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que dépend l'essentiel du pronostic neurologique des patients. L'objectif de cet ouvrage est de proposer aux praticiens le socle de connaissances et les protocoles nécessaires à la prise en charge des patients neurolésés. Il se présente sous la forme de fiches synthétiques permettant de rapidement s'assurer de la conduite à tenir, tout en ayant accès aux fondamentaux. Le lecteur trouvera ainsi réunis au sein d'un même ouvrage pratique tous les éléments clés d'une prise en charge médicale optimisée. Les auteurs ont eu à coeur de regrouper de manière concise et de rendre accessible toute l'expertise de neuro-anesthésistes-réanimateurs, neurochirurgiens, neuroradiologues et ...
Mieux communiquer pour mieux soigner, telle pourrait être résumée l’ambition de cet ouvrage. Définis comme très techniques, les métiers de l’anesthésie-réanimation requièrent en effet d’autres formes de compétences, parmi lesquelles l’art de communiquer est un pilier. Car on le sait, l’immense majorité des conflits a comme point commun une communication défaillante ou mal engagée avec le patient, sa famille, un collègue ou un membre de la structure de soins. Comment mieux communiquer entre soignants ? Comment délivrer une information avec humanité et efficacité ? Comment prévenir un conflit, sinon comment le gérer ? Autant de questions auxquelles cet ouvrage appo...
While some Christians, Protestant as well as Catholic, took risks to shelter Tutsi people, others uncritically embraced the interim government's view that the Tutsi were enemies of the people and some, even priests and pastors, assisted the killers. The church leaders only condemned the war: they never actually denounced the genocide against the Tutsi. Focusing on the period of the genocide in 1994 and the subsequent years (up to 2000), Denis examines in detail the responses of two churches, the Catholic Church, the biggest and the most complex, and the Presbyterian Church in Rwanda, which made an unconditional confession of guilt in December 1996. A case study is devoted to the Catholic parish La Crête Congo-Nil in western Rwanda, led at the time by the French priest Gabriel Maindron, a man whom genocide survivors accuse of having failed publicly to oppose the genocide and of having close links with the authorities and some of the perpetrators. .
Lumumba as a symbol of decolonisation and as an icon in the arts It is no coincidence that a historical figure such as Patrice Emery Lumumba, independent Congo’s first prime minister, who was killed in 1961, has lived in the realm of the cultural imaginary and occupied an afterlife in the arts. After all, his project remained unfinished and his corpse unburied. The figure of Lumumba has been imagined through painting, photography, cinema, poetry, literature, theatre, music, sculpture, fashion, cartoons and stamps, and also through historiography and in public space. No art form has been able to escape and remain indifferent to Lumumba. Artists observe the memory and the unresolved sufferin...