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December 2011

More Popular Medical Books to Read

December 27, 2011 | carolyn | Comments (0)

Armchair ReadingIt's the holiday season.  Maybe the weather is getting you down or it might be a cold or flu and you find yourself at home with time to read.  The following books are filled with adventure, mystery, suspense and even danger and answer questions you might have like:

  • What are some of the more bizarre medical cases physicians see?
  • How does the human mind work?
  • What do the volunteers of Doctors Without Borders do?
  • Who are the Elite Medical Detectives and what do they do?

 

 To see which branch has a copy of the book and to place a hold, click on the title or cover link;

 

Tell-Tale Brain

Yipping Tiger

What Disturbs Our Blood

The Tell-Tale Brain

Using unusual and baffling
cases, Ramachandran, a
neuroscientist, explains
how a normal human brain works.

The Yipping Tiger and Other
Tales from the Neuropsychiatric Clinic

Features ten case histories
of common neuropsychiatric
disorders including golfer's
yip, Tourette syndrome,
obsessive-compulsive
disorder, anorexia nervosa
and phantom limb.

What Disturbs Our Blood:a
Son's Quest to Redeem the Past

A riveting story of addiction
and mental illness in a
prominent Canadian family
spanning three generations.

 

 

 

Hope in Hell

Inside the Outbreaks

Deadly Dinner Party

Hope in Hell: Inside the World of Doctors Without Borders

Fascinating and harrowing tales of the medical professionals who deliver emergency care in war-torn countries and areas where natural disasters have occurred.  Read the News updates from the Canadian website.

Inside the Outbreaks: the Elite Medical Detectives of the Epidemic Intelligence Service

Follow the officers of the Epidemic Intelligence Service, a section of the Centers for Disease Control, as they investigate outbreaks of Ebola, smallpox, rabies, anthrax and other deadly diseases.  To see recent investigations, go to the Epidemic Intelligence Service website.

The Deadly Dinner Party & Other Medical Detective Stories

Fifteen gripping stories including a typhoid outbreak in the Catskills, a building-related cluster of hypersensitivity pneumonia, and a case of Vitamin A toxicity. 

 

Seasonal stress and what to do about it...

December 22, 2011 | marietta forster-haberer | Comments (0)

"It's the most wonderful time of the year..." but holidays can also be a major source of stress. Whether it's decorating the house, stuffing the holiday turkey, shopping for presents or hosting family and friends, these otherwise joyful activities place undue demands on us which in turn result in stress.

 

  

 

But don't despair...with a little foresight, you can minimize the stress that accompanies the holidays.  Mayo Clinic's tips on preventing holiday stress include:

  • be aware of common holiday stress triggers so you can disarm them before they spoil the holidays
  • when stressed, validate your feelings and reach out; it's ok to ask for help!
  • be realistic -- holidays don't have to be perfect
  • plan ahead, learn to say no and stick to a budget
  • don't abandon healthy habits and make some time for yourself

Simplify your Christmas  100 ways to reduce the stress and recapture the joy of the holidays     Stress6             Stress3

While on the topic of holidays, check out our earlier blog on safety tips for the holidays.

 

       
       When holidays are hell  a guide to surviving family gatherings             Stress4           Stress2          

For more information on coping with seasonal stress, here are some books you can check out from TPL. Just click on the book covers to place a hold.


 Stress11   Stress12   Stress9

Medical Mysteries and Histories: True Tales of Forensic Medicine

December 8, 2011 | carolyn | Comments (0)

Medical Mystery

 

 

Nothing but holiday specials on TV?  Missing your favourite forensic medical mystery shows?

 

 

The dark days of winter are approaching when sitting in a big, overstuffed armchair with a good true forensic medical mystery book while the snow falls seems somehow inviting. Here are some titles sure to make you shiver but not from the cold!

 

Blood on the Table
Blood Work
Cranioklepty

Blood on the Table: the Greatest Cases of New York City's Office of the Chief Medical Examiner

Headline cases including a 1922 tale of Becker and Norkin who acuse each other of murdering Becker's wife, a surgeon who kills his rival's patients and the murder of a violinist backstage at the Lincoln Center.

Blood Work: a Tale of Medicine and Murder in the Scientific Revolution

A 17th century tale of French physician Jean-Baptiste Denis who was found guilty of murder after he tranfused lamb's blood into a human who died several days later.  But it was later discovered that the patient was poisoned likely by a cabal attempting to discredit Denis.

Cranioklepty: Grave Robbing and the Search for Genius

In 1809 in Vienna the head of the just-deceased composer Haydn was grave robbed.  The skulls of many other famous people including Beethoven, Mozart, Goya and Swedenborg were also stolen, sold, studied or put on display.  It was a time when the dubious science of phrenology, identifying genius through the study of bumps and ridges on the human skull,  was developed.

 

 

Post Mortem
Tales from the Morgue
The Poisoner's Handbook

Post Mortem: Solving History's Great Medical Mysteries

Fascinating medical cases of 12 famous people including Alexander the Great, King Herod, Joan of Arc, Beethoven, Mozart, Akhenaten, and Christopher Columbus.  A panel of experts attempt to use modern medical knowledge to diagnose their illnesses based on the medical evidence of the time.

Tales from the Morgue: Forensic Answers to Nine Famous Cases Including the Scott Peterson & Chandra Levy Cases

Pittsburgh pathologist Wecht lends his expertise on the John F. Kennedy, Marilyn Monroe and the airline crash in Gander, Newfoundland cases.

The Poisoner's Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York

Witness the birth of forensic toxicology  through the monumental careers of New York City's chief medical examiner Charles Norris and toxicologist Alexander Gettler in the 1920s as they solve chemical crimes.

World AIDS Day... 30 years on

December 1, 2011 | marietta forster-haberer | Comments (0)

100px-Red_Ribbon_svgThis year marks the 30th year since the first HIV case was reported and since then an estimated 30 million people have died of AIDS-related illnesses. Another 33 million are carriers of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. The shocking truth is that many don't know that they are infected with HIV.

While the AIDS Clock is ticking... there is some good news to report. According to the United Nations, the number of HIV infections worldwide has declined in the last decade. Paradoxically, Canada is bucking the trend with rates of infection on the rise.

This is very disheartening. As Christopher Bunting, the president of the Canadian Foundation of AIDS Research (CANFAR) pointed out: "...Canadians need to re-engage with this issue. This disease is still with us...it just moved to the back burner...."

Why this complacency?  Perhaps it's because HIV is no longer a death sentence due to medical advances. Antiretroviral medications, like the "Cocktail" keep patients alive for decades. As a matter of fact, life expectancy is only a few months shorter than for people without HIV. But what about the quality of life? What about the cost to the health care system and to society in general?

"Getting to Zero" is the theme selected by World AIDS Campaign (WAC) to commemorate this year's World AIDS Day. It echoes UNAIDS' vision of "Zero new HIV infections. Zero discrimination. Zero AIDS-related deaths." Here in Canada, we should also make this our rallying cry and do our share to aim for getting to zero

For more information on HIV and AIDS and what you can do about it, here are some books you can check out from TPL. Just click on the book covers to place a hold.  

AIDSAIDS 2AIDS 4AIDS 5

AIDS 3AIDS 6AIDS 7AIDS 8

 

Further Reading:  

Health Canada. It's Your Health - HIV/AIDS

What is World AIDS Day? - CATIE