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1

Approach, Afghanistan's Children a. New. Improving rehabilitation services at juvenile rehabilitation centres in Afghanistan: Lessons learnt through a pilot project ... Kabul: Afghanistan's Children a New Approach, 2011.

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2

Starobina, Elena, Elena Gordievskaya, Anna Ryabokon', I. Volkova, and I. Mishkich. Professional rehabilitation of persons with disabilities: status and directions of development. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/1863105.

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The monograph is devoted to the issues of vocational rehabilitation of persons with disabilities, taking into account the modern positions set out in the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and in the Concept of development in the Russian Federation of a system of comprehensive rehabilitation and habilitation of persons with disabilities, including children with disabilities, for the period up to 2025. The analysis of the current regulatory framework, the state of employment, the need for vocational rehabilitation measures is given. The main methodological approaches to solving the issues of assessing human labor capabilities are presented and the role of institutions of medical and social expertise and employment services in solving issues of vocational rehabilitation is revealed. Modern technologies of vocational guidance, vocational education and training, employment and industrial adaptation of persons with disabilities are described. For a wide range of readers interested in the rehabilitation of persons with disabilities. It can be useful for students, postgraduates and teachers of medical, pedagogical, sociological and economic universities and faculties.
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3

Lindsay, William R. The treatment of sex offenders with developmental disabilities: A practice workbook. Hoboken, N.J: Wiley, 2009.

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4

Lindsay, William R. The treatment of sex offenders with developmental disabilities: A practice workbook. Hoboken, N.J: Wiley, 2009.

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5

Lindsay, William R. The treatment of sex offenders with developmental disabilities: A practice workbook. Hoboken, N.J: Wiley, 2009.

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6

Alcoholism Rehabilitation Consultant (Career Examination Series). National Learning Corp, 1990.

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7

Garner, Geraldine. Careers in Social and Rehabilitation Services (Professional Career Series). 3rd ed. McGraw-Hill, 2008.

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8

Rudman, Jack. Rehabilitation Counselor (Passbook Series: Passbooks for Civil Service Examinations; C). National Learning Corp, 2005.

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9

Leon, Ana, and Sophia F. Dziegielewski. Social Work Practice and Psychopharmacology (Springer Series on Social Work). Springer Publishing Company, 2001.

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10

Lewis, Ruth, Kate Cavanagh, Rebecca Emerson Dobash, and Russell P. Dobash. Changing Violent Men (SAGE Series on Violence against Women). Sage Publications, Inc, 1999.

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11

Lewis, Ruth, Kate Cavanagh, Rebecca Emerson Dobash, and Russell P. Dobash. Changing Violent Men (SAGE Series on Violence against Women). Sage Publications, Inc, 1999.

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12

Williams, Olgen. Healing the Heart, Healing the 'Hood: Olgen Williams's Story of Rebuilding His Life & Neighborhood (Martin University Series in Life History Studies, 1). Martin University Press, 2003.

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13

McDermott, Barbara E. Developmental disabilities. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0052.

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While the purpose of the correctional system is multi-faceted, including punishment and removal of the offender from society, one component is rehabilitation. With no offender does this seem more relevant than those with developmental disabilities. Although the research is inconsistent, most studies suggest that offenders with developmental delays commit less serious offenses, yet serve more time in prison than offenders without such delays. Opinions are mixed on whether appropriate services for such individuals should be provided on specialized units. Proponents of this approach cite the vulnerabilities of these offenders. However, all agree that specialized services must include appropriate assessment that takes into account culture and individualized approaches to habilitation. It cannot be presumed that services designed for the individual with mental illness will be appropriate for inmates with developmental disabilities. Little research has been conducted on the efficacy of specialized services for offenders with developmental disabilities. As such, correctional facilities must necessarily take guidance from research based on non-offender samples. An active collaboration between departments of corrections and agencies providing services for individuals with developmental disabilities can enhance service delivery and improve the integration of the offender into the community. This chapter outlines the progress that has been made in the identification and habilitation of individuals with developmental disabilities in the criminal justice system. Definitions, legal issues, and prevalence rates will be discussed, as well as the vulnerabilities individuals with developmental delays present to the criminal justice system. Finally, screening, management, and habilitation in corrections arising directly from these vulnerabilities are discussed.
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14

Kristofer J., Ph.D. Hagglund (Editor) and Allen W., Ph.D. Heinemann (Editor), eds. Handbook of Applied Disability and Rehabilitation Research (Springer Series on Rehabilitation). Springer Publishing Company, 2006.

