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Jenny McCarthy-whose bestselling books Louder Than Words and Mother Warriors told the stories of healing children with autism-teams up with a preeminent autism doctor to write the first book on a remarkably effective treatment.
In 2006, autism became the leading disorder affecting children in the United States. While diagnoses skyrocket and parents struggle to find help, a group of innovative doctors has been pioneering therapies and treatments that are remarkably effective in healing conditions associated with autism. As word spreads about these incredible discoveries- helped in part by Jenny McCarthy's book Louder Than Words- parents are desperate to learn about the biomedical therapies for themselves.
Since early intervention is key to a successful recovery, McCarthy has teamed up with Dr. Jerry Kartzinel, the doctor who successfully treated her son, to write the first book to give parents all the necessary information about biomedical treatment. Beginning with diagnosis, Dr. Kartzinel explains the different therapies that he uses. He shows parents how to make simple changes to their child's environment and diet that can result in marked improvements and are safe and easy to try at home. And finally he explains some of the more advanced therapies that many doctors use today, and the way parents, alongside a qualified medical professional, can determine whether or not such treatments would benefit their child.
For new parents, Dr. Kartzinel provides helpful guidelines on how to best protect their child from developing autism.
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Technical Details
- ISBN13: 9780525951032- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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By Shevi (NJ, USA)
I have an autistic son. When you hear that diagnosis, it comes crashing down on you like a tsunami, threating to wash all hope for your child's future away. But you can't give up hope, and that's what this book is about.
Most of the controversy around this book comes from the medical community saying a certain vaccine couldn't have caused a single child's autism, the diets and other treatments in the book don't really cure autism, and that the evidence of both things is only anecdotal. Maybe they're right. I know my son's autism wasn't caused by a vaccine--it was caused by an citrus allergy--but when I hear a parent say that's what caused their child's autism, I believe them. A parent knows. The medical community wasn't there when it happen, so how could they know better than the parent? And maybe it's only the cause in 5% of cases, but that doesn't mean the parents who experienced it deserve to be treated like they don't know what they're talking about. I can also tell you that when I put my son on a gluten-casein free diet, he answered a question without prompting for the first time in about six months. Is my son cured? No. But I have hope for him, and I don't care how many times the medical community says these things don't work: I refuse to give up hope.
The book goes into this diet and other treatments, and it does it in a friendly, chatty, funny, and easy to absorb format. It's probably not the best book on these treatments on the market, but it is a book parents can read, understand and use. It offers a choice of suggestions without making any promises. Sometimes these treatments work, and sometimes they don't. Every child is different--but every child deserves a chance.
There is hope for children with autism. Maybe only 5% of children will get better because their parents read this book (from my experience, I think it's much more than that), but that's 5% better that the autistic children of parents who didn't even try because doctors told them nothing works. If you find yourself in that situation, read this book. There are other doctors out there, ones like Dr. Kartzinel. You and your child deserve a doctor who will listen to you and offer you hope. Don't give up until you find it.
By Suzanne K.
When my son was 2 years old, he was diagnosed with autism. There is no history of autism in our families. I had seen Jenny McCarthy on some talk shows and I thought, "I don't have to worry about this..." boy was I wrong! I started reading more about autistic behaviors and then accepted the fact that he is autistic. I do feel that there are different forms of autism but I am convinced that my son has medical issues that can be treated. He is responding to many of the treatments in the book and I am grateful for this resource. This is by far the easiest guide for parents that I found. We have recently started seeing a specialist (Medical Doctor). Because of this book, I felt like I had a grasp of biomedical treatments. It is the "cliff note" guide to the more complicated books. Our son is not "cured" but in about 6 months of implementing ideas in this book (probiotic, cod liver oil, supplements), my son is healthier and happier than he ever has been. He kisses me all of the time and his sounds are coming slowly but surely.
The following is an excerpt from an e-mail I wrote to a woman who I just met through facebook. Her son (9 years old) recovered through similar nutritional and supplemental changes. I am adding this message for all of those parents who may have a similar story and need hope:
"My son is Alex. He is about 2 1/2 years old. He had a traumatic birth - severely bruised head, nerve compression in the left shoulder, fracture in the lower left arm. It was so scary! He was stuck - 10 lbs 6 oz. huge! Anyway, he was always pretty irritable/difficult. He started saying words early and a lot of babbling like he was talking. He was saying a couple of two word combinations at 8 months. We thought he would be an early talker. I can't remember exactly when he started having severe eczema but it was head to toe and horrible. We couldn't take him out of our house without him screaming with discomfort. He stopped talking around 10 months and was only saying "da da" - he lost all other sounds.
