The HPV Vaccine Controversy: Sex, Cancer, God, and Politics: A Guide for Parents, Women, Men, and Teenagers
Autor Shobha S. Krishnan M.D.en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 aug 2008 – vârsta până la 17 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780313350115
ISBN-10: 0313350116
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0313350116
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Notă biografică
Shobha S. Krishnan, MD is Staff Physician at Columbia University's Barnard College Health Services. A board certified gynecologist and family practice physician, she has also worked as a surveillance physician for the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Prior to joining Barnard, she was in private practice for 10 years. In addition, Dr. Krishnan has worked as a physician at the Institute on Aging, and as Chief Resident in the Family Practice Department at St. Vincent Hospital, Indianapolis.
Cuprins
AcknowledgementsAuthor's Note1.The HPV Vaccine Controversy: Science versus Faith2. HPV Transmission and Natural History: A Silent Epidemic3. Risk Factors and Testing: Knowledge is Power4. Cancers, Warts and HPV: From Head and Neck Lesions to Cervical, Penile, and Anal Diseases5. Emotional Aspects and Prevention of HPV: Shame, and Blame, and Absence of Cure6. The New HPV Vaccines: History, Recommendations and Limitations7. HPV Vaccines for Males: The Unsolved Half of the Equation8. FAQ's on HPV and the Vaccines: Excerpts from a University Town Hall Meeting9. Parent's Dilemma to Vaccinate: A Physician Mother's Perspective10. Vaccines on the Global Front: Unique Challenges and OpportunitiesInternet ResourcesReferences
Recenzii
This book is packed full of information. It should be a tool for parents and for health classes in high school, as to teach all teenagers the dangers of sexually transmitted diseases / infections and to also encourage both parents and teenagers to be open and honest in regards to their sexual activity. This book contains so much needed information, from the cause to the treatment, and also the vaccine itself. If I had a teenager, or a child in puberty I would definitely use this book as a learning tool. As a nurse, of course I find any writing related to Health care very beneficial, but that said, shouldn't all parents be informing their children not only the importance of abstinence but also some of the consequences that accompany their sexual urges? This book also delves into the vaccine aspects for both males and females. This book contains much needed information and also gives references and Internet resources. This book is easy for the layman to understand, and also contains a glossary.
Recommended for academic/medical libraries and comprehensive collections at public libraries. . . . Gynecologist Krishnan (Barnard Coll. Heath Svcs., Columbia Univ.) provides admirable and balanced coverage of the controversy and science involved. She discusses her own decision to have her daughter vaccinated and whether or not she believes it promotes promiscuity.
A great book for anyone dealing with sexuality issues, as well as for the occasional lay reader who wants to know more detailed information about HPV and its vaccine. There is far too much information in this book for me to cover it all, but many college health providers will find the chapter on issues surrounding HPV infections in men to be unique and quite helpful. Many college health practitioners may not know the following: women actually get more anal cancer from HPV infections than men; an anal Pap test is available; visual inspection of the cervix with acetic acid techniques are being used in the developing world as a cost-effective alternative to Pap tests; the teenage cervix is the most vulnerable to HPV infections and other sexually transmitted diseases.'
Krishnan offers a well-written, easy-to-understand book that does a super job of providing timely, relevant information regarding human papillomavirus (HPV). Chapters treat transmission, effects on the human body, prevention, and how the virus causes cancer. The author, both a gynecologist and family practice physician, does an outstanding job of explaining the controversy surrounding the vaccine, and has brought to light a rarely discussed issue: why males/boys are not mentioned in the vaccination plans, when according to the date cited HPV causes almost as many cancers in men as in women . . . this volume will be a very valuable acquisition for public, two-year community college, four-year university/college, and consumer health libraries.
Shobha Krishnan's The HPV Vaccine Controversy is a welcome and much-needed book authored at a critical time. . . . Krishnan's book does a masterful job of organizing the complex and expansive HPV literature into well-organized chapters . . . a superb book for any person who wants to be introduced to this fascinating field as well as for the more experienced clinician or health educator who wants to get a fresh and renewed perspective. . . . This is a much-needed reference source for parents who want more information and explanations before making the decision as to whether to give the vaccination to their children, as well as for concerned parents who have pressing questions and want full and detailed answers. . . . This book is a terrific contribution, and individuals involved in the HPV field should be grateful for its publication.
The book is impressive in the vast area covered, the questions answered, and the controversies raised. The author provides an unbiased view and is honest about what we don't know. The key facts at the end of each chapter help identify the take-home points, and the glossary and figures help emphasize pertinent information. . . . This is good addition to the books explaining HPV. It attempts to provide a complete source of information without directing patients and parents to multiple sources and sites. It covers just about everything patients and parents want to know about HPV.'
Although this book is billed for lay people I am sure adolescent health physicians and nurses will also find it very useful. It is an excellent, precise summary of the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) and its role in cancer formation in the genital tract, and lays out the science behind the vaccine very simply and clearly. The author handles the advice on the role of sexual behaviour, infection and prevention in a very well balanced way and the FAQ section is very helpful, and even the men are included. I thoroughly recommend this book to everyone interested in sexual health especially as it relates to HPV. All clinics that see young people should have a copy of this brilliant book.
The subtitle includes A Guide for Parents, Women, Men, and Teenagers. However, this book is also an excellent resource for health professionals; it is a fact-based and balanced approach to the HPV vaccine controversy and achieves her aim of having 'the reader become well-informed and educated with the disease manifestations of HPV and the roles of the new vaccines.'
