The document discusses the culture of addiction and the culture of recovery. It states that addiction and recovery involve deep human needs that interact with social environments. The culture of addiction meets needs through an informal social network that promotes drug use, while the culture of recovery provides an alternative pathway and social world. Both are ways of life that influence behaviors, beliefs, and identity. Shifting from the culture of addiction to the culture of recovery requires addressing physical, psychological, spiritual and relationship areas impacted by addiction.
The Psychology of Tattoo Acquistion - Intervene Jan-FebTara Day MSc
油
This article discusses tattoo acquisition as a potential process addiction based on interviews with heavily tattooed individuals. It found that early family relationships and trauma played a role in tattoo behavior for many. Tattoos may serve as a means to self-medicate or alleviate pain for those with dysfunctional relationships with themselves or others due to childhood trauma. Understanding tattoo acquisition as an adaptive behavior or addiction could help improve treatment and prevention strategies for those who engage in the behavior compulsively or to their detriment.
The document discusses different perspectives on what leads to happiness. It notes that ancient traditions like Buddhism and Aristotle viewed happiness as being determined by moral character and living a virtuous life rather than material conditions. However, in modern times happiness has become more associated with economic factors like income and consumption. While economic growth can provide benefits, too much focus on pursuing wealth has costs like declining social connections and mental well-being. The document advocates restoring virtue ethics and finding a balance between economic, social, psychological and ethical factors to enhance happiness.
Culture has significant effects on health behaviors and illness experiences. When people move to a new culture, they may experience culture shock which involves phases like a honeymoon period, crisis as excitement fades, and eventual adjustment. Illness is understood differently across cultures, with some viewing it as natural and others supernatural. Patients bring culturally influenced ideas about symptoms, treatment, and decision-making. Dietary taboos also vary between cultures. Health care providers must consider these cultural factors to effectively serve diverse patient populations.
Malaria recent guidelines who 2015 & indian 2014Kiran Bikkad
油
The document discusses malaria, its causative species, symptoms, diagnosis and treatment in India. It notes that P. falciparum and P. vivax are the most common species causing around 50% of cases each. Chloroquine resistance has increased in P. falciparum. Diagnosis involves microscopy and rapid diagnostic tests. Treatment depends on species and includes chloroquine for P. vivax and ACT for P. falciparum along with primaquine in some cases. Severe malaria requires parenteral artesunate or quinine along with supportive management. Prevention involves chemoprophylaxis with doxycycline or mefloquine in high risk groups.
Malaria is a mosquito-borne infectious disease caused by Plasmodium parasites. It is transmitted via the bites of infected Anopheles mosquitoes. The most common symptoms of malaria include fever, chills, and flu-like illness. There are four species of malaria parasite that infect humans - P. falciparum, P. vivax, P. ovale, and P. malariae. Treatment involves antimalarial medications such as chloroquine and primaquine. Prevention focuses on mosquito control measures like insecticide spraying and source reduction as well as the use of insecticide-treated bed nets.
The influence of the religious, family, educational, and social system of a s...shawon20115
油
The influence of the religious, family, educational, and social system of a society on the behavior of consumer, and their impacts on marketing, comprise a company's cultural environment
external influences in customer behavior: culture Sukanda Panpetch
油
The document discusses various aspects of culture that are important for marketers to understand when conducting cross-cultural marketing. It outlines three main types of cultural values: other-oriented values which influence relationships between individuals and groups; environment-oriented values which influence relationships with the economic, technical and physical environment; and self-oriented values which reflect individual objectives and approaches to life. It also discusses the concepts of subculture, global culture, and how understanding cultural values and differences is crucial for successful cross-cultural marketing.
This document discusses the lifestyle of young adults from a sociocultural perspective. It defines lifestyle as the interests, opinions, behaviors and orientations of individuals and groups that are learned through socialization. The document notes that modern lifestyles can be unhealthy, leading to issues like obesity, disease, and mental health problems. It identifies key components of young adult lifestyles like family dynamics, marriage age, and responsibilities. Finally, it discusses main determinants of lifestyle from a sociocultural view, such as culture, social roles, socioeconomic position, and their influence on health.
