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Bleeding and Coagulation in Regional Anesthesia
Adam M. Kaye, Alan D. Kaye, R. Urman, N. Vadevalu, R. V. Shah, and J. Y. Tsai
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Aphasia couples therapy (ACT) Workbook
Larry Boles
While workbooks for people with aphasia are not hard to find, they tend to be addressed to the clinical needs of the speech pathologist. However, current practice in the field aims to put more control in the hands of those with aphasia and their caregivers.
This workbook enables you to empower your clients and their caregivers in becoming practically involved in improving everyday life during and after therapy. With insurer sessions limited, ACT provides an easy-to-use, practical continuation of therapy. Unlike every other workbook currently available, ACT is arranged in a functional format to cover everyday activities in a format easily accessible to clients and their spouses or caregivers.
This workbook is geared toward the couple, rather than the client alone; it can be used by the speech pathologist as well as the significant other; and it is hierarchically organized, such that those with mild through severe impairment can use it. Additionally, rather than being organized by sensory modality, the ACT Workbook is arranged in a more functional format with activities and tasks covering a range of activities that might be a part of the routine or aspirations of the client. For example, reading the morning paper is a task many of us take for granted: it is not intuitively obvious how to alter a newspaper to make it aphasia-friendly. By choosing a level of difficulty appropriate for the clients communicative level, and by using carefully chosen (suggested in the workbook) supplementary material (e.g., magnifiers, half-page blocks, highlighters, etc.), the spouse can make this a viable activity again.
Professor Boles has succeeded in producing a workbook that meets the modern practice needs of the busy clinician as well as enabling them to help empower clients spouses in becoming practically involved in the care and therapy of their loved one outside the clinic.
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A Short History of the Drug Receptor Concept
Cay-Rüdiger Prüll, Andreas-Holger Maehle, and Robert F. Halliwell
The concept of specific receptors for drugs, hormones and transmitters lies at the very heart of biomedicine. This book is the first to consider the idea from its 19th century origins in the work of John Newport Langley and Paul Ehrlich, to its development of during the 20th century and its current impact on drug discovery in the 21st century.
A selection of published books and book chapters from faculty members of the Thomas J. Long School of Pharmacy at University of the Pacific.
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