How to Talk to Your Child's Doctor: A Handbook for Parents

Type
Book
ISBN 10
1591026199 
ISBN 13
9781591026198 
Category
Adult  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
2008 
Publisher
Pages
299 
Description
A two-year-old develops a nasty cough and after experiencing breathing problems, his concerned parents take him to the emergency room. The doctor on call diagnoses his symptoms as croup, prescribes treatment, but days later the cough is no better. After another trip to the emergency room, x-rays, respiratory therapy, and treatment for asthma, the little boy still cannot shake his cough and breathing difficulties. Finally, two weeks later, the family doctor suggests an examination by an ear-nose-and-throat specialist. Using a bronchoscope, the specialist finds a small piece of plastic from a toy lodged in the edge of the child’s trachea. After removing the obstruction, the boy returns to normal within a day. In fact, he never had croup or asthma.Could this lengthy, frustrating experience have been avoided?In this illuminating guide to communicating with your child’s doctor, pediatrician Christopher M. Johnson shows parents how to talk more effectively to their doctors about their children’s health. Johnson takes the nonmedical layperson into the mindset of the physician examining a sick child for the first time. He demonstrates how doctors evaluate symptoms, interpret answers to their questions, and decide on a course of treatment. The book invites and then empowers parents to join their child’s doctor as a partner in the diagnostic and therapeutic process. Each chapter ends with a communication checklist to help parents find the right words while visiting the doctor.Dr. Johnson covers the following topics:The medical history and why it is so importantHow and why the doctor examines your childHow a doctor uses lab testsHow a doctor arrives at a diagnosisTime-honored medical wisdom that all doctors rely onThe difference between specific treatments and supportive care when a diagnosis is uncertainConsulting specialists along with the family physicianThe final chapter encourages the reader to become a sort of "junior doctor" by presenting several real-life cases and challenging the reader to work through the problem as a physician would.This jargon-free and completely accessible guidebook will enable you to assist your child’s doctor in the vital work of effectively caring for your child in health and illness. - from Amzon 
Number of Copies

REVIEWS (0) -

No reviews posted yet.

WRITE A REVIEW

Please login to write a review.