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The Bipolar Child: The Definitive and Reassuring Guide to Childhood's Most Misunderstood Disorder -- Third Edition

The Bipolar Child: The Definitive and Reassuring Guide to Childhood's Most Misunderstood Disorder -- Third Edition
Authors: Demitri Md Papolos, Janice Papolos
Publisher: Broadway
Category: Book

List Price: $15.95
Buy New: $9.12
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 117 reviews
Sales Rank: 14341

Media: Paperback
Edition: 3rd
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 496
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.2 x 1.2

ISBN: 0767928601
Dewey Decimal Number: 155
EAN: 9780767928601
ASIN: 0767928601

Publication Date: October 2, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Bipolar Child: The Definitive and Reassuring Guide to Childhood's Most Misunderstood Disorder
  • Paperback - The Bipolar Child: The Definitive and Reassuring Guide to Childhood's Most Misunderstood Disorder
  • Hardcover - The Bipolar Child: The Definitive and Reassuring Guide to Childhood's Most Misunderstood Disorder (Revised and Expanded Edition)
  • Kindle Edition - The Bipolar Child: The Definitive and Reassuring Guide to Childhood's Most Misunderstood Disorder -- Third Edition
  • Hardcover - The Bipolar Child: The Definitive and Reassuring Guide to Childhood's Most Misunderstood Disorder -- Third Edition

Similar Items:

  • Parenting a Bipolar Child: What to Do & Why
  • The Explosive Child: A New Approach for Understanding and Parenting Easily Frustrated, Chronically Inflexible Children
  • The Ups and Downs of Raising a Bipolar Child: A Survival Guide for Parents
  • Brandon and the Bipolar Bear: A Story for Children with Bipolar Disorder
  • Intense Minds: Through the Eyes of Young People with Bipolar Disorder

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
For any caregiver experiencing life with a bipolar child, Demitri and Janice Papolos's The Bipolar Child will be an indispensable reference guide. The material is presented clearly, with lots of helpful charts and lists to aid in receiving proper diagnosis, treatment, and long-term care. All medical information is relayed with the aim of helping parents to ensure effective treatment for their children and includes journal-tracking formats to help caregivers provide accurate information to personal physicians. Importantly, many pages are devoted to discussions about the emotional upheavals that living with a bipolar child can bring, and how parents and children can cope most effectively. The book is filled with families' stories that do a beautiful job providing comfort and inspiration to others. A detailed chapter on hospitalization covers everything from insurance to types of treatments. The authors provide excellent information regarding improved educational practices, with step-by-step instructions for goal-setting with your child and communicating your child's needs to school personnel. The Bipolar Child is a satisfying and wise read. --Jill Lightner

Product Description

Since it first appeared on bookshelves, The Bipolar Child has made an indelible mark on the field of psychiatry and has become the resource that families rely upon. Now, with more than 200,000 copies sold, the first book about early-onset bipolar disorder is completely revised and expanded.


Bipolar disorder—manic depression—was once thought to be rare in children. Now researchers are discovering not only that bipolar disorder can begin early in life, but that it is much more common than ever imagined. Yet the illness is often misdiagnosed and mistreated with medications that can exacerbate the symptoms. Why? Bipolar disorder manifests itself differently in children than in adults, and in children there is an overlap of symptoms with other childhood psychiatric disorders. As a result, these kids may be labeled with any of a number of psychiatric conditions: “ADHD,” “depression,” “oppositional defiant disorder,” “obsessive-compulsive disorder,” or “generalized anxiety disorder.” Too often they are treated with stimulants or antidepressants—medications that can actually worsen the bipolar condition.
Since the publication of its first edition, The Bipolar Child has helped many thousands of families get to the root cause of their children’s behaviors and symptoms and find what they need to know. The Papoloses comprehensively detail the diagnosis, explain how to find good treatment and medications, and advise parents about ways to advocate effectively for their children in school. In this edition, a greatly expanded education chapter describes all the changes in educational law due to the 2004 reauthorization of IDEA (Individuals with Disabilities Education Act), and offers a multitude of ideas for parents and educators to help the children feel more comfortable in the academic environment. The book also contains crucial information about hospitalization, the importance of neuropsychological testing (with a recommended battery of tests), and the world of insurance. Included in these pages is information on promising new drugs, greater insight into the special concerns of teenagers, and additional sections on the impact of the illness on the family. In addition, an entirely new chapter focuses on major advances taking place in the field of molecular genetics and offers hope that researchers will better understand the illness and develop more targeted and easier-to-tolerate medicines.
The Bipolar Child is rich with the voices of parents, siblings, and the children themselves, opening up the long-closed world of the families struggling with this condition. This book has already proved to be an invaluable resource for parents whose children suffer from mood disorders, as well as for the professionals who treat and educate them, and this new edition is sure to continue to light the way.




