Get Rid of the Blues: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Varicose and Spider Veins but Didn't Know Who to Ask

Voorkant
iUniverse, 4 aug 2000 - 108 pagina's
Eighty million Americans suffer from venous problems. The bad news is that vein disease is progressive, so even if it is mild and simply unattractive, it could progress to severe. The good news is that treatment is available and preventative measures may help stop the progression.

As a nurse educator, writer and consultant, Mary T. Johnson, R.N. is an advocate for those who suffer from this condition and from a lack of good, clearly written, well-researched information on the subject.

Get Rid of the Blues is for the millions of people who think there is no way to prevent varicose and spider veins and for those who think they have to live with them. Get the answers to your questions in plain, easy-to-understand language.

You will learn:

1. top tips for preventing varicose veins

2. lifesaving tips for preventing blood clots when you fly

3. why varicose veins may be the first sign of pregnancy

4. one of the best kept secrets for preventing vein disease

5. eight things you must know before having laser treatment

6. what effect high impact aerobics and weight lifting has on veins

7. seven things you can do to prolong the life of your stockings

8. eleven questions to ask when shopping for medical treatment

 

Geselecteerde pagina's

Inhoudsopgave

Introduction
1
I The Knowing of Things Together
37
II Causality Perception and Self
66
III Organic Purpose
100
IV Concepts and Conceptual Operations
163
V The Larger Relations
191
Conclusion
229
Abbreviations Used in the Notes
239
Notes
241
Index
275
Copyright

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Over de auteur (2000)

Mary T. Johnson, a registered nuse since 1982, began specializing in small vein disease in 1991. She has served as a consultant and trains registered nurses to do sclerotherapy utilizing a training program she developed which has been approved for continuing deucation credit by the California State Board of Registered Nursing and by the California Department of Rehabilitation for RN retraining.

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