Health 6 To 9 Arts Education Grade 9; Arts Education secondary Level; English It provides adviceon health, hygiene and good 12th birthday, hoping it will teach him some http://www.sasked.gov.sk.ca/curr_inst/iru/bibs/update01/health69.html
Extractions: Appropriate Actions: A Guide for Educators on Dealing With Sexual Harassment (Video). National Film Board of Canada (NFB), 1998. 27 min. Order no. C9197155 ($39.95). (CAN) This video could be useful for school boards, school division administrators, principals and staff when developing and implementing a policy concerning sexual harassment. The program provides a definition of sexual harassment and illustrates examples of it in schools. It also emphasizes how teaching becomes less effective in an environment plagued by sexual harassment. Suggested Use: Grade 9 - Safety at School, at Home, and in the Community Beans on Toast (Print-Fiction). Hrdlitschka, Shelley. Orca Book Publishers Ltd. (LRDC) , 1998. 122 p. Order no. 17978 ($7.50 pbk.). (CAN) At an eventful summer camp, 13-year-old Madison begins to cope with the repercussions of her parents. divorce and her subsequent move with her mother from Alberta to British Columbia. Camp proves to provide a positive, growing experience that Madison did not expect! Appealing black-and-white sketches enhance this realistic chapter book.
LVH-ATOD as a positive way to teach young people to drink, and primary and secondary preventiontechniques for community, education, and health professionals http://www.preventionpathways.org/Library/lvhaod.htm
Extractions: Acquaintance rape, drugs and you Interviews with counselors, survivors and a detective warn young people of this terrible violation. Also learn the role of drugs in the attacks. Teens. 18 min. 09/02 Drugs. Aftermath Olympic diver Bruce Kimball drove his car into a group of teens gathered on a dead-end road. His blood alcohol content was twice the legal limit. Deals with grief and agony experienced as a result of an alcohol related crash. Guide. Jr High-Adult, 25 min. Drunk Driving. Alcohol and the brain. Teens-Adults. 30 min. Alcoholism. And down will come baby Promotes zero tolerance for alcohol, tobacco, and other drugs for all pregnant women. Applicable for teens who are at risk for both umplanned pregnancy and substance abuse. Teens,17 min, Prevention. Before you get into this (car) WATCH THIS Madd Safe-Driving Video. Celebrities help this high-impact video combine the strongest deterents against drinking and driving. You'll experience the pain and suffering of family and friends attending the funeral of a promising teen whose life was snuffed out by a drunk driver. You'll see actual demonstrations of the decrease in driver performance from one drink. Teens, 20 min. Drunk Driving.
Extractions: The N.C. Biotechnology Center recently awarded nearly $25,000 to Western Carolina University in Cullowhee for equipment and supplies that will enable college and high school students from the western half of the state to get hands-on experience in molecular genetics research. "For some time, the university has been interested in developing a biotechnology program, both for its students and as a means of providing the Western North Carolina region with new opportunities for economic growth," said Wesley Bonds, an assistant professor of chemistry who leads the biotech efforts at the college. The money will pay for new laboratory equipment, which will be used with the existing DNA sequencers at Western Carolina University to teach undergraduate and graduate chemistry courses.
Health And Health Care In Schools - November 2000 and authorizes federal funds to teach young people in the facilities of any elementaryor secondary school Blood Institute of the National Institutes of health. http://www.healthinschools.org/ejournal/november_print.htm
Extractions: Vol 1, No 9 - November 2000 Advocates Charge States Aren't Using Settlement Money for Tobacco Prevention The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids and the American Cancer, Heart, and Lung Associations joined in October to tell a Senate committee that some states aren't living up to their promise to use tobacco settlement money to reduce the death toll from tobacco. "The tobacco settlement has resulted in an increase in the amount of money being spent on tobacco prevention and cessation, but the numbers are woefully short of what the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has concluded represents the absolute minimum to fund a truly effective, sustained comprehensive program," the associations testified at a hearing chaired by Senator John McCain (R-AZ). That's not what was envisioned in November 1998, the Campaign said, when 46 states and the tobacco industry settled the states' Medicaid lawsuits for recovery of their tobacco-related disease costs. The industry committed to paying the states approximately $206 billion over the next 25 years, with additional payments of $5 billion to 14 states to compensate them for potential harm to their tobacco-producing communities. That was a "unique opportunity to reduce the terrible burden exacted by tobacco on America's families and communities," but the states' levels of funding for prevention and cessation are "inconsistent with the magnitude of the problem," especially the near-record high rates of smoking by young people, the Campaign charged.