We already were very careful about new foods - but at 18 months we removed wheat and dairy from his diet. He was still nursing at that point because his diet was so limited - so when I removed dairy from my diet his skin almost completely cleared up. I remember that my life got easier at that point and actually thinking, "It's like I have a different kid." He was able to enjoy life a lot more and interact more.
He started speech therapy at 18 months and was not responding to it. He was assessed by a group of developmental specialists at 2 years and they were mixed opinions for an autism diagnosis. He was assessed at a 9-14 month level of communication.
We started educating ourselves about autism (thank God for Jenny McCarthy because she gave me a place to start). After reading about other children, I was convinced that he was autistic. We added cod liver oil, multi-vitamin, calcium, and removed corn and soy from Alex's diet at about 24-25 months. At that point, he improved with every "biomedical" thing that we implemented. His mood was definitely improving.
At 25 months, we started a probiotic, added Vitamin D-3, and added oregano to his diet to control yeast. His eye contact and chewing improved.
At 26 months, he started occupational therapy. We had an appointment with our autism specialist (he was on the DAN! doctor list), Dr. Green. I researched him on the internet and he seemed REALLY qualified. I feel so lucky that we found him - apparently he has treated over 2000 autistic patients. He's been doing this for a long time and we can tell!
We changed the probiotics, vitamins and supplements to Dr. Green's preferences (mainly stronger). We added Methyl B-12 shots every 3 days and we saw immediate improvements. Then we recently added a supplement called "Zen" - which helped him calm down a bit for sleeping. He also was low on Vitamin D so we increased that.
We are about a week into taking the antifungal - I am taking it too. It seems to be really helping. He's jabbering more and he seems to actually understand a lot more of what's going on. I do notice some "die-off reactions" though. Yesterday, I had him in his crib for a nap and he took his diaper off and really made a mess. It was so gross. He used to do that EVERY DAY! He would refuse to have a bowl movement until he was in his crib and then he would immediately take his diaper off. I would be so angry - clean up was horrible because he would not follow directions. Yesterday wasn't so bad. I cleaned him up and he actually listened to me! I told him not to touch things and he didn't; he didn't fight me. That has never happened. It was amazing! I hope that story wasn't too disgusting for you. I don't usually share that with anyone."
Again - I added that excerpt for all of the parents who may need hope. Also, don't feel like "biomedical" means something scary. I USED to feel that way - because I didn't understand what it meant. I now find it sad that our society seems more accepting of people using drugs like Risperidone or Ritalin instead of trying to resolve the issues through diet and supplementation. I don't want my child to need a drug to feel better. So far so good!
By Kim L (Charlottesville, VA United States)
As a new parent who knows several people with children who are on the spectrum, I was eager to read this book to see if there was indeed some way to prevent autism. While I found the authors' personal stories regarding their own children very interesting, there was little in the way of hard-core science to back up the claims in the book with the most controversial being that vaccines may trigger autism in children with weak immune systems. (Indeed, the current studies say there is not a link between autism and vaccines.)
With that said, most of the diet and health advice probably couldn't hurt most children who are on the spectrum. Indeed, the diet advice may even help those who are not on the spectrum, but suffer from multiple allergies.
My biggest problem with this book is the anti-vaccine agenda. While McCartney states that she is not anti-vaccine and feels it is up to the parents to vaccine or not, Dr. Kartzinel is clear that he is anti-vaccine. He does not vaccine children in his practice and only recommends a single vaccine for parents who want to vaccinate their children. I truly wish there had been some space given to the pros of vaccination, but it is not to be found.
Still, there is no doubt that the authors truly are speaking from the heart and their goal is to help children and families who are dealing with autism. I just wish it wasn't so anti-vaccination.
By TK (Illinois)
gave this as a gift to autistic family members parent and got a very favorable review from her. Very helpful info.
By Ava Piquett (Indiana)
This book is so informative and is really more broad reaching than just for autistic spectrum children. I think the advice on dietary and supplements and vitamins is also relavant for ADHD as well as other developmental delays. As the caregiver and one who loves your child the most --- DO NOT RELY on DRS -- educate yourself!! You will not regret it! God Bless! God Bless Ms. McCarthy for all she has done and is sharing with the rest of us who do not have limitless funds.
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