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Healthy Child, Whole Child: Integrating the Best of Conventional and Alternative Medicine to Keep Your Kids Healthy

Healthy Child, Whole Child: Integrating the Best of Conventional and Alternative Medicine to Keep Your Kids HealthyAuthors: Stuart H. Ditchek, Russell H. Greenfield, Lynn Murray Willeford
Publisher: Harper Paperbacks
Category: Book

List Price: $17.99
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Seller: boatbumme
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 16 reviews
Sales Rank: 460,952

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1
Pages: 352
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 7.3 x 1.1

ISBN: 0061685984
Dewey Decimal Number: 618.92
EAN: 9780061685989
ASIN: 0061685984

Publication Date: February 1, 2009
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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  • ISBN13: 9780061685989
  • Condition: New
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

Should you give your child nutritional supplements? Are vaccinations safe? Why are more and more children becoming couch potatoes? In Healthy Child, Whole Child, doctors Stuart H. Ditchek and Russell H. Greenfield answer these questions and more, offering authoritative, cutting-edge information on all aspects of children's health and wellness. Taking the position that conventional and alternative approaches to pediatric care are not mutually exclusive, they provide the newest science and most up-to-date information on:

  • The 6 myths (and one true statement) about vaccinations
  • The 10 powerhouse foods for your kids
  • The 7 questions you need to ask to find out if your child is overweight
  • The 16 herbs that are safe and effective for children
  • How to receive more integrative care from your current pediatrician
    And more!



Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 16



5 out of 5 stars Essential Reading for Parents and Grandparents of Youngsters   August 12, 2001
Professor Donald Mitchell (Thanks for Providing My Reviews over 97,000 Helpful Votes Globally)
44 out of 47 found this review helpful

Review Summary: Drs. Ditchek and Greenfield take Dr. Andrew Weil's approach to combining conventional and alternative medicine (called "Integrated Medicine") and apply it to younger children. As a result, you will get new ideas for ways to avoid recurring ear infections, chronic colic, allergies, asthma, and various attention-related problems. The book provides a sound foundation for having a healther, happier child. As compared to other books I have read on the subject, this one is the best overall resource.

Review: Your child is just undergoing her or his 37th ear infection. Your pediatrician has informed you about putting in tubes to drain the ears as a possible solution. You don't want to do that. What now? Chances are that if you read this book, you will never have to face that exact dilemma. Chronic ear infections are often a consequence of other kinds of problems such as allergies. If you don't eliminate the causes, how can you hope to eliminate the symptoms?

Integrated medicine is based on a belief that the best thing to do is to boost the body's natural immune defenses; consider the interaction of body, spirit, and environment; focus on preventing disease rather than curing later; customizing treatment for each individual; tring gentle and noninvasive methods first; integrating the best of conventional and unconventional medicine; forging a nonauthoritarian healing partnership with patients and their parents; acknowledging that patients and their parents have good insights into the problems; and treating children as children, rather than as small adults.

Where do you find these pediatricians who practice integrated medicine? Well, there are few formally trained ones today. But some traditionally trained pediatricians operate in a similar fashion. The book can also be used to help you get better results while working with a traditional M.D.

The book looks at a lot of key issues for smaller children: optimizing immunity beginning during pregnancy, vaccinations, proper use of antiobiotics, the right kind and amount of food, getting enough water, exercise, rest, relaxation, protecting children from environmental hazards, and offsetting the bad cultural influences of television and advertising.

There is also an unusually open-minded discussion about mind/body medicine, osteopathy, chiropractic, massage, herbs, homeopathy, Chinese medical techniques, and energy based medicine (like Reiki and Qi Gong). I'm pretty open minded on thse subjects, and the authors go beyond my openness.

The book's final section looks specifically at how to avoid and deal with colds, flu, sore throats, ear infections, colic, reflux, abdominal complaints, headaches, allergies, asthma, skin problems, and attitude issues.

Most people would give the book five stars just for the colic, ear infection, and allergy materials.

The materials on food, eating, and exercise are good, but you will want to supplement them. I recommend Marilu Henner's new book, Healthy Kids, for that purpose. It espouses many of the same principles in those subject areas and has recipes, as well.

Despite being the father of four with plenty of experience for these complaints and illnesses, I was impressed by how much new information was presented here. My only complaint about the book is that it wasn't written 30 years ago when I was preparing for fatherhood. Dr. Spock wasn't nearly as helpful on these subjects!

On the matter of ear infections, I would like to note that you can gently rub your child's Eustachian tubes through the skin on the neck and often relieve the interior pressure on the ear drum. While it may not stop the infection, the pain will be less and you can probably avoid a punctured ear drum. A partial vacuum often forms near the top of the tubes. By getting air in there, the air pressure is equalized and comfort is improved. Most dictionaries have a drawing to show you where they are. Basically, they go straight down from the base ear into the throat. You can usually feel them as swollen tubes through the skin.

Forewarned is forearmed. Use this information . . . and pass it on!




5 out of 5 stars Integrative Childcare   August 1, 2001
11 out of 12 found this review helpful

"Healthy Child, Whole Child" is a terrific guide to childcare for the 21st century. Drs. Stu and Russ and Lynn Willeford offer smart, actionable advice on raising healthy kids--weighing in on everything from herbs to conventional medicine to mind/body therapies--all written in easy-to-understand, entertaining language. Dr. Russ's training with integrative medicine physician Andrew Weil is a plus. I'd recommend this book to any parent.


5 out of 5 stars A healthy mix   December 14, 2001
15 out of 18 found this review helpful

When I received this book, I was looking at it from a fairly critical point of view. I wanted to give my daughter the best start that I could without wanting a medical "fix" for everything that went wrong, while at the same time being prudent about what she would need from modern medicine to be healthy. After reading chapters that had addressed issues such as immunizations, eating, sleeping, and antibiotics, I had found that the pediatricians who wrote this had a good mix of conventional medicine as well as alternative medicine. It is a book has pulled methods of both scopes of practice and has formed a new way of looking at health through both conventional and alternative methods.


5 out of 5 stars Everything you need to know to raise healthy kids   July 22, 2001
12 out of 14 found this review helpful

This must-read book is rational, grounded in scientific medicine, open to safe and effective combinations of conventional and alternative medicine, and extremely well written. I really liked the authors' respectful and friendly tone, and their comprehensive consideration of everything that affects the health and well-being of children. Well organized into 3 easy-to-use sections: foundations for healthy living; alternative forms of medicine that are safe for children; and how to combine conventional and alternative treatments for run-of-the-mill problems. Good guidelines on when to call your health professional and what you can try on your own. Great references and resources for all parents. I've been giving it as a gift for showers and new parents.


5 out of 5 stars Great resource for parents   July 21, 2001
Stephen C. Shapiro, MD (Langley, WA United States)
9 out of 10 found this review helpful

Parents want to do the right thing when it comes to their children's health. They are bombarded by conflicting (sometimes dangerous) advice from friends, books, and the media. This book provides clear, medically accurate explanations for the choices it offers. It is well-researched and easy to read. It improves upon "Dr. Spock's Baby and Child Care." I have been a physician for 27 years and a father for 22 years. I will give this book to my daughters when my grandchildren are born.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 16



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