Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 220
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4422-0203-0 • Hardback • June 2010 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
978-1-4422-0204-7 • Paperback • December 2011 • $19.95 • (£14.99)
978-1-4422-0205-4 • eBook • July 2010 • $18.50 • (£13.99)
Christopher M. Johnson, M.D., has been practicing pediatrics and talking to the parents of sick and injured children for thirty years. He received his Doctor of Medicine degree in 1978 from Mayo Medical School and trained in general pediatrics at Vanderbilt University Children's Hospital and in pediatric infectious diseases and pediatric critical care medicine at the Mayo Graduate School of Medicine. During much of his career, he was Director of the Pediatric Critical Care Service at the Mayo Clinic and Professor of Pediatrics at Mayo Medical School, as well as Director of the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at Mayo Eugenio Litta Children's Hospital. He is the author of Your Critically Ill Child: Life and Death Choices Parents Must Face and How To Talk To Your Child's Doctor: A Handbook for Parents. He writes a regular column on children's health issues for PTA Magazine.
You will be amazed by the intense drama of microscopic events taking place within the cells and other organs during the process of healing from childhood illnesses and injuries. Few authors have more experience than Dr. Johnson as a physician in both pediatric clinics and intensive care units as well as a laboratory investigator of immune system pathophysiology.
— K.H. Rhodes, M.D., Mayo Clinic
Recognizing the abundance of books offering guidance to parents dealing with the various ailments and injuries that children encounter, Johnson (pediatrics, Mayo Clinic) has taken a different approach. His goal is to explain in understandable language what happens in the normally functioning body, then contrast that, often at the molecular level, with what transpires when things go wrong. While what to do is inevitably touched on, what is occurring and why take precedence. Topics include inflammation, the immune system, fractures, appendicitis, asthma and other allergic reactions, cancer, and signs and symptoms. He also discusses how to help a child heal and what can take place when healing doesn't occur. While not the first book a worried parent would turn to, many will find it helpful in gaining a clearer understanding of what's happening. Because communication in the examining room is often poor, this book, clearly written without condescension, might serve interested parents very well.
— Library Journal
Dr. Johnson's factual, interesting, and innovative journey into How Your Child Heals is a fabulous resource for parents wanting to learn more about medical issues facing children, and how to maximize that precious face-to-face time with the doctor. How Your Child Heals is also a tremendous resource for medical professionals working with children, providing excellent explanations for medically "complicated" concepts. As a pediatrician and a mother of four, I highly recommend this fabulous book-should be on every parent's bookshelf!
— Jennifer Canter MD, MPH, FAAP Board Certified Child Abuse and General Pediatrician & Educational Toy Inventor/Owner of www.playthisway.com
Johnson (How to Talk to Your Child's Doctor), a former Director of Pediatric Critical Care Service at the Mayo Clinic and Professor of Pediatrics at Mayo Medical School, tackles a range of childhood injuries, illnesses, and common diseases in a fun and educational way. With chapters covering health issues both basic (ear infections; allergies) and severe (cancer), parents will find a wealth of useful information laid out in a clear, easy-to-follow format. Intent on sharing how 'fascinating, complex events appear to me,' Johnson begins with a very tight focus; in 'Inflammation: A Visit to a Sore Finger' he asks parents to imagine a scenario wherein their 12-year-old comes to them midway through building a backyard fort complaining of a throbbing finger. The typical symptoms of inflammation are there—redness, swelling, heat, and pain. Using this simple scene, Johnson examines the understanding and ignorance of inflammation in Roman times and then delves into a wonderfully comprehensive and wildly entertaining eight-page examination of the process at a cellular level. His Fantastic Voyage approach makes incredibly elaborate processes read like the adventures he believes them to be.
— Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
Parents will learn these key things from the book:
"What is happening inside a child's sick and injured tissues and organs as they heal?"
"What are the potential barriers to healing, and why are some problems chronic and difficult to heal completely?"
"What are the key psychological factors that affect how children heal?"
"What do we know about promoting healing, and what can a parent do to help?"