Medicine Books


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Medicine Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Medicine
Beyond Medicine, exploring a new way of thinking
Published in Kindle Edition by Matrix Transformation (2007-07-15)
Author: Richard, Dr. DiCenso
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

Finally...Solutions For Better Health and Wellbeing!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-05
Amazingly easy REAL common sense solutions to help yourself to better health effectively and efficiently in as little as 60-90 days. Dr. D. is WAY ahead of his time in providing the tools you need to finally FEEL GREAT. Beyond Medicine is for anyone interested in improving the quality of their life or know someone else who is...
I wish I had known about this years ago!
Sheryl M.

Miraculous Technique
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-29
Dr. DiCenso has a miraculous proven technique that gives hope and help to many suffering from physical and emotional pain. The book explains constant negative thinking patterns need to drastically and immediately change and physical symptoms will change as well. These negative thought patterns are the Vicious Cycle Disorder where your own thoughts continually keep your physical symptoms alive and well. Dr. DiCenso gives a unique and successful way of changing this merry-go-round of negativity and suffering. This amazing process begins with the Matrix Assessment Profile and it offers a way to rid the constant pain and find a new positive lifestyle. He combines basic healthy everyday elements with a way to change the aggravating, twirling, self-defeating thoughts. This book is a necessity for everyone to understand the concept that we can improve and grow in a positive direction and release all of our pain into the past.

A Genuine Medical Breakthrough
Helpful Votes: 41 out of 41 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-30
Ever more clinicians are recognizing the limitations of the biomedical model of illness and the importance of considering not only the psychological, social, subtle and spiritual components of the human organism, but also how they each change over time.

This time factor is critically important. Time runs at different speeds and even in different directions in each of these five domains. It is also important because a good healer soon learns that time management is considerably less important than energy management: time provides the structure but energy provides the dynamic power that enables our lives and the lives of our patients to flourish. While time is limited, energy is not. Or rather it should not be. But sometimes we do our best to sabotage it. Instead of relying upon contacting and using our inner energy, we steal it from other people or rely on the quick fixes of caffeine, sugar or a hundred other suboptimal solutions that leave their tracks in each of the five domains.

But underlying time and the five domains, there is a timeless, dynamic, intelligent blueprint - often called the Informational Matrix - that constantly generates the plans and strategies that keep us alive. When we lose touch with that Source we either become sick or die. Physical medicine, herbs, nutrition, postural work and energy medicine are all essential components of treatment and health maintenance, but over the last three decades, ever more therapists have been interested in doing more than treating people who have already "fallen off the cliff:" Nobody wants to move the deckchairs on the Titanic! So in addition to physical and energy medicine, there has, since the early 1980s been growing interest in "Information Medicine."

If it is indeed possible to influence the Informational Matrix, then we might be getting at the root of the problem. And that should in turn direct the subtle systems of the body. That does not mean a "get out of jail free card!" Our efforts could yet be thwarted by poor lifestyle choices, though those choices become less common as we work with people's information systems.

There is a second observation that has been known by specialists for many years, and that is the concept of the pain cycle. Many people with chronic headache or intractable back pain may no longer have any obvert physical pathology, yet the pain will not budge: they have entered a chronic pain cycle, that is probably mediated by some precise circuits in the thalamus of the brain. But you can be sure that these chronic problems have also left their imprint in the other systems of the body. The pain is not solely psychological or psychosomatic. It is as real as having a pin inserted into your forearm. It is surprising to find how few therapists have been taught about or discovered these pain cycles. And it is not just pain: many pathological patterns can establish vicious circles in the body or mind that are similar to obsessive ruminations, obsessive-compulsive thoughts or an ohrwurm that has occupied someone's mind.

The trouble is that these vicious circles can sometimes be very hard to break.

This book by Richard DiCenso is an extremely important contribution and propels the whole field of information medicine forward, with what he calls "Vicious Cycle Disorders," and his novel approaches to treating them.

Richard starts by speaking of his initial frustration about trying to treat the 20% of the population who have chronic symptoms for which there is no readily apparent cause. Sometimes these people are given an array of diagnoses or interpretations of their symptoms such as "chronic fatigue syndrome," "sub-clinical hypothyroidism," "adrenal fatigue" or "Candida infections," all of which may be present, but the underlying problem is of a life out of balance. The cutting edge of medicine is not molecular biology or brain science. They are important and knowledge about them essential. But the real progress is being made in a new science: the science of re-integration. The reintegration of mind, body and spirit.

