All Better Pediatrics

Archive for March 2010

The purpose of the 2010 Mid-South Baby Expo was to acquaint expectant and new parents with needed and pertinent educational resources within the Memphis Metro community. All who attended this year’s show would agree that it provided that and so much more.  The event featured exhibitor booths provided by health care providers, non-profit organizations and other businesses relevant to expectant and new parents, plus plenty of fun activities and educational seminars.

This community event is unique in that it brings all area hospitals together in one setting. Also, the initial Mid-South Baby Expo in 2003 marked the first time that an event of this type was held in the Memphis area in a large, easily accessible location.

The Expo’s ultimate goal is to provide educational information for expectant and new parents as they navigate their journey into parenthood enabling them to make wiser and healthier choices for not only themselves but also for their babies.

This year the Expo donated a portion of proceeds to local charities that serve expectant or new parents.

A tremendous thank you to Pam Sere from Baptist Hospital and Cathy Akin from Methodist Hospital for their generous support and help to make this year’s expo one of the best ever!

Hope to see everyone out there next year.

If you aven’t already-Please sign up to become a fan of Facebook on All Better Pediatrics and the Mid-South Baby Expo. Both sites will be up all year round with helpful tips, promotions, and important information for you and your baby.

Please visit and join:

All Better Pediatrics:  http://bit.ly/bRhvPS

Mid South Baby Expo:  http://bit.ly/9tEzM8

Today’s the day you can sign up for Facebook and be eligible to win gift certificates to Eden Spa  and movie passes. Eden Spa is one of  Dr. Tam’s convenient getaways (It’s downstairs from the office). She often pampers herself (She loves the facials) by letting  the wonderful staff make her look and feel great!

For more information on Eden Spa, please visit: www.Edenspaandlaser.com.

As a reminder….

About The Mid-South Baby Expo:

  The seventh annual Mid-South Baby Expo will be held on Saturday, March 27, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Agricenter International, 7777 Walnut Grove.

To read more: https://allbetterpediatrics.wordpress.com/2010/03/22/news-release-seventh-annual-mid-south-baby-expo/

About The Contest:

The 2010 Mid-South Baby Expo is tomorrow. We encourage you to become a fan on Facebook, to find out the latest on seminars, sponsor participation, Tips for you and your baby, and much, much more.

Become a fan today!

Link:    http://bit.ly/b1m8AC

Drawings will be held on Monday March 29, so today’s the last day to sign up. The winners will be announced on our Facebook fan page.

The Rotavirus vaccine, Rotarix, was pulled from the market (date) until it’s safety could be reviewed. We use a Rotavirus vaccine named Rotateq, which has NOT been pulled from the market. Please let us know if you have any questions regarding this issue. 

Thank you,

Dr. Tam

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

For more information, contact:

Valerie Robilio                                                 

Ayoka Pond

Public Relations Coordinators     

Phone: 901-227-3525                                        

Pager: 901-227-7243 ID# 3041                          

E-mail: valerie.robilio@bmhcc.org          

ayoka.pond@bmhcc.org          

Local sponsors present seventh annual

Mid-South Baby Expo 

MEMPHIS, Tenn., March 10, 2010– The seventh annual Mid-South Baby Expo will be held on Saturday, March 27, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Agricenter International, 7777 Walnut Grove.

The event will feature pregnancy, childbirth and baby experts; products; services; and community resources. Mini-presentations on a variety of pregnancy, childbirth and infant care topics will be offered throughout the day. In addition, car seat and home safety demonstrations will be provided in the Infant Safety Corner.

The Mid-South Baby Expo also will offer fun activities for the family, including Pickles & Ice Cream for Mom, a daddy diaper derby, a grandparents’ stroller relay and maternity and children’s fashion shows. Plus, local food vendors will be on hand with refreshments available for purchase and a grand prize – a $500 gift certificate to decorate a nursery – will be given away at the event.

This year’s sponsors include Baptist Memorial Health Care, The Regional Medical Center at Memphis, Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare, WRBO Soul Classics 103.5, 98.9 Kim FM, Kix 106, 98.1 the Max, All Better Pediatrics, Similac, Babytime and Memphis Parent magazine.

-more-

Local sponsors present Baby Expo

—add one—

Admission to the event is $5 per person; children 12 and younger are admitted free. A portion of the proceeds will be donated to local organizations that provide services to expectant and new parents.

For more information about the Mid-South Baby Expo, please call 901-227-9873 or visit www.midsouthbabyexpo.com.

