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Dr. Steffany Mohan

The Causes and Treatments of Xerostomia - - 0 views

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    Dry mouth mainly in medical terms known as Xerostomia. There are various medical and non medical causes of this.Here's;s the cause and treatment discussed. 
rizwanyonis516

Lipolysis Treatment Dubai, UAE | Dubai Cosmetic Surgery - 0 views

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    Lipolysis is non-surgical treatment that helps remove excess fat in the body by injecting fat melting substances. The liquefied fat is then removed through body naturally.
rizwanyonis516

Pigmentation Treatment Can Safely Brighten Your Skin | Dubai Cosmetic Surgery - 0 views

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    Pigmentation treatment is effective for improving the uneven skin tone by treating all the pigmentation disorders like sun spots, age spots, freckles and melasma.
fnfdoc

Appendicitis: Causes, Symptoms and Treatment | Health Blog - 0 views

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    What Is Appendicitis? How to diagnose Appendicitis? Where is Appendix pain located In this article, we hope you can find all of your answers related to Appendicitis. We covered everything about Appendicitis. We discussed types, causes, symptoms, tests, and treatment of Appendicitis.
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    Appendicitis is an inflammation of the appendix, which is a small tube of intestinal tissue that projects from the large intestine. While the appendix does not seem to have a particular function, one theory suggests that it acts as a storehouse of good bacteria and boosts immunity after diarrheal illness. However, some experts believe the appendix is just a purposeless remnant from our evolutionary past. One thing we're sure of is that we can live without it, without any apparent consequences.
fnfdoc

Acne Problems Diagnose And Treatment | Your Health Our Priority - 0 views

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    Acne commonly named vulgaris, a disorder of hair follicles of the face, back and chest or neck.acne also characterized by blackheads or whiteheads on oily skin (Pimples). Dermatologists find different treatments for improvement of this disorder by regulating oil-producing glands.
fnfdoc

Symptoms And Treatments of PMS | Your Health Our Priority - 0 views

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    About eighty-five percent of all women suffer from PMS or PMDD at some point in their lives. Premenstrual Syndrome is a dreadful condition that precedes your period and causes uncomfortable symptoms like backaches and cramps. Luckily, there are a number of tried remedies to live happier with PMS.
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    Depression, cramps, and headaches are some of the symptoms that mark the onset of the "Oh So Dreadful" days as most women associate with. These are the days when women suffer from Premenstrual Syndrome or PMS. It has become such a common term these days that it needs no introduction. Premenstrual Syndrome is a group of signs and symptoms that affect women during the week preceding the start of their period.
Dr. Steffany Mohan

What Are the Symptoms and Treatment for Child Sleep Apnea? - - 0 views

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    Save your child from sleeping disruption. Find out what is child Sleep Apnea and its symptoms.
rizwanyonis516

Rejuvenation and Resurfacing Treatments - 0 views

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    Skin rejuvenation treatments can help you eradicate aging and environmental effects on your skin and make your skin look youthful and refreshed again.
fnfdoc

COPD: Stages, Causes, Symptoms And Treatment - Health Blog - 0 views

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    COPD consists of multiple lung infections and is considered incurable by most physicians. Can timely diagnosis, on the bright side, slow down its progress?
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    COPD consists of multiple lung infections and is considered incurable by most physicians. Can timely diagnosis, on the bright side, slow down its progress?
fnfdoc

Chalazion Eye: Causes, Surgery & Home Remedies - Health Blog - 0 views

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    Are you searching for Chalazion? We covered completely Causes, Symptoms, Treatment, Surgery and Home Remedies of Chalazion. Read and get rid of Stye too
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    Are you searching for Chalazion? We covered completely Causes, Symptoms, Treatment, Surgery and Home Remedies of Chalazion. Read and get rid of Stye too
fnfdoc

How Bad Vitamin B12 Deficiency | Your Health Our Priority - 0 views

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    Vitamin b12 called cobalamine, important for vital functions in body, like maintenance. Deficiency cause malnutrition and digestion problems. Treatments including supplements, injections and vitamins regulatory measures.
fnfdoc

Causes And Treatment Of Obesity | Your Health Our Priority - 0 views

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    Read how to measure weight and take healthy steps for reducing fats. Obesity is excess of your calories stored in adipose tissues as fats. BMI is used for calculating body mass in relation to stronger muscles.
fnfdoc

What Is Leprosy Disease? | Health Blog - 0 views

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    What Is Leprosy Disease? Leprosy is a chronic, granulomatous infection caused by the... According to historical records, this disease spread through the slave trade and migration routes from... In this article, we talk about the causes, symptoms, and treatment of Leprosy
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    Like TB, leprosy is caused by a bacterium. The bacterium is Mycobacterium Leprae. It was discovered by Armauer Hansen in Norway in 1873. This is why it is also called Hansen's disease. Although its bacterial nature was known at the time, it was not considered infectious.
fnfdoc