Richard has an ambitious goal: "to develop a working mode for behaviors that lead to a life of conscious co-creation and fulfillment."

Yet his novel approaches have made these goals attainable in a unique way. First the book contains a great many useful techniques for dealing with problems like repetitive thoughts and nutritional deficiencies. Second he has devised something called a "Matrix Assessment Profile" that helps pinpoint some of the precise disturbances in the body that are causing symptoms. He has created a very informative website containing a lot of information about the evaluation and how to get it done.

Richard DiCenso has created a wonderful healing system based on the essential truth that the future of the healing arts lies in whole person therapy.

Highly recommended.


Richard G. Petty, MD, author of Healing, Meaning and Purpose: The Magical Power of the Emerging Laws of Life

Beyond Medicine Exploring a New Way of Thinking
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-16
Dr. Richard Dicenso has written a very thought provoking book that explores healing and illness from a truly holistic model. His perspective encompasses not only the physical manifestations of imbalance, but also the too often ignored realms of emotion, consciousness and spirit. This is a book that you will want to read more than once because it is filled with wisdom and insight. I found this book very inspiring and a source of hope as well as practical guidance for all those seeking to achieve balance and wellness in their lives. Dr. Dicenso's book is one of the best books on healing that I have ever read.

Don't settle for an alleviation of symptoms: Go for the Cure.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-21
Beyond Medicine is THE BOOK for our times and especially for the doctors and patients of the USA who have been brought up to believe that fixing illness is no more sophisticated than treating symptoms much as "Click and Clack the Tapet Brothers" might listen to the symptoms of a dysfunctional car and come up with a diagnosis on their National Public Radio program. It is vindication for all of those suffering from symptoms for which there seems to be no overt cause. It affirms the incredible complexity and mystery that is the human experience and gives hope to sufferers by outlining a matrix of considerations and activities that may treat the causes of disease instead of merely addressing the complaints. If you are interested in health, either yours or others, this book is a must read.

Medicine
The Birth of the Clinic
Published in Kindle Edition by Taylor & Francis (2007-03-14)
Author: Michel Foucault
List price: $45.95
New price: $10.04

Average review score:

Structural analysis of the origins of clinical medicine
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 31 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-28
Here is a commentary:

Reviewer: A reader from California May 17, 1998 "Again, Foucault shatters our illusions.This book examines our cultural tendency to elevate the authority of the physician..." This reviwer's summary of the book is incorrect because the work is not a study of power or "authority" (themes which would be important in Foucault's later works). In "The Birth of the Clinic" we see how Foucault MIGHT HAVE made a crticism of clinical medicine as an authoritarian institution, but in fact this is NOT the focus of the book. This book is not the attempt to dispel a "myth", it is a description of the reality of the development of the clinical gaze as a discursive formation distinct from its historical predecessors.

Reviewer: spandex9@aol.com from Barbaraville, Manitoba (Canada) July 21, 1998. "Structures of Perception and Positivism Questioned". This review is much closer to the mark than the first one. In particular, in the second paragraph the reviewer touches on the implications of the development of anatomo-clinical medicine for "the human experience itself". In the conclusion to the book Foucault himself stated that "the experience of individuality in modern culture is linked to the experience of death" and that is one reason why we should be interested in this work.

Reviewer: Dr. W Y Wan from Hong Kong "A book with special insight-- one that you cannot miss. I agree that this book can be of value to physicians who are genuinely interested in human welfare, and it's unfortunate that most physicians never study the humanities during their educations.

Sound historical interpretation, hold the postmodernism
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 19 total.
Review Date: 2002-05-10
Foucault has been interpreted in the US as a pretentious standard-bearer of postmodernism - as an almost "evil" figure who threatens to undermine the foundations of Western knowledge with his problematisation of conceptual categories. It doesn't help that his work has been taken up to justify just about any subversive perspective, whether well-conceived or not. This is only a pitifully small perspective on the man and his work. Foucault should be seen first as a historian, not a philosopher; second, his work should be lauded for the contribution it makes to Western knowledge rather than the superficial "threats" it makes to perspectives whose time has come in any event. Every revolution of perception has been accompanied by vociferous resistance, yet a great many of those sounding their disapproval loudly probably don't really understand what the late Michel was really on to.