This book by Shobha Krishnan comes at a time when everyone, medical professionals and laymen alike, need to be educated on all aspects of HPV infection so that they have a better understanding of the disease process. . . . The book makes for good reading, and is thoroughly researched, handy and lucid in style. It will be useful to all those involved in the field of HPV, including those who make healthcare policies, as well as to parents, students and religious leaders. We congratulate Dr. Krishnan for this constructive and valuable contribution to the medical literature.
I believe much of Krishnan's success in spreading the word about HPV lies in her method of delivery. Rather than projecting her own personal views on the reader, she objectively and sensitively presents the facts and allows her readers to formulate their own stance. Readers come away from The HPV Vaccine Controversy feeling passionately about what they can do to combat HPV, empowered to make informed health care decisions, and better equipped to advocate for patients.
Dr Krishnan does an outstanding job of explaining that the HPV vaccine is prophylactic not therapeutic. . . . she provides a superb discussion on counseling patients with HPV infections. . . . The HPV Vaccine Controversy is a useful guide for the clinician and for the lay public.
Recommended for academic/medical libraries and comprehensive collections at public libraries. . . . Gynecologist Krishnan (Barnard Coll. Heath Svcs., Columbia Univ.) provides admirable and balanced coverage of the controversy and science involved. She discusses her own decision to have her daughter vaccinated and whether or not she believes it promotes promiscuity.
A great book for anyone dealing with sexuality issues, as well as for the occasional lay reader who wants to know more detailed information about HPV and its vaccine. There is far too much information in this book for me to cover it all, but many college health providers will find the chapter on issues surrounding HPV infections in men to be unique and quite helpful. Many college health practitioners may not know the following: women actually get more anal cancer from HPV infections than men; an anal Pap test is available; visual inspection of the cervix with acetic acid techniques are being used in the developing world as a cost-effective alternative to Pap tests; the teenage cervix is the most vulnerable to HPV infections and other sexually transmitted diseases.'
Krishnan offers a well-written, easy-to-understand book that does a super job of providing timely, relevant information regarding human papillomavirus (HPV). Chapters treat transmission, effects on the human body, prevention, and how the virus causes cancer. The author, both a gynecologist and family practice physician, does an outstanding job of explaining the controversy surrounding the vaccine, and has brought to light a rarely discussed issue: why males/boys are not mentioned in the vaccination plans, when according to the date cited HPV causes almost as many cancers in men as in women . . . this volume will be a very valuable acquisition for public, two-year community college, four-year university/college, and consumer health libraries.
Shobha Krishnan's The HPV Vaccine Controversy is a welcome and much-needed book authored at a critical time. . . . Krishnan's book does a masterful job of organizing the complex and expansive HPV literature into well-organized chapters . . . a superb book for any person who wants to be introduced to this fascinating field as well as for the more experienced clinician or health educator who wants to get a fresh and renewed perspective. . . . This is a much-needed reference source for parents who want more information and explanations before making the decision as to whether to give the vaccination to their children, as well as for concerned parents who have pressing questions and want full and detailed answers. . . . This book is a terrific contribution, and individuals involved in the HPV field should be grateful for its publication.
The book is impressive in the vast area covered, the questions answered, and the controversies raised. The author provides an unbiased view and is honest about what we don't know. The key facts at the end of each chapter help identify the take-home points, and the glossary and figures help emphasize pertinent information. . . . This is good addition to the books explaining HPV. It attempts to provide a complete source of information without directing patients and parents to multiple sources and sites. It covers just about everything patients and parents want to know about HPV.'
Although this book is billed for lay people I am sure adolescent health physicians and nurses will also find it very useful. It is an excellent, precise summary of the Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) and its role in cancer formation in the genital tract, and lays out the science behind the vaccine very simply and clearly. The author handles the advice on the role of sexual behaviour, infection and prevention in a very well balanced way and the FAQ section is very helpful, and even the men are included. I thoroughly recommend this book to everyone interested in sexual health especially as it relates to HPV. All clinics that see young people should have a copy of this brilliant book.
The subtitle includes A Guide for Parents, Women, Men, and Teenagers. However, this book is also an excellent resource for health professionals; it is a fact-based and balanced approach to the HPV vaccine controversy and achieves her aim of having 'the reader become well-informed and educated with the disease manifestations of HPV and the roles of the new vaccines.'
This book by Shobha Krishnan comes at a time when everyone, medical professionals and laymen alike, need to be educated on all aspects of HPV infection so that they have a better understanding of the disease process. . . . The book makes for good reading, and is thoroughly researched, handy and lucid in style. It will be useful to all those involved in the field of HPV, including those who make healthcare policies, as well as to parents, students and religious leaders. We congratulate Dr. Krishnan for this constructive and valuable contribution to the medical literature.
I believe much of Krishnan's success in spreading the word about HPV lies in her method of delivery. Rather than projecting her own personal views on the reader, she objectively and sensitively presents the facts and allows her readers to formulate their own stance. Readers come away from The HPV Vaccine Controversy feeling passionately about what they can do to combat HPV, empowered to make informed health care decisions, and better equipped to advocate for patients.
Dr Krishnan does an outstanding job of explaining that the HPV vaccine is prophylactic not therapeutic. . . . she provides a superb discussion on counseling patients with HPV infections. . . . The HPV Vaccine Controversy is a useful guide for the clinician and for the lay public.