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Empowered Patients – Diagnose Yourself Review

22Dec | 2014

posted by Paula

 

Diagnose Yourself: How to Find a Permanent Cure For What Ails You (with or without the help of your doctor)
is a common sense approach with a hint of detective work designed to build empowered patients.

Imagine you are suddenly struggling with a host of minor symptoms related to headaches or sinus pain. It’s there constantly bothering you, painful enough to warrant a trip to the doctor’s office. He listens to your complaint, asks if you have a history of allergy to any antibiotics and writes you a prescription. You are in and out in under ten minutes. One complaint per visit. It’s a health care system standard rule really. On the odd occasion, your doctor might sit and listen to two minor issues. He is a medical doctor. Or perhaps she is a medical doctor and their training is essentially almost entirely around diagnosis and prescription. The right prescription solves the problem. It is not always his or her concern what the underlying cause of the issue is. This is true whether you are a patient of the Canadian (Taxpayer funded social health care model) or the American system that is somewhat less universal or accessible. So the cause of many issues, ailments and complaints is often not so important as long as the symptom goes away eventually. In the centre of this system, while working through it you often do not feel like empowered patients. In fact quite the opposite is true.

Now imagine that this headache or sinus pain become chronic and returns pretty much every few weeks. You are stuck in this cycle of painful symptoms, doctor’s appointments, prescribed antibiotics and then temporary relief. Diagnose Yourself: How to find a permanent cure for what ails you says: what if you consider a common sense approach to the symptoms and apply a bit of detective work to unravel what is causing the issue first? What if you take control of your health care and do the detective work to reveal why a symptom is happening? Could you become a more empowered patient? Could you take charge of your health and potentially resolve some of your health issues without needing the doctor as often?

Diagnose Yourself: How to Find a Permanent Cure For What Ails You (with or without the help of your doctor) is the first non fiction book by the author. It is a book peppered with case studies that make sense. It starts with the example of a father and daughter struggling for years with vicious sinus pain. They have little relief ever and yet they live in a house with two other members of their family who never ever have sinus pain. Why them? Why not the others? What is unique about the environment the father and daughter share that is not happening for the other two family members? Reid Jenner suggests that you can help uncover many of your symptoms by working through his system of questions and work sheets. The process itself can be more empowering than the doctor and patient relationship that still sits at the heart of the health care system. The goal at heart of this book is to create a system of empowered patients less reliant on traditional health care models.

It’s the kind of premise that makes you think this seems incredibly simple, almost too simple to be true. But what if it works? What if you tried it and it worked? You might be surprised. Traditional medicine really is not that interested in uncovering the source of the issue, or symptom. Traditional medicine sometimes tackles the symptoms and leaves the cause undetermined. That can be unfulfilling over the longterm for the patient. Jenner advocates giving patients more tools to problem solve some of their own health care issues.

Diagnose Yourself is a smart approach that doesn’t hurt to try. The book is structured in three parts: case studies, health care history and a template so that patients can help work through some of the causes of their maladies. It’s a fast read and could easily be kept as a reference guide for many issues and health care concerns. Jenner is an acclaimed naturopathic problem-solving specialist with over twenty years’ experience designing, teaching, and facilitating root-cause analysis techniques in the health sector. He has a track record of solving many patient problems with this approach which focuses also largely on environmental factors. Jenner has helped many patients use their health history to find the quickest, simplest, and least invasive permanent solution to each problem. In his experience, many problems can be solved in less than 60 minutes.

I often talk about empowerment and advocacy over on my main blog http://www.thriftymommastips.com and in my own family I have had more than my fair share of interactions with the health care system. Sometimes relationships with doctors works well to help build a treatment plan for a child, or other member of the family. Occasionally the doctor patient relationship leaves you feeling powerless. Reid Jenner offers a means to take back some of the control. Even if you only remember 3 or 4 of the takeaways here, the book is worth your time. Every tool in your health care toolkit is relevant and useful in helping you become your own best advocate. (or your child’s best advocate.)

Diagnose Yourself is available on Kindle and paperback.

Diagnose Yourself by Reid Jenner, published in September 2014, can be purchased here:Diagnose Yourself: How to find a permanent cure for what ails you It is available for about $6.50 US via Kindle and it is also available for about $11.50 US paperback. That is extremely affordable and worthwhile. I think the price, coupled with content makes this one a $$$$$ out of $$$$$ because it will save you money and aggravation with the health care system in the long run.