The Birth of the Clinic, MF's most accessible work, is a well-researched, brilliantly interpreted account of the development of the clinical "gaze" in the wake of modern medical knowledge and practice. Foucault problematises the institution of the clinic, showing how clinical perception is the result of a historically specific constellation of knowledge and power. His ultimately emancipatory analysis is substantiated every step of the way with textual and historical examples. No metaphysics here, just a radical questioning of the nature of knowledge within institutional practice.

So, sorry (Objectivists!) if this is too much to handle. It's good research, plain and simple. Don't dismiss Foucault as a lightweight postmodernist - try to see him where he would situate himself, in the tradition of reflexive historical sociology.

About freedom
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-08
Birth of the Clinic is a partner to Discipline and Punish: Birth of the Prison. They are both about political economy and the irony of how the modern 'free' world is as confining as previous historical eras just in an opposite way. This is kind of Foucault's whole mission, to show us just how confined we really are and wake us up to reality. But he is always subtle about it. In a way his 'philosophy' and 'methodology' and the wild theoretical tangents the academies have taken it to, are a mask for his very powerful and even dangerous political indictments. In Discipline and Punish (Surveil in French) Foucault shows historically how individual time and space have been controlled by the ever evolving, profit-driven, techno-efficiency of the panopticon-state and the distracted aquiescence of its subjects. In Birth of the Clinic he will show historically how the individual person and their body have become property of the state via consensus (law) and the same somnambulent aquiescence. In many ways Foucault is a major conservative showing us empirically, through historical evidence, how the power-play of today is an interiorization of past power-relationships, interiorized to the point of invisibility and largely unacknowledged by the manipulated masses.

Read Kuhn first, then Foucault
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-15
Wow, Foucault is truly a literary genius. Getting a small glimpse into his wonderful genius is pleasure enough to warrant reading this book. However that said The Birth of the Clinic lacks in certain areas. Obviously, Foucault is writing in the postmodern era, thus his ideas are not nearly as groundbreaking as they would have been had he been writing 30-40 years earlier. This book, as Foucault explicitly states, is not so much about the birth of the clinic, as it is about the birth of ideas and knowledge - how conceptions of good and bad science come to be. In that regard the book, unfortunately the book falters in comparison to some others. The one I have in mind is Thomas Kuhn's "Structure of Scientific Revolutions". The main difference between the two is in time of release. Kuhn's book was released immediately after the Second World War. Subsequently, due to the nascent phase of the field, his book sets the foundation for the literature to follow in its tradition - such as The Birth of the Clinic. Therefore, readers interested in the development of scientific knowledge would be better served to pick up Kuhn's book first, then move onto The Birth of the Clinic.

While an introduction to the topic is somewhat helpful, the value of this book must not be overlooked. Your impression of medicine will not be the same.

A book with special insight-- one that you cannot miss
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-01
" The birth of the Clinic " is an attempt by the philosopher and the learned historian to decipher the secret of medical perception. Only when the chaotic and subjective clinical experience is transcended to the objective language, we have the medicine as a scientific subject as today. As a physician myself , I think understanding " clinical gaze " helps me to define the place of modern medicine, of doctors and patients and of medical organisation in this fast changing world.

Medicine
Body of Health: The New Science of Intuition Medicine for Energy and Balance
Published in Paperback by New World Library (2005-04-10)
Author: Francesca McCartney
List price: $17.95
New price: $8.95
Used price: $8.01

Average review score:

Alexandra's Book Club
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-30
One of the highlights of my summer was serving as a teaching assistant at a workshop called "The Language of Intuition," at the Omega Institute in Rhinebeck, New York. The workshop, taught by Dr. Francesca McCartney, founder of the Academy of Intuition Medicine in Sausalito CA., was a sampling of the material in her book, Body of Health. I trained with Dr. McCartney and this review showcases her book which should be a foundation for anyone building a healthy, balanced, and fulfilling life

The major building blocks of developing your ability to listen to your intuitive intelligence are described in great detail, with exercises that move from theory to integration. Since all of you have worked with me, do you remember my focus on grounding from the first moment we begin? Body of Health shows you myriad ways to de-code what it really means to be grounded and how vitally important it is. Grounding to the earth is an integral part of the practice of living in health and balance. We are constantly exchanging energy and information, and an overload of this is called stress. It's an over used word, but the depletion is real and there are many ways to manage it. The author describes herself as an "energy technician," and my goal for you all is to have full toolboxes of resources for the inevitable challenges to your mental, physical and spiritual health. These are complex systems that make up the human experience and there is a beauty of enhancing wisdom through experiential exercises in the areas of your life force, aura, and chakra system. For those who want to start a meditation practice, there is a very comprehensive section on just how to do that.