2 Culture, Health and Society - Basic Conceptsmloefler
油
This document defines and explains key sociological concepts related to culture, norms, values, and socialization. It discusses how culture is the shared way of life learned and transmitted between generations in a society. Norms provide guidelines for acceptable behavior while values represent abstract ideals. People learn norms and values through the process of socialization primarily from their family and peer groups when young, and later through schools, work, and media. Understanding these foundational sociological concepts is important for discussing and analyzing society.
Culture influences moral behavior and perceptions of right and wrong. Culture is learned and passed down through generations, shaping a group's actions, beliefs, and values. It provides a sense of unity and is influenced by various institutions like family, school, church, and media. Moral behavior is defined as actions that benefit both individuals and society as a whole.
Social, Political, and Cultural behavior and PhenomenaMiss Chey
油
Every society has norms that guide appropriate behavior. Culture includes shared beliefs, values, and symbols learned from one generation to the next. It is integrated over time as societies adapt. Culture exists through both material items and abstract concepts like language, values, and beliefs. There are various types of social norms including folkways, mores, taboos, and laws, which differ in how strictly they are enforced. Understanding culture requires recognizing that values differ in each society and should be considered within their own context rather than being judged according to one's own culture.
Culture consists of the shared beliefs, values, and practices of a group. It includes both material aspects like objects and nonmaterial aspects like ideas and beliefs. Culture is learned and transmitted through socialization. It provides people with norms and rules about how to behave in different contexts. Cultural elements like values, beliefs, norms, symbols, and language all shape how a society functions and the lens through which its members view the world. Culture is always evolving as new ideas and technologies spread through diffusion and globalization. Sociological perspectives like functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism offer different views on the role and influence of culture.
1 sociocultural context of health and health care deliveryChantal Settley
油
Culture:
Culture: definition- pg 35 in Pretoruis.
Components of culture:
Cognitive component- pg 36 in Pretoruis.
Normative component- pg 37 in Pretoruis.
Symbolic component- pg 39 in Pretoruis.
Cultural concepts:
Subcultures- pg 44 in Pretoruis.
Cultural change- pg 44 in Pretoruis.
Cultural competence (aspects of cultural identity) - pg 47 in Pretoruis.
Culture shock- pg 37 in Du Toit.
Cultural lag- pg 37 in Pretoruis.
This document discusses addiction from several perspectives. It defines addiction as a pathological relationship between a human and an addictive object like substances or behaviors. Addiction is described as having physical, psychological, and social components. The development of addiction is influenced by social and environmental factors. Treatment approaches discussed include cognitive-emotional-behavioral therapy and a five-phase therapeutic model. The document also notes the issue of drug addiction in Palestine and rehabilitation organizations working to address it.
This document defines key concepts related to attitudes and prejudice, including how attitudes are formed and can change. It discusses three characteristics of attitudes: stability, evaluation, and guidance of behavior. Attitudes can change through persuasive communication, changing behavior, or ideology. Prejudice involves negative attitudes toward groups, and racism is a system that categorizes people by physical features. The document also examines gender stereotyping, patriarchy, sexism, and feminist efforts to reduce prejudice and ideological support for inequality.
This document defines key concepts related to attitudes and prejudice, including how attitudes are formed and can change. It discusses three characteristics of attitudes: stability, evaluation, and guidance of behavior. Attitudes can change through persuasive communication, changing behavior, or ideology. Prejudice involves negative attitudes toward groups, and racism is a system that categorizes people by physical features. The document also examines gender stereotyping, patriarchy, sexism, and feminist efforts to reduce prejudice and ideological support for inequality.
The document discusses key concepts in sociology including culture, norms, values, social structure, and social institutions. It defines culture as a system of symbols shared by a society that provides meaning and guides behavior. Norms are rules that specify appropriate behavior while values provide criteria for evaluating people and events. Social structure refers to the patterned relationships between social institutions, groups, and statuses that give direction to and constrain behavior. Important social institutions that every society develops to meet basic needs include family, religion, politics, education, and healthcare.
Filipino culture has a strong influence on maternal care practices and beliefs during the perinatal period. Traditional birth attendants called hilots are preferred over hospitals and provide delivery and postnatal care according to cultural traditions. Home births are more comfortable and hospitals are feared. During pregnancy, women follow indigenous practices like keeping the pregnancy secret initially to prevent harm from evil spirits, and receiving massages from hilots. After birth, the placenta and umbilical cord are buried in special ways believed to impact the baby's health and intelligence. Superstitious beliefs also influence family planning views.
