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Animal viruses and humans, a narrow divide : how lethal zoonotic viruses spill over and threaten us
Andiman, WarrenFirst Paul Dry Books edition. - Philadelphia : Paul Dry Books, 2018. -
Forgotten children of the AIDS epidemic
New Haven : Yale University Press, c1995.This study looks at the issues facing children whose parents are dying of AIDS: what children experience; how it affects them; how their emotional needs can be met and second families found; and the stigmas they face. Stories of children, told in their own words, are included.AIDS breaks the rules of dying. It strikes the young rather than the old, decimating families and devastating communities. It will leave as its legacy a generation of orphans - traumatized by multiple losses, isolation, stigma, and grief. By the turn of the century, more than one hundred thousand children and youth in the United States - and ten million worldwide - will lose their parents to AIDS. Written by professionals in medicine, law, social work, anthropology, psychiatry, and public policy, this volume is the first full-length look at the issues facing children whose parents and siblings are dying of AIDS: what children experience, how it affects them, how we can meet their emotional needs and help them find second families, how we can counter the stigmas they face. Authors explore ways to promote resilience in these AIDS-affected children. Stories of the children and their caretakers, told in their own words, are woven throughout. Pioneering and practical, the book presents an action agenda and resource directory for our nation's policymakers as well as for parents and those who work with children in both formal and informal settings.
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Forgotten children of the AIDS epidemic
New Haven : Yale University Press, ©1995.AIDS breaks the rules of dying. It strikes the young rather than the old, decimating families and devastating communities. It will leave as its legacy a generation of orphans - traumatized by multiple losses, isolation, stigma, and grief. By the turn of the century, more than one hundred thousand children and youth in the United States - and ten million worldwide - will lose their parents to AIDS. Written by professionals in medicine, law, social work, anthropology, psychiatry, and public policy, this volume is the first full-length look at the issues facing children whose parents and siblings are dying of AIDS: what children experience, how it affects them, how we can meet their emotional needs and help them find second families, how we can counter the stigmas they face. Authors explore ways to promote resilience in these AIDS-affected children. Stories of the children and their caretakers, told in their own words, are woven throughout. Pioneering and practical, the book presents an action agenda and resource directory for our nation's policymakers as well as for parents and those who work with children in both formal and informal settings.
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