05413nam 22006494a 450 99621458270331620230617004756.01-280-23784-897866102378450-470-79666-90-470-77481-91-4051-5000-9(CKB)1000000000342111(EBL)239868(OCoLC)159921653(SSID)ssj0000304678(PQKBManifestationID)11226301(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000304678(PQKBWorkID)10285192(PQKB)10879337(MiAaPQ)EBC239868(EXLCZ)99100000000034211120031202d2004 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrNutrition and stroke[electronic resource] prevention and treatment /Salah GariballaAmes, IA Blackwell Pub.20041 online resource (194 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-4051-1120-8 Includes bibliographical references (p. 145-176) and index.Contents; Preface; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; SECTION I: Nutrition and Ageing; 1 The challenge of stroke; 1.1 Definition; 1.2 Epidemiology; 1.3 The burden of stroke; 1.4 Risk factors for stroke; 1.5 Nutrition and risk of stroke; 1.6 Post-stroke nutrition; 2 Ageing changes relevant to nutrition in elderly people; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Gastrointestinal tract; 2.3 Body mass and composition; 2.3.1 Assessment of body composition in elderly people; 2.4 Physical activity; 2.5 Social and medical conditions related to ageing; 2.6 Summary; 3 Macro- and micronutrients in elderly peopleMacronutrients3.1 Energy requirement; 3.2 Energy expenditure; 3.2.1 Basal metabolic rate (BMR); 3.2.2 Physical activity; 3.2.3 Thermogenesis; 3.3 Protein requirement; Micronutrients; 3.4 Vitamins; 3.4.1 Vitamins B12 and folate; 3.4.2 Fruit and vegetables (antioxidants); 3.5 Minerals; 3.5.1 Sodium (Na) and potassium (K); 3.5.2 Calcium (Ca) and vitamin D; 3.5.3 Magnesium (Mg); 3.5.4 Iron(Fe); 3.5.5 Zinc(Zn); 3.6 Trace elements; 3.7 Summary; 4 Diagnosing protein-energy undernutrition (PEU) in elderly people; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Methods used to assess nutritional status; 4.2.1 Dietary surveys4.2.2 Anthropometric measurements4.2.3 Clinical laboratory tests; 4.2.4 General assessment; 4.3 PEU, ill-health and outcome; 4.4 Specific markers of PEU and outcome; 4.4.1 Body weight; 4.4.2 Serum albumin; 4.4.3 Total lymphocyte count (TLC); 4.5 Summary; SECTION II: Nutritional Factors and Risk of Stroke; 5 The role of dietary and nutritional factors in stroke prevention; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Role of nutritional factors in stroke incidence and outcome; 5.2.1 Fruit and vegetables (antioxidants); 5.2.2 Potassium; 5.3 Serum albumin; 5.4 Hyperhomocysteinaemia5.5 Deitary salt, calcium, magnesium and fibre5.6 Dietary fat and serum lipids; 5.7 Fish consumption; 5.8 Milk consumption; 5.9 Obesity; 5.10 Physical activity; 5.11 Alcohol use; 5.12 Maternal and fetal nutrition; 5.13 Genetic and racial factors; 5.14 Summary; 6 Antioxidants and risk of ischaemic stroke; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 Intake of antioxidant vitamins and risk of cardiovascular disease; 6.3 Intake of antioxidant vitamins and risk of stroke; 6.4 Interpretation of results; 6.5 Summary; 7 Homocysteine and stroke; 7.1 Introduction; 7.2 Homocysteine metabolism; 7.2.1 Remethylation7.2.2 Trans-sulphuration7.3 Factors influencing homocysteine metabolism; 7.3.1 Genetic defects; 7.3.2 Nutritional deficiencies; 7.3.3 Other causes; 7.4 Measurement of plasma homocysteine; 7.5 Prevalence of hyperhomocysteinaemia; 7.6 Association between hyperhomocysteinaemia and vascular damage; 7.7 Homocysteine and atherothrombotic vascular disease; 7.8 Homocysteine and stroke; 7.9 Intake of folic acid and other B group vitamins and risk of cardiovascular disease; 7.10 B vitamins as a therapy for lowering homocysteine; 7.11 Hyperhomocysteinaemia and cardiovascular disease: cause or effect?7.12 SummaryStroke is a common and devasting event, which often results in