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      • Trusted Partner
      • Trusted Partner
        September 2022

        eure paläste sind leer (all we ever wanted)

        eine missa in cantu

        by Thomas Köck

        Die Statuen gestürzt, die Kolonien aufgelöst, die Bediensteten entflohen, im Ballsaal Hermeline, Wurzeln durchschlagen das Treppenhaus, die Paläste verfallen, der Kapitalismus raucht noch eine, blutleer, das Anthropozän hustet irritiert und dazwischen flüstert noch irgendjemand: aber ich habe dich doch geliebt.Thomas Köck bewegt sich in unterschiedlichen Szenarien und Zeitebenen, die sich über eine exzessive Suche nach Liebe und Macht, Erlösung und Transzendenz miteinander verbinden: Im brasilianischen Dschungel um 1550 sind Konquistadoren im Namen Gottes und der Krone unterwegs, unterwerfen rücksichtslos Menschen und Natur, auf der Suche nach Eldorado. Im Amerika unserer Tage grassiert eine Opioid-Krise, die Menschen faden einfach aus, am Fließband, in ihrem Auto, in ihren Villen, die Venen und Münder offen, die Konzerne auf Kursgewinn. Und dazwischen immer wieder geflüstert die Einsicht: alles haben wir gewusst, nichts haben wir gemacht. Ohnmächtige Seher:innen durchschreiten die Höllenkreise in dieser missa in cantu, ein mächtiger, melancholischer Gesang, in den immer mehr Stimmen und Erinnerungen einfallen.

      • Trusted Partner
        April 2022

        Silent Killers

        How Big Food Risks Our Health

        by Wilfried Bommert, Christina Sartori

        Addiction from the supermarket The most powerful drug cartel of the 21st century sells pizzas, chocolate bars and mixed sweets. The promise: a quick and happy snack at low cost. The truth: this “food” isn’t nutritious, but is addictive and fattening, while bringing bumper profits for the investors. “Big Food” is becoming more powerful, but the costs due to the consequences of obesity now risk overwhelming global healthcare services. Obesity ranks as a killer before smoking or high blood pressure. A direct analysis of a man-made epidemic that is dominated by a few large companies and kept going by multiple profiteers. Their motto: “Teach the world to snack.”

      • Trusted Partner
        Science & Mathematics
        December 2021

        Broom and Fraser's Domestic Animal Behaviour and Welfare

        by Donald Broom

        Completely updated and revised, and synthesizing the recent explosion in animal welfare literature, the sixth edition of this best-selling textbook continues to provide a thorough overview of behaviour and welfare of companion and farm animals, including fish. The introductory section has been completely revised, with all following chapters updated, redesigned and improved to reflect our changing understanding. This edition includes: - New and revised chapters on climate change and sustainability, ethics, and philosophy to ensure that the book provides the latest information in a changing world; - New information on human interactions with other animal species, big data, modern technologies, brain function, emotions and behaviour; - Solutions and advice for common abnormal behaviours. Written by a world-leading expert and key opinion leader in animal behaviour and welfare, this text provides a highly accessible guide to the subject. It is an essential foundation for any veterinary, animal science, animal behaviour or welfare-focused undergraduate or graduate course.

      • Medicine
        April 2018

        Pain Management and the Opioid Epidemic

        Balancing Societal and Individual Benefits and Risks of Prescription Opioid Use

        by National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, Health and Medicine Division, Board on Health Sciences Policy, Committee on Pain Management and Regulatory Strategies to Address Opioid Abuse, Jonathan K. Phillips, Morgan A. Ford, Richard J. Bonnie

        Millions of Americans experience acute and/or chronic painful conditions each year, many of whom are prescribed opioids to help them manage their pain. While the vast majority of people who are prescribed opioids do not misuse or intend to misuse these drugs, like illicit opioids such as heroin, prescription opioids trigger biochemical processes in the brain that can be experienced as pleasurable and rewarding beyond the effect of pain relief. Because of these rewarding properties, opioids pose a risk of addiction to pain patients and, often at no fault of those to whom they are prescribed, make their way into the hands of people for whom they were not intended, including illicit markets. The risks associated with use of prescription opioids (addiction, overdose) and the consequences of these for families, health care and social service providers, and others therefore manifest not only among pain patients but at a broader societal level. Balancing the appropriate use of opioids in the context of the often sub-optimal clinical management of pain, in the fragmented health care delivery system of the United States, is a complex endeavor. Pain Management and the Opioid Epidemic explores incorporating public health considerations into regulatory decisions for opioids, while preserving appropriate access for those individuals who will most benefit from their use. This report provides a framework that will enable a more circumspect approach to regulatory decisions for opioids.