Books And Resources - Best Selling Health Titles used as a textbook for senior secondary courses in Choices please see health Educationfor Children and Teenagers for those who plan, manage, teach or work http://www.macmillan-africa.com/books/health1.htm
Extractions: Covering a wide range of diseases affecting the health of the villager and the treatments available, including home remedies and modern medicines, this is more than just a first aid book. Particular importance is placed on cleanliness, a healthy diet and vaccinations, as well as childbirth and family planning, and this new edition incorporates new information about AIDS, dengue, complications from abortion and drug addiction. Contents include: Home cures and popular beliefs; Sicknesses that are often confused; How to examine a sick person; How to take care of a sick person; Health without medicines; Right and wrong use of modern medicines; Antibiotics; How to measure and give medicine; Instructions and precautions for injections; First Aid; Nutrition; Prevention; Some very common sicknesses; Serious illnesses that need special medical attention; Skin problems; The Eyes; The Teeth, gums and mouth; The Urinary systems and the genitals; Information for mothers and midwives; Family planning; Health and sicknesses of children; Health and sicknesses of older people; The Medicine kit.
Alcoholism Drug Abuse Addiction Codependency Recovery courses provide an opportunity to teach history, sociology Drug Use and PsychologicalHealth A Longitudinal Drugs A Survey of Rural secondary School Students http://www.alcoholanddrugabuse.com/article_safety_first.html
HLTH3500asg 2001 Instructor Bud Cooper School of health Sciences Georgia within feetof a elementary/secondary school, park for the grade level you hope to teach. http://www.faculty.de.gcsu.edu/~bcooper/courses/HLTH_3500/hlth3500assign.html
Extractions: Welcome to your Internet assignment! This assignment is not difficult. However, it will require some time. You should not have any trouble finding the sites or the sections of the sites that I want you to explore. However, some websites are very transitory-here today and gone tomorrow. Hopefully this will not happen to the sites I have chosen. If you do have difficulty accessing a site, please email me. There are questions for you to answer and tasks for you to perform. If you are working at home on your own computer you may want to bookmark these sites in case you want to return to them later. For those of you who will access computers in libraries or computer labs you can always return to my homepage to access the links again while the assignment is still available. The easiest way for you to complete this assignment is to copy and paste the questions into a word processing document and type your answers in the spaces provided. This also allows you to copy and paste from the actual websites and save yourself some typing time. It is quite easy to move back and forth between a website and your word processing document. Hit the return key as many times as needed to create more space to type your answers. Please bold or underline your answers.
Student Code Of Conduct Emphasize the importance of good health. teach him ways to say no. 4877139. ExecutiveDirector of secondary Schools .. 487-7106. http://www.leon.k12.fl.us/student_code/31.htm
Extractions: Fax (850) 487 - 7141 Superintendent - William J. Montford, III Leon County School Board APPENDIX Prevention: Florida Alcohol and Drug Abuse Assoc.*+ 1030 E. Lafayette Street, Suite 100 Florida Education Center Room 4332 325 W. Gaines Street Florida Prevention Assoc.*+ 111 Beverly Court Girl Scout Council of the Apalachee Bend Positive Lifestyles for Women 250 Pinewood Drive Tallahassee, FL 32303 386-2093 Tallahassee Housing Authority 385-6126 227 N. Bronough St. Suite 1115 Tallahassee, FL 32301 224-5648 Intervention: Addiction Recovery Center Tallahassee Community Hospital 1835 Buford Court Apalachee Center for Human Services, Inc.
