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Medicine, Popular --- Medicine, Medieval. --- Medical misconceptions --- Delusions, Medical --- Health misconceptions --- Medical delusions --- Medical superstitions --- Medicine --- Misconceptions, Medical --- Common fallacies --- Medical errors --- Medicine, Medieval --- Medieval medicine --- Early works to 1800. --- Superstitions
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Psychodiagnostics. --- Categorization (Psychology) --- Medical misconceptions. --- Delusions, Medical --- Health misconceptions --- Medical delusions --- Medical superstitions --- Medicine --- Misconceptions, Medical --- Common fallacies --- Medical errors --- Classification (Psychology) --- Abstraction --- Diagnostic psychological testing --- Psychological assessment --- Clinical psychology --- Nervous system --- Psychological tests --- Superstitions --- Diseases --- Diagnosis --- Psicodiagnòstic --- Categorització (Psicologia)
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When experiencing mental health challenges, we all deserve treatments that actually work. Whether you are a healthcare consumer, student, or mental health professional, this book will help you recognize implausible, ineffective, and even harmful therapy practices while also considering recent controversies. Research-supported interventions are identified in this book and expanded upon in a companion volume. Chapters cover every major mental disorder and are written by experts in their respective fields. Pseudoscience in Therapy is of interest to students taking courses in psychotherapy, counseling, clinical psychology, and behavior therapy, as well as practitioners looking for a guide to proven therapeutic techniques.
Psychotherapy. --- Pseudoscience. --- Medical misconceptions. --- Delusions, Medical --- Health misconceptions --- Medical delusions --- Medical superstitions --- Medicine --- Misconceptions, Medical --- Common fallacies --- Medical errors --- Junk science --- Science --- Psychagogy --- Therapy (Psychotherapy) --- Mental illness --- Clinical sociology --- Mental health counseling --- Superstitions --- Treatment --- Psychotherapy --- Pseudoscience --- Medical misconceptions
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Psychology, Clinical --- Psychotherapy --- Psychiatry --- Research --- Clinical psychology --- Medical misconceptions --- #PBIB:2003.3 --- Psychagogy --- Therapy (Psychotherapy) --- Mental health --- Mental illness --- Psychiatric research --- Psychology, Pathological --- Delusions, Medical --- Health misconceptions --- Medical delusions --- Medical superstitions --- Medicine --- Misconceptions, Medical --- Superstitions --- Clinical sociology --- Mental health counseling --- Common fallacies --- Medical errors --- Psychology, Applied --- Psychological tests --- Treatment --- Diagnostic --- Psychologie clinique --- Psychothérapie --- Psychiatry - Research --- Expertise --- Traitement
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This interesting book is a compilation of recent stories from a regular column called "Science Monitor" in The Straits Times, Singapore's main English daily. They focus on exposing health and beauty fads and fallacies like purported breast enlargement methods, baldness treatment and skin renewal therapies which have begun plaguing consumers in Asia. Written by a well-known columnist, Andy Ho, PhD, this book provides a handy review of what cutting-edge research says about these scams. Readers can apply these valuable insights, which the author has backed up by poring over medical books and jour
Quacks and quackery. --- Medical misconceptions. --- Medical care --- Cosmetics industry --- Pharmaceutical industry --- Deceptive advertising. --- Fraud. --- Commercial fraud --- Deceit --- Misrepresentation (Crime) --- Commercial crimes --- Deception --- Torts --- Hoaxes --- Impostors and imposture --- Advertising, Fraudulent --- False advertising --- Fraudulent advertising --- Misleading advertising --- Truth in advertising --- Advertising --- Corrective advertising --- Aesthetics industry --- Beauty services industry --- Toilet preparations industry --- Delivery of health care --- Delivery of medical care --- Health care --- Health care delivery --- Health services --- Healthcare --- Medical and health care industry --- Medical services --- Personal health services --- Public health --- Drug industry --- Drug trade --- Medicine industry --- Medicines industry --- Prescription medicine industry --- Chemical industry --- Delusions, Medical --- Health misconceptions --- Medical delusions --- Medical superstitions --- Medicine --- Misconceptions, Medical --- Common fallacies --- Medical errors --- Charlatans --- Swindlers and swindling --- Corrupt practices. --- Superstitions