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15

Hea, Joint Commission on Accreditation of. Monitoring and Evaluation Physical Rehabilitation Services (Monitoring and Evaluation Series). Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthca, 1988.

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16

Smedley, Julia, Finlay Dick, and Steven Sadhra. Sickness absence, rehabilitation, and retirement. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199651627.003.0020.

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Improving health and wellbeing through work 394Sickness benefits 400Sickness absence: general principles 402Short-term sickness absence 404Long-term sickness absence 406Evidence-based recovery times 408Rehabilitation and disability services 410Ill-health retirement 412There is good research evidence to suggest that unemployment is associated with poor health....
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17

Basu, Sanjay. Waiting Lines and Waiting Times. Edited by Sanjay Basu. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190667924.003.0004.

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This chapter seeks to determine if can we reduce the time it takes to deliver a public health or healthcare service, such as the long waiting times in emergency departments, long waiting lists for under-supported services such as drug rehabilitation, and vast periods of uncertainty for scarce commodities such as organ transplants. How can we minimize the time it takes to provide people with the services they need? Embedded in this question is the problem of making strategic decisions about distributing our resources. Should we invest in that new resource, or is our money better spent on something else? In this chapter, the reader will solve such problems using a common operations research method known as queuing systems, which are systems of equations that enable us to determine what factors influence the time that people wait in line.
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18

Stucky, Kirk J., and Jennifer Stevenson Jutte, eds. Critical Care Psychology and Rehabilitation. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190077013.001.0001.

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When contemplating the broad field of critical care and all of its complexities, rehabilitation and psychology practice is not likely among the top 10 things that clinicians, patients, or the public think of. However, just beneath the surface of this fascinating, multilayered environment, the need for psychologists and rehabilitation-oriented clinicians is everywhere, in large part because intensive care stands among the most emotionally intense and physically taxing hospital-based settings for everyone involved. This book provides an introduction to critical care for professionals who are interested in, or who are already providing services in, intensive care environments. It also organizes and expands upon the growing literature that emphasizes the benefits of integrating rehabilitative and psychological principles into the continuum of critical care practice. Chapters from international experts, on a broad range of topics, provide summative reviews of the literature, treatment techniques, and innovative developments in various intensive care settings geared toward helping professionals appreciate how integrated critical care practice can benefit all stakeholders—patients, families, caregivers, staff, institutions, and society at large.
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19

Edwards, Jane, ed. The Oxford Handbook of Music Therapy. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199639755.001.0001.

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Music is acknowledged as an arts medium with a universal and timeless potential to influence our behavior and emotions. As international research about the effects of music on well-being expands it is timely to consolidate and report the gains in the profession of music therapy through this firstOxford Handbook of Music Therapy. With a foreword by Professor Colwyn Trevarthen (Emeritus, University of Edinburgh) this handbook provides an overview of some populations who are served in music therapy, with information about the contexts in which practitioners work. These include mental health services, hospitals, education programmes, and rehabilitation services. The people who come to music therapy either through self-referrals or by referral from a practitioner or service are described in detail by practitioner researchers most of whom are qualified at doctoral level. A range of chapters from internationally recognized experts has resulted in a substantial multidisciplinary, and pluralistic account of recent advances and applications in music therapy. The handbook presents an overview of many of the models and approaches that have developed in the field since its inception. Many of these chapters were written by the founders of the methods. Multiple perspectives to practice are honored in this text, with music therapy predominantly described as a relational therapeutic practice throughout.
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20

Lewis, William B. Helping the Youthful Offender: Individual and Group Therapies That Work (The Child & Youth Services Series) (The Child & Youth Services Series). Haworth Pastoral Press, 1990.

