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Her Doctor Prescribes Dancing at Daybreak
Are diseased people allowed to have fun in a doctors office? A clinic door swings wide open revealing fervent yet fragile exchange between a one-breasted Gentile and her Jewish medicine man. An unusual prescription for Dancing at Daybreak sparks lively conversation which is not easy to transfer onto paper, but author Connie Titus tries. God knows she tries. Intimate letters record ten years of private, playful encounters. Doctor and Patient yoke together to accomplish serious work, yet zany humor pops up causing wild and merry disarray in a professional setting. Patient writes prescriptions for the Doctor, counsel flows both ways, and they manage each others well-being. Who is healing whom? Although Patient is tempted to choke her licensed professional for his various commands, Dancing at Daybreak (at surfs edge) turns out to be one grand idea. Prayers do, indeed, reach the Ocean Maker. Final result: Doctor and Patienttwo changed people..
Price: $11.32
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Mastering the New York Intermediate Level Math Test: Diagnose--Prescribe--Practice Workbook, Grade 7
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Health Coaching in Primary Care: Persuading Physicians to Prescribe Behavior Change and Self-Efficacy
Relationships are important in healthcare perhaps none more so than the physician-patient bond. Until now, these encounters have largely been focused on treating illness, not preventing it. But as healthcare acknowledges the clinical and cost benefits from health coaching in disease and health management, some experts say that primary care is ripe for the same change. In addition to dispensing clinical advice, it may also be time for primary care physicians (PCPs) to prescribe physical activity, smoking cessation and other healthy habits to guide patients toward self-efficacy. In this special report, "Health Coaching in Primary Care: Persuading Physicians to Prescribe Behavior Change and Self-Efficacy," three health coaching thought leaders detail their models for incorporating health coaching into the primary care paradigm. While acknowledging existing demands on busy physicians, they recommend that PCPs school themselves in health promotion and make coaching a team effort to foster behavior change in members and patients. But for this effort to be successful, physicians need a dose of their own medicine, embracing healthy habits themselves "walking the walk" so they can effectively "talk the talk" with patients. In this 35-page special report, contributing authors Dr. Rick Botelho, professor of family medicine at the URMC Family Medicine Center, Margaret Moore, CEO, Wellcoaches Corporation and Dr. Edward Phillips, director of outpatient medical services at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital Network and assistant professor of the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Harvard Medical School, describe how to leverage the trusted clinician relationship to reinforce behavior change. They provide details on: -Moving practitioners from "fixers" to "motivators"; -Why healthy physicians don't automatically make the best coaches; -Teaching physicians to "walk the walk" and "talk the talk" without alienating patients; -Creating blended learning methods to support a team approach to health coaching; -Identifying the 10 common mistakes health plans and disease management organizations make and 10 strategies to correct them; -Developing a culture of health promotion in a physician practice and the training effort to support it; -Two physician-training initiatives aimed at improving health promotion and disease prevention by physicians; -Rudiments of a Lifestyle Clinic; and much more..
Price: $115.00
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Mastering the New York Intermediate Level Math Test: Diagnose--Prescribe--Practice Workbook, Grade 6
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Panel prescribes simpler medicare E/M coding descriptors. (CMS Could Lighten Documentation Load).: An article from: Clinical Psychiatry News
This digital document is an article from Clinical Psychiatry News, published by International Medical News Group on October 1, 2002. The length of the article is 643 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser. Citation DetailsTitle: Panel prescribes simpler medicare E/M coding descriptors. (CMS Could Lighten Documentation Load). Author: Jennifer Silverman Publication:Clinical Psychiatry News (Magazine/Journal) Date: October 1, 2002 Publisher: International Medical News Group Volume: 30 Issue: 10 Page: 74(1) Distributed by Thomson Gale.
Price: $5.95
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