Product Details

    • Paperback: 280 pages
    • Publisher: CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (November 11, 2014)
    • Language: English
    • ISBN-10: 1503099237
    • ISBN-13: 978-1503099234

Filed Under: Amazon, American, authors, book reviews, books, health, reading, Uncategorized Tagged With: amazon, books, health, kindle, non fiction

5 Camping Themed Books for Kids

1Jul | 2014

posted by Paula

You know summer is here when you start to see RVs, boats, and cars loaded down with camping supplies heading down the highway. Whether you’re camping close to home or planning a bigger trip further away, here are some books to help introduce your kids to camping before they actually get there. From cooking to activities to setting up the tent, these books are sure to cover everything your child needs to know.
Cooking On A Stick: Campfire Recipes for Kids by Linda White tells kids everything they need to know about cooking over a fire. From chili to popcorn, this book is filled with old favourites in recipes that even a novice can cook. White also introduces kids to the basics of building a fire and discusses campfire safety. Beautiful illustrations accompany the recipes. Paperback. Gibbs Smith, 2000.
Kids Camp!: Activities for the Backyard or Wilderness by Laurie Carlson is a great book full of ideas for things to do while camping. Young campers will learn more about their environment, including insects, animals, and plants, and have fun while doing so. There are even ideas for rainy days. And if you can’t make it camping this summer, many of these ideas could be done in your backyard. Paperback. Chicago Review Press, 1995.
Toasting Marshmallows: Camping Poems by Kristine O’Connell George is a beautiful book of poetry that captures the spirit of camping for children. George turns every little camping moment into something memorable with her spirited, evocative verse, accompanied by Kate Kiesler’s vivid paintings. This book will help get young campers excited about camping—or remember the little things they enjoyed about their camping trip. Hardcover. Clarion Books, 2001.
S is for S’mores: A Camping Alphabet by Helen Foster James takes readers on an alphabetical tour of everything camping-related. From national parks to famous conservationists, camping snacks to camping equipment, James has it all covered in this book. Informational sidebars accompany James’ poetry to give readers more information about each topic discussed. Hardcover. Cherry Lake Publishing, 2007.
When We Go Camping by Margriet Ruurs follows one family on their camping trip, teaching children about what happens while camping and offering information about wildlife that campers might encounter. Each story had a hidden animal and tracks curving onto the next page. Beautiful artwork accompanies the story. Paperback. Tundra Books, 2004.
Of course, children may also enjoy going camping with their favourite literary friends in books like:
·       Scaredy Squirrel Goes Camping by Melanie Watt
·       Curious George Goes Camping by H. A. Rey
·       Olivia Goes Camping by Alex Harvey
·       Fred and Ted Go Camping by Peter Eastman (aka Dr. Suess)
·       Just Me and My Dad by Mercer Meyer
·       Amelia Bedelia Goes Camping by Peggy Parish
Have you taken your children camping? What was their favourite camping memory?

This post contains affiliate links. If you want to buy any of the books mentioned above, click through to amazon.ca and you can buy directly. Any small profits from the affiliate link, then helps keep this blog going.

This is a guest post by contributor Bonnie Way. Bonnie Way went on her first overnight camping trip at age seven and has taken her daughters camping in a tent when they were each newborns. She’s looking forward to more camping trips this summer in a brand-new family-sized tent! When she’s not camping, she can be found blogging as The Koala Bear Writer.

Filed Under: Amazon, best camping books for kids, books, camping, children, family activity, kids, literacy, outdoors, preschool, reading, travel

My Five Favourite Books for Babies #TMMGG2013

10Dec | 2013

posted by Paula

best_board_books_for_babies

When my babies were still scarcely able to open their eyes I started reading to them. I have had a lifelong passion for books and reading and knew immediately that was one thing I wanted to instil in my children – a love of reading. In fact I read essays and articles about nurturing a love for books from even before the girls arrived. One of the pictures in my head that grew in my heart was that of me sitting and cuddling with my kids and reading to them. Those were precious moments, perfect for bonding.

There are a few sweet board books I have still kept from those early years. I will keep them forever because they stand the test of time and will ring true even for grandchildren years from now. I thought that you might appreciate a list of my favourite infant board books because it is the season of giving and gifting and books are always the perfect present.