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21

Everett, Anita. Financing Care. Edited by Hunter L. McQuistion. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190610999.003.0007.

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Persons with serious mental illnesses are much more likely to have government-sponsored insurance, such as Medicaid and Medicare, compared to persons with general medical conditions. Often, state, city, or county government programs are needed to close gaps in services funding. Learning to navigate the health care financing system to access needed treatment and rehabilitative services is an essential part of a public psychiatrist’s work, and psychiatrists have a valuable role in advocating for better access to care. The pieces of the complex financing puzzle come together to provide, at the very least, a safety net and, at optimum, a high-quality delivery system that promotes resilience, recovery, and well-being.
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22

Barton, Michael, and Geoff Delaney. The optimal provision of cancer treatment services. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199550173.003.0009.

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Chapter 9 describes an evidence-based approach to estimating the demand for cancer services and its application to different treatment modalities and different populations. The work was done mainly for Australia, but has been adapted and used in Europe and North America. Cancer services include all cancer control interventions such as screening, early detection, diagnosis, treatment, palliation, and rehabilitation. It also describes in detail the estimation of demand for radiotherapy and give examples of how this approach has been adapted to other modalities and other populations.
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23

Markus, Hugh, Anthony Pereira, and Geoffrey Cloud. Organization of stroke services. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198737889.003.0016.

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The chapter on organization of stroke services discusses the evidence for stroke unit care and defines what this means within hospitals. The chapter sets out the patient pathway starting with pre-hospital care the assessment using the Face Arm Speech Test (FAST). It then moves to the acute hospital care emergency department (Recognition of Stroke in the Emergency Room, ROSIER) and consideration of thrombolysis and admission to an acute stroke unit. Rehabilitation and transition of care into the community including early support discharge bookends the chapter. Staffing levels are discussed as is the relationship between stroke unit nursing levels and mortality.
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24

Community-oriented psychiatry: scientific and practical aspects and vectors of development. LCC MAKS Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.29003/m3017.978-5-317-06796-0.

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This digest includes materials of the All-Russian Scientific and Practical Conference with International Participation «Community-oriented psychiatry: Scientific and Practical Aspects and Vectors of Development», dedicated to the 20th anniversary of the creation of the non-profit organization «Family and Mental Health». It presents scientific research in the field of organization of mental health services in Russia and abroad, considers modern technologies of psychosocial rehabilitation, including on the basis of a spiritually-oriented approach; the experience of the public sector in the domestic mental health service is reflected. It is recommended for researchers, psychiatrists, psychotherapists, psychologists, social work specialists, as well as representatives of non-profit organizations, volunteers working in the field of mental health, clergy and students of religious institutions.
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25

Franklin, Deborah Julie, and Andrea L. Cheville. Medical rehabilitation and the palliative care patient. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199656097.003.0415.

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Maintaining function, specifically independent function, is a key determinant of quality of life for patients receiving palliative care and their caregivers. Techniques, interventions, and strategies from the field of rehabilitation can be adapted to meet the needs of patients with advanced disease. This chapter explores aspects of rehabilitation medicine that are of greatest value for patients requiring palliative care. The first section describes pertinent rehabilitation services available in hospitals, outpatient settings, as well as home-based programmes. The next section reviews the timing of rehabilitation interventions with an emphasis on distinctive features of rehabilitation goal setting for palliative care patients. Some in-depth examples of specific rehabilitation interventions are given that can improve function for patients with advanced disease processes, including the important areas of caregiver training and support. The final section examines current barriers to the effective use of rehabilitation strategies in palliative care medicine and outlines some emerging approaches for improving outcomes.
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26

de Moor, Janet S., Catherine M. Alfano, Erin E. Kent, Lynne Padgett, and Melvin Grimes. Using an Implementation Science Approach to Study and Improve Cancer Survivors’ Employment Outcomes. Edited by David A. Chambers, Wynne E. Norton, and Cynthia A. Vinson. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190647421.003.0027.

