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Adventist Books of 2020

Adventist Books of 2020 December 31, 2020 This was a tough year in publishing with the world homebound and authors and publishers only able to market new books through online avenues. Nevertheless, books on a wide range of topics continued making their way into the hands of readers. From riveting autobiographies to vegan cooking, from theology to understanding Adventism, here are 20 books from Adventist authors that we read in 2020. (The following titles are in order of publication date.) 1. This anthology includes scholarly papers presented at the 3 rd International Symposium organized by the Institute of Adventist Studies of Friedensau Adventist University in Germany that analyze the Seventh-day Adventist denomination in Europe from a variety of angles: historical, missiological, theological, and socio-political. “The essays provoked, puzzled, and inspired me addressing questions I will likely need to confront at some point in my own culture as the United States experie

Los Angeles doctor identifies case of coronavirus-related psychosis in patient

People believe the police are after them or their families are trying to hurt them, he said. Individual reports of coronavirus-related psychosis have been documented in medical journals. Some experts suspect the cause could be the body s immune system response or inflammation caused by the disease. Dr. Charles Casassa is a neurologist at Loma Linda University Health. We see symptoms that are related to brain inflammation, which can include confusion and rarely psychosis, he said. Casassa is studying the effects of COVID-19 on patients with epilepsy and found the virus can cause more seizures. We have also found that there are some patients who have no history of seizures before that can subsequently get seizures once infected with COVID, he said.

Frailty is a factor in higher mortality for women awaiting liver transplants

 E-Mail Women awaiting liver transplants in the United States are known to be about one-third more likely than men to become too ill to undergo surgery or die before receiving a liver. Now a study headed by UC San Francisco and Columbia University highlights the role that frailty plays in this gender gap. The study followed 1,405 patients with cirrhosis, of whom 41 percent were women, awaiting liver transplantation at nine transplant centers in the United States. The men, whose ages ranged from 49 to 63, were more likely to have chronic hepatitis C and alcoholic liver disease (27 percent versus 22, and 33 percent versus 19 percent). The women, whose ages ranged from 50 to 63, were more likely to have non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and autoimmune cholestatic liver disease (23 percent versus 16 percent, and 23 percent versus 9 percent).

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