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  • Book
    Daniel Goleman and Richard J. Davidson.
    Summary: Sweeps away the misconceptions around mindfulness and other forms of meditation, showing how smart practice can change our personal traits and even our genome for the better. Goleman and Davidson reveal what we can learn from a one-of-a-kind data pool that includes world-class meditators. They share for the first time findings that show how meditation--without drugs or high expense--can cultivate qualities such as selflessness, equanimity, love and compassion, and redesign our neural circuitry.

    Contents:
    The deep path and the wide
    Ancient clues
    The after is the before for the next during
    The best we had
    A mind undisturbed
    Primed for love
    Attention!
    Lightness of being
    Mind, body, and genome
    Meditation as psychotherapy
    A Yogi's brain
    Hidden treasure
    Altering traits
    A healthy mind.
    Limited to 2 simultaneous users
  • Article
    Armitage P, Clifford R.
    J Infect Dis. 1978 Jul;138(1):1-8.
    There is a need in clinical tetanus for a simple prognostic classification for all patients at time of admission to the hospital. Data from three randomized clinical trials performed in India in the 1960s, which contained information on several prognostic variables for 1,385 patients, have been used to study different methods of prognosis. A logistic regression performed on the combined data from the trials suggested that the probability of death is related separately to the period of onset (the time from the first symptom to generalized reflex spasms), to the time from first symptom to admission to the hospital, and to the clinical assessment of severity of tetanus on admission; the effects of these variables have been studied by tabulation. A new system is proposed for assigning patients to three prognostic groups, defined by time from first symptom to admission and whether or not reflex spasms were present on admission to the hospital. The range of fatality rates is 10%--63%. Neonates are assigned to a separate group with a fatality rate of 72%. Other prognostic groupings are also explored in case it is felt that the above method relies too heavily on local arrangements for medical care.
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