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A cancer diagnosis and treatment can lead to a broad range of symptoms and side effects that interfere with a survivor’s ability to work. Multilevel and multidisciplinary strategies are needed to support individuals as they co-navigate cancer treatment and work. Cancer rehabilitation is an example of a multidisciplinary approach to care with potential to improve work outcomes among cancer survivors. As illustrated by this case study, a referral to cancer rehabilitation can improve the domains of functioning that are needed for work. However, implementation science is needed to overcome key challenges to integrating rehabilitation into cancer care, including testing different models of care delivery that support routine screening and assessment of cancer-related work limitations and referral for rehabilitation services.
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27

Family, school community and government involvement in rehabilitation of the handicapped (SPED publication series). SPED Oyo, 1996.

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28

Psychiatric Rehabilitation Programs: Putting Theory into Practice (Johns Hopkins Series in Contemporary Medicine and Public Health). The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989.

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29

Connolly, Susan, and Margaret E. Cupples. Community-based prevention centres. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199656653.003.0025.

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The need for a new approach to cardiovascular disease prevention, both secondary and primary, that is different from traditional health service provision through hospital cardiac rehabilitation services and general practice is evident. The targets set in the cardiovascular prevention guidelines for modifiable cardiovascular risk factors-smoking, diet and physical activity, weight and its distribution, blood pressure, lipids, and diabetes-are not being adequately achieved for either coronary or other vascular patients or for those at high multifactorial risk of developing CVD. There is also evidence of an increasing disparity in levels of risk between different community groups, largely attributable to social determinants of health. Community-based prevention centres provide a novel approach to reducing cardiovascular risk, in which there is shared working between professionals and the public and a shared understanding of the barriers that individuals experience in their attempts to engage in effective measures for both secondary and primary prevention.
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30

Katevas, Nikos. Mobile Robotics in Health Care Services (Assistive Technology Research Series, 7). Ios Pr Inc, 2000.

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31

Stumphauzer, Jerome S. Helping Delinquents Change: A Treatment Manual of Social Learning Approaches (Child and Youth Services Series, Vol 8, No 1/2) (Child and Youth Services Series, Vol 8, No 1/2). Haworth Press, 1987.

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32

McGuire, James. Offender Rehabilitation and Treatment: Effective Programmes and Policies to Reduce Re-offending (Wiley Series in Forensic Clinical Psychology). Wiley, 2003.

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33

McGuire, James. Offender Rehabilitation and Treatment: Effective Programmes and Policies to Reduce Re-offending (Wiley Series in Forensic Clinical Psychology). Wiley, 2003.

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34

Schmid, Jean-Paul, and Hugo Saner. Ambulatory preventive care: outpatient clinics and primary care. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199656653.003.0023.

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Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) services aim to restore the physical, psychosocial, and vocational status of cardiac patients. The role of these services has evolved due to the progress of interventional cardiology with its prompt and effective treatment of acute coronary syndromes. The focus has moved from the restoration of a patient’s health following an acute event towards a more pronounced long-term targeted secondary prevention intervention. As a consequence, CR services have also expanded their indication in order to include not only patients after myocardial infarction or surgery but also a variety of ’non-acuteʼ cardiovascular disease (CVD) states like stable coronary heart disease and peripheral obstructive artery disease as well as asymptomatic patients with no history of CVD but with a constellation of cardiovascular risk factors, especially metabolic syndrome or diabetes mellitus. This chapter provides a wide-ranging summary of the issues concerning outpatients and primary care.
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Schmid, Jean-Paul, Hugo Saner, Paul Dendale, and Ines Frederix. Ambulatory preventive care: outpatient clinics and primary care. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199656653.003.0023_update_001.