I have client who, when asked to set an intention for our work together said, "I want to trust myself." How wise of her. We are working with, reading about, and identifying your subtle energies and Body of Health gives a very clear blueprint. Trust opens up when understanding opens up, and this book contributes towards understanding.

My desire for you is to find ways to restore or increase vitality and since school is back in session it's a good time to broaden knowledge and add to your essential skills. Then we'll have an intuitive intelligence quiz for a change!

Alex
www.AlexandraNicholson.com


Author Comment...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-11
Greetings:
If you have read my book and would like to comunicate with me please do so:: Francesca@IntuitionMedicine.org

Have a look inside...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-27
So many of us have clocked hours and hours at yoga classes, workshops, seminars, or at the gym. Sometimes we can't make it to class, and sometimes the need for centering arises suddenly, so here's a handbook to help you develop techniques to complement those healthy habits.

The ideas in this book helped me develop a personalized daily practice. I turn to it for inspiration and how-to's and depend on it to help me through my week whether I make it to my yoga class or not. Its many techniques and how to's help you use spare minutes throughout the day to develop your own health-giving and spirit-nourishing practices. It's all good.

Best Book on Energy Healing
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-11
I've read hundreds of books on Chakras and Energy Healings and this is the most informative, grounded and clear book I've ever seen. The books is well written, easy to understand and has so much practical information I find myself returning to it over and over again.

Must read
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-02
This is a must read for those who are interested in learning energy work. Everything is short and clear; easy to understand.

Medicine
Bove and Davis' Diving Medicine
Published in Hardcover by W.B. Saunders Company (1997-07)
Author:
List price: $82.00
New price: $48.95
Used price: $23.00

Average review score:

Bove and Davis Diving Medicine 4th Edition
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-12
My practice is in neurosurgery, but dive medicine is taking up more and more of my time. This is an excellent review of all the pertinent physiology, pathology, and treatments for diving related illness. It builds very nicely on the prior editions. A great resource for dive medical officers, as well as serious divers wanting to build their knowledge base.

Diving texts lag behind in their layout
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-08
There is no doubt that this is a comprehensive and clear introduction into diving medicine. It certainly dealt very well with all of the questions that I had regarding both the Pathophysiology of Diving Medicine and also some of the practical considerations arising from these. Additionally I am sure that this book would be suitable for those without formal Medical training who wish to further their knowledge in this field. My only reservation is that the layout of the book appears very dated. The black-and-white pictures and diagrams could be made so much more engaging and more clear if they were brightened up a little. This is a criticism which could be aimed at many books outside of the main general Undergraduate texts, however just because a situation is widely tolerated it does not mean a publisher shouldn't try a bit harder to make a better product, especially when the content is absolutely first class as it undoubtedly is in this case.

God's Gift to Diving Medicine
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2003-12-16
After perusing the textbooks of diving medicine, this continues to be a gold standard in the literature. Readers should note it does not compete with the 2003 Bennett and Elliott's Physiology and Medicine of Diving. B&E is more a physiology of normal persons while diving and is geared to being as factually driven as possible. Bove focuses on medical issues and the physiology that makes it happen, with substantial discussion on diagnosis and treatment of diving illnesses and of ill people [Diabetics, Asthmatics etc.] who wish to dive. There is an amount of cross over between both text, but Bove's expert opinion approach fills the many gaps of facts in B&E. You MUST own both texts to cover the field in toto.

Tip: You can read Bove very quickly by reading the last paragraph or sentence in each section, it summarizes the whole block of text very succinctly.

I previously reviewed the 3rd Edition, just received the 4th, and after a cover to cover dissection must applaud its extensively updated chapters notably cardiology, decompression science, treatments and diagnoses, updated appendix on Diabetes mellitus and diving. More focus is made on hydrostatic pressure spikes in the reduction of bubble formation, data that although present in the 3rd Edition, did not get as much emphasis. The timeliness of the updates is in tune with the zeitgeist for bubble decompression models used in technical diving gaining momentum since Year 2000 [VPM and RGBM.]

