Dr. Laura Nathanson wrote *The Portable Pediatrician* to help parents find the joy in parenting and gain the confidence to quickly and easily assess their child's development, medical symptoms, and behavioral problems. Parents can't always visit their pediatrician every time they have a question, bu
The Portable Pediatrician for Parents
โ Scribed by Walther, Laura Nathanson
- Publisher
- Harper Perennial
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 589 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN
- 0062731769
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Amazon.com Review
Some parents in the post-Spock generation may think that when it comes to basic childcare instruction, Heidi Murkoff's What to Expect series is the only game in town. But there are alternatives, and this one has a considerable advantage--especially from the viewpoint of parents with more than one small child--in that it covers birth-to-5 in a single, manageable volume. Laura Walther Nathanson, M.D., FAAP, also serves up loads of useful information--everything from breastfeeding to the impact of divorce on a child--in a writing style that's authoritative without being pompous. She sounds less like a medical expert who happens to deal with children, and more like a fellow-parent who happens to be a medical expert. She refers to 3 and 4 year olds simply as Threes and Fours, pee is pee, and poo is poo. There are a couple of drawbacks, however. A minor complaint is the shockingly poor quality of the line illustrations, which manage to make smiling toddlers look deranged at best and demonic at worst. A more major issue is the book's bland layout--there is lots and lots of plain gray text and very little has been done to make the most important information leap to the eye. Nonetheless, this is such an excellent source of information that it is a must for every parent's shelf. --Richard Farr
From Library Journal
Nathanson, a practicing pediatrician, has written a delightful, informative guide for parents of children from birth to age five. She divides her text into three basic sections: the well child, the sick child, and pediatric controversies and concerns. The section on the well child, which is the longest, is divided by age; Nathanson here discusses what to expect developmentally and behaviorally at each age and how to handle common problems. The section on the sick child focuses on common illnesses and what symptoms to look for, while the section on pediatric controversies and concerns treats everything from allergies to baby shots. Two smaller sections feature handouts for potentially awkward situations and a glossary of medical terms. Nathanson's well-placed touches of humor throughout the book make even the dry parts interesting. An excellent complement to Fitzhugh Dodson and Ann Alexander's Your Child: Birth to Age 6 (LJ 11/1/86), this book is recommended for patient education/consumer health collections.
Mary J. Jarvis, Methodist Hosp. Medical Lib., Lubbock, Tex.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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