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February 28, 2009

Today is Rare Disease Day 2009

Today is Rare Disease Day.

Rare Disease Day: rarediseaseday.org/
Rare Disease Day 2009

I blogged elsewhere a couple weeks ago about how in working with the health system you do NOT want to be an outlier ( Life Outside the Bell Curve, a.k.a. The Limitations of the Evidence Base). I should have added you don't want to be interesting either. People with rare conditions are both. This often means that both they have no strong voice in developing and implementing healthcare systems and policies, and also that the typical healthcare provider isn't likely to have a strong sense of how best to help.

Rare Disease Day is designed to help promote both these concerns and find solutions. As the image above says:
- Strengthen one voice of patients
- Give hope and information to patients
- Bring stakeholders closer together
- Coordinate policy actions in different countries
- Get equity in access to care and treatment.

Here in the United States, your best connection to this initiative is through NORD.

National Organization for Rare Disorders: rarediseases.org

Rare Disease Day - NORD

So what can you do? Tell people. Now, today, tomorrow, whenever. There will be another one next year, if you miss today. Just get the word out. Here are some ways you can join in with the activities going on.

Join the Facebook group.
Rare Disease Day 2009

Set your Facebook status to tell folks.
Rare Disease Day 2009

Contribute photos to the Flickr group.
Rare Disease Day 2009

Follow them on Twitter.
Rare Disease Day 2009

Tell folks on Twitter.
Rare Disease Day 2009

Go to their YouTube channel. Subscribe, and watch some videos.
Rare Disease Day 2009

Read the book.

The Voice of 12,000 Patients: http://eurordiscarebook.eurordis.org/

Rare Disease Day 2009 Rare Disease Day 2009

Bottom line? Tell someone.

Posted by pfa at 12:47 PM | Comments (0)

February 10, 2009

More No-Chew Recipe Sources

In our January 27, 2007 blogpost, Update: Food and Feeding, we listed a number of fine resources for recipes that are either easy to swallow or no-chew.

That was (and this is) an update to:

Let's Face It: Lifestyle: Food and Feeding:
http://www.dent.umich.edu/faceit/lifestyle/food.php

We were inspired to prepare an exhibit of some of the marvelous no-chew cookbooks available at that time in the Dentistry Library and now available in the Health Sciences Libraries. Selected images from the exhibit are available here.

I Chew, You Chew, No Chew: http://www.flickr.com/photos/rosefirerising/sets/72157594547459105/

Cuisine Après Dentist The I Hate to Chew Cookbook
Blend & Mend Nutrition and Eating Problems of Oral and Head-Neck Surgeries

Since those earlier pieces, more resources have become available. We are delighted to bring to your attention the following (and remember to check with your doctor or dietician if you have any question whether these are appropriate for you personally, since everyone's needs are slightly different).

Colitis Cookbook: http://www.colitiscookbook.com/

Elayne Achilles' Dysphagia Cookbook.
Cookbook: http://www.dysphagiacookbook.com/
Recipes: http://www.dysphagiacookbook.com/recipes.htm

Food Down Under: No Chew Food Recommendations: http://www.fooddownunder.com/cgi-bin/recipe.cgi?r=174798

Taste of Home: Community: Got Any Good Soft "No Chew" Recipes?: http://community.tasteofhome.com/forums/t/274657.aspx?PageIndex=1
(COMMENT: This forum entry has 55 response, and starts to get really useful on the 3rd and 4th pages.)

Today's Caregiver: Six New Items on the Menu for a Liquid Diet: http://www.caregiver.com/articles/general/six_new_items.htm

Wide Smiles: Liquid Recipes for After Surgery: http://www.widesmiles.org/cleftlinks/WS-414.html

Posted by pfa at 02:23 PM | Comments (0)