      • April 2019

        Integrating Responses at the Intersection of Opioid Use Disorder and Infectious Disease Epidemics

        Proceedings of a Workshop

        by National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, Health and Medicine Division, Board on Population Health and Public Health Practice, Anna Nicholson

        According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 115 Americans die each day from an opioid overdose, which averages one death every 12.5 minutes. Between 1999 and 2016, the number of drug overdoses catapulted by 300 percent, with injection drug use increasing by 93 percent between 2004 and 2014 and opioid-related hospital admissions increasing by 58 percent over the past decade. And an inexorable sequela of the opioid epidemic is the spread of infectious diseases. To address these infectious disease consequences of the opioid crisis, a public workshop titled Integrating Infectious Disease Considerations with Response to the Opioid Epidemic was convened on March 12 and 13, 2018, by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. Participants discussed strategies to prevent and treat infections in people who inject drugs, especially ways to work efficiently though the existing public health and medical systems. This publication summarizes the presentations and discussions from the workshop.

      • Fiction

        Now Lila Knows

        by Elizabeth Nunez

        Lila Bonnard has left her island home in the Caribbean to join the faculty as a visiting professor at Mayfield College in a small Vermont town. On her way from the airport to Mayfield, Lila witnesses the fatal shooting of a Black man by the police. It turns out that the victim was a professor at Mayfield College, and he was giving CPR to a white woman who was on the verge of an opioid overdose. The two Black faculty and a Black administrator in the otherwise all-white college expect Lila to be a witness in the case against the police, but Lila fears that in the current hostile political climate against immigrants of color she may jeopardize her position at the college by speaking out, and her fiancé advises her to remain neutral. Now Lila Knows is a gripping story that explores our obligation to act when confronted with the unfair treatment of fellow human beings. A page-turner with universal resonance, this novel will leave readers rethinking the meaning of love and empathy.

      • The Big Hustle: A Boston Street Kid's Story of Addiction and Redemption

        by Jim Wahlberg

        When Jim Wahlberg went to prison the second time, he was sentenced for breaking and entering. He had staggered into a Boston cop’s apartment, helping himself to the sellable stuff and all the beer in the fridge. But Wahlberg knew that if he wanted to avoid serving the full sentence, he would do what he was best at: He hustled creating the illusion that he was trying to change. He didn’t know that a Catholic priest he was trying to hustle was hustling him. The Big Hustle is the story of a redeemed life and a family’s healing. This is the no-holds-barred true story of Jim Wahlberg hustling for attention led him to the biggest hustle of his life. Against all odds he got clean, he got out, and he got the girl. Jim dedicated his life to working with addicts. Nothing could have prepared him for what came next. His discovery that his own son was an addict threw Jim into a crisis—one that led him deeper into his faith and led to healing he never thought possible. This is a testament to God’s power and an invitation to all of us to hope in the darkest places.

      • Fiction

        Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms

        Stories and Essays

        by Tim McLoughlin

        In Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, Tim McLoughlin draws upon his three-decade career in the criminal justice system with his characteristic wit and his fascination with misfits and malfeasance. A lifetime living and working in New York City feeds short stories that evoke a landscape of characters rife with personal arrogance and misjudgment; and nonfiction essays about toeing the line when the line keeps disappearing. An opioid-addicted catsitter electronically eavesdrops on his neighbors only to hear devastating truths. A degenerate gambler stakes his life on a long shot because he sees three lucky numbers on the license plate of a passing car. In the nonfiction essays, we learn that the system plays a role in supporting vice, as long as it gets a cut. Altar boys compete to work weddings and funerals for tips in the shadow of predatory priests. Cops become robbers, and a mob boss just might be a civil rights icon. McLoughlin shines a light on worlds that few have access to. Always urban, often New York–centric, in his work a recurring theme is chronic displacement, people standing still in a city that is always changing. These are McLoughlin’s ghosts, these casualties of progress, and he holds them dear and celebrates them.