The quality of the book's hardbound production has diminished, as the rugged linen-type cover binding, extant in the past WB Saunders Editions, has been replaced by a glossy paper overlay on cardboard, reflecting a new philosophy of the books publishers, Elsevier, and of WB Saunders to a fading trademark. The print itself seems sharp, and appears more like a laser printer output on 'economy' mode. The cover binding is hastily pasted in my edition, compared to the meticulous tight binding, and near flawless lines of the 3rd Edition. There are over a 100 new pages in this edition. Bookmaking, a dying art!

The editing is superb, near typo free, to this reviewer at this time, compare against typos present in 2003 B&E and the 2000 NOAA Diving Manual. Inconsequential, but reflects the rigor by which Dr. Bove put into crafting this textbook.

A Classic
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-08
My favorite diving medicine textbook. If you like the no-nonsense format of the NOAA Diving Manual, Bove too, shoots from the hip. Bove is best in the hands of medical professionals, as brevity in some discussion presumes a background in medical care. Focusing on medical professionals may limit its audience, but astute readers anywhere may appreciate its directness, as a distillation, its strong spirit. Diving Medicine is a MUST for any physician treating civilian divers, and its format makes for quick reference for primary care gives who occassionally encounter divers with medical issues.

Passed the Boards!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-09
I read this book cover to cover before taking Medical Boards in Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine. I enjoyed the experience greatly, and passed the Boards. It is well-organized and easy to read if you have at least a diving background. I am a pulmonary and critical care specialist (and diver) and found it very straight-forward. I recommend reading this book in conjunction with the US Navy Diving Manual which is available through .... in print (but I prefer the CD ROM published by the Navy and others). We keep these references at our hyperbaric unit at UCLA where we have already done 4 Table VI treatments this week.

Medicine
Brain Imaging: Case Review Series (Case Review)
Published in Paperback by Mosby (1999-05-15)
Author: Laurie A. Loevner
List price: $49.95
New price: $39.96
Used price: $37.00

Average review score:

It's good.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-08
I've been looking for such a book both in USA and China for a long time, and now I find it.

It's good for integrating the differentiate diagnosis. However, if there are more new MR techniques (DTI,PWI,etc.), it will be better.

excellent
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-13
I recommend this book for anybody studying for the Orals and especially CAQ.

Very helpful.

The best of the best "dial-a- yield" neuroimaging guide
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-01-13
The advantage of the graded approach, and the extraction in the text descriptions of key substantive points is excellent. Emphasis is on the findings, less on the academic differentials. Perfect to study along with detailed texts. The keys to the "Requisites" first edition is awesome: but anyone know where one can buy, beg, borrow, or steal a key to the Second edition of "Requisites"?

boards essentials
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-18
a great, portable book to run through cases when you're studying or on a less taxing rotation. interesting, well-displayed cases running the gamut of pathologies with concise, informative summaries and cross-referenced with the neurorad requisites.

Compact and to the point.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-19
This is a great tool for the oral boards. I read it three times in preparing. The cases are diverse with a third section which is good more for CAQ than for dx boards. It is chock full of great info and cases. Its also fairly cheap. Well worth the money.

Medicine
The Brain Trust Program
Published in Kindle Edition by Perigee (2007-09-04)
Author: Larry, M.D. McCleary
List price: $24.95
New price: $9.99

Average review score:

Brilliant and Authoritative
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-17
I couldn't help but notice that Dr. McCleary's photo on the back flap of the book shows that he is a bit overweight. This is natural considering his apparent love for beacon and eggs for breakfast, and his love for red meats, butter, and cheese. In my opinion, this is the only questionable part of his book. I just cannot believe that a diet abundant in saturated fats and cholesterols is not harmful to the cardiovascular system. And what is harmful for the cardiovascular system is also harmful for the brain. Furthermore, any amount of overweight puts a strain on all internal organs - for both man and beast.

Most readers may think I am some kind of fanatic. Well, maybe I am. But I believe that a calorie restricted, nutrient rich diet, leads to better health for the brain and all the other organs of the body. I also believe that calorie restriction is easy when the food served is simple and not made artificially enticing.