My Five Favourite Books for Babies:

Goodnight Moon

The Very Hungry Caterpillar board book

Guess How Much I Love You

Runaway Bunny

 Time for Bed

You can click on any one of the above links and purchase directly from Amazon. Time For Bed is a gorgeous little book of rhyme about animals going to sleep. I adore Mem Fox. Good Night Moon and The Runaway Bunny are both by Margaret Wise Brown and they are the first books my oldest daughter ever received. They are timeless and beautiful. I especially love The Runaway Bunny because it gently assures babies and toddlers that a mother’s love means you will never be lost. Eric Carle’s books are always magnificent and the drawings are truly unique. Guess How Much I Love You is just a sweet little, loving and gentle story. I have always believed babies take in so much more than we give them credit for and their brains are perfect little sponges. What better way to build a relationship than to read with them?

Filed Under: Amazon, babies, board books, family, gifts, infants, literacy, reading

Top Five Young Adult (13-17) Reads for 2013

5Dec | 2013

posted by Paula

top_five_young_adult_reads_2013

My apologies. I have been absent for a couple of months here because I have been getting ready to move and renovating and haven’t had any time to read. But now as we approach the end of year 2013 I feel the need to get back to reading and to compile the usual year end lists of best reads. Why not start with Young Adults ages 13 and upto 17?

 I plan to bring you a few more as the month progresses. I am gifted here often with some incredible reads from young adult authors and I love that I get to read some gorgeous writing here before my daughter does. Then, of course I share these with her because I am all kinds of awesome like that.

The Secret Ingredient was reviewed here in July.

The five Best young Adult books published in 2013:
 1. The Moon and More
 2. Just One Day
 3. Fangirl
 4. The Secret Ingredient
 5.Allegiant These are recommended for ages 13 to 17. Do you have any others to add?

Filed Under: Amazon, authors, books, fiction, juvenile fiction, lists, reading, young adults

Bite Me: Not Your Granny’s Betty Crocker Cookbook Review and Giveaway

7Feb | 2011

posted by Paula

My copy of Bite Me. Keep Your Hands Off. It’s Mine, All Mine
This is not your Grandma’s or your Mama’s Betty Crocker Cookbook. It is so much more. Need proof?
1. The title: Bite Me: A Stomach Satisfying, Visually Gratifying, Fresh-Mouthed Cookbook.
2. The hysterical drawings:
Like this one which tells a little about the sisters that created the book, Julie Albert and Lisa Gnat. One brings the funny and the other brings the palate. (No that’s not them in the picture)



And this one. Which prefaces the appetizers section of the book.

3. And the incredible recipes. (From traditional with a twist – Rustic Meatballs in Marinara Sauce to oddball unique – like Julie’s Tabbouleh – (I made the meatballs on our snow day here last Wednesday and I’ve got to say they are the yummiest meatballs I’ve ever made. My whole family agreed)
4. I am no foodie, but I can make these recipes. They are easy to follow and delicious. They make me laugh and they make me feel competent in the kitchen (which can be a stretch some days)
5. Smart tips that I tested and tried here. Luckily I had some very hard brown sugar rehabilitated thanks to the sister’s tip about bread.
 

 Tonight I made my fourth recipe from this amazing new cookbook and I am in culinary love with this extremely funny and irreverrent collection. The style of this cookbook reminded me a wee bit of that runaway success Looney Spoons by the sisters from Ontario that created a mini empire based on their funny cookbook and savvy sense of style that caught the eye of finance guru David Chilton. Bite Me is a funnier cookbook that makes you chuckle while tossing ingredients together. Frankly anything that helps me view cooking as less of a chore is a great investment for my whole family. The white chocolate chunk cookies in Bite Me, were the two sisters’ signature item, Chunky White Chocolate and Cranberry. Easy to bake and delicious. There’s nothing my kids and I love to make more than scrumptious cookies. The Balsamic chicken with sweet peppers will be a new staple in my regular rotation of dishes. This one will be a great gift book for pretty much any occasion.
Bite Me (A Stomach-satisfying, Visually Gratifying, Fresh-mouthed Cookbook) (available at Amazon now)
Bite Me is by Julie Albert and Lisa Gnat, 2009, Pinky Swear Press Inc. Canada, $29.95, 272 pages can be purchased at http://www.bitemecookbook.com/
or http://www.pinkyswearpress.com/ and this one gets a $$$$$ out of $$$$$.
I was provided with a copy of this cookbook for free to review. The opinions on this blog are all my own. Bite Me!
My copy of Bite Me is mine I am not sharing. But the lovely authors will.
TO WIN: You can win a signed copy of Bite Me, a reusable Bite Me shopping bag and a Bite Me hat (you can enter until Feb. 15th)