Addiction Fellowships Salary Source Primary secondary Minor Not at all Hospitals Midtown Community MentalHealth Center and The fellows have the chance to teach both residents http://www.med.nyu.edu/substanceabuse/felldes.html
Extractions: at New York University. The Center is sponsored by the American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry (AAAP), the Association for Medical Education and Research in Substance Abuse (AMERSA), and the American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM). Support for this project was provided by the Scaife Family Foundation. Click here to return to SUBSTANCE ABUSE home page This brochure was prepared by the Center for Medical Fellowships in Alcoholism and Drug Abuse at NYU,
The Quit Smoking Report 07/07/99 Here comes the speech therapist trying to teach me how to letters and decided it istime to improve my health. was Oh my God, is that from secondary smoke? I http://www.quitsmoking.com/ezine/report990707.htm
Extractions: December 31, 1999 As many as three out of four chemically dependent women have been sexually abused themselves while some women may have been abusers. Alcohol and other drugs cloud the memory, so as a woman becomes sober, distressing memories can begin to surface. Women need to understand that these experiences can be discussed with a counselor. This sample session is meant to empower women to name whatever has happened and to deal with it at whatever pace they choose. Because safety is the first stage of trauma recovery, it will help them feel safe talking about abuse. By raising the topic in this session, the facilitator will let the women know that it is okay for them to talk about sexual abuse. This is not an appropriate forum in which to ask the women to talk in detail about their experiences and, No one should be forced to speak on this topic that does not want to. Session Supplies
Pre And Post and to use genealogy to teach health behaviors, both the high school leaders andhealth instructors, process cancer care and cost using secondary linked data http://www.vcu.edu/mcc/research_info/massey_rp_cc_train_prog.htm
Extractions: Pre and Post Doctoral Training Program in Cancer Prevention and Control Massey Cancer Center Virginia Commonwealth University Post Doctoral Position Announcement Our Goals The goals for training in cancer control at MCC are similar to the goals of the Cancer Control Program. The overall goal of the training program is to provide pre-doctoral training in the areas of human genetics, biostatistics and psychology and post-doctoral training that will allow talented researchers to establish their careers as independent researchers in important areas of cancer control. The proposed program will establish unique multidisciplinary training that is not typical of any other cancer center and is founded in the unique opportunities at VCU and the unique surrounding environment of Richmond (Richmond and a large proportion of Virginia s rural areas are over 50% minority). The training program has five objectives: a) to develop a multidisciplinary integrated research training program with a broad range of research opportunities in cancer control b) to meet the needs of training in underserved research areas in cancer control such as psychiatric and behavioral genetics, and underserved populations
Mary Anne Salmon force component, created and will teach a unit secondary Data and Statistical Profilesof Older Rural in Gesler, Rabiner, and DeFriese, Rural health and Aging http://ssw.unc.edu/people/resume/msalmon.htm
Extractions: Professional experience 1993-Present Clinical Instructor , UNC School of Social Work. Taught Introduction to Research Methodology to students in the planned part-time program. 1988-Present Research Specialist , Center for Aging Research and Educational Services, UNC School of Social Work. Served as a member of a small inter-disciplinary team to do research, training, and technical consultation on issues involving the needs of older adults in North Carolina. Conducted survey research (from instrument design, to supervising coding, to analysis and report writing), coordinated and assumed primary authorship/ production role for selected research projects with a demographic and/or labor force component, created and will teach a unit on demographics and diversity in aging as part of the center's training in geriatrics for human services professionals serving adults public and private settings. Provided information and consultation in project evaluation to the state division of social services, state division of aging, and local public agencies throughout the state. Research Associate , Health Services Research Center of the University of North Carolina (now the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research). Was Project Director in two NCI-sponsored Self-Help Smoking Cessation Projects. Participated in the Research Group for Aging, Disablement, and Long Term Care.
