The Health During Industrial Revolution
The problems and causes of diseases during industrial revolution. (Amateur video with slides and uneasy narration)
Common French Phrases for Health
Learn common French phrases for health. Stephanie Hourie Morrow is a native French speaker and has been giving language lessons for 10 years. Each sentence is pronounced in English and French while the French phrase appears on the screen. For beginning to intermediate learners. Good sound quality.
Monitor turf health
This resource covers the identifying of issues related to the establishment and growth of turf. It contains activities and resources to facilitate self-paced learning. Topics include: turf problems around the barbeque area, tennis court patchy, bowling green worn, entry losing colour, greens not running true, 16th green thinning and workplace turf problem.
2010 Missouri Civic Health Assessment
A report released Oct. 26 by Missouri State University and the National Conference on Citizenship (NCoC) finds that while Missouri out-performs national trends for volunteering, community engagement and voter turnout, some forms of civic involvement, such as one-on-one interactions with neighbors, may be waning.
The Missouri Civic Health Index is the first of its kind and is designed to help the state document the health of Missouri's civic sector. The report follows the September release of th
3.6 Health education
Access to healthcare is important to all of us. Did the arrival of state medicine in the twentieth century mean that everyone had access to good medical services? If you fell sick in 1930 where could you get treatment – from a GP, a hospital, a nurse? This unit shows that in the early twentieth century, access to care was unequally divided. The rich could afford care; working men, women and children were helped by the state; others had to rely on their own resources.
3.5 The health of mothers and children
Access to healthcare is important to all of us. Did the arrival of state medicine in the twentieth century mean that everyone had access to good medical services? If you fell sick in 1930 where could you get treatment – from a GP, a hospital, a nurse? This unit shows that in the early twentieth century, access to care was unequally divided. The rich could afford care; working men, women and children were helped by the state; others had to rely on their own resources.
3.4 Health and the working class
Access to healthcare is important to all of us. Did the arrival of state medicine in the twentieth century mean that everyone had access to good medical services? If you fell sick in 1930 where could you get treatment – from a GP, a hospital, a nurse? This unit shows that in the early twentieth century, access to care was unequally divided. The rich could afford care; working men, women and children were helped by the state; others had to rely on their own resources.
3.2 Health and wealth
Access to healthcare is important to all of us. Did the arrival of state medicine in the twentieth century mean that everyone had access to good medical services? If you fell sick in 1930 where could you get treatment – from a GP, a hospital, a nurse? This unit shows that in the early twentieth century, access to care was unequally divided. The rich could afford care; working men, women and children were helped by the state; others had to rely on their own resources.
Kids Health - Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
kidshealth.org defines fetal alcohol and also discusses prevention. What I liked most about this site is that it discusses that children's behvaioral characteristics may be effected more than just cognitive abilities.
Integrating Social and Behavioral Theory into Public Health: Foundations/Macro-Mezzo Levels
This is the first part of a two-course survey that introduces an ecologic perspective that can be used to map factors that shape the health of individuals and populations.
Video: Health care reform in the community
Dr. Bill Paul, Metro Nashville’s director of public health, discusses “health care reform in the community” with the Healthcare Delivery Systems course taught by Sharon Shields, professor of the practice of health promotion and education. Media Contact: Ann Marie Deer Owens, (615) 322-NEWS annmarie.owens@vanderbilt.edu
So You Want To Be An Expert In Global Health?
How do you know if you are the right kind of person to specialise in Global Health following on from your degree or other professional qualification? According to experts from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine your background could be from any of a number of disciplines: including science and medicine, but [...]
Health Symposium: Dr. Fraser Mustard, Dr. Bruce Lanphear and Dr. Charlotte Waddell
Faculty of Health Sciences Health Symposium featuring the inaugural Dr. Cam Coady Foundation Lecture Series in Health Issues.
Speakers:
Dr. Fraser Mustard
Dr. Cam Coady Foundation Lecturer
The Canadian Leader about the socioeconomic determinants of human development and health.
Founding President of the Canadian Institute for Advance Research (CIFAR).
Head of the CIFAR Founder's network.
"The Experience-based Brain and Human Development"
Dr. Bruce Lanphear
Professor of Children's Environment
Education 320: Teaching PE & Health, Elementary Education - Dance!
Class Session 4, recorded October 15, 2010
Education 320: Teaching PE & Health, Elementary Education - Group Presentations
Class Session 5, recorded October 22, 2010
IT Specialist
Felix is an IT specialist at IBM - "that involves anything from doing designing, implementing, building or testing a computer system." Video with transcript.
Decline of infant mortality in England and Wales, 1871-1948 : a medical conundrum
This is a Web page detailing the context, range and availability of the 'Decline of Infant Mortality in England and Wales, 1871-1948: a Medical Conundrum' dataset hosted by the History Data Service (HDS), based at the UK Data Archive University of Essex (formerly part of the Arts and Humanities Data Service - AHDS). The data is available to order from the HDS as an excel file. From this Web page you may download a PDF of images of the study documentation. To make use of this dataset you must fir
Small and Special
The Small and Special website provides free access to the results of a project into the early development of The Hospital for Sick Children at Great Ormond Street, in London, which was England's first in-patient hospital for children. The project to analyse the patient registers of the hospital from 1852 to 1914 has been carried out in partnership with Kingston University and funded partly by the Wellcome Trust. Through this easy to use site it is possible to trace patients or members of staff a
Vulnerable patients, safe doctors : good practice in our clinical relationships
This document is one in a series of College Reports (previously known as Council Reports) prepared and made available on the Web by the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych). Published in 2007, this report focuses on the therapeutic relationship and places emphasis on the vulnerability of the patient and on the corresponding responsibility of the doctor to the patient. It sets out the principles that should underlie any therapeutic relationship, whether working with families, couples or indiv
American Academy of Ophthalmology : preferred practice patterns (PPPs)
Preferred Practice Patterns (PPPs) of quality eye care are developed by a panel of ophthalmologists and made available on the Web by the American Academy of Ophthalmology. The PPPs can currently (June 2010) be browsed by the following subspecialties, cataract/anterior segment; glaucoma; cornea/external disease; comprehensive ophthalmology; retina/vitreous; refractive management/intervention; and paediatric ophthalmology/strabismus. PPPs are reviewed annually and are valid for five years from