Down Syndrome: Symptoms, Types & Treatment | Health Blog - 0 views

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    Down syndrome is also known as DS or DNS. This is a genetic disorder. Our human body is made of millions of cells.
fnfdoc

Psoriasis: Causes, Symptoms, Types & Treatment - Health Blog - 0 views

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    Psoriasis is a chronic skin condition that accelerates the rate at which your skin cells grow. An effective method to treat psoriasis is phototherapy or light therapy.
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    Psoriasis is an auto-immune illness that affects almost three percent of the world's population. People who suffer from psoriasis experience a great deal of skin irritation and discomfort.
Leena Marilda

Fifth Avenue Physical Therapy | NYC Rehabilitation Medicine - 0 views

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    What is physical therapy? Who are physical therapists? Your #physical therapist helps you in a lot of ways; #health care profession that involves treatment of a #disease, injury or deformity. Your physical therapist helps achieve the improvement mobility and motion, managing pain effectively without long term use of #medication.
Suheir Kilani

Broken Heart Syndrome: Testing, Treatment, and Diagnosis - 1 views

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    What is broken heart syndrome? What causes the heart to weaken. Check California Family Medical & Urgent Care Center to know all about broken heart syndrome.
Dianne Rees

UHnet - 0 views

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    "Patient Rights: All patients or a family member must be informed of their rights with regard to: - Informed consent - Privacy - Treatment options - Advanced directives - Respect"
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    Some basic considerations for patient education
Dianne Rees

Health Communication and Health Information Technology - Healthy People - 1 views

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    "Continual feedback, productive interactions, and access to evidence on the effectiveness of treatments and interventions will likely transform the traditional patient-provider relationship. It will also change the way people receive, process, and evaluate health information. Capturing the scope and impact of these changes-and the role of health communication and health IT in facilitating them-will require multidisciplinary models and data systems. "
Dianne Rees

'Ignorance is bliss sometimes': constraints on the emergence of the 'informed patient' ... - 0 views