HERO HealthHints - Great American Smokeout (November, 1997) In 1996, 55% of all secondary students reported perspective, statistics, marketingpractices, health effects and teach 913 year olds the consequences of http://fcs.tamu.edu/health/Health_Education_Rural_Outreach/Health_Hints/1997/Nov
Extractions: Extension Associate-Health Table of Contents Great American Smokeout This month's health observance is the Great American Smokeout scheduled for Thursday, November 20, 1997. The Great American Smokeout, facilitated by the American Cancer society, is the day each year when smokers and non-smokers alike commit to keeping our society and our children smoke-free. For smokers, the Great American Smokeout is a day to prove to themselves that they can quit by putting up their cigarettes and other tobacco products for the day. Nonsmokers can join in the Smokeout by adopting relatives, friends, and co-workers to help them quit for the day. Students can join in the Great American SmokeScream in schools across the U.S.
NCADI: NCADI It explains how to teach young people to say that surveillance, research, and publichealth programs are Study 19751995; Volume 1, secondary School Students http://www.health.org/govpubs/MS704/
Extractions: Tobacco Tobacco use is increasingly becoming taboo in American society. Yet, according to statistics from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, about 32 percent of the total population has used tobacco within the past year, and 72 percent of the population has tried tobacco at some time throughout the course of their lives. Disturbingly, 36 percent of 12- to 17-year-old adolescents have already tried tobacco. Tobacco use remains the leading preventable cause of death in the United States, causing more than 419,000 deaths each year at an annual cost of more than $50 billion, according to a 1996 report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The Center for Substance Abuse Prevention recognizes the serious threat that chewing and smoking tobacco poses to the health of Americans and is committed to stemming the tide of new smokers by deterring tobacco's use. This guide provides the latest information and referrals for tobacco use prevention. It highlights research, materials, programs, and organizations for prevention professionals, educators, parents, and the general public. By working together, we can save lives. Nelba Chavez, Ph.D.
Health Psychology Course Pack secondary baby talk Judgments by institutionalized elderly and Attitudes of healthcare professionals toward care of empathy, techniques to teach empathy to http://course1.winona.msus.edu/klane/Healthcourse.html
Extractions: This course will: explore the specialty area of health psychology, examine the effects of stress on wellness and illness as well as stress management procedures, discuss lifestyle factors that enhance health and that compromise health, look at the role of the patient in the health care system, investigate adaptation to chronic and terminal illnesses.
Health-psych.org - Announcements would be expected to teach courses in Assistant Professor, Clinical health PsychologyPh.D. Program STD primary prevention and secondary prevention interventions http://www.health-psych.org/announce.asp
Extractions: SPECIAL ISSUE: PSYCHOLOGICAL INTERVENTIONS IN CHRONIC ILLNESS GUEST EDITORS: Keith J. Petrie and Tracey A. Revenson The submission deadline is June 30 2003. Submissions should comply with the guidelines for authors for the Journal of Health Psychology. Details can be found on the journal's website Four copies of manuscripts should be sent electronically to: David F. Marks, Department of Psychology, City University, Northampton Square, London, UK EC1V OHB.; email D.Marks@city.ac.uk . Questions concerning the Special Issue can be sent to either of the guest editors: Keith J. Petrie, University of Auckland. Phone: 64-9-373-7599;; E-mail: kj.petrie@auckland.ac.nz or Tracey A. Revenson, City University of New York, Phone: 212-817-8709; E-mail: trevenson@gc.cuny.edu JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC PSYCHOLOGY FAMILY BASED INTERVENTIONS IN PEDIATRIC PSYCHOLOGY The Journal of Pediatric Psychology will publish a special issue on family based interventions in pediatric psychology. Of particular interest are empirical papers that aim to effect children's health through improved family relationships, communication between health care providers and family members, and psycho-educational efforts that incorporate a family systems perspective. Preventive interventions as well as interventions that focus on disease management are welcome. Preference will be given to empirically based studies highlighting a particular intervention, however, integrative reviews will be considered. Manuscripts should be sent to Barbara Fiese, Ph.D., Guest Editor, Family Based Interventions in Pediatric Psychology, Journal of Pediatric Psychology, 19 Hagood Avenue, Suite 910, P.O. Box 250822, Charleston, S.C. 29425. Questions concerning the appropriateness of manuscripts may be sent to