death or major loss of independence, with immense human and financial costs. In the developed world stroke accounts for around 10 per cent of all deaths and is the most important single cause of severe disability among western people living in their own homes. Futhermore, in the next 30 years, the burden of stroke will grow substantially in most developing nations. There is now substantial evidence that dietary habits not only influence the prevalence of stroke, but also its course and outcome once it has occurred. The author, SalaCerebrovascular diseaseNutritional aspectsCerebrovascular diseaseDiet therapyCerebrovascular diseasePreventionCerebrovascular diseaseNutritional aspects.Cerebrovascular diseaseDiet therapy.Cerebrovascular diseasePrevention.616.8/10654616.810654Gariballa Salah880073MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK996214582703316Nutrition and stroke1965140UNISA08196nam 2200589I 450 991095414290332120191015135049.09781789738094178973809197817897380701789738075(CKB)4100000009068803(MiAaPQ)EBC5853795(UtOrBLW)9781789738070(Perlego)882972(EXLCZ)99410000000906880320191018d2019 uy 0engurun|||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMad muse the mental illness memoir in a writer's life and work /Jeffrey Berman1st ed.Bingley, England :Emerald Publishing,[2019]©20191 online resource (385 pages)9781789738100 1789738105 Includes bibliographical references and index.Intro -- Half Title Page -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright page -- Dedication Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Out of the Closet to Bear Witness -- "Compulsive Memoirism of the Mentally Ill" -- A New Sub-Genre Largely Ignored or Mistrusted -- Understanding Memoirs Backward and Forward -- Creative Malady -- The Ambiguities of Mad Muses and Mad Memoirs -- Fake Memoirs -- F. Scott Fitzgerald: "The Authority of Failure" -- Sherwin Nuland: "I was an Impostor" -- The Wounded Storyteller -- The Difference Between Survival Stories and Triumph Narratives -- Writing/Righting Wrong -- The Plan of this Book -- Questions -- 1-"The Landscape Of Depression": William Styron and Darkness Visible -- "BEYOND EXPRESSION" -- "THE LANDSCAPE OF DEPRESSION" -- LIE DOWN IN DARKNESS -- A WRAITHLIKE OBSERVER -- A MIRROR OF STYRON'S CHILDHOOD LIFE -- SET THIS HOUSE ON FIRE -- THE CONFESSIONS OF NAT TURNER -- SOPHIE'S CHOICE -- "MALIGNANT DEPRESSION" -- STINGO'S RESCUE FANTASIES -- "A STUDY IN THE CONQUEST OF GRIEF" -- "MY WRITING HAD KEPT SERIOUS EMOTIONAL DISTRESS SAFELY AT BAY" -- STYRON'S HEART OF DARKNESS -- WHY MEMOIR? -- "THE FUNDAMENTAL QUESTION" -- READING MY FATHER -- A SCANDAL -- WRITING MADNESS -- ALL THE FINEST GIRLS -- A SUICIDE LETTER TO HIS READERS -- A LIFELINE -- 2-"My Proclaimed Sanity and My Conjectured Madness": Kate Millett and The Loony-Bin Trip -- Sexual Politics -- The Prostitution Papers: A Candid Dialogue -- Flying -- Sita -- The Basement and Going to Iran -- The Loony-Bin Trip -- Millett's Reading of Other Accounts of Mood Disorders -- A Conspiracy -- Interpreting Tape-Recorded Conversations -- Sleeplessness -- The Loony-Bin Trip in Ireland -- Another Version of the Story -- Mania or Hypomania? -- Ivor Browne -- The Language of Manic Depression -- Talk Therapy -- Thomas Szasz -- "A Crisis to Die" -- Shame."A Small Prophylactic Dose" -- Reviews of The Loony-Bin Trip -- Life After The Loony-Bin Trip -- 3-"A Strange and Driving Force, A Destroyer, A Fire in the Blood": Kay Redfield Jamison and An Unquiet Mind -- Touched with Fire -- What's in a Name? -- An Unquiet Mind -- Drawing upon her Own Experience: The Two Editions of Manic-Depressive Illness -- "Severely Depressed. Very Quiet" -- Night Falls Fast -- The Contagion Effect -- Jamison's Psychiatrist -- Writing About her Family -- Exuberance -- Nothing was the Same -- Jamison