pediatric housecalls Robert R. Jarrett M.D. M.B.A. FAAP

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Showing posts from: Parenting

Parenting: Never Trust Newborns

This article about never trusting the Newborn to do the expected is the ninth in a series of guest posts from a pediatrician I’ve never met but have bonded with over sharing ideas, opinions and experiences; including having a penchant for medical blogging. His URL is up for sale, and I’ve lost track of him, but his content will be here for safe keeping until he wants them back.
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Parenting: How To Give Medicine To A Child

This fun article on giving your child their medicine is the eighth in a series of guest posts from a pediatrician I’ve never met but have bonded with over shared ideas, opinions and experiences; including having a penchant for medical blogging. His URL is up for sale, and I’ve lost track of him, but his content will be here for safe keeping until he wants them back.
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Parenting: Talk To Strangers

In this delightful talk about talking to strangers, Stark explores the overlooked benefits of pushing past our default discomfort when it comes to strangers and embracing those fleeting but profoundly beautiful moments of genuine connection. [Additional communication video]

Talk To Strangers
Most aren’t dangerous and if we don’t, we lose

Kio Stark has always talked to strangers. She started documenting her experiences when she realized that not everyone shares this predilection. She’s done extensive research into the emotional and political dimensions of stranger interactions and the complex dynamics how people relate to each other in public places.

She authored the TED Book When Strangers Meet, in which she argues for the pleasures and transformative possibilities of talking to people you don’t know.

Her novel Follow Me Down began as a series of true vignettes about strangers placed in the fictional context of a woman unraveling the eerie history of a lost letter misdelivered to her door. Additionally, she wrote Don’t Go Back to School, a handbook for independent learners.

She writes, teaches and speaks around the world about stranger interactions, independent learning and how people relate to technology. She also consults for startups and large companies helping them think about stranger interactions among their users and audiences.

Parenting: Draw your own circles

[Guest Author] This article on Families is the sixth in a series of guest posts from a pediatrician I’ve never met but have bonded with over shared ideas, opinions and experiences; including having a penchant for medical blogging.
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Parenting: Toilet Training Is Not a Parenting Test

[Guest Author] This article on Toilet Training, is the fifth in a series of guest posts from a pediatrician I’ve never actually met but have “bonded” with because of shared ideas, opinions, experiences and philosophies—including having a penchant for medical blogging.
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Teenagers: Maturing and “THE Talk”

[Guest Author] This article on having “THE sex talk” or sex education, is the fourth in a series of guest posts from a pediatrician I’ve never met but have bonded with over shared ideas, opinions and experiences; including having a penchant for medical blogging. This article on talking to children about sex is something that I’ve written about too, several times; it’s that important in the scheme of childrearing.
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Most Important Parenting, When It Appears The Least

[Guest Author] This article on the “Most Important Parenting” is the third in a series of guest posts from a pediatrician I’ve never met but have bonded with over sharing ideas, opinions and experiences; including having a penchant for medical blogging.
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Parenting: Four bad ages

[Guest Author] This article on the “bad ages” for parenting is the second in a series of guest posts from another pediatrician I’ve never met but have bonded with. We share ideas, opinions and experiences including having a penchant for medical blogging.
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Choose Your Battles With Teens Over Hair and Clothing

[Guest Author] I’ve mentioned before how I stumbled upon another “blogger” on the internet and bonded instantly, like he was a “brother from another mother” based on the fact that we had been writing similar pediatric articles completely independently for years. His URL is up for sale now, and I’ve lost track of him, but his content will be here for safe keeping until he wants them back.
 
This one: “Choose your battles” is “survival parenting 101.” It merely means to save your energy, and credibility, for the “big stuff” (and there is enough of that to be going on with). Read more →

Real Pediatrics: Dr. Gregory Alan Barrett

This article entitled: Real Pediatrics is to mark the beginning of a series of thirty-one guest posts from a pediatrician I’ve never met but have bonded with over sharing ideas, opinions and experiences; including having a penchant for medical blogging and even a similar sounding last name: Dr. Gregory Alan Barrett,, Greg for short.
 

Gregory A Barrett, pediatrician, author of Real Pediatrics

I’ve lost track of him following Covid but recently found his site has been “camped on” by someone having taken over the URL and trying to gouge someone into buying it—obviously a ‘something-for-nothing-flipper’ using the popularity my friend created. I’ve located most of his articles (I think) and have decided to re-post them here for safe keeping until he wants them back (or this blog suffers a similar fate).
 
They are nearly all precisely as he wrote them; except, of necessity, I had to add back the headings and photographs because they had not been archived in the ‘way-back machine.’ Additionally, I did, on occasion follow the spell-checkers advice as well as update medical advice on at least one post (a thing I believe the good doctor would do himself if he were here).

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Sleep Problems: Older Children, Toddlers, Stumbling Blocks

Siblings sharing a vacation bed – “A nickel to the first one asleep”It seems like I can’t escape dealing with sleep problems (yep, they’re that common) and just as difficult to answer.

Narrowing it a bit (at least in my mind) to three groups: Infants, toddler-big kids (schoolers) and biggest kids (teens).

I’ve covered infants and some teens. Now some issues of toddler-big kids. Read more →

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