Customer Reviews:   Read 112 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars The Bipolar Child   June 15, 2008
This book is a must for understanding why your bipolar child does some of the things they do. We are raising our Grand daughter who is bipolar and it has given me far more information than anything I had read. It gets easier to be more patient and understanding when you realize that the child is not just being defiant and hard to get along with.
Some parts get a little technical, but if you are dealing with a child with this illness you will certainly get your money's worth.



4 out of 5 stars Comprehensive reference for frustrated parents   June 1, 2008
Overall, this is a very good book. It contains a good mixture of medical information, real life examples, research findings, and links to resources and support groups. (The later may be especially useful to you.) Unfortunately, the book tries to address too diverse an audience simultaneously. Most of it is for parents, but one chapter is way too technical. At times, it seems like the authors are trying to write to the medical community of therapists and physicans at their level as well as to parents without that level of knowledge. Best advice -- skip over the excruciatingly technical details and keep going. I almost put the book down midway through, but was glad I kept on reading because it picked back up.

Having raised a bipolar child, I can attest to the many frustrations mentioned in the book -- like when consequences have no effect on behavior. Praise or punish, it matters not. Now, what do you do? It took nearly 10 years for us to discover the underlying cause of our child's symptoms and we were reluctant to believe it at first. But, the bipolar pieces fit together and pursuing treatment along those lines ultimately made a major difference. When we ran into this quagmire (diagnosed in 1992), there were not nearly so many support groups or treatment options available. Having this book 16 years ago would have been a major blessing. Our experience parallels much of what is mentioned in the book. For example, medication has remained a trial and error adjustment process -- what works for one person does not for another and new drugs replace older ones.

If you are wondering whether you child's behavior is outside of normal, or you know it is and are wondering why, reading this book will help you determine if it might be caused by bipolar disorder. The authors know what they are talking about.



1 out of 5 stars Ought to be illegal.   May 21, 2008
 1 out of 8 found this review helpful

I wonder why nobody goes to prison over this. Drugging children should be against the law. For whatever reason a child misbehaves, using drugs in any case should be met with the prescriber being imprisoned. My life was literally, not practically, not virtually, but literally ruined by being drugged as a child -- I would had rather been a [...] rape victim, at least then I would have healed. Yet, nobody gets stopped and nobody gets punished. The practice continues, rationalized by horrible people doing horrible things as necessary because it's what they do and what keeps them employed.

No brain needs drugs, period. None of these drugs are healthy to be on and in fact all of anti psychotics and mood stabilizers work by damaging and disabling normal, healthy parts of the brain.

Better reading would be "Blaming the brain", By Elliot Valenstein, Ph.d psychologist and neuroscientist and "Mad In America" By Robert Whitaker, award winning science and medical writer who was a finalist for the 1998 pulitzer prize (Among many other things, including his book being awarded one of Discover magazines best science books of 2002 and an American Library Association best book selection as well.)... And why don't we compare even just these two of many authors of truth to say, Joseph Biederman?

Which of the three do you think is most intelligent, scientific and telling the truth. The accredited scientists, or the man being paid millions of dollars by Big Pharma to try and culturally justify through a abuse of science and medicine the action of drugging disruptive children.

Google

MindFreedom Neuroleptic Brain damage

And Robert Whitaker Neuroleptics Natural News


"1 of 8 people found the following review helpful: "

It's amazing, there are actually people out there who care so little for children - even their own! - that when the truth is spoken, they'd rather just drug the child and stick their head in the sand. It's most important that your own life isn't disrupted or that you don't have to work with your child, right?

You hide behind psychiatry to make it look like you're not bad parents who are abusing your children, but guess what... Psychiatry is easy to shoot holes through. You're hiding behind something that accredited scientists and medical specialties only considered legitimate because of a biochemical imbalance hypothesis that has long been destroyed and only kept alive in the media (thus the culture) via the money and power of the drug companies.

Hiding behind psychiatry to pretend you're not a bad parent is no better than hiding behind a street drug dealer. You're using powerful, life destroying drugs to sweep away the problems you have at home so you can get back to a life that doesn't involve actually having to deal with people you don't truly appreciate.


I wonder how many of you people even googled those keywords and I wonder how many of you are too busy watching American Idol while your child suffers EPS to even care.



5 out of 5 stars Bi-polar   May 13, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I was very happy to find this book during the time that I needed it most. It was definitely a great source of information.


5 out of 5 stars Written by THE expert and helpful, understandable   April 5, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book is reassuring and understandable, not written in professional language that one has to translate. I definitely recommend it.
The Bipolar Child: The Definitive and Reassuring Guide to Childhood's Most Misunderstood Disorder -- Third Edition



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