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Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) services aim to restore the physical, psychosocial, and vocational status of cardiac patients. The role of these services has evolved due to the progress of interventional cardiology with its prompt and effective treatment of acute coronary syndromes. The focus has moved from the restoration of a patient’s health following an acute event towards a more pronounced long-term targeted secondary prevention intervention. As a consequence, CR services have also expanded their indication in order to include not only patients after myocardial infarction or surgery but also a variety of ’non-acuteʼ cardiovascular disease (CVD) states like stable coronary heart disease and peripheral obstructive artery disease as well as asymptomatic patients with no history of CVD but with a constellation of cardiovascular risk factors, especially metabolic syndrome or diabetes mellitus. This chapter provides a wide-ranging summary of the issues concerning outpatients and primary care.
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36

Gannon, Jessica M., and Shaun M. Eack. Psychosocial Treatment for Psychotic Disorders: Systems of Care and Empirically Supported Psychosocial Interventions. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199331505.003.0007.

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In this chapter, we discuss psychosocial interventions, including psychotherapies and other services useful for helping individuals with psychotic disorders. We explain the basics components of the systems of care through which these services are frequently offered, focusing on outpatient treatments. Psychosocial rehabilitation is highlighted, as it helps patients move towards recovery, which is an important model for psychosocial care. A number of evidence-based psychotherapies are explored, notably cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), family therapy, and cognitive remediation. Many of these treatments can be given individually or in groups, and although underutilized, can improve outcome when combined with somatic therapies. Other services have been shown to be useful in recovery, such as case management, assertive community treatment, and housing, and these are explored in this chapter as well. Finally, we review the role of hospitalization and involuntary treatment in the care of patients with psychotic disorders.
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37

Sadhra, Steven, Alan Bray, and Steve Boorman, eds. Oxford Handbook of Occupational Health 3e. 3rd ed. Oxford University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198849803.001.0001.

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The Oxford Handbook of Occupational Health is a practice-based guide primarily for occupational health (OH) practitioners including general practitioners (GPs) who practice occupational health on a sessional basis. The book will also be useful to therapists who work with and support OH services e.g. physiotherapists, rehabilitation, and behavioral therapists and those preparing for professional examinations in Occupational Medicine. Although the Handbook is primarily for those practicing in Occupational Health, it provides valuable practical guidance for those who have responsibility for the following: assessing managing work-related health conditions, managing absence and return to work, development of health and well-being programs at work and evaluation of work based interventions for improving health outcomes. Assessment and management of work-related health issues require a integrated approach with involvement of employers, employees, occupational health services and the NHS. Such collaborations require good understanding of OH concepts and principles as well evidence-based practices which are central to the OH handbook. The 3rd edition has been subject to a major rewrite with revisions to various sections in particular chapters on occupational health practice, delivery of OH services, fitness for work, policies and procedures. The third edition maintains the overall approach and the general structure of previous editions but updates the material to reflect important new changes to practice, disease recognition, OH service delivery, guidelines as well changes to legislation and ethical principles. The new material for the 3rd edition reflects developments in the field of OH and the enhanced attention on health and work (improving employment and work capability, reduced sickness absence, increased productivity) in the political, employment as well as the academic research arenas. We hope the third edition will be highly regarded resources as the first two editions and will provide readers the right balance better the theory and practice of occupational health.
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38

Smith, Paula, Lindsey M. Mueller, and Ryan M. Labrecque. Employment and Vocation Programs in Prison. Edited by John Wooldredge and Paula Smith. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199948154.013.21.

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Historically, work has played an important role in managing correctional populations and providing a means to reduce prisoner idleness. As correctional ideologies have shifted over time, the concept of working while incarcerated has taken on more of a rehabilitative approach. Several policies and correctional initiatives have been developed to integrate prison industry and employment services into correctional systems in an effort to address the poor employment histories and low job-related skills of offenders. Evaluations of these programs demonstrate that participation in prison industry and employment services can increase job prospects and lower the chances of recidivism. The effectiveness of prison-based employment programs vary, however, and is dependent upon the key components incorporated into their design. Despite the differences between programs, employment services offered in prison seem to be an effective approach to addressing employment deficits among offenders.
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39

McQuistion, Hunter L. Recovery Orientation as the Clinical Matrix. Edited by Hunter L. McQuistion. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190610999.003.0001.