      • 2019

        Strange Trips

        Science, Culture, and the Regulation of Drugs

        by Lucas Richert

        This book examines the boundaries between recreational and medicinal drugs in the eyes of the public and law. Drugs take strange journeys from the black market to the doctor's black bag. Changing marijuana laws in the US and Canada, the opioid crisis, and the rising costs of pharmaceuticals have sharpened the public's awareness of drug regulation. Weaving together stories of consumer resistance and government control, Strange Trips offers timely recommendations for future drug regulation.To learn more about this publisher, click here: http://bit.ly/2K2LUuO

      • Science & Mathematics
        January 2020

        Drugs without the hot air

        Making sense of legal and illegal drugs

        by David Nutt

        The dangers of illegal drugs are well known and rarely disputed, but how harmful are alcohol and tobacco by comparison? What are we missing by banning medical research into magic mushrooms, LSD and cannabis? Can they be sources of valuable treatments? The new expanded and revised second edition of Drugs without the hot air looks at the science to allow anyone to make rational decisions based on objective evidence, asking:•What is addiction? Is there an addictive personality?•What is the role of cannabis in treating epilepsy?•How harmful is vaping?•How can psychedelics treat depression?•Where is the opioid crisis taking us?

      • Neurology & clinical neurophysiology
        February 2012

        Analgesics for Cancer Pain

        by Frank Porreca, Tamara King

        Although current pain management techniques are efficacious in many patients, there remain many patients in whom pain is inadequately controlled. This eight-chapter work from internationally recognized experts provides a thorough overview of this challenging and topical issue. The book’s first chapter examines the complexity of clinical cancer pain, the importance of proper assessment for adequate treatment, barriers to effective pain relief and approaches toward better understanding of the patient’s therapeutic needs. Many patients reporting moderate to severe cancer pain are treated with opioid analgesics, and options for such therapies are discussed in following chapters. Various adjuvant analgesics for cancer pain are also addressed and there is discussion of the issue of breakthrough pain, outlining its definition and assessment. The final two chapters address emerging analgesics and future directions.

      • March 2021

        Be Kind, Be Calm, Be Safe

        by Bonnie Henry and Lynn Henry

        Dr. Bonnie Henry, “one of the most effective public health figures in the world” (The New York Times), earned accolades in 2020 for her consistent, calm, empathetic, and science-based public health strategy in the face of COVID 19, embodied in the phrase “Be kind, be calm, be safe.” This is the story of the four key weeks in spring during which British Columbia flattened the curve while other places struggled, and of the challenging weeks in summer when the infection returned with a vengeance.   This is not only a medical story; it's a personal story punctuated by moments of gravity and grace. Public health officials are required to make personally agonizing decisions in the face of incomplete information and competing health priorities; we glimpse the private deliberations behind policies that affect millions. This is a universal story about how we make decisions (and who makes them) in times of great upheaval; the nuances of communication, leadership, and public trust; the balance between politics and policy; and what and whom we value, as individuals and a society. It's also about Henry’s deceptively simply slogan, and what it requires from all of us to “be kind, be calm, be safe.”