1. Follow thriftymommasbrainfood on Google Friend Connect (it’s right there on the side of my blog) or tell me that you already do.
2. Follow @inkscrblr on twitter, or tell me that you already do.
3. Visit one of the sites above either http://www.bitemecookbook.com/ or http://www.pinkyswearpress.com/
and tell me something you learned from either site.

Extra entry (Not mandatory at all, but gives you more chances to win)
1. (1 extra entry) Follow one of my other blogs: http://www.thriftymommastips.blogspot.com/
or http://www.thriftymommagogo.blogspot.com/
2. (I extra entry for each tweet. Comment each time.)Tweet this or something like it:  “I just entered to win a copy of Bite Me cookbook with http://www.thriftymommasbrainfood.com/ ”
3. Blog about the giveaway once and earn 5 extra entries. Leave me the link.
I will draw for the winner with random.org and announce the winner Feb. 16th at 9 a.m. Please remember to leave your email address.

Filed Under: Amazon, Betty Crocker, book reviews, cookies, giveaways, meatballs, recipes, shrimp, signed books, Stress Free Kids, tips. cookbooks

Trendspotting 2010: What Was The Biggest Publishing Story of The Year?

26Dec | 2010

posted by Paula



Marina Glogovac discussing Kobo at ShesConnected

 So what’s the biggest publishing story of 2010? I think, without doubt the story still has to be ereaders and the growing trend to buying epubs. Last year, for the first time ever numerous public libraries noted that epublications had outnumbered actual physical books being borrowed by patrons. This year the story will be the same, with a small twist. Now there is an even greater emphasis on book apps too. That will continue in 2011. Apps for everything and on line magazines, digital publications will continue to explode. Ebooks now outnumber regular book sales on Amazon. Back in the summer I reviewed the Kobo ereader, on loan from the company for purposes of review. I now own one and have found it to be enjoyable, fun and a nice supplement to my reading. Back in the summer I noted that ereaders are to books, what book to film adaptations are. Both are unique and should be judged on own merits. I still feel they can be complementary. And frankly as a book reviewer my amount of paper hasn’t decreased. Books are still piled high on the bedside table for review. Publishers are still making galleys. I have compared many of the ereaders on the market and found the Kobo the most economical. Also I like the company. Not that I don’t like Sony, whose ereader has received great reviews also and was recently highlighted again in the Globe and Mail as one of the best gifts of the season. I like Kobo, as the little company that could and has taken the market by storm. (Just six months ago the tiny company had 30 employees and now they’ve grown to over 150.) Kobo smartly partnered with Indigo/Chapters early on and that has been a very positive experience for both companies. Kobo churned out a lovely little ereader that women have loved and bought in droves. Their business skyrocketed and then some. They created a gadget that looked like a book, not a piece of computer equipment and that resonated with women. Not that there aren’t a few bugs to still be worked out with this whole phenomenon, but right now it is changing the ways we read. Back in October I heard from Marina Glogovac of Kobo, who spoke at ShesConnected. “Our mission from the beginning was just to get books into your hands.” That they have done. The price of Kobo, the most economical and perhaps the most user friendly of the ereaders, succeeded in changing the price point driving sticker price down on other models. Right now you can purchase a Kobo for $139. For consumers that was a win-win situation. Seniors are another demographic enjoying this new way of reading. Both tech savvy seniors and those who are not so much gadget geeks. Nursing homes and some senior’s facilities are now using these because they’ve found them to be easier for seniors with arthritis. In future ereaders will need to add more children’s books to their library. Kids can easily use these gadgets and will start using them at younger ages. Also some thought needs to be given to sharing of titles. If I buy a book for instance for my Kobo and then want to share it with my mother, as I would with a hard copy of a book, there should possibly be a means to safely and responsibly share my copy. Now excuse me while I finish reading The Room on my Kobo.

Filed Under: Amazon, books, ereaders, Globe and Mail, Kobo, publishing, Sony, trends

Speak!

