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The descriptions are based on information from the publishers.
The Treatment of Hypertension: A Story of Myths,
Misconceptions, Controversies and Heroics, 2nd ed.
by Marvin Moser, M.D., clinical professor of medicine

Le Jacq Communications (Darien, Conn.) 2002

Moser focuses on the devastating consequences of untreated hypertension.
Management of this public health problem has evolved over the past century;
hypertension was once considered to have beneficial effects on health
since the higher the pressure, the better the circulation. This rudimentary
misdiagnosis along with other myths and misconceptions regarding the treatment
of hypertension are discussed and debunked by the author.


The Way to Eat: A Six-Step Path to Lifelong Weight
Control
by David L. Katz, M.D., M.P.H. ’93, associate clinical professor
of public health and medicine, and Maura Gonzalez, M.S., R.D.

Sourcebooks Trade (Naperville, Ill.) 2002

This book offers a comprehensive overview of food and diets, beginning
with a guide to nutritional basics and what people need to eat vs. what
they may want to eat. While not offering a specific diet plan, the book
provides practical tips and persuasive reasons for changing eating habits.


Captive of Libby Prison
by Stewart J. Petrie, M.D., HS ’55

Pentland Press Inc. (Raleigh, N.C.) 2002

Petrie has captured a side of the Civil War that is not often portrayed:
a personal perspective. Fighting for the Union Army during the Civil War,
Charles Robinson—Petrie’s great-great-uncle—wrote home
frequently to friends and family describing the battle being fought around
him. He and the other men in his regiment were captured by Confederate
soldiers and held in the notorious Libby Prison. These personal accounts
describe a far different war than the one often portrayed by military
strategists.


Genetics for Pulmonologists: The Molecular Genetic
Basis of Pulmonary Diseases
by Jordan Prutkin, M.D. ’02, Joel Moss, M.D., and Eli Hatchwell,
series editor

Remedica Publishing (Lincolnshire, Ill.) 2002

Genetics for Pulmonologists provides an overview of lung diseases whose
genetic defect has been defined as of June 2001. It is an easy-to-use
manual with concise reviews of genetic diseases that a pulmonologist might
encounter.


Overcoming Dyslexia: A New and Complete Science-Based
Program for Overcoming Reading Problems at Any Level
by Sally Shaywitz, M.D., professor of pediatrics and in the Child Study
Center

Alfred A. Knopf (New York) 2003 
This comprehensive book helps us understand, identify and overcome the
reading problems that plague American children. Shaywitz’s book
corrects such popular myths as the beliefs that dyslexia is primarily
a male problem, that children with dyslexia see words backwards and that
dyslexia is linked to intelligence. She shows that although dyslexia cannot
be outgrown, its effects can be overcome with careful planning and hard
work.


Encyclopedia of Psychotherapy
edited by William H. Sledge, M.D., FW ’75, professor of psychiatry,
and Michel Hersen, M.D.

Academic Press (San Diego, Calif.) 2002

This two-volume set covers the major psychotherapies currently in practice
as well as the classical approaches that laid the foundation for the various
contemporary treatment approaches. In addition, it identifies the scientific
studies conducted on the efficacy of the therapies and reviews the theoretical
basis of each therapy.


Chromosomal Instability and Aging: Basic Science
and Clinical Implications
edited by Fuki M. Hisama, M.D., HS ’92, assistant professor of
neurology, Sherman M. Weissman, M.D., Sterling Professor of Genetics and
professor of medicine, and George M. Martin, M.D.

Marcel Dekker Inc. (New York) 2003

Understanding the biological basis of aging is increasingly important
as we anticipate the impact that a rapidly growing older population will
have on the medical and social landscape. This book provides readers with
background information on the biology of aging and the genetic alterations
and epigenetic remodeling that occur with normative aging. It brings together
expert reviews on the cellular and molecular bases of chromosomal instability
and aging in human diseases and animal models, cellular senescence, telomeric
regulations and oxidative stress.


Send notices of new books by alumni and faculty to Cheryl Violante,
Yale Medicine, P.O. Box 7612, New Haven, CT 06519-0612, or via e-mail
to cheryl.violante@yale.edu.
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