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Compétences pour minimiser le stress chez les professionnels de santé - E-BOOK


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Développez la résilience et prospérez en tant que professionnel des soins ! Compétences pour minimiser le stress chez les professionnels de santé : un guide pour renforcer votre racines aborde des méthodes pour prendre soin de soi et prévenir la fatigue émotionnelle et l'épuisement professionnel dans les milieux de travail très stressants. Ce livre utilise une approche factuelle qui examine comment les professionnels de la santé peuvent développer l'autocompassion, la pleine conscience, les relations avec leurs collègues et leur satisfaction en leur carrière. Rédigé par Shannon Dames, enseignante et chercheuse réputée, ce manuel pratique montre comment mettre en pratique ces connaissances et améliorer votre bien-être dans de vrais contextes de soins. En raison de la prévalence plus élevée chez les professionnels de la santé de problèmes de santé mentale comme le syndrome de stress post-traumatique (SSPT) et le trouble dépressif majeur (TDM) une ressource comme celle-ci n'a jamais été aussi nécessaire ! - Focaliser à la fois sur la théorie et la pratique permet aux étudiants de s'autoévaluer, de renforcer leur résilience et de s'épanouir, grâce à des concepts soutenus par la recherche. - UNIQUE ! Les études de cas Parcours illustrent l'expérience ou les préoccupations réelles d'un professionnel de la santé, ce qui amène les étudiants à réfléchir, pendant leur lecture, à la façon dont ils géreraient la situation exposée. La fin du chapitre propose une méthode efficace pour gérer la situation, et démontre comment mettre en pratique les leçons apprises. - UNIQUE ! L'écriture claire sur le ton de la conversation et le cadre métaphorique des racines et de l'arbre établissent un lien avec les lecteurs et facilitent l'apprentissage conceptuel. - Des exercices pratiques intégrés permettent aux étudiants de développer et de renforcer leurs propres racines métaphoriques. - Des vignettes tout au long du texte démontrent comment les concepts s'appliquent aux scénarios du monde réel. - S'adapter au parcours à venir résume le contenu à la fin de chaque chapitre pour que les étudiants comprennent bien les concepts principaux. - UNIQUE ! Des encadrés présentant la contribution du Dr Crosbie Watler, M.D., FRCPC aident les étudiants à naviguer et à comprendre les enjeux en santé mentale qui touchent les professionnels de la santé.




YOUR SICK BOWEL - Your body's source of illness and disease: THE UNDERESTIMATED DESTROYER


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Many people are suffering from physical constraints like skin diseases, diabetes, dementia, allergies, obesity, fungus infections, migraine, or psychological constraints like anxiety, stress, eating disorders or mood swings up to depression. They do not know that the cause lives inside of the bowel, because The bowel and its bacteria decide about our mental and physical condition! Around the bowel, there is a great accumulation of nerve cells that can influence and manipulate all our feelings. This also means that our bowel can cause brain diseases like depression, but also fight it or even heal it. What we eat – which foods we ingest, influences our gut bacteria. Our food has a say in how we feel, how much lust we feel, how much you like the smell of a person. Enteric flora also decides about inferiority complexes, negative thoughts, bad moods, avolition and aggression. Many healing traditions in Africa value the bowel highly in relation to our mental wellbeing. As it is taught in African medicine, gut bacteria can manipulate our entire neural system and therefore also our brain with targeted information, be it good or bad information. They take control over our behavior, our thinking, our personality, our feelings of love, and our actions. And depending on information that the brain receives from them, we feel good, happy, strong and brave or downcast, tired, negative, aggressive and have a bad mood. This also means that you can decide how you feel with an according diet that supports these gut bacteria. We can cultivate our gut bacteria so that they do something good for us. In this book, you will learn about: • How the bowel is connected to our diseases • Why and how does the bowel become sick in the first place? • What destroys enteric flora and limits the functionality of the good and important gut bacteria? • What supports the spread of bad and sickening bacteria? • Which diseases are supported or caused by a disturbed bowel? • Which signs indicate a sick bowel • How a sick bowel influences your mood and makes you tired, depressed and unhappy • Why you cannot lose weight with a disturbed enteric flora • What cigarettes, the vaginal flora of your mother, stress and bread for dinner have to do with a sick bowel • And much more You will find a lot of African-inspired information and gain excellent insight into the functions of the bowel, all of which you would not even have dreamed about being possible, but that are confirmed by science.




Papers


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The Force of Beauty


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The market for commercial beauty products exploded in Third Republic France, with a proliferation of goods promising to erase female imperfections and perpetuate an aesthetic of femininity that conveyed health and respectability. While the industry's meteoric growth helped to codify conventional standards of womanhood, The Force of Beauty goes beyond the narrative of beauty culture as a tool for sociopolitical subjugation to show how it also targeted women as important consumers in major markets and created new avenues by which they could express their identities and challenge or reinforce gender norms. As cosmetics companies and cultural media, from magazines to novels to cinema, urged women to aspire to commercial standards of female perfection, beauty evolved as a goal to be pursued rather than a biological inheritance. The products and techniques that enabled women to embody society's feminine ideal also taught them how to fashion their bodies into objects of desire and thus offered a subversive tool of self-expression. Holly Grout explores attempts by commercial beauty culture to reconcile a standard of respectability with female sexuality, as well as its efforts to position French women within the global phenomenon of changing views on modern womanhood. Grout draws on a wide range of primary sources-hygiene manuals, professional and legal debates about the right to fabricate and distribute "medicines," advertisements for beauty products, and contemporary fiction and works of art-to explore how French women navigated changing views on femininity. Her seamless integration of gender studies with business history, aesthetics, and the history of medicine results in a textured and complex study of the relationship between the politics of womanhood and the politics of beauty.













Changes in Society, Crime and Criminal Justice in Europe


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In 1994 the School of Criminology, a part of the Department of Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure and Criminology in the Faculty of Law of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, celebrated the 25th anniversary of its study programme. To give added lustre to this landmark in its history, the Institute accepted the invitation from the International Society of Criminology to organise the 49th International Course of Criminology. The title of the course was: Changes in Society, Crime and Criminal Justice in Europe. A challenge for criminological education and research'. This course explored two themes, both of which are likely to be the focus of debate in criminal policy in the near future: crime and insecurity in the city, and international organised and corporate crime. The presentation and discussion of both themes followed two main approaches. Lectures and seminars focused on the analysis of the nature, the quantity and the development of the phenomena, and meetings were focused on the policy needed to gain control of these phenomena. Moreover, attention was paid to technical and ethical problems which show up at the moment that empirical research is carried out. This publication brings together the main part of the introductory lectures. Part one relates to the theme of crime and insecurity in the city; the second part contains the lectures on international organised and corporate crime. Together both parts present a good picture of what was explained and commented on during the Course, especially in relation to important European developments concerning crime, criminal justice and criminal policy. This book will become an important source of inspiration for both criminological educationand research.