, while addressing current issues concerning the ability of GIS technology to track diseases worldwide. The original chapters have some minor updating, and two new chapters have been added. Chapter 13 attempts to understand how the hundreds of maps of Ebola revealed not simply disease incidence but the way in which the epidemic itself was perceived. Chapter 14 is about the spatiality of the disease and the means by which different cartographic approaches may affect how infectious outbreaks like ebola can be confronted and contained.
The Plant Disease Reporter
Title | The Plant Disease Reporter PDF eBook |
Author | |
Publisher | |
Pages | 362 |
Release | 1930 |
Genre | Plant diseases |
ISBN |
The Burdens of Disease
Title | The Burdens of Disease PDF eBook |
Author | J. N. Hays |
Publisher | Rutgers University Press |
Pages | 390 |
Release | 2009-10-15 |
Genre | Medical |
ISBN | 0813548179 |
A review of the original edition of The Burdens of Disease that appeared in ISIS stated, "Hays has written a remarkable book. He too has a message: That epidemics are primarily dependent on poverty and that the West has consistently refused to accept this." This revised edition confirms the book's timely value and provides a sweeping approach to the history of disease. In this updated volume, with revisions and additions to the original content, including the evolution of drug-resistant diseases and expanded coverage of HIV/AIDS, along with recent data on mortality figures and other relevant statistics, J. N. Hays chronicles perceptions and responses to plague and pestilence over two thousand years of western history. Disease is framed as a multidimensional construct, situated at the intersection of history, politics, culture, and medicine, and rooted in mentalities and social relations as much as in biological conditions of pathology. This revised edition of The Burdens of Disease also studies the victims of epidemics, paying close attention to the relationships among poverty, power, and disease.
Autobiography of a Disease
Title | Autobiography of a Disease PDF eBook |
Author | Patrick Anderson |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 315 |
Release | 2017-06-09 |
Genre | Medical |
ISBN | 1351720996 |
Autobiography of a Disease documents, in experimental form, the experience of extended life-threatening illness in contemporary US hospitals and clinics. The narrative is based primarily on the author’s sudden and catastrophic collapse into a coma and long hospitalization thirteen years ago; but it has also been crafted from twelve years of research on the history of microbiology, literary representations of illness and medical treatment, cultural analysis of MRSA in the popular press, and extended autoethnographic work on medicalization. An experiment in form, the book blends the genres of storytelling, historiography, ethnography, and memoir. Unlike most medical memoirs, told from the perspective of the human patient, Autobiography of a Disease is told from the perspective of a bacterial cluster. This orientation is intended to represent the distribution of perspectives on illness, disability, and pain across subjective centers—from patient to monitoring machine, from body to cell, from caregiver to cared-for—and thus makes sense of illness only in a social context.