Ear Infection Specialist Girard OH

For kids, back to school means excitement and anticipation. For parents, it means colds, flus, rashes--and back to the doctor. Come September, along with their art projects and homework assignments, kids start coming home with an array of germs that leave them--and the rest of the family-'sick, sapped, and cranky.

Lynn Marie Johnson, MD
(330) 372-3364
2201 Oakwood St
Girard, OH
Specialties
Pediatrics
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Univ Of Cincinnati Coll Of Med, Cincinnati Oh 45267
Graduation Year: 2000

Data Provided by:
Michael G Sekman, MD
(330) 759-4733
1616 E Liberty St Ste B
Girard, OH
Specialties
Pediatrics
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: Cebu Doctors Coll Of Med, Cebu City, Philippines
Graduation Year: 1988

Data Provided by:
Aliya Ghani, MD
Girard, OH
Specialties
Pediatrics
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Northeastern Oh Univs Coll Of Med, Rootstown Oh 44272
Graduation Year: 1998

Data Provided by:
Michael Sekman
(330) 759-4733
1616 E Liberty St
Girard, OH
Specialty
Adolescent Medicine

Data Provided by:
Gireesh Velugubanti, MD
Apt 151 410 Elruth Court
Girard, OH
Specialties
Pediatrics
Gender
Male
Education
Graduation Year: 2007

Data Provided by:
Dr. Gireesh Velugubanti
(718) 741-2460
Apt 151 410 Elruth Court
Girard, OH
Specialty
Pediatrics

Sheikh Mohammad Ashraf, MD
5731 Logan Arms Dr
Girard, OH
Specialties
Pediatrics
Gender
Male
Education
Medical School: King Edward Med Coll, Univ Of Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan
Graduation Year: 1962

Data Provided by:
Dr. Lynn Marie Johnson
(330) 372-3364
2201 Oakwood St
Girard, OH
Specialty
Pediatrics

Dr. Aliya Ghani
(502) 629-7212
Girard, OH
Specialty
Pediatrics

Dr. Sheikh Mohammad Ashraf
Girard, OH
Specialty
Pediatrics

Data Provided by:

Keep Kids Healthy, Naturally

Provided by: 

By Jessica Downey

For kids, back to school means excitement and anticipation. For parents, it means colds, flus, rashes—and back to the doctor. Come September, along with their art projects and homework assignments, kids start coming home with an array of germs that leave them—and the rest of the family—sick, sapped, and cranky. However, there’s no need to resign yourself to a season spent at the pediatrician’s office and a medicine chest filled with prescription meds. Experts agree that using holistic, homeopathic, and alternative remedies can resolve common kid ailments. And when it comes to your kids’ health, not reaching for the big pharmaceutical guns right away makes good sense.

“People naturally want to give kids medicine if they aren’t feeling well because they want to help them get better,” says Roy Steinbock, MD, an integrative pediatrician in Boulder, Colorado. “But illness is part of life. Suppressing symptoms at all costs is not a good approach.” And while conventional medicine has plenty of merit, some treatments come with potential risks of their own and don’t even get to the root of the problem, says Lawrence Rosen, MD, a pediatrician at the Whole Child Center in Oradell, New Jersey. “Medicine used to be very ‘one-size-fits-all,’ which doesn’t treat kids most effectively,” says Rosen. “It shouldn’t be a decision between conventional or alternative treatments. The approach to helping kids feel better should really be integrative.”

Of course, many parents feel nervous going outside the generally accepted guidelines, especially when their child gets sick. So we asked pediatricians what they deem to be the safest and most effective natural solutions for the five most common ailments. Here’s what they had to say.

Ear Infections
Often signaled by fevers, tugging at the ears, and congestion, ear infections—one of the most common of all childhood complaints—can cause excruciating pain for your kids, making it difficult not to fill that prescription for antibiotics immediately.

“Most pediatricians are taught that ear infections are best treated with antibiotics,” Rosen says. But holistic practitioners and conventional pediatricians don’t agree. “We want fewer antibiotics prescribed to kids,” he says. What’s more, studies show that antibiotics don’t always work. First, many ear infections are not bacterial—and antibiotics only clear up bacterial infections. Secondly, antibiotics target bacteria indiscriminately, so they wipe out good bacteria along with the bad. And finally, growing immune systems can become dependent on the drugs, says Dana Ullman, MPH, DHM, and author of The Homeopathic Revolution (North Atlantic Books, 2007). “If you treat with antibiotics too soon in the inflammation process, your child’s body doesn’t learn to identify what has infected it. Her body then depends on the antibiotic to fight the infection for her.”

Furthermore, an ear infection—viral or bacterial—will often clear up without the aid of drugs....

Author: Jessica Downey

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