Health&Science,건강,과학,마케팅,브랜드,브랜드마케팅,기업,서비스마케팅,글로벌,경영,시장,사례
- 최초 등록일
- 2012.05.21
- 최종 저작일
- 2012.05
- 22페이지/ MS 파워포인트
- 가격 2,000원
소개글
Health & ScienceContentsMind over medicineStem cells that killThe new cancer fighterOur cousin the fishapodDarwin would have loved itMind over medicineInstead she rested on a gurney, alert and calm, taking deep breaths at her hypnotherapist`s instruction. Thomas counted aloud, "One hundred, deep sleep; 99, deeper sleep; 98 ...""By the time I got to 95, the words and numbers had all gone," says Thomas. "It`s quite peculiar. They all go."Hypnosis was first used as a surgical anesthetic in India in 1845 but was quickly abandoned with the introduction of ether the following year. Mind over medicineBut it is in Europe that surgical applications of hypnosis have flourished. The new interest stems in part from studies showing that hypnosedated patients suffer fewer side effects than fully sedated ones do. many patients are fully sedated before surgery not because the surgeon requires it but because they choose to be. "People don`t want to feel or hear anything. They want to be out," says Schulz-Stubner. "That`s what you hear most of the time." Stem cells that killCancer is driven by its own kind of stem cells. Understanding them could lead to new treatments and maybe even a cure.as long as the original exists, copies can be made, and the disease can persist. But destroy the tumor at its source, and the abnormal cells can`t survive.
목차
Mind over medicine
Stem cells that kill
The new cancer fighter
Our cousin the fishapod
Darwin would have loved it
본문내용
Instead she rested on a gurney, alert and calm, taking deep breaths at her hypnotherapist`s instruction. Thomas counted aloud, "One hundred, deep sleep; 99, deeper sleep; 98 ..."
"By the time I got to 95, the words and numbers had all gone," says Thomas. "It`s quite peculiar. They all go."
Hypnosis was first used as a surgical anesthetic in India in 1845 but was quickly abandoned with the introduction of ether the following year.
But it is in Europe that surgical applications of hypnosis have flourished. The new interest stems in part from studies showing that hypnosedated patients suffer fewer side effects than fully sedated ones do.
many patients are fully sedated before surgery not because the surgeon requires it but because they choose to be. "People don`t want to feel or hear anything. They want to be out," says Schulz-Stübner. "That`s what you hear most of the time."
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