Maybe Dr McCleary believes that most people simply will not be willing to eliminate these expensive and enticing kinds of foods. I do admit that almost everyone probably feels this way, and would greatly benefit just by doing exactly as he has written. For this reason I must bow to his judgment.

I definitely agree with Dr. McCleary's recommendations for dietary supplements and mental exercises. What I'm really saying is that I plan to do as he says except that my diet is a bit more restrictive - simply steamed vegetables, whole grains, skim milk, more fish, less whole eggs, a little skinless chicken, and almost no red meat. And no candy. Candy kills more people than cigarettes.

I'm a 70 year old 5'10" male weighing in at 150lbs. My goals are to reduce my weight to what it was at age 25(140lbs.), and to improve my cognitive functions as much as possible. This book is sure to help. I highly recommend it to others.

A MUST READ IF YOU CARE ABOUT YOUR OWN HEALTH
Helpful Votes: 20 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-07
If you are interested about the numerous "diet" books and health programs out there, this books helps to put it all in perspective. When you finish reading it, you'll probably want make your brain a priority. Why? Because the way we "feed" our brain by what we eat and what we do not eat, is going to affect our brain's health for the rest of our lives and no one wants to end with a "bad" brain.
In this book you'll find awfully interesting, practical, explanations and a simple how-to help yourself guide. Dr McCleary's book is easy and enjoyable to read, so much so that I gave it to my 12 year old with the warning: "This is the most important book about your health you can ever read." A few hours later she was saying, "You know, mom? If I load myself with candy bars this is what happens to my brain..." To say I was thrilled to hear my daughter talking about the effect of sugar overload is an understatement. Dr McCleary's book might well become the key to good health to today's youth and the starting point to healing and prevention for us, the middle aged.
Dr McCleary also has a web site with very good articles (www.drmccleary.com)

Two words...must read!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-20
If ever there was an occasion to issue a must read recommendation, this would be it. The Brain Trust Program, by Dr. Larry McCleary, manages to provide a wealth of information on enhancing and maintaining brain function without being a boring biblically long mechanical medical treatise. Complete with supplementation (vitamin use and recommended dosages) guidelines, this book serves as an interesting read for anyone interested in retaining and preserving cognitive clarity.

Minding Your Brain
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-22
"The Brain Trust Program" should be required reading for those of us who have trouble remembering what we were going to say long enough to finish a sentence or where we parked the car; for anyone who suffers from hot flashes or migraines; in fact, for anyone who has a brain. Dr. McCleary's easy-to-understand articles on his Website are an additional bonus. Don't miss a single one.

Outstanding synthesis and advice!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-05
Dr McCleary is able to review the relevant research and distill it into useful, meaningful recommendations. I urge everyone over age 40 and anyone caring for aging parents to look at this book very carefully. His advice could save years of anguish.

Medicine
Bugs, Bites & Bowels
Published in Paperback by Everyman Publishers (1999-08)
Author: Jane Wilson-Howarth
List price: $9.95
Used price: $0.47

Average review score:

Press reviews
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-23
"its bedside manner is decidedly more reassuring and less alarmist" [than the Lonely Planet guide] Sunday Telegraph book of the week May 2000

Best Title Award for October 1999 from Big World Magazine (Pennsylvania) "This clear concise manual explains how to avoid the icky side effects of travel"

"the most amazing collection of well-written, easy to read, and jargon-free information flowing off every page of this book." Doctor (autumn 1999)

"Whilst her theoretical knowledge is extensive, it is her personal experience that adds great charisma and humour to the very informative text, making the book a true pleasure to read." Travel Wise: newsletter of the British Travel Health Association Autumn 1999

"offers practical advice for disease prevention and treatment, based on the author's and travellers' personal experiences in a clear and concise way."
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (1999) 93 539

"clear, easy to read, comprehensive manual... everything from jet lag to the psychological problems of being a long-term expat spouse." Carousel: diplomatic service families association magazine Autumn 1999

"excellent" Wanderlust June/July 1999

"magnificent book... readable and accessible" Expeditioner (Brathay Expeditions, spring 1998)

"indispensable...some of the most realistic, practical advice about trekking" Independent on Sunday, London (May 4, 1997)

"recommended" Marie Clare May 1997

"covers insect bite treatments, acclimatization, AIDS avoidance, snake-bite treatment and travel related skin problems." Los Angeles Times (Mar 9 1997)