This document discusses culture and gender in society. It defines key terms like sex, gender, gender roles, and sex-gender systems. It notes that gender and gender roles are social constructs that vary across cultures, though are often associated with biological sex. Contemporary societies increasingly challenge traditional gender norms. The document also discusses how culture dictates appropriate characteristics for each gender, and society propagates these definitions. It briefly mentions LGBT and feminist movements working toward greater gender equality.
Culture is shaped by the norms, values, beliefs, behaviors, and objects that make up a group's way of life. It is expressed through both material objects and nonmaterial aspects like ideas and attitudes. Subcultures exist as distinct groups within a larger dominant culture that differ in their values and behaviors. Deviance from cultural norms is a relative concept that depends on time and place, and plays a role in both social change and the reinforcement of social order through systems of social control.
This document discusses the concept of culture. It defines culture as the shared way of life of a group of people, including their ideas, values, knowledge, behaviors, and material objects. Culture is learned and passed down between generations, shaping people's perceptions of reality. The document outlines various components of culture, including material and non-material aspects, characteristics, how culture varies globally, and the concept of cultural universals. It provides examples to illustrate cultural concepts like values, norms, folkways, mores, taboos, and sanctions.
The document discusses concepts related to community and health. It defines community as a social group that interacts and shares common goals and interests within geographical boundaries. A healthy community has engaged members, effective leadership, and accessible health resources. Community types include rural, urban, and suburban. Development requires group cooperation and leadership guides the group according to its needs. Culture and religion influence individuals' health views and practices.
Culture influences one's moral development in several key ways according to the document:
1) Culture is communal and promotes relationships by establishing norms, rules, and standards of behavior for its members.
2) Culture defines normative principles and behaviors for the society and sets boundaries to protect the community.
3) Culture conditions the mind and helps generate the identity and moral character of its people.
Chair, Joshua Sabari, MD, discusses NSCLC in this CME activity titled Modern Practice Principles in Lung CancerFirst Find the Targets, Then Treat With Precision: A Concise Guide for Biomarker Testing and EGFR-Targeted Therapy in NSCLC. For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aid, and complete CME information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at https://bit.ly/3VomnBV. CME credit will be available until February 26, 2026.
Dr. Jaymee Shells Perspective on COVID-19Jaymee Shell
油
Dr. Jaymee Shell views the COVID-19 pandemic as both a crisis that exposed weaknesses and an opportunity to build stronger systems. She emphasizes that the pandemic revealed critical healthcare inequities while demonstrating the power of collaboration and adaptability.
Shell highlights that organizations with gender-diverse executive teams are 25% more likely to experience above-average profitability, positioning diversity as a business necessity rather than just a moral imperative. She notes that the pandemic disproportionately affected women of color, with one in three women considering leaving or downshifting their careers.
To combat inequality, Shell recommends implementing flexible work policies, establishing clear metrics for diversity in leadership, creating structured virtual collaboration spaces, and developing comprehensive wellness programs. For healthcare providers specifically, she advocates for multilingual communication systems, mobile health units, telehealth services with alternatives for those lacking internet access, and cultural competency training.
Shell emphasizes the importance of mental health support through culturally appropriate resources, employee assistance programs, and regular check-ins. She calls for diverse leadership teams that reflect the communities they serve and community-centered care models that address social determinants of health.
In her words: "The COVID-19 pandemic didn't create healthcare inequalities it illuminated them." She urges building systems that reach every community and provide dignified care to all.
The influence of the religious, family, educational, and social system of a s...shawon20115
油
The influence of the religious, family, educational, and social system of a society on the behavior of consumer, and their impacts on marketing, comprise a company's cultural environment
external influences in customer behavior: culture Sukanda Panpetch
油
The document discusses various aspects of culture that are important for marketers to understand when conducting cross-cultural marketing. It outlines three main types of cultural values: other-oriented values which influence relationships between individuals and groups; environment-oriented values which influence relationships with the economic, technical and physical environment; and self-oriented values which reflect individual objectives and approaches to life. It also discusses the concepts of subculture, global culture, and how understanding cultural values and differences is crucial for successful cross-cultural marketing.
