Summary
Praise for the previous edition:
"...continues its tradition as a trustworthy guide...Very useful for professionals and general audiences...recommended..."—Booklist
The Encyclopedia of Women’s Health, Sixth Edition covers the full range of women’s health issues in clear, straightforward language. More than 1,100 A-to-Z entries offer up-to-date information on issues specific to women, as well as material on general health issues such as diet, exercise, and disease treatment. Perfect for students and professionals alike, this new resource explains the latest medical discoveries and treatments, providing concise information on health-related topics to enable women to become informed and active medical consumers.
New entries include:
- Cervical cancer vaccine
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- Emphysema
- Fertility monitor
- Gout
- Hospitalist
- HPV
- Immunization
- Liver cancer
- Lung cancer
- Myositis
- Preconception care
- Probiotics
- Rett syndrome
- Serotonin poisoning
- Vertigo
- and more.
About the Author(s)
Christine Ammer is a professional writer and editor. She is the author of many reference books, including The Facts On File Dictionary of Clichés, Second Edition and The Facts On File Dictionary of Music. Active in the women’s movement, she has led workshops on health issues. Her other reference works include Unsung: A History of Women in American Music and Getting Help: A Consumer’s Guide to Therapy. She is a graduate of Swarthmore College and lives in Lexington, Massachusetts.
Christine Adamec is a medical writer who has authored and coauthored books on a broad array of topics, including diabetes, drug abuse, fibromyalgia, and prostate cancer. Her most recent books are Impulse Control Disorders for Chelsea House and The Encyclopedia of Drug Abuse and The Encyclopedia of Elder Care for Facts On File.
Foreword author JoAnn E. Manson, M.D., Dr.P.H., is professor of medicine and Elizabeth F. Brigham Professor of Women’s Health at the Harvard Medical School as well as the chief of preventive medicine at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.