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Reviews of 2 good books on health

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Title: Hypoglycemia The Other Sugar Disease

Author: Anita Flegg (Foreword by Dr. Ron Rosedale, MD)

Publisher: Book Coach Press (September 30, 2004)

ISBN: 0968034748

Genre: Non-Fiction/Medical/Diet/Self-Help

No. of Pages: 237

 

Having read " Overcoming Runaway Blood Sugar " by Dennis Pollock, I

was wondering whether I should take up yet one more book on blood

sugar problems, especially hypocglycemia (Dennis's book is also

dealing with the same problem) , but then I took it up to see the

difference in treatment of the same subject by a different author,

who, incidentally shares with Dennis the unfortunate similarity of

being a sufferer.

 

Anita's book under review treats the subject very comprehensively

and gives the various forms of hypoglycemia and the causes for them.

The treatment protocol is more or less similar and is largely based

on elimination of refined carbohydrates and sugar (in all its forms

like cane sugar, glucose, fructose, honey, etc.). A diet largely

based on complex carbohydrates, fats of the right kind, proteins and

fiber (very important) has been found to minimise the spikes in

blood sugar and thus minimise the incidence of hypoglycemia and thus

help minimise the onset of adult diabetes, which is caused by

insulin resistance.

 

The book under review provides a good discussion of the various

popular diets such as the no-fat diet, Atkins Diet, South Beach

Diet, The Zone Diet, etc. and suggests a diet aimed at

hypoglycemics, which incidentally also helped many of them lose

weight and which eliminated the mood swings etc.

 

The author gives the life stories of other sufferers in their own

words at the beginning of each chapter and follows up their stories

with a good analysis. This feature has added a lot of authenticity

to the book. She discusses various problems like fatigue,

fibromyalgia etc., associated with hypoglycemia, in Chapter 9, with

the notable exception of hypochlorhydria (the symptoms of which were

described by Michel in Chapter 4).

 

The work book at the end adds value to an already good book and

Anita provides the reader with two or iterations (cycles) to check

how they are doing. If the workbook is photocopied before being

written up, the same can be used in the unlikely event of the reader

not being able to reach the desired state of health in the first few

cycles.

 

All in all, I found the book a good read with a good style and very

good editing.

 

------------------------------

 

Title: Mayday A Physician as Patient

Author: Allan Lohaus, M.D.

Publisher: Synergy Books

ISBN: 978-0-9755922-9-8

Genre: Autobiography/Medical/Self-help

Presentation: Hard Bound with dust jacket

No. of Pages: 114

 

 

About the Book (From the inner flap) - Mayday! is a medical odyssey

journal revealing the thought, feelings, humor and spirituality of

an American physician during months of hopitalization. Rising on

swells of optimism and tugged down by pain, infections, operations

and adverse outcomes, he drifts through waters too deep to stand in

and too dark for him to see hidden dangers. The illness ends in New

Zealand, two years later. This body, mind, and spirit experience of

dying and returningto health is a personal and universal journey.

A little more about the book (as I understood after reading) - It is

a good indepth account of the doctor's struggles with illness,

fortunately for him, an acute problem and not chronic illness. He

was operated for removal of some intestinal polyps and the post-

operative infections and the resultant complications required three

more surgeries to restore his body to a semblance of normalcy.

 

What I liked about the book - The intensely personal narrative and

the good style. Since it is a relatively short book, it could be

read in a day. Since I always had an abiding interest in medical

matters (though I became a metallurigst), I enjoyed reading the

details of the treatment and the operative procedures, his emotions

as he was struggling with pain and a very real chance of prolonged

illness or death!

 

What did not appeal to me - None.

 

What else I would have liked to see - A fuller account of his

younger days, and his own mom's struggle with Hodgkin's disease etc.

His estrangement from his biological father probably pushed him to

mature spiritually since he searched and found his father first in

senior friends and later in God through Christ. I would also have

liked to read a more detailed account of his treatment.

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