This document discusses the lifestyle of young adults from a sociocultural perspective. It defines lifestyle as the interests, opinions, behaviors and orientations of individuals and groups that are learned through socialization. The document notes that modern lifestyles can be unhealthy, leading to issues like obesity, disease, and mental health problems. It identifies key components of young adult lifestyles like family dynamics, marriage age, and responsibilities. Finally, it discusses main determinants of lifestyle from a sociocultural view, such as culture, social roles, socioeconomic position, and their influence on health.
2 Culture, Health and Society - Basic Conceptsmloefler
油
This document defines and explains key sociological concepts related to culture, norms, values, and socialization. It discusses how culture is the shared way of life learned and transmitted between generations in a society. Norms provide guidelines for acceptable behavior while values represent abstract ideals. People learn norms and values through the process of socialization primarily from their family and peer groups when young, and later through schools, work, and media. Understanding these foundational sociological concepts is important for discussing and analyzing society.
Culture influences moral behavior and perceptions of right and wrong. Culture is learned and passed down through generations, shaping a group's actions, beliefs, and values. It provides a sense of unity and is influenced by various institutions like family, school, church, and media. Moral behavior is defined as actions that benefit both individuals and society as a whole.
Social, Political, and Cultural behavior and PhenomenaMiss Chey
油
Every society has norms that guide appropriate behavior. Culture includes shared beliefs, values, and symbols learned from one generation to the next. It is integrated over time as societies adapt. Culture exists through both material items and abstract concepts like language, values, and beliefs. There are various types of social norms including folkways, mores, taboos, and laws, which differ in how strictly they are enforced. Understanding culture requires recognizing that values differ in each society and should be considered within their own context rather than being judged according to one's own culture.
Culture consists of the shared beliefs, values, and practices of a group. It includes both material aspects like objects and nonmaterial aspects like ideas and beliefs. Culture is learned and transmitted through socialization. It provides people with norms and rules about how to behave in different contexts. Cultural elements like values, beliefs, norms, symbols, and language all shape how a society functions and the lens through which its members view the world. Culture is always evolving as new ideas and technologies spread through diffusion and globalization. Sociological perspectives like functionalism, conflict theory, and symbolic interactionism offer different views on the role and influence of culture.
1 sociocultural context of health and health care deliveryChantal Settley
油
Culture:
Culture: definition- pg 35 in Pretoruis.
Components of culture:
Cognitive component- pg 36 in Pretoruis.
Normative component- pg 37 in Pretoruis.
Symbolic component- pg 39 in Pretoruis.
Cultural concepts:
Subcultures- pg 44 in Pretoruis.
Cultural change- pg 44 in Pretoruis.
Cultural competence (aspects of cultural identity) - pg 47 in Pretoruis.
Culture shock- pg 37 in Du Toit.
Cultural lag- pg 37 in Pretoruis.
This document discusses addiction from several perspectives. It defines addiction as a pathological relationship between a human and an addictive object like substances or behaviors. Addiction is described as having physical, psychological, and social components. The development of addiction is influenced by social and environmental factors. Treatment approaches discussed include cognitive-emotional-behavioral therapy and a five-phase therapeutic model. The document also notes the issue of drug addiction in Palestine and rehabilitation organizations working to address it.
This document defines key concepts related to attitudes and prejudice, including how attitudes are formed and can change. It discusses three characteristics of attitudes: stability, evaluation, and guidance of behavior. Attitudes can change through persuasive communication, changing behavior, or ideology. Prejudice involves negative attitudes toward groups, and racism is a system that categorizes people by physical features. The document also examines gender stereotyping, patriarchy, sexism, and feminist efforts to reduce prejudice and ideological support for inequality.
This document defines key concepts related to attitudes and prejudice, including how attitudes are formed and can change. It discusses three characteristics of attitudes: stability, evaluation, and guidance of behavior. Attitudes can change through persuasive communication, changing behavior, or ideology. Prejudice involves negative attitudes toward groups, and racism is a system that categorizes people by physical features. The document also examines gender stereotyping, patriarchy, sexism, and feminist efforts to reduce prejudice and ideological support for inequality.
The document discusses key concepts in sociology including culture, norms, values, social structure, and social institutions. It defines culture as a system of symbols shared by a society that provides meaning and guides behavior. Norms are rules that specify appropriate behavior while values provide criteria for evaluating people and events. Social structure refers to the patterned relationships between social institutions, groups, and statuses that give direction to and constrain behavior. Important social institutions that every society develops to meet basic needs include family, religion, politics, education, and healthcare.