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At the core of working with people who experience mental illnesses is a collaboration in pursuit of helping them actualize their goals in work and love. Their recovery is therefore a unique process of personal development, with psychiatrists and other human services professionals practicing with recovery orientation. Specific skills, techniques, and services are identified as recovery oriented. In this chapter, through relating one person’s story, the reader can understand how recovery orientation becomes operational in a clearly systematic manner, using such techniques as motivational interviewing, shared decision-making, rehabilitative focus, person-centered treatment planning, and the use of peer supports. In this way, it is illustrated how recovery orientation is not only richly humanitarian but also evidence-based.
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40

Tkach, V. P., N. Yu Vysotska, A. S. Torosov, I. F. Buksha, V. P. Pasternak, S. A. Los, O. V. Kobets, et al. Economic evaluation of ecosystem services of Ukrainian forests. Ukrainian Research Institute of Forestry and Forest Melioration named after G. M. Vysotsky, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.33220/2023.978-617-8195-57-1.

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Ecological-economic calculations are presented for assessing the ecosystem services of Ukrainian forests, taking into account international trends. An economic estimation is provided for both wood and non-wood forest products, as well as for the climate-regulating, phytomeliorative, rehabilitation, recreational, and social functions of Ukrainian forests. Additionally, the economic value of the biodiversity of woody plants and forest genetic resources is determined. This scientific publication is intended for forestry professionals, experts of scientific and project organizations, as well as teachers and students of educational institutions of forestry and related fields. Наведено еколого-економічні розрахунки стосовно оцінювання екосистемних послуг лісів України з урахуванням міжнародних тенденцій і напрямів. Надано економічну оцінку деревної та недеревної продукції лісу, кліматорегулювальних, фітомеліоративних, рекультиваційних, рекреаційних і соціальних функцій лісів України, а також визначено вартісну цінність біологічного різноманіття деревних рослин і лісових генетичних ресурсів. Наукове видання призначене для фахівців лісового господарства, наукових і проектних організацій, викладачів і студентів навчальних закладів лісівничого та суміжних напрямів.
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41

Pinals, Debra A., and Joel T. Andrade. Applicability of the recovery model in corrections. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0040.

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Mental health professionals and substance use providers have worked with “recovery” concepts for many years. President Bush’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health spoke to important aspects of mental health care systems that were challenged, recognizing that “care must focus on increasing consumers’ ability to successfully cope with life’s challenges, on facilitating recovery, and on building resilience, [and] not just on managing symptoms.” Furthermore, the report went on to state that “recovery will be the common, recognized outcome of mental health services.” These words related to general mental health services, and yet correctional settings have become a place where mental health services are increasingly needed. Prisons and jails, however, are built around confinement and the general principles of sentencing that include retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation. Thus it might seem that there is such a fundamental distinction between a prison or jail and a place of treatment that a “recovery” orientation seems inappropriate or unrealistic. In this chapter, we address recovery, describing various ways of defining this construct. We also review potential considerations related to recovery-oriented services that may be feasible and even helpful within correctional environments, and describe some of the tensions between recovery and responsibility in the context of working with an offender population. Finally, we present recommendations for combining evidence-based treatments for incarcerated individuals with a recovery based model for inmates with mental health needs.
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42

Pinals, Debra A., and Joel T. Andrade. Applicability of the recovery model in corrections. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199360574.003.0040_update_001.

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Mental health professionals and substance use providers have worked with “recovery” concepts for many years. President Bush’s New Freedom Commission on Mental Health spoke to important aspects of mental health care systems that were challenged, recognizing that “care must focus on increasing consumers’ ability to successfully cope with life’s challenges, on facilitating recovery, and on building resilience, [and] not just on managing symptoms.” Furthermore, the report went on to state that “recovery will be the common, recognized outcome of mental health services.” These words related to general mental health services, and yet correctional settings have become a place where mental health services are increasingly needed. Prisons and jails, however, are built around confinement and the general principles of sentencing that include retribution, deterrence, incapacitation, and rehabilitation. Thus it might seem that there is such a fundamental distinction between a prison or jail and a place of treatment that a “recovery” orientation seems inappropriate or unrealistic. In this chapter, we address recovery, describing various ways of defining this construct. We also review potential considerations related to recovery-oriented services that may be feasible and even helpful within correctional environments, and describe some of the tensions between recovery and responsibility in the context of working with an offender population. Finally, we present recommendations for combining evidence-based treatments for incarcerated individuals with a recovery based model for inmates with mental health needs.
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43