"at once attractive, user friendly and a good read." Discovery - Cathay Pacific (May 1996)

"Amusing and informative...By far the best book of this type" Sesame: Scientific Exploration Society Newsletter, UK (spring 1995)

"Interesting off-beat guide" Observer, London (May 14, 1995)

"coverage is excellent...sensible...accurate and well researched...single authorship makes it an easy read" Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (1995)

"with tips on avoiding afflictions such as `sahib's knee' when mountain walking." Australian Gourmet Traveller

"advice...from immunisation to dealing with snake-bites. General Practitioner (July 14, 1995)

"there is even a section in `Sex and the Single expat'. An extremely useful book." Good Book Guide (July 1995)

"essential reading" Marie Claire June 1995

"useful reading" Daily Telegraph (London) 10 June 1995

"a must for anyone going travelling." Wanderlust February 1995

"The sensible precautionary advice covering common and uncommon ailments is not only thorough, but also made more palatable by the case histories and touches of humour." The Book Seller 13 January 1995

"an irresistible little book... Each topic is in easy-to-follow sections, with anecdotes and case histories to illustrate the medical guidelines." Globe (London)

Endlessly Fascinating
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-21
Even if you're not going to be travelling in remote places, this book is wonderful. Jane Wilson-Howarth's no nonsense (and funny) tone makes this book an excellent read, even if it's just for the vicarious thrill of knowing which parasites you might encounter.

Don't leave it behind!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-04-02
This a gem of a book- not for the squeamish (though they wouldn't be travelling off the beaten path, would they?!) and definitely not to be given to your hypochondriacal aunt before she goes on her next overseas vacation- but great for everybody travelling outside of say, North American & Western Europe. V. practical, v. succinct & v. realistic. Great help in planning your trip, esp. if you are anyway intrepid in your travels. And loads of fun to read, with lots of v. funny bits.

The essential guide to getting sick
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-10-29
Cadogan's Bugs, Bites and Bowels is the best health guide for travellers. I travel a lot for work and pleasure and always use it when preparing to leave. The text is bang up to date and easy to understand. You get all the details on where you're at risk, signs to look for and lots of advice on what to do if your luck runs out - for each and every possible ailment.

Everyone who is planning a trip outdoors should get a copy. Five Stars.

Best of the lot
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-03
I seem to collect health travel books. We live in Mexico and beleive in being our own best health advocates anywhere. Of all the books I have seen in the past five years dealing with travel health, Bugs, Bits & Bowels surpasses my previous favorite, one in the Moon Travel Series which is currently out of print. Wilson-Howarth is concise, yet seeming thorough, with a presentation easily understood. Even bits of humor sprinkled in.

Medicine
Carmen's Sticky Scab
Published in Hardcover by Tanglewood Press (2007-11-25)
Author: Ginger Churchill
List price: $15.95
New price: $8.00
Used price: $8.00

Average review score:

Very funny story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-20
We love this book. I read a review of it in one of my sons turtle magazines and knew I had to get it. Even though the story is about a girl, this is a must for all boys who love gross things. My son took it to show n tell at preschool and it was a huge hit with all the kids and teachers.
We read it over and over and never stop laughing.

Hilarious!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-03
My five-year-old LOVES this book. Aside from the laugh-out-loud humor and engaging characters, the illustrations are fabulous. I can't wait to see more from this author/illustrator team!

A MUST for your children's book library!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-20
The story and illustrations of this new and refreshing book make Carmen's Sticky Scab fun and enjoyable. Ginger has done a wonderful job capturing events surrounding a pesky scab...situations that we can all relate to (in one way or another). This book is well written and illustrated. One that can be enjoyed over and over. Carmen's Sticky Scab is MUST for your library! Thumbs up on this great book! Let's hope it's the first of many from this wonderful new author!

very cute
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-27
This was so cute and funny - any kid would love this story and read it over and over. The kind of ending that will have any kid (or adult) laughing out loud. Anyone with children in the family should pick this book up

None Better
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-15
Scabs, sharks, bossy grown-ups, and a boy named Andy who apparently doesn't eat enough . . . I would never have expected to love a book about scabs. But the humor won me over. My kids love this book and my 1st-grader wants to read it to me at least once every single day. For every kid who's ever had a scab and the grown-ups who love them--buy this book and prepare to laugh!