Filipino culture has a strong influence on maternal care practices and beliefs during the perinatal period. Traditional birth attendants called hilots are preferred over hospitals and provide delivery and postnatal care according to cultural traditions. Home births are more comfortable and hospitals are feared. During pregnancy, women follow indigenous practices like keeping the pregnancy secret initially to prevent harm from evil spirits, and receiving massages from hilots. After birth, the placenta and umbilical cord are buried in special ways believed to impact the baby's health and intelligence. Superstitious beliefs also influence family planning views.
This document discusses culture and gender in society. It defines key terms like sex, gender, gender roles, and sex-gender systems. It notes that gender and gender roles are social constructs that vary across cultures, though are often associated with biological sex. Contemporary societies increasingly challenge traditional gender norms. The document also discusses how culture dictates appropriate characteristics for each gender, and society propagates these definitions. It briefly mentions LGBT and feminist movements working toward greater gender equality.
Culture is shaped by the norms, values, beliefs, behaviors, and objects that make up a group's way of life. It is expressed through both material objects and nonmaterial aspects like ideas and attitudes. Subcultures exist as distinct groups within a larger dominant culture that differ in their values and behaviors. Deviance from cultural norms is a relative concept that depends on time and place, and plays a role in both social change and the reinforcement of social order through systems of social control.
This document discusses the concept of culture. It defines culture as the shared way of life of a group of people, including their ideas, values, knowledge, behaviors, and material objects. Culture is learned and passed down between generations, shaping people's perceptions of reality. The document outlines various components of culture, including material and non-material aspects, characteristics, how culture varies globally, and the concept of cultural universals. It provides examples to illustrate cultural concepts like values, norms, folkways, mores, taboos, and sanctions.
The document discusses concepts related to community and health. It defines community as a social group that interacts and shares common goals and interests within geographical boundaries. A healthy community has engaged members, effective leadership, and accessible health resources. Community types include rural, urban, and suburban. Development requires group cooperation and leadership guides the group according to its needs. Culture and religion influence individuals' health views and practices.
Culture influences one's moral development in several key ways according to the document:
1) Culture is communal and promotes relationships by establishing norms, rules, and standards of behavior for its members.
2) Culture defines normative principles and behaviors for the society and sets boundaries to protect the community.
3) Culture conditions the mind and helps generate the identity and moral character of its people.
Chair, Joshua Sabari, MD, discusses NSCLC in this CME activity titled Modern Practice Principles in Lung CancerFirst Find the Targets, Then Treat With Precision: A Concise Guide for Biomarker Testing and EGFR-Targeted Therapy in NSCLC. For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aid, and complete CME information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at https://bit.ly/3VomnBV. CME credit will be available until February 26, 2026.
Dr. Jaymee Shells Perspective on COVID-19Jaymee Shell
油
Dr. Jaymee Shell views the COVID-19 pandemic as both a crisis that exposed weaknesses and an opportunity to build stronger systems. She emphasizes that the pandemic revealed critical healthcare inequities while demonstrating the power of collaboration and adaptability.
Shell highlights that organizations with gender-diverse executive teams are 25% more likely to experience above-average profitability, positioning diversity as a business necessity rather than just a moral imperative. She notes that the pandemic disproportionately affected women of color, with one in three women considering leaving or downshifting their careers.
To combat inequality, Shell recommends implementing flexible work policies, establishing clear metrics for diversity in leadership, creating structured virtual collaboration spaces, and developing comprehensive wellness programs. For healthcare providers specifically, she advocates for multilingual communication systems, mobile health units, telehealth services with alternatives for those lacking internet access, and cultural competency training.
Shell emphasizes the importance of mental health support through culturally appropriate resources, employee assistance programs, and regular check-ins. She calls for diverse leadership teams that reflect the communities they serve and community-centered care models that address social determinants of health.
In her words: "The COVID-19 pandemic didn't create healthcare inequalities it illuminated them." She urges building systems that reach every community and provide dignified care to all.