  • Recent work in medical sociology suggests that there continues to be a gap between the partnership and ‘negotiation’ models of practitioner-patient relations and the empirical reality of everyday practice.
  • Lupton (1997) has drawn attention to the fact that patients have agency here, too.
  • in their interactions with doctors and other health care workers, lay people may pursue both the ideal type ‘consumerist’ and the ‘passive patient’ subject position simultaneously or variously, depending on the context (1997: 373).
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  • For Lupton, ‘late modernist notions of reflexivity … fail to recognise the complexity and changeable nature of the desires, emotions and needs that characterise the patient-doctor relationship’ (1997: 373).
  • He argues that the health care practitioners who participate in these online self-help networks are also experiencing an identity shift, moving from authority figure to facilitator.
  • nformation technology and consumerism are synergistic forces that promote an ‘information age healthcare system’ in which consumers can, ideally, use information technology to gain access to information and control their own health care, thereby utilising health care resources more efficiently (2000: 1714, our emphasis).
  • Is there a direct link between information access and empowerment?
  • Such detailed empirical studies of Internet use can tell us much about the significance of this medium in the everyday lives of specific user groups and about the emergent relations and communities that may accompany such use. Thus, studies of online health communities tell us much about how the Internet can support community building which is valuable and interesting in its own right. They also demonstrate well the point made by science and technology studies (STS) that users of technologies ‘shape’ those technologies to fit their needs and that the context of use, in particular, is central to understanding the significance of such technologies
  • (Bijker and Law 1992, MacKenzie and Wajcman 1999, Lie and Sørensen 1996, Silverstone and Hirsch 1992). There is, however, a danger that such work will be interpreted and/or used to imply that the Internet is, in itself, empowering of patients, and it is this type of technological determinism that we wanted to avoid in our own study. In the next section, we explain how we designed our study to do this.
  • In order the better to understand how these women located themselves within the landscape of health information, the very first question we asked them was:What, if anything, do you do when you first feel something isn’t quite right with your health?
  • Thirty-two women were recruited through a GP practice (family doctor) or gynaecological clinic in a city in the south east of England. Women who were taking, had considered taking, or had recently stopped taking HRT were all considered for inclusion in the study.
  • The interview schedule included questions about health information practices in general before going on to ask about HRT-related health information practices.
  • Thus, results suggest that our participants access a range of different information sources and media, but the interesting questions remain. How keen are they to become more informed about their health? Does access to information necessarily lead to feelings of empowerment? Does access to the Internet enhance information-related empowerment? Below, we explore the constraints on the emergence of the ‘informed patient’ under three headings: taking responsibility; information literacy; and the medical encounter
  • Have you ever looked something up for yourself before going to see a doctor, nurse or other health care practitioner?
  • Eighteen of the 32 participants had never looked anything up for themselves before a visit to a doctor or other healthcare practitioner. Eleven of these offered no explanation for this and many seemed surprised by the question.
  • Two kinds of explanation were offered by the seven other participants. The first suggested a reluctance to take the kind of responsibility for self-care suggested by the ‘informed patient’ discourse. The feeling here was that it was the doctor's job to know about such matters.
  • Thus, we cannot assume that everyone sees the importance of taking on more responsibility for their health, especially where that involves ‘becoming informed’ outside of the traditional medical encounter. This particular group of mid-life women felt either that it was a doctor's job to inform patients about their health or that there would be problems in trying to work in partnership with doctors in the way suggested by the informed patient discourse.
  • Becoming informed involves skills and competencies that relate both to the information itself and to the medium used to access that information. Amongst our participants we found women who had very few information literacy skills and others who lacked general computer literacy skills and/or web searching skills. Below, we discuss how lack of competency in these areas can inhibit the emergence of the informed patient identity. To illustrate this point, we compare more and less ‘literate’ participants, some of whom have access only to the more traditional media, others who have access to the Internet as well.
  • Information literacy
  • Taking responsibility
  • Information landscapes
  • Recruitment and interview focus
  • The Internet and patient empowerment
  • Information literacy skills are crucial when searching on the web. Awareness of sources (individual or organisation publishing the information) is one means by which one can begin to assess the validity of the information found on the web. While Marge is our least information-literate Internet user, many others were similarly uninterested in information source and validity issues, displaying low levels of information literacy.
  • Clearly, Jane is unwilling to trust the information about dairy products from producers of dairy products but is, at the same time, more than happy to accept what producers of soya products say about the benefits of soya.
  • Clearly, whilst medical sites are a signpost to trustworthiness for some, this is not a universal experience.
  • In particular, those with an interest in alternative or complementary therapies may well find conventional medical sites restrict and circumscribe their ‘informed choice’, just as some healthcare practitioners were reported to have done in the context of the medical encounter, discussed next.
  • The medical encounter
  • When discussing the first constraint on the emergence of the informed patient –‘taking responsibility’– we found that 14 of the 32 women had, at some point, actively searched for information about their health prior to a visit to the doctor
  • These women were asked whether they disclosed what they already knew. As with those who did not look up information for themselves, there was, amongst the more informed participants, still a great concern about appearing to over-step the boundary between ‘expert’ and ‘patient’ here
  • The last example is particularly interesting for the way in which the patient, here, feels the need to protect the doctor from the ‘informed patient’ who she sees as exerting extra pressures on an already busy professional.
  • You have to be very careful because they come back with – and I don’t blame them at all – they say, ‘don’t believe what you read in the paper, you’re here with me now and I’m telling you this’. I don’t blame them, because it must be very hard, when you go and say, ‘Oh, I read this in the paper’. It's not easy for them … (Pat).
  • Annie shows us that it is perfectly possible to be very engaged with one's own health and informed about treatment options through traditional information media and sources but, at the same time constrained in the full development of an informed patient identity because of a reluctance to challenge the doctor.
  • Despite nearly half the women in our sample being willing and able to look things up for themselves prior to visits to healthcare professionals, in no instance did it seem to be the case that disclosing what was already known about their particular health problems and their treatments was a completely straightforward process for these women.
  • Exceptions might be the one woman who stated that she would feel confident disclosing to a complementary therapist (though not to her GP), and another who felt that ‘a lot of doctors now know that some people know their bodies better than what [the doctors] do’ and that things were, therefore, getting better over time. In general, however, for this particular group of mid-life women, it seems that the boundary between the expert healthcare professional and the patient is still fairly robust.
  • A second constraint on the emergence and enactment of the informed patient identity has to do with skills and competencies in what we might call ‘information literacy’. These skills involve general awareness of where to find information, information retrieval, understanding the context of the information being provided, and interpretation and communication of that information in the context of health-care decision-making. This point becomes all the more pertinent when we come to look at Internet use. Although almost half of our participants had used the Internet for accessing health information, we found that the search strategies used were very unsystematic. In addition, we found, as did Eysenbach and Köhler (2002) in their qualitative study of health information searching on the Web, there was almost no awareness of who or what organisation was publishing the information being accessed. Indeed, for some, the information ‘media’ and ‘source’ were collapsed and the Internet was itself considered a source of health information and, for many, a good one at that.
  • Conclusions
  • First, many patients do not want to take responsibility or seek out information for themselves – they are more than happy to trust their GPs and leave decisions to them. There may be many different reasons for this as Lupton (1997) has suggested but it is important that the patient perspective is acknowledged nevertheless.
  • The third constraint in the emergence of informed patients and partnership relations comes from the apparent reluctance of practitioners to take on this new role
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