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Reviews for Your Child in the Hospital; A Practical Guide for Parents, 2nd Edition

 Your Child in the Hospital magazine reviews

The average rating for Your Child in the Hospital; A Practical Guide for Parents, 2nd Edition based on 2 reviews is 4.5 stars.has a rating of 4.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2018-12-12 00:00:00
1999was given a rating of 4 stars Scott Weiler
I wish I had this book when my daughter was admitted for a long time in the hospital and then she was diagnosed with rare cancer. Its a small book and has alot of information and it talks about almost everything. The only reason i gave it four stars instead of 5 is because in one of the chapters she said to taste every medication that your child take to describe it to you kid, And thats a big no, Simply because there is some dangerous meds. And my daughter's doctors always tell me don't ever taste the medicine its good for her but its very bad for you, And i'm talking about chemotherapy and steroids and other serious medications. So in my opinion she should've mentioned that.
Review # 2 was written on 2015-04-20 00:00:00
1999was given a rating of 5 stars Oscar Santos
I am the parent of a childhood cancer survivor and a physician. I have logged many an hour in the hospital both as a professional and as a parent. You would think that with all that schooling and on the job experience that being a parent of a hospitalized child would be a relative cake walk compared to the hospital naive adult. It turns out that is basically untrue. The only thing that being a doctor helps with is understanding the lingo and knowing your way to the cafeteria. The physical terrain is entirely familiar, but the emotional terrain is new, scary, and filled with land mines. That is where this book comes in. It calmly, carefully, and lovingly takes parents through the entire experience of having a child in the hospital. There is some excellent and highly reproduced research that shows that when under stress patients only take in about 10% of what is said to them. Add the stress of a child being ill enough to require round the clock monitoring and having to juggle caring for siblings and what to do about work, and it is not hard to feel completely out of control. When my son was first diagnosed I laughed out loud when someone told me to take it one day at a time. I could not for the life of me manage more than 15 minutes at a time. I would spend 15 minutes with him, 15 minutes walking, and 15 minutes crying. Wash, rinse, repeat. It was a week before I could manage anything better than that. This book can save your sanity. It helps with every facet of the hospital experience. It is readable. The advice is practical, and it comes from parents who have been there. This is wisdom that health care professionals lack, but every parent of a hospitalized child needs. It tells you how to get through it and how to make it bearable. It will brighten your day when you didn't think that was possible.


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