Royal College Of Physicians Home Page and advises the Government, the public and the profession on health and medical Newjob vacancies at the College 9th January New London teachin Programme http://www.rcplondon.ac.uk/
Extractions: more press releases... President's report update A regular review of the work which the President is undertaking on behalf of the College College Day General Internal Medicine For Specialist Registrars College Lectures Problems and Perils of Prescription Medicine College Lectures Flexible Working and Training Code of conduct for NHS managers How Hospitals Manage Heart Attacks Nicotine Addiction in Britain Stroke Guidelines Core Curriculum and Appraisal Record for SHOs ... Online Publications list It has been brought to our attention that there is an organisation entitled "Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of the United States of America". It offers CME leading to FRCP, FRCS, MRCP and MRCS qualifications. Despite its web site claim to have "sister colleges" in England and around the world it has no connection to this College, or to any other medical Royal Colleges in the UK.
RCP | Annual Review ! 1999 to appraise and assess, as well as how to teach. training in GIM and introducing generichealth workers to activities which cross the primary / secondary divide http://www.rcplondon.ac.uk/pubs/AnnualReview/1999/annualreview_1999_mftp.htm
Extractions: One year ago I wrote that "it has been a year of continuing change nationally and there has been a major drive within the College to contribute positively " The same could be said this year, but even more so. Another major proposal was the need to strengthen regional activities. We have opened a further office in Wales, jointly with the RCS, and three more will follow this coming year. They have proved universally popular and I suspect that despite the cost there will be offices in each Deanery eventually. We have also increased the number of Regional "Teach ins" both for SHO's and for Consultants, forming a significant component of CME for the latter. There is also now a handbook containing the job descriptions of all College Officers (except myself) both in Regents Park and in the regions. This should help clarify some of the confusion that exists regarding the interface between the College and the Deaneries. In the wake of Bristol, where I gave evidence, there has been continued pressure on self-regulation. Clinical governance is being introduced. The College has worked closely with other Colleges through the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges to produce a generic model. This will involve annual appraisal by the Trust, participation in audit and CPD with a personal portfolio. Revalidation was agreed by the GMC in February and a wide range of working groups have been looking at options. Our Standards Committee (created in the College reorganisation) has made major contributions in both these areas. Revalidation will be introduced in 2001, but we are making the point
HOW STUPID (OR DISHONEST) CAN THEY GET? smokers gathering in the nation's secondary schools and of Harvard University's studenthealth service, which Do not teach them intolerance, hatred, disrespect http://www.forces.org/writers/turci/files/dishon.htm
Extractions: Gian Turci's Corner April 13, 1999 The dishonesty of the anti-tobacco cartel is beyond the imaginable. And the naïvete of those who honestly believe the garbage the cartel spews out is equally unimaginable. Here is an article published by "On Health," a well-known lackey of the anti-tobacco industry. On Health regularly publishes garbage on tobacco, its users, and publicizes the junk science steadily mass-produced by the cartel. This particular article, however, requires some comments, because seldom I have seen something more stupid, as well as more false and misleading, all under one roof. The direct link to this article is http://onhealth.com/ch1/in-depth/item/item,33735_1_1.asp . I am reproducing it here for the sole purpose of commenting on it. The Rehooked Generation: How Do We Help Them Stop? Alarmed to discover a large, new generation of smokers gathering in the nation's secondary schools and colleges, public health officials are facing a question they've never seriously confronted before: How do you get an addicted child to stop smoking? ...Notice the resounding title: "The Re-Hooked Generation..." Where is the musical commentary á la "ABC Nightline?"