A chance to step into your child's shoes. When your child was diagnosed with diabetes your first priority was probably to learn everything you could about diabetes and how to manage it. Whether your child is a youngster or a teenager, you've done your best to help with injections, meals and snacks, and the many other elements of a diabetes management program. But through all this, you may be overlooking the importance of your child's social and emotional development. Children want to be normal, and diabetes makes them "different." Many well-meaning parents inadvertently focus too much on their child's diabetes, and not enough on other aspects of their child's life. This unique book, written by a young woman who was diagnosed with diabetes at age 11, gives you the opportunity to understand and relate to your child's feelings. Drawing on the author's own experiences and those of the many children and young adults she's counseled, this sensitive guide explains: How children feel when they're diagnosedWhy diabetes is a bigger adjustment for you than for your childHow to encourage a healthy approach to diabetesThe importance of diabetes educationHow to make your child's life as normal as possibleDealing with outside forces (school, day care, relatives, etc.)Eliminating the power struggle for independence in adolescenceBooks to Fund A Cure A portion of this book's proceeds will go to the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation International, a not-for-profit voluntary health agency, whose primary objective is to support and fund research to find the cause, cure, treatment, and prevention of diabetes and its complications. Juvenile Diabetes Foundation Library Health
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A chance to step into your child's shoes. When your child was diagnosed with diabetes your first priority was probably to learn everything you could about diabetes and how to manage it.
Diabetes "Hurts" Parents More Than Kids. Education and Attitude: Equal Partners. Getting on with Life. The Importance of Social Involvement and Support. Working Through Frustrations. A Declaration of Independence. Appendices. Index.
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A chance to step into your child’s shoes. When your child was diagnosed with diabetes your first priority was probably to learn everything you could about diabetes and how to manage it. Whether your child is a youngster or a teenager, you’ve done your best to help with injections, meals and snacks, and the many other elements of a diabetes management program. But through all this, you may be overlooking the importance of your child’s social and emotional development. Children want to be normal, and diabetes makes them "different." Many well-meaning parents inadvertently focus too much on their child’s diabetes, and not enough on other aspects of their child’s life. This unique book, written by a young woman who was diagnosed with diabetes at age 11, gives you the opportunity to understand and relate to your child’s feelings. Drawing on the author’s own experiences and those of the many children and young adults she’s counseled, this sensitive guide explains: How children feel when they’re diagnosedWhy diabetes is a bigger adjustment for you than for your childHow to encourage a healthy approach to diabetesThe importance of diabetes educationHow to make your child’s life as normal as possibleDealing with outside forces (school, day care, relatives, etc.)Eliminating the power struggle for independence in adolescence • Books to Fund A Cure • A portion of this book’s proceeds will go to the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation International, a not-for-profit voluntary health agency, whose primary objective is to support and fund research to find the cause, cure, treatment, and prevention of diabetes and its complications. Juvenile Diabetes Foundation Library Health
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780471347316
Publisert
1998-12-09
Utgiver
Vendor
John Wiley & Sons Inc
Vekt
156 gr
Høyde
214 mm
Bredde
141 mm
Dybde
8 mm
Aldersnivå
G, P, 01, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
128

Forfatter

Biographical note

Alicia McAuliffe is a 21-year-old student who was diagnosed with diabetes at age 11. She has been counseling children and young adults with diabetes for six years, and is the founder of the Circle of Life Camp, Inc., a not-for-profit camp for young people with diabetes.