# # #

A prominent British medical journal on Tuesday retracted a 1998 research paper that set off a sharp decline in vaccinations in Britain after the paper’s lead author suggested that vaccines could cause

Share your thoughts on this column at the Well blog.

The retraction by The Lancet is part of a reassessment that has lasted for years of the scientific methods and financial conflicts of Dr. Andrew Wakefield, who contended that his research showed that the combined measles, mumps and rubella vaccine may be unsafe.

But the retraction may do little to tarnish Dr. Wakefield’s reputation among parents’ groups in the United States. Despite a wealth of scientific studies that have failed to find any link between vaccines and autism, the parents fervently believe that their children’s mental problems resulted from vaccinations.

Tom Skinner, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, called the retraction of Dr. Wakefield’s study “significant.”

“It builds on the overwhelming body of research by the world’s leading scientists that concludes there is no link between M.M.R. vaccine and autism,” Mr. Skinner wrote in an e-mail message.

A British medical panel concluded last week that Dr. Wakefield had been dishonest, violated basic research ethics rules and showed a “callous disregard” for the suffering of children involved in his research. Dr. Richard Horton, editor in chief of The Lancet, said that until that decision, he had no proof that Dr. Wakefield’s 1998 paper was deceptive.

“That was a damning indictment of Andrew Wakefield and his research,” Dr. Horton said.

With that decision, Dr. Horton said he could retract the 1998 paper. Dr. Wakefield could not be reached for comment.

Jim Moody, a director of SafeMinds, a parents’ group that advances the notion the vaccines cause autism, said the retraction would strengthen Dr. Wakefield’s credibility with many parents.

“Attacking scientists and attacking doctors is dangerous,” he said. “This is about suppressing research, and it will fuel the controversy by bringing it all up again.”

Dr. Wakefield is part of a small but fervent group of doctors who discourage vaccinations because of a seeming link with autism.

Dr. Wakefield’s paper reported on his examinations of 12 children with chronic intestinal disorders who had a history of normal development followed by severe mental regressions. He speculated that the combined measles, mumps and rubella vaccine may have caused some sort of chronic intestinal measles infection that in turn damaged the children’s brains. He suggested that the combined vaccine should be split into three separate shots and given over a longer period of time.

But an investigation by a British journalist found financial and scientific conflicts that Dr. Wakefield did not reveal in his paper. For instance, part of the costs of Dr. Wakefield’s research were paid by lawyers for parents seeking to sue vaccine makers for damages. Dr. Wakefield was also found to have patented in 1997 a measles vaccine that would succeed if the combined vaccine were withdrawn or discredited.

After years of investigation, the General Medical Council in Britain concluded that Dr. Wakefield had subjected 11 children to invasive tests like lumbar punctures and colonoscopies that they did not need and for which he did not receive ethical approval.

After Dr. Wakefield’s study, vaccination rates plunged in Britain and the number of measles cases soared.

In the United States, anti-vaccine groups have advanced other theories since then to explain why they think vaccines cause autism. For years, they blamed thimerosal, a vaccine preservative containing mercury. Because of concerns over the preservative, vaccine makers in 2001 largely eliminated thimerosal from routinely administered childhood vaccines.

But this change has had no apparent impact on childhood autism rates. Anti-vaccine groups now suggest that a significant number of children have a cellular disorder whose effects are set off by vaccinations.

With each new theory, parents’ groups have called for research to explore possible links between vaccination and autism. Study after study has failed to show any link, and prominent scientific agencies have concluded that scarce research dollars should be spent investigating other possible causes of autism.

 
 
 

By Jennifer LaRue Huget

 

What did you crave when you were pregnant: Chocolate? Tacos? Sardines? Or were you more driven by food aversions than by cravings?
Whichever foods your pregnancy drives you toward or makes you recoil from, the new what-to-eat-while-pregnant book “Feed the Belly,” by Frances Largeman-Roth (Sourcebooks, 2009) can help you figure out how to consume enough of the nutrients you and your growing baby need even as you tiptoe through the minefield of cravings, aversions and weight gain.

Largeman-Roth got the idea for her book when she was just thinking about starting a family. As senior food and nutrition editor at Health magazine, she was nutrition-savvy and well aware of the books and other resources available to pregnant women who want to maintain healthful diets. Finding many of those guides too rigid and daunting, she aimed for a lighter, more encouraging tone.

The premise of “Feed the Belly” is that if food doesn’t taste good, it doesn’t matter what wealth of nutrients it delivers because nobody’s going to eat it. To that end, she enlisted chefs to provide tasty, nutritious recipes, such as Mark Bittman’s Smashed Edamame and Potatoes With Miso and Iron Chef Cat Cora’s Cinnamon-Stewed Chicken. The book also features a tear-out menu listing a week’s worth of meals and snacks.

