Thursday, January 15, 2009

Addictions and Trauma Recovery or Cell of Cells

Addictions and Trauma Recovery: Healing the Body, Mind, and Spirit

Author: Dusty Miller

A recovery model for use in conjunction with 12-step programs or on its own. Dusty Miller's treatment model for addiction and self-injury, outlined in the best-selling Women Who Hurt Themselves, has been expanded in this new work to include the physical and spiritual impact of trauma. This how-to manual introduces new ways of thinking about self-care, self-soothing, and self-expression. Designed for groups as well as individuals and their therapists/counselors...the "Addiction and Trauma Recovery Integration Model" ...[addresses] the core problems linked to trauma and addiction experiences. Its unique approach blends psychoeducational, process, and expressive activities to assess the effects of trauma on the body, mind, and spirit.

Author Biography: Dusty Miller and Laurie Guidry live in Massachusetts.



Table of Contents:
Acknowledgmentsvii
Part IIntroduction to the ATRIUM Model
The Atrium Model3
Part IIThe Outer Circle
Session 1First Steps to Creating Safety: Outside and In47
Session 2Understanding Trauma Reenactment57
Session 3Addictions and Trauma Reenactment: Finding Another Way67
Part IIIThe Middle Circle
Session 4Finding Emotional Expression and Balance77
Session 5Managing Dysregulated Anger: Whose Anger Is It Anyway?87
Session 6Cultivating Courage: Moving beyond Anxiety and Fear97
Session 7The Body Remembers What the Spirit Seeks to Forget107
Session 8Your Body Is a Gift115
Session 9Touch and Intimacy125
Part IVThe Inner Circle
Session 10From Reenactment to Reconnection137
Session 11Environmental Healing: Spirit in Community147
Session 12The Journey toward Hope155
Conclusion: After the Group Ends161
Handouts167
References217
Index223

See also: A Guide to PC Hardware Maintenance Repair or Sports Marketing

Cell of Cells: The Global Race to Capture and Control the Stem Cell

Author: Cynthia Fox

Positioned at the cutting edge of science, Cell of Cells charts the international race to utilize the stem cell.

From a lab in the Sahara, where one problem is sand in the petri dishes, to an Israeli lab that narrowly escapes a terrorist bomb, stem cells have gone global. Not only are the cells studied in an escalating number of labs—and lands—but they are already being used. In Japan, a respected doctor uses the cells to make small women better endowed. In Connecticut, stem cell technology has created cloned cows that roam the hills displaying eerily identical personalities. In Texas, stem cells rejuvenate dying hearts. In China, clinics offer stem cells to patients suffering from everything from paralysis to brain trauma.

In elegant, cogent prose, science journalist Cynthia Fox has illuminated the reality and promise of stem cell therapies. Cell of Cells illustrates how the extensive, fervent experimentation currently under way is causing a revolution, both in the body and in the international body politic.

M. Ian Phillips - Science

In Cell of Cells, Cynthia Fox brings her impressive talent as a science writer and journalist to telling the story of (the stem cell) race. The hefty book offers a great read for anyone interested in the topic. Fox makes the story an adventure....For nonscientists, she gives pithy but effective explanations without disturbing the flow; for scientists, the book is a smooth read because Fox does not dumb down scientific terminology. The knowledge she acquired in her journeys is astonishing in range and depth, and she cites papers from the primary literature as rungs on the ladder to her overview. (The book includes 43 pages of references and interview notes.)....The author's fascination with "science trouncing science fiction," the potential of stem cells, and our desire to learn what happens next make this a rare can't-put-it-down science book. It reminds me of the fun of first reading The Double Helix. There are fights between and within labs, gossip, and different cultures, but there are also knowledge and exhilarating progress. Cell of Cells is a serious book, spiced up by Fox's wit and storytelling.

Nature

The portrait that Fox paints of stem-cell science and politics, and of the talented (sometimes flawed) individuals involved, is faithful to reality. She pitches her account squarely in the context of competition between individual scientists, labs and nations, not all of which have been proceeding honourably in the race to revolutionize medicine using stem cells. Few of the mainstream players are missed out. An entire chapter, 'Biopolis', is dedicated to Singapore (where I am based), which punches well above its weight in the stem-cell field. The Biopolis, a conglomeration of glamorous institutes with a world-class infrastructure, is just one of many places where Fox conducted a vast number of interviews, attended conferences and generally did her homework. The author has laboured to be thorough, and tells an interesting story.

