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  • Book
    edited by Catherine Arnott Smith and Alla Keselman.
    Contents:
    1. Designing health information programs to promote the health and well-being of vulnerable populations: the benefits of evidence-based strategic health communication / Gary L. Kreps and Linda Neuhauser
    2. Health literacy research's growth, challenges, and frontiers / Robert A. Logan
    3. Medical information for the consumer before the World Wide Web / Catherine Arnott Smith
    4. Ethical health information: Do it well! Do it right! Do no harm! / Michelynn McKnight
    5. Health information resource provision in the public library setting / Mary Grace Flaherty
    6. Who needs a health librarian? Ethical reference transactions in the consumer health library / Nancy C. Seeger
    7. Consumer health information: the community college conundrum / Anne Chernaik
    8. Health information delivery outside the clinic in a developing nation: The Qatar Cancer Society in the State of Qatar / Ellen N. Sayed and Alan S. Weber
    9. Health information and older adults / Kay Hogan Smith
    10. Re-envisioning the health information-seeking conversation: insights from a community center / Prudence W. Dalrymple and Lisl Zach
    11. For the mutual benefit: health information provision in the science classroom / Albert Zeyer, Daniel M. Levin and Alla Keselman
    12. "You will be glad you hung on to this quit": sharing information and giving support when stopping smoking online / Marie-Thérèse Rudolf von Rohr
    13. Health information in bits and bytes: considerations and challenges of digital health communication / Clare Tobin Lence and Korey Capozza
    14. Does specialization matter? How journalistic expertise explains differences in health-care coverage / Michael W. Wagner
    Afterword
    Index.
    Digital Access ScienceDirect 2015
  • Article
    Emery FE.
    J Trauma. 1977 Jan;17(1):1-7.
    A method of flexor tendon repair and grafting has been described. The advantage of the technique presented is that it allows early tendon excursion, and at the same time allows healing at the tendon-repair or graft site after a 4- or 5-week period. This technique appears to offer the patient with a flexor tendon injury a satisfactory, predictable result with few complications and a relatively short period of disability.
    Digital Access Access Options