Sweeney, Jennifer. Literacy. ABC-CLIO, LLC, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9798400679988.

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This exploration of juvenile corrections librarianship provides a complete description of these specialized services, addresses unique challenges in this library environment, and promotes intellectual and social growth for at-risk youth. The facts regarding juvenile corrections are grim. In California alone, 13,000 youth are housed as wards of the state. Rearrest rates for young people in detention and correction facilities range from 77 to 90 percent. The good news is youth corrections librarianship has the potential to improve the situation. This book fills a gap in the literature on corrections librarianship, which is focused almost solely on adult prisons. Programs for juvenile offenders require significantly more emphasis on education and rehabilitation than adults. There is also greater urgency in delivering needed services to youth offenders. Literacy: A Way Out for At-Risk Youth provides librarians in juvenile detention facilities with tools to face their unique challenges, such as collaborating with corrections staff and encouraging youth to maintain their connection to the library after release. The author's recommendations for reader's advisory, collection development, and other services are geared toward helping teens cope with their problems and develop better decision making skills.
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44

Paris, Joel. Integrating Psychotherapy into Practice. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190601010.003.0007.

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Psychotherapy can be integrated into the practice of psychiatry, but doing so requires changes in how mental health services are currently delivered. The delivery of psychiatric services may not be ideally accomplished in solo office practice but often requires multidisciplinary teams that include psychologists and social workers. This model of health care requires structures and planning that focuses on the needs of the sickest patients in the mental health system. Psychiatrists should reserve providing direct care for this population. Applying a stepped care model, one can offer less intensive treatment as a first step, reserving resource-intensive rehabilitation methods as a second step for those who do not improve. The benefits of this approach are that it avoids using specialized resources on patients who will get better with less intensive and briefer interventions and it supports clinical psychologists in the treatment of common mental disorders.
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45

Assistive Technology: Added Value to the Quality of Life (Assistive Technology Research Series, 10) (Assistive Technology Research Series, 10). Ios Pr Inc, 2001.

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46

Buchanan, Alec, and Michael A. Norko. Violence risk in community settings. Edited by Alec Buchanan and Lisa Wootton. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780198738664.003.0012.

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Managing the risk of harm to others is an essential aspect of the care of hospital patients and mentally disordered people in prisons. As these people move to the community, the responsibility to assess risk remains, but the circumstances and the resources available change. This chapter reviews violence risk-assessment principles described in previous chapters, and applies them to the management of risk in community settings. Those principles continue to require the obtaining of information from a range of sources and the collation of that information, a task complicated by the coexistence of correlation-based and causation-based approaches in the literature. Managing risk in community settings requires particular attention to a range of concerns, including the appropriateness of residential placements, the monitoring of people’s mental states, and the ethics of sharing information. It also requires the integration of risk-management strategies with other tools of rehabilitation, such as vocational services and substance-abuse services.
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47

Parr, Hester. Mental Health and Social Space: Towards Inclusionary Geographies (RGS-IBG Book Series). Wiley-Blackwell, 2008.

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48

Parr, Hester. Mental Health and Social Space: Towards Inclusionary Geographies (RGS-IBG Book Series). Wiley-Blackwell, 2008.

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49

Palmer, Emma J. Offending Behaviour Programmes: Development, Application and Controversies (Wiley Series in Forensic Clinical Psychology). Wiley, 2006.

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50

Palmer, Emma J. Offending Behaviour Programmes: Development, Application and Controversies (Wiley Series in Forensic Clinical Psychology). Wiley, 2006.

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