The Economist

Ms Fox's book captures the adventures of scientists working towards this medical ambition with a realistic humanity...refreshingly unideological.

The Dallas Morning News

The book is as ambitious and wide-ranging as its subtitle...a living history....Ms. Fox delves deeply into the science, enabling readers to understand the research and its implications in detail.... Parts of the book read like a novel, with rich renderings of settings and fully fleshed-out characters....Cell of Cells is an essential handicapper's guide.

The Lancet

Peopled with quirky characters and crowded with strange and beautiful places, Cell of Cells reads like the best travel writing, but the author doesn't stint on the science, or the politics, of her subject. Cynthia Fox spent years touring the world's stem cell hotspots, staking out labs from Egypt to Israel to Singapore, and peering over the shoulders of scientists and surgeons. Her exhaustive legwork has produced a highly entertaining book.

The Journal of Clinical Investigation

(Cell of Cells) makes one think about the immense possibility science holds for society. It tells a great story...Aspiring students of science would benefit from this book, both as stimulation and as an example of the kinds of approaches undertaken in this particular scientific endeavor. The restrictions placed on hES cell research by religious groups will only delay success (assuming that there will be success at the end of this road). Fox's book is an excellent introduction to the field of stem cell research and makes for interesting and entertaining reading.

Scientific American Book Club

One of the most striking narratives in the book concerns Woo Suk Hwang, the South Korean researcher who racked up a seemingly impressive series of coups-including a claim to have cloned several new human embryonic stem cell lines-before his career collapsed in 2005 in what Fox dubs "the biggest act of fraud in science history." Charges of fudged results, not to mention paying for eggs from his own female researchers, dealt a crushing setback to South Korea's stem cell efforts. Hwang's story illustrates the high stakes and pressures that mark this ongoing saga. Cell of Cells deftly chronicles the international quest to apply the potentially life-saving power of stem cells.

Journal of Law and Medicine

Cynthia Fox is an award-winning science writer whose work has appeared in a variety of high-profile populist publications. Her new book on human embryonic stem (hES) cells is a fascinating and accessible work....The book contains a myriad of fascinating and disturbing tales. The reader cannot but be overwhelmed by the awesomeness of the discoveries which are in the process constantly now of coming to light. This early part of the 21st century is a remarkable time. Many of the components of stem cell research, though, are not so edifying. Fox chronicles frightening examples of greed, unethical conduct and utter indifference to ethical propprieties. Apart from anything else, stem cell reseearch is big business, huge business. Fox has done a fine job in documenting the early and inglorious years of stem cell research. She has rendered an important service in making much that is inaccessible understanding and engaging. The challenge now is for science, medicine and law to cooperate in ways which are meaningful and effective to curb the excesses of avarice and ambition in relation to stem cell developments. Fox's Cell of Cells should be compulsory reading for anyone wanting to understand where stem cell research has come from, where it is likely to head and the kinds of dilemmas that it will pose for the human race.

Mary Chitty - Library Journal

Science journalist Fox traveled to Egypt, Israel, Singapore, Japan, China, Korea, and the United States to talk with scientists, patients, and physicians dealing with stem cells through such work as laboratory research in mice; clinical applications in oncology, cardiovascular medicine, tissue engineering, regenerative medicine, and cosmetic plastic surgery; and attempts to clone mammoth DNA in Siberia. More is happening in the United States than might be readily apparent, given the ban on federal funding. But other countries are definitely racing to take advantage of U.S. restrictions. The issues are as much political as scientific. The promise of stem cells may never be exactly as hoped for, but some patients are being helped in truly new ways. A glossary with definitions and acronyms of all the varieties of stem cells—e.g., adult, embryonic, human embryonic—would have been helpful, but this is both a good introduction to a topic that isn't going away and a gripping and accessible guide to the ongoing work. Recommended for almost any library. [See Prepub Alert, LJ9/1/05.]



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