Medicine
Case Files Emergency Medicine (Lange Case Files Series)
Published in Paperback by McGraw-Hill Medical (2004-10-13)
Authors: Eugene C. Toy, Barry Simon, Terrence H. Liu, Jorge Trujillo, and Kay Takenaka
List price: $29.95
New price: $22.76
Used price: $21.73

Average review score:

recommended
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-02
For most students and residents I talked to, this was the only book they used for the rotation, and all of these are EM-minded people. Great concise discussions of ED's most common complaints as well as diagnosis and management.

Best book I read
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-30
I read all 6 case files for third year, and this continues the series into fourth year with another home run. The cases are right out of the ED, telling you what you need to do first and how to proceed, the exact things you will be asked by attendings.

I Love the Case Files!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-13
When looking for books to help me review for exams, the Case Files series was recommended to me. Ever since I purchased one for my Psych rotation, I've been hooked since. The sections start off with a case and let you come up with the diagnosis and treatment plan before turning the page. The case is then picked apart and the main conept of the case is outlined (its by no means an all inclusive summary of the topic, but it is covered fairly well). There are then comprehension q's at the end of each case to see how much you learned. For all medical professionals who learn and review by reading cases rather than a non-interactive textbook, the Case Files series are for you.

Another excellent book in a great series
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-17
If you like the case files series, then this is another great addition to your library. Good cases with adequate survey of emergency medicine knowledge.

Case Files in Emergency Medicine
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-15
This is really a factastic book. I own two books from the "Case Files" series, and will buy more when I see them available. Each chapter is concerned with one particular problem. The chapter opens with a case presentation, giving the opportunity to make a diagnosis before proceeding to the explanation and information. Finally, there are Clinical Pearls at the end of each chapter. The book is great because you can take 10 minutes and do one case, and put the book down. Great for a busy schedule. And great for board review.

Medicine
Chemo Girl: Saving the World One Treatment at a Time
Published in Paperback by Jones & Bartlett Pub (1997-06)
Author: Christina Richmond
List price: $12.50

Average review score:

5 yr Old liked it, too
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-10
Written for a little older child, but when you are trying to normalize Chemo in their life anything is worth a try and this one gets their attention.

Awesome informative inspirational book for kids with cancer!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-15
I was looking for a book to help explain my 4 yo daughter's leukemia to her. After finding lots of really BAD books, we ran into Chemo Girl. FABULOUS book that is written by a 9 year old girl with cancer. She introduces a superhero to help a child with cancer. Chemo Girl races to the rescue and defeats the cancer. The story gives an uplifting hopeful spin on the chemotherapy treatments that kids get. Doesn't explain the disease process for leukemia or other cancers, but does give a hopeful picture.

Pros - drawings, storyline, inspiring.
cons - may cover treatments that your child doesn't have (like radiation - which now scares my daughter). Nothing else. Get this book!

Do get this book!

A Child's perspective of Cancer
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-02

Chemo Girl is a fun story written by a girl who is undergoing treatment for cancer. She weaves terms into characters and events in the story to create an understanding of Chemo Therapy, and what it is doing to fight the cancer. It is a creative look into a complicated topic that kids can understand. I gave this book to one of my elementary students who is currently in treatment so she could get a grasp of what chemo is and how it works in the battle. This is an excellent book for an children facing such a challenge.

An Amazing Story From an Amazing Person
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-04-16
I didn't know Christina Richmond well when she was alive. I saw her occasionally at 1 thing or another, and she was always a great person. Her book is a reminder to those who ever knew her (even just a little bit, like me)and a guide, for those who never had the priveledgeto know what a special person she was. She had a srenght like nobody else, and was always positive. This book serves as a readable memorial to Chemo-girl, who is now an angel.

Good, helpful, and smart
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-13
Chemo-Girl is exactly what it sounds like -- it's a story that aims to help children who have been diagnosed with cancer. For a 12 year old, it is extremely well imagined and structured: this book makes chemotherapy understandable to children and, in the process, a good deal less scary. It also helps those siblings and friends surrounding a chemo patient understand the therapy without intimidating or frightening language. I would seriously recommend this book to parents and friends of children with cancer being treated with chemotherapy and the great patients themsleves . . . Anything that helps, folks, anything taht helps.


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