14Jan | 2010

posted by Paula

It is quite unusual for me to choose a young adult book to read or review for that matter. But something about this one tweaked my interest when shopping at Chapters/Indigo recently and as a result it has changed my whole reading perspective. Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson came recommended by a staffer named Emily as you can see here. It also has garnered more awards than most authors accumulate in a lifetime of writing volumes of novels. This young adult book is one of the most compelling character studies I have seen since reading The Lovely Bones, by Alice Sebold. (a new movie currently in theatres based on the bestseller. In Speak, the narrator is a young girl starting high school. Melinda Sordino, selectively mute, has stopped communicating in any meaningful way since she broke up a summer party by calling the cops. All of her friends hate her since she ruined the summer’s biggest social event. While most readers will probably be able to guess at the reasons behind the phone call, the author doesn’t reveal the details until a crucial point in the book. Melinda is traumatized, depressed and anxious. She slowly reveals details of why and how she came to be non responsive and disenfranchised from her parents and her former friends. Halse Anderson has done a remarkable job recreating the truly awful awkwardness of early grade nine and the strange but real high school environment. A mother of teenagers at the time she wrote this novel, she captures details with a wonderful mix of humour and pain, always realistically conveying atmosphere, setting and dialogue. Melinda is failing or flailing in most of her subjects. She is depressive to everyone except her parents, who do not stop working or admonishing her poor academic performance long enough to figure out what truly might be happening with their daughter. This is a sad, brave, book because it deals with mental illness and violence. But Speak is also ultimately a hopeful story that chooses to pull back the curtain that shields people from seeing mental illness as something that affects young people. Melinda’s high school is a place of refuge and terror, an escape and a prison. “The art room is one of the places I feel safe. I hum and don’t worry about looking stupid.” This is a book I will keep for my daughters to read when they are old enough to read it (I would estimate 12 and up). Speak conveys a powerful message about voice and truth, safety and the complex world of contemporary teenagers. It is precise and unflinching and it has opened my eyes to another genre of novel and the fact that there are some truly amazing authors writing young adult fiction.

thriftymommastips review $$$$$ our of $$$$$.
Speak, by Laurie Halse Anderson is published by Penguin USA, 1999.
198 pages. $14 Canadian and $10 USA.

Filed Under: Amazon, authors, book reviews, books, good reads, Indigo, Laurie Halse Anderson, mental illness, novelists, rape, reading, Speak, teenagers, violence, young adult books

Rainbow Magic Fairy Books and a giveaway

30Nov | 2009

posted by Paula

 We discovered the Rainbow Magic Fairy series a few years ago when my oldest daughter was small and very into fairies. This year my youngest child Ainsley, now five, has picked them up again and so we’ve been reading through the numerous children’s mystery books one more time. This, at right, is a picture of Harriet the Hamster Fairy, one of our favourites, that I am giving away to one lucky reader  Dec. 1st. I received the book for free with purchase of several others recently and want to pass it on to you. The series, by Daisy Meadows, started with the weather fairies and moved on from there to dance and party fairies, colour fairies, jewel fairies, day of the week fairies, pet fairies etcetera. There is no end to the possibilities. This lovely little series starts with two girls who are friends Kirsty and Rachel and they communicate with fairies who help them solve mysteries when ill mannered goblins, usually under the control of Jack Frost, steal things that control the weather or control the pets in the city. These are simple chapter books, full of clues and pictures, good transitional books for solid little readers wanting to graduate from picture books to something a bit more challenging. The Scholastic series are available on line from Amazon and Chaqpters/Indigo. Usually they run about $4.99 US or $5.99 Canadian. To win this my latest giveaway, a book for a child between the ages of four and 10 at most, follow me on twitter

On Twitter @inkscrblr
Comment on either one of my blogs at http://www.thriftymommastips.blogspot.com/ or http://www.thriftymommasbrainfood.com/
Please note in the comments that you are interested in the Hamster Fairy book giveaway.

thanks and good luck. Contest will be drawn by Random.org on Dec. 1st.

Filed Under: Amazon, book reviews, chapter books, children, mysteries, pets, rainbow magic fairies, scholastic, weather

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About Paula


Keeper of the Sanity - Freelance journalist, social media consultant and community manager. I build buzz for you. #KelloggersNetwork. Twitter Party junkie. Published in magazines, newspapers, on TV, radio etc.

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