as Therapist -- Grief, not Madness -- Robert Lowell -- Using Psychiatric Records -- A Textbook Diagnosis -- Two Biographers Writing About Madness -- A Study of Madness and Creativity -- 4-"For Better or Worse You Inherit Me": Linda Gray Sexton and Searching for Mercy Street and Half in Love -- Anne Sexton: A Self-Portrait in Letters -- Manic-Depressive Illness -- A Suicide Letter Five Years Before the Event -- Between Two Worlds -- Chris Hastings -- Rituals -- Lily Sinclair -- Oedipal and Pre-Oedipal Desire -- Proofreading -- A Father's War Story -- Mirror Images -- A Signature Daughter -- Twinning and Playing Nine -- Domestic Violence -- Mother-Daughter Incest -- "The Double Image" -- Points of Light -- The Kiss -- Reunion with the Dead -- Private Acts -- Searching for Mercy Street -- The Meaning of the Title -- Writing as Rescue -- Half in Love -- The Limits of Disguises -- Sexton's Psychiatrists -- The Legacy of Suicide -- Critical Reviews -- Ghosts and Ancestors -- 5-"Truth is Bendable": Lauren Slater and Lying -- Welcome to My Country -- Prozac Diary -- A Traumatizing Mother -- Lying -- A Philosophy Professor without Ontological Existence -- The Ethics of Lying -- "I Exaggerate" -- "Three Blind Mice" -- "Learning to Fall" -- The Supermarket Incident -- "Sincerely, Yours" -- A Corpus Callostomy -- "The Cherry Tree"."How to Market this Book" -- Breach of Narrative Promise? -- "Amazing Grace" -- Love Works Like this -- The 60,000 Dog -- Playing House -- Opening Skinner's Box -- All in the Family -- Blue Dreams -- Leaving Readers with Question Marks -- 6-"I Cannot Separate Her Homophobia from My Own": Andrew Solomon and The Noonday Demon -- Training in English and Psychology -- A Stone Boat -- Homophobia -- Assisted Suicide -- The Noonday Demon -- Seeking Insights from Literature and Philosophy -- Poetic Prose -- The Timing of Solomon's Depression -- The Internalized Mother -- "Curing" Homosexuality -- Psychopharmacology -- ndeup: "You are Free of Your Spirits" -- Acknowledging Father -- Far from the Tree -- Becoming a Father -- Far and Away -- Writing -- 7-"Someone Acts Through My Brain": Elyn R. Saks and The Center Cannot Hold -- Saks and Millett -- The Hidden Personal Element Behind Scholarship -- "A Few Little Quirks" -- The Question of Confidentiality -- "Elizabeth Jones"/Martha Harris -- The Fundamental Rule -- Termination -- "Joseph White"/Stanley W. Jackson -- A Psychoanalytic Researcher -- "Kaplan" -- The Lady of the Charts -- Failing Fathers -- Capgras Syndrome -- Jekyll on Trial -- Interpreting Interpretation -- Terminating Analysis with Kaplan -- Refusing Care -- Doctors Freed/Fried -- Life with and without a Regulator -- Dr King -- Hope for the Future -- Conclusion: The Challenges of Reading Mad Memoirs -- Elizabeth Costello -- The Contagion Effect -- Contagious Psychiatric Disorders -- "The AX for the Frozen Sea Within Us" -- Reading Oppositionally -- Literary Detectives -- A Lifeline -- Bibliography -- Works Cited* -- Index.Mental illness can often be the driving force behind creativity. This relationship is never more apparent than in the memoirs of writers who have lived, worked and created with a mental illness. Mad Muse examines and unpicks this fascinating relationship, demonstrating that mental illness is often intergenerational while the story of mental illness is intertextual.The study begins with William Styron's iconic memoir Darkness Visible, moving through a succession of mental illness memoirs from some of the most important authors in the genre, including Kate Millett, Kay Redfield Jamison, Linda Sexton, Lauren Slater, Andrew Solomon and Elyn Saks.From memoirs that blur the boundaries between historical truth and narrative truth to a first-person account of schizophrenia, Berman discusses the challenges of reading books which