Rabies Bali 2008-2020_WRD Webinar_WSAVA 2020_Final.pptxWahid Husein
油
A decade of rabies control programmes in Bali with support from FAO ECTAD Indonesia with Mass Dog Vaccination, Integrated Bite Case Management, Dog Population Management, and Risk Communication as the backbone of the programmes
Dr. Ahmed Elzainy
Mastering Mobility- Joints of Lower Limb -Dr. Ahmed Elzainy Associate Professor of Anatomy and Embryology - American Fellowship in Medical Education (FAIMER), Philadelphia, USA
Progress Test Coordinator
Enzyme Induction and Inhibition: Mechanisms, Examples, and Clinical SignificanceSumeetSharma591398
油
This presentation explains the concepts of enzyme induction and enzyme inhibition in drug metabolism. It covers the mechanisms, examples, clinical significance, and factors affecting enzyme activity, with a focus on CYP450 enzymes. Learn how these processes impact drug interactions, efficacy, and toxicity. Essential for pharmacy, pharmacology, and medical students.
FAO's Support Rabies Control in Bali_Jul22.pptxWahid Husein
油
What is FAO doing to support rabies control programmes in Bali, Indonesia, using One Health approach with mass dog vaccination and integrated bite case management as main strategies
Chair, Shaji K. Kumar, MD, prepared useful Practice Aids pertaining to multiple myeloma for this CME/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE activity titled Restoring Remission in RRMM: Present and Future of Sequential Immunotherapy With GPRC5D-Targeting Options. For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aids, and complete CME/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at https://bit.ly/4fYDKkj. CME/NCPD/AAPA/IPCE credit will be available until February 23, 2026.
Enzyme Induction and Inhibition: Mechanisms, Examples & Clinical SignificanceSumeetSharma591398
油
This presentation explains the crucial role of enzyme induction and inhibition in drug metabolism. It covers:
鏝 Mechanisms of enzyme regulation in the liver
鏝 Examples of enzyme inducers (Rifampin, Carbamazepine) and inhibitors (Ketoconazole, Grapefruit juice)
鏝 Clinical significance of drug interactions affecting efficacy and toxicity
鏝 Factors like genetics, age, diet, and disease influencing enzyme activity
Ideal for pharmacy, pharmacology, and medical students, this presentation helps in understanding drug metabolism and dosage adjustments for safe medication use.
Union Budget 2025 Healthcare Sector Analysis & Impact (PPT).pdfAditiAlishetty
油
The Union Budget 2025-26 emphasizes enhancing India's healthcare by allocating 99,858 crore to the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, marking a 10% increase from the previous year. Key initiatives include adding 10,000 medical college seats, with a plan to reach 75,000 over five years, and increasing funding for the Pradhan Mantri Ayushman Bharat Health Infrastructure Mission by 41% to 4,758 crore. However, experts express concerns that the allocation may still fall short of the sector's urgent needs. Dr. Bipin Vibhute, a distinguished Liver and Multi-Organ Transplant Surgeon, is renowned for pioneering free liver transplants for pediatric patients up to 12 years old in Pune. As the Program Director of the Center for Organ Transplants at Sahyadri Hospitals, he has significantly advanced organ transplantation services across Maharashtra.
Chair, Grzegorz (Greg) S. Nowakowski, MD, FASCO, discusses diffuse large B-cell lymphoma in this CME activity titled Addressing Unmet Needs for Better Outcomes in DLBCL: Leveraging Prognostic Assessment and Off-the-Shelf Immunotherapy Strategies. For the full presentation, downloadable Practice Aid, and complete CME information, and to apply for credit, please visit us at https://bit.ly/49JdxV4. CME credit will be available until February 27, 2026.
Strategies for Promoting Innovation in Healthcare Like Akiva Greenfield.pdfakivagreenfieldus
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Healthcare innovation has been greatly aided by leaders like Akiva Greenfield, CEO of Nexus, particularly in fields like operational efficiency, revenue cycle management (RCM), and client engagement. In order to ensure both operational success and better patient experiences, Akiva's approach combines technological advancements with an emphasis on improving the human side of healthcare.
Role of Artificial Intelligence in Clinical Microbiology.pptxDr Punith Kumar
油
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is revolutionizing clinical microbiology by enhancing diagnostic accuracy, automating workflows, and improving patient outcomes. This presentation explores the key applications of AI in microbial identification, antimicrobial resistance detection, and laboratory automation. Learn how machine learning, deep learning, and data-driven analytics are transforming the field, leading to faster and more efficient microbiological diagnostics. Whether you're a researcher, clinician, or healthcare professional, this presentation provides valuable insights into the future of AI in microbiology.