      • Loveoid

        by JL Morin

        This cli-fi love story is a Cygnus 1st Place Sci-fi Award Winner; Book Excellence Award Finalist, Erotica; ScreenCraft Semifinalist (top 12% of submissions); Fish shortlist (top 4% of submissions); Global Thriller Book Awards for High Stakes and Lab Lit Novels shortlist   An American euthanasist and an Egyptian astrological farmer delve into the evolution of the collective soul ... as an extremophile virus targets a select few.   The twisted scientific changes of our present-day lives catalyze love in parallel universes, as love-lacking predators on top kill off life on earth. Loveoid grapples with the dilemmas of the latest generation of humankind ⎯ that the loving don't survive. In the present-day novel Loveoid, Olivia unravels a virus that only harms the corporate elite. In combat with media, governments and corporations, Olivia finds love, and comes to question her own ideals. The impossibly mixed match encounters life-threatening obstacles, as Khalid elicits her darkest fears, yet lights the way with astrological farming and ancient holistic remedies. Will love allow them to stay human?   "Loveoid is a wildly unique and immensely realized science fiction thriller set in a dystopian present in which overpopulation is decimating the Earth and its natural resources at a rapid rate. Additionally, the world of the story is incredibly deep, filled with dense detail and nuance that give the impression of a very realized universe."   ⎯ScreenCraft   "With a new, scary virus as the backdrop, Olivia and Khalid navigate love, cures, and a different world. A timely novel with an interesting message about love and nature."    ⎯Booklist   "The smart choice to set this eco-thriller in the present brings home the tenebrous climate prognostications we usually reserve for another year." ⎯Brussels Express   "As overpopulation grows, natural resources are depleted, species go extinct, and the polar ice caps continue to melt. People now check into euthanasia hotels to escape a hopeless future.... The story's premise is interesting."⎯Library Journal   "Morin's wit can be delicious"  ⎯Canberra Times, Australia   "I take heart from her ethereal intuition: true love is what eventually will separate man from vegetable."  ⎯Andreas Bergsten, Author, The Rift   "About time some serious writers and artists grappling with the biggest issue of our time--maybe all time. This story shows that engagement is fully underway!"   ⎯Bill McKibben, Founder 350.org     JL Morin grew up in inner-city Detroit. She proffered moral support while her parents sacrificed all to a failed system. Wondering what the Japanese were doing right, she decamped to Tokyo. Her debut Japan novel, Sazzae, won an eLit Gold Medal, and a Living Now Book Award. Her second novel, Travelling Light, was a USA Best Book Awards finalist, and her third, Trading Dreams, became ‘Occupy’s first bestselling novel’. Her climate fiction novel, Nature’s Confession, won first place in the Dante Rossetti Book Awards; a Readers’ Favorite Book Award; a LitPick 5-Star Review Award; and an excerpt received an Honorable Mention in the Eco-Fiction Story Contest, published in the Winds of Change anthology of eco-fiction. Her second cli-fi novel, Loveoid, is a Cygnus Sci-fi 1st place winner, among others. Her cli-fi novels are on course syllabi at many universities. Ivy League professors have facilitated discussions with JL Morin’s writing, and it is discussed in textbooks, such as Science Fiction and Climate Change: A Sociological Approach, by Andrew Milner, ‎and J. R. Burgmann, 2020, published by Oxford University Press. Her most recent work, Tuck-a-tuck Dragon, is a diverse rhyming children’s book illustrated by children throughout their childhood from the ages of 2–21. JL Morin’s writing draws on a breadth of experience. She traded derivatives in New York while studying nights for her MBA at New York University’s Stern School of Business; worked for the Federal Reserve Bank posted to the 103rd floor of the World Trade Center; presented the news as a TV broadcaster; and she is adjunct faculty at Boston University. Morin’s fiction has appeared in The Harvard Advocate and Harvard Yisei, and her articles and translations in The Huffington Post, Library Journal, The Detroit News, European Daily, Livonia Observer Eccentric Newspapers, The Harvard Crimson, and Agence France Presse while she worked in their Middle East Headquarters.

      • Medicine
        December 1997

        Dispelling the Myths About Addiction

        Strategies to Increase Understanding and Strengthen Research

        by Committee to Identify Strategies to Raise the Profile of Substance Abuse and Alcoholism Research, Institute of Medicine

        Every year about half a million men, women, and children in the United States die from the effects of using nicotine, alcohol, and illegal drugs: one of every four American deaths. Yet research to solve this terrible problem is often perceived as less important than other types of biomedical investigation. Focusing on four major classes of drugs with the greatest social and economic impact--nicotine, alcohol, opioids, and stimulants--Dispelling the Myths About Addiction examines what is known about addiction and what is needed to develop a talented cadre of investigators and to educate the public about addiction research. The committee explores these areas: Economic costs of addiction. What has been learned about addiction from research into basic neurobiology and the brain, psychosocial and behavioral factors, and epidemiology. Education and training of researchers and the research infrastructure. Public perceptions and their impact on public policy in this field. This volume outlines the challenges and opportunities in addiction research today and makes recommendations to educators, treatment professionals, public and private institutions, and others for how to build support for addiction research and treatment.

      • May 2022

        Essential Guide to Psychedelic Renaissance

        All you need to know about how psilocybin, MDMA and LSD are revolutionizing mental health and changing lives

        by Antón Gómez-Escolar

        In this guide you will learn all the essentials about the history, neuroscience,legality, therapeutic applications and harm reduction of the most promisingpsychedelic drugs for science. After decades of international prohibitionthese molecules are returning to laboratories and clinics, hand in hand withthe most rigorous science, to revolutionize the way we understand and treatmental health (depression, anxiety, PTSD and addictions). Discover the worldof psilocybin, MDMA, DMT, ketamine and LSD, before society immerses in thisrevolution, which will forever change the perception we have of psychedelics.This guide will be of interest to both therapists and other mental healthprofessionals interested in the clinical applications, parents and educatorsseeking to understand the impact and safety of psychedelics and other drugs,as well as any adult curious to learn about and explore this new world of thepsychedelic renaissance.

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