inspire hope and courage in many readers but may also sometimes have unintended consequences. In so doing, it illuminates the complex, co-existing relationship between the arts and mental health and represents an invaluable contribution to the study of health humanities. AutobiographyAuthorshipAuthorsMental healthLiterature and mental illnessLiterary CriticismGeneralbisacshLiterature & literary studiesbicsscAutobiographyAuthorship.AuthorsMental health.Literature and mental illness.Literary CriticismGeneral.Literature & literary studies.808.06692Berman Jeffrey544955UtOrBLWUtOrBLWBOOK9910954142903321Mad muse4366414UNINA04345nam 2200901 a 450 991095360690332120250703000244.09786612964725978128296472312829647209781400837595140083759610.1515/9781400837595(CKB)2550000001251858(EBL)664565(OCoLC)707067725(SSID)ssj0000543538(PQKBManifestationID)12250329(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000543538(PQKBWorkID)10531058(PQKB)10629732(SSID)ssj0000484020(PQKBManifestationID)11282254(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000484020(PQKBWorkID)10573041(PQKB)11048366(OCoLC)708564880(MdBmJHUP)muse36718(DE-B1597)446735(OCoLC)1054879223(OCoLC)979954347(DE-B1597)9781400837595(Au-PeEL)EBL664565(CaPaEBR)ebr10443114(CaONFJC)MIL296472(PPN)265129214(FR-PaCSA)88935100(MiAaPQ)EBC664565(Perlego)735013(FRCYB88935100)88935100(EXLCZ)99255000000125185820050826d2006 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrEconomic justice in an unfair world toward a level playing field /Ethan B. KapsteinCourse BookPrinceton, N.J. Princeton University Pressc20061 online resource (276 p.)3rd printing and 1st paperback printing, 2008.9780691136370 0691136378 9780691117720 0691117721 Includes bibliographical references (p. [197]-234) and index.Economic justice in an unfair world -- Fairness in trade -- Allocating aid -- Justice in migration and labor -- Harnessing investment -- Toward a level playing field : a policy agenda.Recent years have seen a growing number of activists, scholars, and even policymakers claiming that the global economy is unfair and unjust, particularly to developing countries and the poor within them. But what would a fair or just global economy look like? Economic Justice in an Unfair World seeks to answer that question by presenting a bold and provocative argument that emphasizes economic relations among states. The book provides a market-oriented focus, arguing that a just international economy would be one that is inclusive, participatory, and welfare-enhancing for all states. Rejecting radical redistribution schemes between rich and poor, Ethan Kapstein asserts that a politically feasible approach to international economic justice would emphasize free trade and limited flows of foreign assistance in order to help countries exercise their comparative advantage. Kapstein also addresses justice in labor, migration, and investment, in each case defending an approach that concentrates on nation-states and their unique social compacts. Clearly written for all those with a stake in contemporary debates over poverty reduction and development, the book provides a breakthrough analysis of what the international community can reasonably do to build a global economy that works to the advantage of every nation.Distributive justiceInternational economic relationsMoral and ethical aspectsEconomic developmentMoral and ethical aspectsEconomic policyMoral and ethical aspectsInternational economic integrationDistributive justice.International economic relationsMoral and ethical aspects.Economic developmentMoral and ethical aspects.Economic policyMoral and ethical aspects.International economic integration.337/.01Kapstein Ethan B.1953-123241MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910953606903321Economic justice in an unfair world4342258UNINA