In 1914, for example, she noted the fares for six hundred tram rides to Utica and back, all of them debits against the girls, as were the wages for the cook, half the food expenses, and all of the coal, water, and electricity used in the house. If there was any relief from Miss...
“I read this very informative book when my mother was diagnosed with dementia in 2015. It’s like the “what to expect when you expecting” books of long ago. So much helpful information for the many phases, issues, obstacles one faces when dealing with the ever changing issues dementia/A...
or sad, or make us cry as we empathise with characters . the power of books was recognised a few years ago by the british charity reading agency, who published a list of books that doctors could offer to patients, tackling topics from de...
From A Sacred Sorrow: Reaching Out to God in the Lost Language of Lament by the great Michael Card (NavPress) to Prophetic Lament: A Call for Justice in Troubled Times by Soong-Chan Rah (IVP) to Dark Clouds, Deep Mercy: Discovering the Grace of Lament (Crossway) by Mark Vroegop to Yo...
More than 9,000 titles are available to you at this very moment. From scientific book series and monographs to Fast Facts – our medical handbooks for healthcare professionals and patients – our book program covers all disciplines of human medicine and related sciences. Over the past years, ...
A good novel can make us happy or sad, or make us cry as we empathise with characters.Thepower ofbookswasrecognised a few years agoby theBritish charity Reading Agency, who published a list of books that doctors could offer to patients, tackling topics from depression to dementia to chronic...
Drug-Induced Dementia: a perfect crime: Jackson, MD Grace E.: Rethinking Psychiatric Drugs: A Guide for Informed Consent: Grace Jackson *** Health and wellbeing: *** Meditation, mindfulness and spirituality: *** Books about having come off psych drugs:...
years ago by the British charity Reading Agency, who published a list of books that doctors could offer to patients, tackling topics from depression to dementia to chronic pain. It called this ‘bibliotherapy’ and it’s become so successful that it's about to be extended to children as ...
it is a conglomeration of the joys and frustrations of real practice, set far from the ivory towers of urban academic centers. It advocates compassion, both for patients and for doctors. And it brings the reader closer to humanity and closer to the truth about life behind the doors of the...
James Joyce once famously said that if it took him seventeen years to write Finnegans Wake, then a reader should take seventeen years to read it. In his usual prophetic way, he turned out to be exactly right.