A strikingly honest anthology of autistic teachers sharing the challenges and successes of their careers. With topics including identity, inclusion, intersectionality and more, it highlights the strengths of employing a neurodiverse workforce and the ways the needs of autistic teachers can be accommodated.
In this paradigm-shifting book from acclaimed Harvard Medical School doctor and one of TIME magazine's 100 most influential people on earth, Dr. David Sinclair reveals that everything we think we know about ageing is wrong, and shares the surprising, scientifically-proven methods that can help readers live younger, longer.
Martial Arts and Well-Being explores how Martial Arts can contribute in important ways to health and well-being, as well as providing other broader social benefits.
When faced with cancer, timely and educated healthcare interventions are crucial to recovery. Put the odds in your favour with the help of this practical CANCER ACTION PLAN. "Don't let a cancer diagnosis fill you with feelings of fear, panic, and helplessness. Take back your power with Naturopathic Cancer Care."
Fully revised and updated, this edition includes new information on sensory modalities; disease states affecting sensation; nutritional manipulation; unusual sensory hallucinations of food; using flavor to suppress appetite; and the concept of a sixth taste in gustation, lipid and fat receptors on the tongue.
This accessible guide will tell you everything you need to know about parenting a child with a hidden condition, such as autism, dyspraxia, ADHD or bipolar, whether or not a formal diagnosis has been received. With information on various conditions and diagnoses, it includes candid advice and strategies from parents as well as young adults who grew up with a hidden condition themselves.
This multidisciplinary reference book brings together cutting-edge health and illness topics from around the globe. It offers a range of theoretical and critical perspectives to provide contemporary insights into complex health issues that can offer ways to address inequitable patterns of illness and ill-health.
Originally published between 1968 and 1989, this set presents a coherent body of information on the inter-relation between nutrition, health and disease in its social context. They examine various aspects of disease ecology relating socio-geographical contrasts to a dichotomy between infectious and non-infectious diseases.