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Wellness tourism: a perspective article

The Tourist Review, 2020
Purpose This paper aims to examine the development and significant contributions in a growing array of relevant publications spanning from 1946 to date and discuss future developments of the wellness tourism topic until the year 2095.
S. Kazakov, Olga Oyner
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Cut Well, Sew Well, Do Well?

New England Journal of Medicine, 2013
Although its origin is uncertain, the expression “cut well, sew well, do well” is known by most physicians and is probably known by every surgeon who received training in this century. It endorses principles espoused by Dr. William Halsted at the end of the 19th century that stressed that gentle handling of tissue, precise dissection, and exact tissue ...
openaire   +2 more sources

Vacation as a Public Health Resource: Toward a Wellness-Centered Tourism Design Approach

Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research, 2019
In today’s technology-driven configuration of work and life systems, wellness imbalances underscore the need for time away from sources of stress in the workplace, school, and other living scenarios. Increasingly, consumers are turning to vacation travel
Xinran Y. Lehto, M. Lehto
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Doing Well by Making Well: The Impact of Corporate Wellness Programs on Employee Productivity

Management Sciences, 2017
This paper investigates the impact of a corporate wellness program on worker productivity using a panel of objective health and productivity data from 111 workers in five laundry plants.
Timothy Gubler, Ian Larkin, L. Pierce
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Sleep well, breathe well, age well

Science Translational Medicine, 2015
Sleep-disordered breathing hastens cognitive decline by a decade, but positive airway pressure treatment may offset this effect.
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Keeping the Well-Elderly Well

The American Journal of Nursing, 1983
The term well elderly does not necessarily mean illness free. In fact, it is estimated that 85 percent of the elderly have some form of chronic illness.* But many, on fixed incomes, cannot afford routine health checkups. Thus, new problems may go undetected and chronic disorders may escalate into acute illnesses.
M P, Hazard, R E, Kemp
openaire   +2 more sources

Wellness and healthy lifestyle in tourism settings

The Tourist Review, 2019
Purpose This paper aims to examine the concept of wellness as a form of healthy lifestyle in tourism settings. Design/methodology/approach Data were collected through a self-complete questionnaire administered to a sample of guests staying in wellness
A. T. Damijanić
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Environmental Wellness

Literature and Medicine, 1996
Calicott uses the recent history of his home, Stevens Point, Wisconsin, to illustrate what he argues is an important distinction between the traditional model of health and a more involved understanding of wellness. He argues that health is usually defined as the absence of disease, while wellness encompasses a proactive stance in which human
openaire   +2 more sources

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