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1.
Glob Public Health ; 6(5): 505-19, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21424963

ABSTRACT

The internally displaced persons (IDPs) during the July 2006 war in Lebanon exhibited a high level of community resilience, affirmed by relief agencies and public health professionals. Data from personal observations, interviews, meetings and published material were used to examine factors contributing to this resilience. Findings suggested that community resilience is a process rather than an outcome. The sense of a collective identity, prior experience with wars and social support networks have contributed to building up IDP's resilience over time, while community cohesiveness, adequate public health interventions, social solidarity and a connected political leadership helped to sustain it during and shortly after the war. This paper examines implications for public health professionals and argues for a paradigm shift in disaster relief practice.


Subject(s)
Refugees/psychology , Relief Work/organization & administration , Residence Characteristics , Resilience, Psychological , Social Support , Transients and Migrants/psychology , Warfare , Group Processes , Humans , Islam/psychology , Lebanon , Models, Psychological
2.
J Hist Med Allied Sci ; 62(3): 316-35, 2007 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17124259

ABSTRACT

The Surgeon General's 1964 report on smoking and health, which declared that cigarette smoking was a cause of lung cancer, is considered a landmark in the history of medicine and public health. This article examines the impact of the report on medical student education by reviewing how the relationship between smoking and lung cancer was presented in medical school textbooks and syllabi between 1964 and 1987, changes in hospital smoking regulations and doctors' attitudes toward smoking following the publication of the report, and medical students' smoking patterns and attitudes toward cigarette smoking in the years after 1964. Although it provided some advanced students with additional insight into mechanisms of pathogenesis related to smoking, the education that many medical students received seems to have been neither a primary influence on their smoking patterns nor an important source of their scientific understanding of the causal link between smoking and lung cancer for at least a decade following the publication of the Surgeon General's report.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Education, Medical, Undergraduate/history , Health Education/history , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Schools, Medical/history , Smoking/history , Students, Medical/history , History, 20th Century , Humans , New York , Organizational Policy , United States
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