Review
"Each chapter has something to offer, I want to give a copy to all my patients." --
Parissa Ezzati dentist, mother"I feel The Complete Teething Guide will be a valuable contribution to parent education." --
Paul Fleiss, M.D. pediatrician"The book answers questions parents ask me everyday. It's a wealth of practical advice." --
Jay Gordon, M.D. pediatrician
About the Author
Kathy Arnos is an internationally recognized author, teacher and healing consultant specializing in childrens issues. She has been lecturing and writing about health and environmental issues for more than 16 years. She helps parents unlock the mysteries of their childrens physical, emotional and behavioral problems, and gives them practical methods to resolve these concerns. In 1987, she created Mother to Mother: Another View newsletter and is also the author of Bach Flowers for Children Raising Emotionally Healthy Children Without Drugs.
Kathy is known for her thorough investigative techniques, creative and practical solutions and unusual theories about the teething process. Her main objective in writing The Compete Teething Guide was to help parents, doctors and school administrators better understand why kids might be having trouble learning or concentrating (diagnosed as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, ADHD or attention deficit disorder, ADD), are continuously sick, experience bouts of anxiety and depression, or are acting irrationally and out of control.
Kathy believes that physical illness, especially in young children, should be examined thoroughly, as well as treated responsibly. She has great respect for the medical profession and the lifesaving miracles it can perform, and states, "Many parents are spending too much time at the doctors office looking for a quick fix for the common cold, fever, flu, ear infections, etc. Twenty years ago, a parent was more likely to find answers to health-related questions through books written by respected pediatricians such as the late Benjamin Spock, M.D. Somehow the baby-boomer era brought with it much more dependent parents and frequent doctor visits. This increased need for pediatrician handholding has also encouraged the overuse of prescription drugs and created parents who have lost the ability to trust their instincts. The time has come to relearn this trust and combine it with old-fashioned common sense."