Status epilepticus, clinical presentation and treatmentMohamadAlhes
油
Fes culture
2. A culture is a way of life of a group of people
-the behaviours, beliefs, values, and symbols
that they accept, generally without thinking
about them, and that are passed along by
communication and imitation from one
generation to the next.
Culture is the totality of a person's learned,
accumulated experience which is socially
transmittedsimply put
Behaviour through social learning.
4. Addiction and recovery are more than something
that happens inside someone. Each involves deep
human needs in interaction with a social
environment.
For addicts, addiction meets a multiplicity of
needs and the culture of addiction provides a
valued platform where these needs can be met.
No treatment can be successful if it doesnt offer
a pathway to meet those same needs and provide
an alternative social world that has perceived
value and meaning.
5. The culture of addiction is an informal social
network in which group norms (prescribed
patterns of perceiving, thinking, feeling and
behaving) promote and protect excessive drug
use.
The culture of addiction is a way of life, a means
of organising ones daily existence, and a way of
viewing people and events in the outside world.
The culture of addiction plays a role in both
initiating and sustaining substance abuse
disorders.
6. DAGGA
Johnny's circle
of friends
Ecstasy
Cocaine/
CAT
Chrystal
Meth
Crack
Heroin
VISUAL REPRESENTATION OF THE
CULTURE OF ADDICTION
All tribes are interlinked
through individual members
who belong to other tribes
and ultimately are joined
creating a bigger culture of
shared group norms.
Drug users seek out
other drug users which
mirror their use to form
a tribe.
BENONI
DRUG
CULTURE
Each tribe has its own
patterns of behaviours,
beliefs, thinking patterns
etc
They have their own
symbols, dress code,
music preference and
preferred lifestyle.
10. As we progress from tribe to tribe, drug to
drug, social group to social group, we learn
more about the ways of life as outlined by the
culture of addiction.
The longer we stay, and the deeper we go,
the more ingrained the culture becomes in
us.
The more we learn the more we change.
11. The culture of addiction is a context for
human needs to be met. Some of these needs
include:
IDENTITY AND SELF ESTEEM Addiction is
often rooted in insecurities, low self-esteem
and social anxieties (a feeling of not quite
fitting in).
The culture provides a platform off of which
to find acceptance and to develop a new
identity through providing a set of values
morals and beliefs.
12. Probably the biggest draw card of the culture
of addiction to the addict is the instant
acceptance into the culture just through the
use of a substance.
Suddenly the addict has friends, has respect
and has found a sense of belonging.
Drug taking is your entrance card into a world
that most addicts long for way before picking
up their first substance.
Transforming stigma (looser, reject, no good)
to status.
13. Adolescent needs:
Many of us start to engage in the culture of
addiction in our teens which has its own
specific needs such as the need to:
- develop a personal identity separate both
physically and emotionally from our family.
- chart a path to ones adult role or career
amongst many others.
The culture of addiction cleverly provides for
those needs.
The Culture of addiction also provides:
knowledge on how and what to use, skills in
sustaining addiction and avoiding detection etc.
14. There are specific milestones in the culture of
addiction. Joining the culture being the first.
Contrary to popular belief almost all initial
drug consumption is characterized by the
following:
Initial drug use takes place in a social context
with ones peers, the new addict very seldom
paying for the substance drugs are provided
as a token of friendship.
Initial use is sought after by the addict more
often than forced upon by others.
Due to the social context the decision to use
seems natural and of no great consequence.
15. In this stage the first regular drug purchases
are made by the addict.
Preoccupation with drug supply begins and...
..the addict begins to desire the drug during
designated social activities.
The addict begins to learn from more
experienced users, basic etiquette
surrounding rituals of use and learning
desirable precautions.
16. Justifying usage through changing ideological
beliefs (belief structure rooting in denial).
The change in identity.
Letting go of the outside world.
Developing status and reputation within the
culture.
Learning to hustle.
Escaping and reframing consequences.
Getting busted and doing time.
Doing treatment, incarceration or death.
