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Enter your mobile number or email address below and we'll send you a link to download the free Kindle App. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. To get the free app, enter your mobile phone number. Professionally, Dr.
Honigfeld is identified most closely with the study of biological therapies in severe neuropsychiatric disease. He spent over 20 years as clinical research director with a large, international pharmaceuticals company, and served as well on the faculty of Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey.
His most recent book -- DEAD END: The Lives of Henry Cotton - deals with an aggressive program of 'psychosurgery' promoted one hundred years ago, a failed effort that resulted in multiple patient deaths. Would you like to tell us about a lower price? If you are a seller for this product, would you like to suggest updates through seller support? Syphilis is back. This potentially fatal disease -- passed along by physical intimacy -- is again on the rise, its increase accelerated by peer pressure, demographics, changing sexual practices, drug resistance, social networking and electronic chatter.
This old scourge, potentially fatal if untreated, was supposed to have been eradicated with the introduction of antibiotics way back in the s. So, why is syphilis still around? Why are new cases rising here and abroad? Who is at risk - rich or poor, black or white, male or female, young or old, homosexual or heterosexual?
And, what are the prospects for syphilis control in the future? Looking for answers, the author begins his search with the animals of the Ark, each replete with an invisible cargo of bacteria never mentioned in the Bible. You will learn why of all those creatures two-by-two who might have hosted the germs of syphilis, the wily venereal bacterium -- a squiggly microbe named Treponema pallidum -- chose Mr.