The book offers detailed information about key nutrients and how much of them a pregnant woman should consume. But Largeman-Roth also suggests women relax and enjoy the experience of being pregnant rather than sweat over their daily choline intake.

Still, recipes are indexed according to key nutrients, so if your physician says you’re low on, say, iron, you can easily find foods rich in that mineral. Recipes are also organized according to the common cravings they satisfy. (You can find some of them at http://www.franceslargemanroth.com/recipes; you can also download a shopping list for healthful foods there.)

Largeman-Roth says pregnancy is not the time to overindulge in food or to let your exercise routine fall by the wayside. She suggests it’s a great time to take stock of your diet and physical activity and work toward becoming your healthiest self. Among other helpful exercise suggestions, the book offers a guide to modifying yoga poses to accommodate your pregnant body: downward dog with bent knees, for example.

One of the great challenges for pregnant women — particularly those who are overweight to start with — is to cram in all the nutrients their bodies and babies need without taking in too many calories. “Feed the Belly,” in keeping with standard medical advice, points out that pregnant women really should consume just 300 extra calories per day, and only in the second and third trimesters. Overweight or obese women, Largeman-Roth suggests, should talk with their doctors about how much weight they should gain during pregnancy, as overweight moms put their infants at risk of being larger than average (which can have implications for their future health). And being overweight increases a mom’s risk of developing gestational diabetes and preeclampsia and of delivering by Caesarean section. She notes that recent research suggests that some pregnant women should even consider dieting, a notion that has long been taboo.

As Largeman-Roth notes in her book, women who are overweight during pregnancy tend to stay that way afterward, many of them never returning to a normal, healthy weight. Research published in this month’s issue of the journal Obstetrics & Gynecology showed that women who gain weight during pregnancy, especially in the first trimester, when no extra calorie intake is required, are at especially high risk of developing gestational diabetes.

Largeman-Roth doesn’t sugarcoat the grim news about the need to keep pregnancy weight gain in check. But for the most part, she writes in a breezy, I’m-your-pal style, which many moms-to-be will find appealing. At my age, with my childbearing days long behind me, I could do with a little less lingo — the word “vajayjay,” in particular, grates. But as it happened, Largeman-Roth became pregnant while writing and gave birth to her daughter when “Feed the Belly” was in the final stages of editing. So she clearly was in tune with what a pregnant woman needs to know — and how she wants that information delivered.

The Milk Mustache Mobile Tour will be stopping at the Mid-South Baby Expo on March 27. 

America’s milk processors are traveling coast-to-coast with the Drink Well. Live Well. Tour to encourage Americans to not only live well, but drink well with milk. Milk is naturally nutrient-rich like no other beverage, some may even say milk is nature’s wellness drink. Providing an array of benefits in every glass, milk has been endorsed by more than 250 celebrities and its benefits are supported by hundreds of scientific studies. Drinking milk is one of the simplest things you can do every day and feel good about, for you and your family.

At tour events, you can experience free, interactive activities including:

FROM ALL BETTER PEDIATRICS, PC!

The 2010 Mid-South Baby Expo is a week from this Saturday. We encourage you to become a fan on Facebook, to find out the latest on seminars, sponsor participation, Tips for you and your baby, and much, much more.

Become a fan today!

Link:    http://bit.ly/b1m8AC

Effective March1, 2010 we officially changed the name of our practice to All Better Pediatrics –“Healthcare for kids.  Helpcare for parents”. 

 There are so many reasons why we decided to change the name-we could write a book! Here are a few of the most important reasons:

1.  Almost no one can remember the current name, can you?

2.  The name ‘All Better’ reflects what we do because, whether they were seen for a sick or well visit, those are the words every parent and child want to hear from their pediatrician.

3. The name ‘All Better’ reflects the value added to the doctor patient relationship.  Some examples of adding value include taking your evening and weekend calls, being the only pediatrician in Memphis to offer breastfeeding assistance services on site, and helping first-time parents navigate the maze of challenges that arise when they bring a child home from the nursery.

4. The old name was so long and wordy that moms would tell me, “I referred my friend to you but she could not remember the name and could not find you on-line”.  No one forgets the name All Better Pediatrics!

On a future post I will explain the concept of “Healthcare for kids. Helpcare for parents” in more detail.

By the way the complete name of our practice was Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine of East Memphis.


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