17. The culture of addiction and the culture of
recovery are like twins who, while mirroring
each other in may ways pursue opposite paths
one nurturing life and the other ultimately
embracing death.
Like the culture of addiction the culture of
recovery is a way of life, a means of organising
ones daily existence. It is a way of talking,
dressing, gesturing, believing, working, playing,
thinking and seeing that separates those in
recovery from those who are not.
19. The physical
The psychological
The spiritual
Relationships
Lifestyle
These are overlapping areas which need
to be addressed and recreated bringing
them from the effects of addiction into
recovery.
20. Developmental tasks in this zone revolve
around three major areas:
1. The adjustment of the body to the absence
of the drug.
2. The treatment of acute and chronic health
problems.
3. The construction of a health-enhancing
lifestyle.
21. This is a complex process of reconstructing
the personality by eliminating the cognitive
defence structures that supported addiction
and replacing them with sobriety based
defence structures.
Basically challenging thought patterns, the
management strategies of emotions and
attitudes, and recreating the belief structure
that underpins all of the above.
22. The spiritual aspect of recovery is often the
initiating and driving force of the recovery
process.
Redefining ones spiritual beliefs ultimately
guides you in the reconstruction of your
values, morals and ultimately behaviour.
The spiritual aspects of recovery also open
new social networks that contribute to the
culture of recovery as a whole.
23. This involves the reconstruction of intimate,
family and social relationships.
As addicts we need to rebuild healthy, family
orientated relationships, we need to get rid of
our old relationships within our social
networks and create new ones.
24. If addiction and recovery is a way of life then
defining and developing your lifestyle is a crucial
factor in recovery.
This involves a systematic reconstruction of daily
life with a large amount of focus on routine and
balance.
Remembering that the two cultures mirror each
other your focus in recovery needs to be the
opposite to that of addiction with one similarity
The energy, drive and determination you put into
your addiction should now be put into your
recovery.
25. There are some specific areas that need to be
worked on and upheld in order to encourage
continued development in the culture of
recovery.
There needs to be a shift in these areas that
should be clear and visible enough to
separate you, as part of the recovery culture,
from those that are not.
As addicts we cannot afford to leave traces of
the culture of addiction and must root out
them out.
26. We focus on words we use (no swearing,
slang)
We focus on conversation themes (no drug
talk, romanticizing, coarse jokes)
We start talking recovery (terminology,
principles)
We watch our tone (aggression, manipulative,
intimidating)
We watch our body language (the way we
walk, our posture).
We get rid of things like secret handshakes.
27. Culturally enmeshed addicts surround
themselves with symbols identifying them to
the culture drug paraphernalia, jewellery,
tattoos, clothes, hairstyles etc.
We need to shed all symbolic items that we
associate to the culture of addiction weather
they have sentimental value or not. In holding
onto these items we are in a way holding onto
out identity rooted in the culture of addiction.
28. Culturally enmeshed addicts entering
treatment must do two things.
They must do alternative, recovery orientated
things to fill the void during times of drug
taking and
they must develop a range of new rituals
that promote physical, spiritual and
emotional health, that build self-esteem and
enhance personal identity.
29. Music we have to change the music we listen to
(quite a controversial topic).
Dress and appearance this can easily keep us tied
into the culture.
Social relationships and how and when those are
developed and nurtured (watching out for the new
modern age of facebook, BBM, whatsapp etc)
Time orientation most addicts live at night and
sleep during the day this has to change. Friday
and Saturday nights become dangerous times etc.
We will cover a lot of this in tomorrows
presentation.
30. FROMING A CULTURE OF RECOVERY
THROUGH SOCIAL NETWORKS
SCRC
HEAL/ NA/
AA
CHURCH
WORK
FAMILY
NEW
FRIENDS
JOHNNYS
CULTURE
OF
RECOVERY
As recovering
addicts develop
their lifestyle they
are exposed to new
social networks.
These social
networks all have
their own values
and belief systems.
They have
prescribed patterns
of behaviours that
should obviously
promote a recovery
lifestyle.
Their affiliation to
each one of these
networks will help
in defining their
new identity and in
building self
esteem.
Johnny's first new
social network
31. I hope you found this informative.
I know there was a lot to take in.
We will address some of these principles in
tomorrows relapse prevention planning
lecture.
The impact of the family group held by Didi
will be after tea this is for family members
only.
See you at the talent show.