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Chemical technology --- Medical misconceptions --- Toxicology --- Popular works --- Toxicology. --- 541.6 --- 615.9 --- -#WSCH:AAS2 --- Chemicals --- Medicine --- Pharmacology --- Poisoning --- Poisons --- Delusions, Medical --- Health misconceptions --- Medical delusions --- Medical superstitions --- Misconceptions, Medical --- Common fallacies --- Medical errors --- Evidence Based Toxicology --- Evidence-Based Toxicology --- Toxinology --- Based Toxicologies, Evidence --- Based Toxicology, Evidence --- Evidence Based Toxicologies --- Evidence-Based Toxicologies --- Toxicologies, Evidence Based --- Toxicologies, Evidence-Based --- Toxicology, Evidence Based --- Toxicology, Evidence-Based --- Pharmacogenetics --- Chemical structure in general. Chemical structure in relation to properties of substances. Chemistry of high polymers --- General toxicology. General studies of poisons and poisoning (intoxication) --- Superstitions --- Medical misconceptions. --- Popular works. --- 615.9 General toxicology. General studies of poisons and poisoning (intoxication) --- 541.6 Chemical structure in general. Chemical structure in relation to properties of substances. Chemistry of high polymers --- Superstitions et médecine --- Toxicologie --- Écotoxicologie --- Médecine populaire. --- Superstitions et médecine. --- Superstitions et médecine --- #WSCH:AAS2 --- Écotoxicologie --- Médecine populaire. --- Superstitions et médecine.
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“Louise Cummings’ Fallacies in Medicine and Health is essential reading for health-care practitioners and policy makers and for professional fallacy-theorists as well. Louise Cummings has played a pioneering role in finding useful work for fallacy theory to do in contexts in which faulty diagnoses, misjudged treatment protocols or unrealistic prognoses can be fatal. To achieve the book’s objectives, it has been necessary for its author to secure scientific standing on both sides of the disciplinary divide from which her project proceeds. Fallacies in Medicine and Health merits a large and welcoming reception in both places.” – John Woods, Director of The Abductive Systems Group, University of British Columbia, Canada This textbook examines the ways in which arguments may be used and abused in medicine and health. The central claim is that a group of arguments known as the informal fallacies – including slippery slope arguments, fear appeal, and the argument from ignorance – undertake considerable work in medical and health contexts, and that they can in fact be rationally warranted ways of understanding complex topics, contrary to the views of many earlier philosophers and logicians. Modern medicine and healthcare require lay people to engage with increasingly complex decisions in areas such as immunization, lifestyle and dietary choices, and health screening. Many of the so-called fallacies of reasoning can also be viewed as cognitive heuristics or short-cuts which help individuals make decisions in these contexts. Using features such as learning objectives, case studies and end-of-unit questions, this textbook examines topical issues and debates in all areas of medicine and health, including antibiotic use and resistance, genetic engineering, euthanasia, addiction to prescription opioids, and the legalization of cannabis. It will be useful to students of critical thinking, reasoning, logic, argumentation, rhetoric, communication, health humanities, philosophy and linguistics. Louise Cummings is Professor in the Department of English at The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong. She has published and edited 18 books in public health reasoning, communication disorders, pragmatics, and clinical linguistics. She is Visiting Professor at York St John University in the UK, and Honorary Research Associate at the University of Antwerp in Belgium.
Medical misconceptions. --- Critical thinking. --- Fallacies (Logic) --- Errors, Logical --- Sophisms (Logic) --- Sophistry (Logic) --- Judgment (Logic) --- Logic --- Reasoning --- Delusions, Medical --- Health misconceptions --- Medical delusions --- Medical superstitions --- Medicine --- Misconceptions, Medical --- Common fallacies --- Medical errors --- Critical reflection --- Reflection (Critical thinking) --- Reflection process --- Reflective thinking --- Thinking, Critical --- Thinking, Reflective --- Thought and thinking --- Reflective learning --- Superstitions --- Applied linguistics. --- Sociolinguistics. --- Medical policy. --- Medicine—Philosophy. --- Applied Linguistics. --- Health Policy. --- Philosophy of Medicine. --- Health care policy --- Health policy --- Medical care --- Medicine and state --- Policy, Medical --- Public health --- Public health policy --- State and medicine --- Science and state --- Social policy --- Language and languages --- Language and society --- Society and language --- Sociology of language --- Language and culture --- Linguistics --- Sociology --- Integrational linguistics (Oxford school) --- Government policy --- Social aspects --- Sociological aspects
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