Dietitian's Journal

Tuesday
Jul082008

Podcast Tuesday

Today, in yet another attempt to post more regularly and inspired by one of my favourite weekly features (Type Tuesday) on this elegant blog,  I'm starting a new Greens & Berries series: 

Podcast Tuesday

 

ipodnanomacbook.jpg

Image credit: iPod nano and MacBook by FHKE
 

This week's recommended podcast:  an interview with writer Michael Pollan on CBC Radio's Diet for a Hungry Planet - Focus on Food.

Diet for a Hungry Planet is a program that takes classic story ingredients from The Current and cooks up a fresh new view of how our world eats. Our host is Anna Maria Tremonti.

Today's show

Author Michael Pollan serves up a buffet of food wrongs as he walks us down the supermarket aisles. For him, knowing what to eat comes down to some fundamental rules. Eat food. Mostly plants. Not too much. Why that's not as easy as it sounds. Today, on Diet for a Hungry Planet.

Listen to this episode here.
Subscribe to the entire series by going to this page, and scrolling down to Diet for a Hungry Planet.

 

Friday
Jun272008

Dysphagia: four more resources

Image:  Chest x-ray of pneumoniaPneumonia.jpg

#1) Dysphagia -- very thorough discussion of normal swallowing physiology,  pathophysiology, clinical presentation,  diagnosis, treatment; includes videographic images. An excellent article to give to an intern or student.

#2-4) Cochrane Review Abstracts & Plain Language Summaries:

Thursday
Jun262008

More on dysphagia: a book, a blog and a "movie"

One dysphagia link leads to another:

TheDysphagiaCookbook.jpg1) The Dysphagia Cookbook -- Although I'm not sure when Dr. Elayne Achilles' web site was last updated (it's copyright 2004) it's well worth checking out her cookbook informationsample recipes,  and helpful dysphagia linksUpdate, 02 Februrary, 2012: Unfortunately, the web site is no longer maintained. The Cookbook, however, is still available for purchase from online booksellers.

One of the recommended links is:

2) The Dysphagia Resource Centre blog (last updated March 2008).  I haven't finished exploring the entire site yet, but my favourite find so far is this next resource that I will be sharing with my colleagues as well as every dietetic intern who has a placement with me:

3) Swallowing: An Animated Sequence -- interactive animation and a detailed explanation of a normal swallow.  Please forward this one to your colleagues and students, too!

Wednesday
Jun252008

CBC News Health Feature on Dysphagia

graysanatomyhead.jpgAt work I'm collecting and reading resources for a specific dysphagia team project and today I found this recently published Web feature: Dysphagia.

Even though my dysphagia paper and electronic files are bulging,  I added this link to my library because the article has excellent images,  a very clear, plain-language description of dysphagia, and quotations from dysphagic clients who describe their experiences and feelings.

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Illustration from Bartleby.com's edition of  Gray's Anatomy of the Human Body.
Tuesday
Jun242008

LivingLocal.ca

 fraservalley.jpg A view of farm fields and mountains in the Eastern Fraser Valley

 

Living in Place

" Living in place is consciously trying to satisfy your needs and find your pleasures in your local bioregion and working to assure the long-term health of the bioregion"
(source: Discovering a Sense of Place)
 

Last week in my Web wanderings I discovered the above definition that I thought worth saving and sharing.  I first encountered the concept living in place a few years ago, although I can't quite remember where. Perhaps in this magazine.  No matter the original source, the phrase has stayed in my consciousness, although I confess I  have not practiced it consistently. But my growing concerns about climate change and resource depletion and a desire to help solve rather than add to the crises compel me to question every potential consumption choice.  Do I really need this product or service? And if the answer is yes, where, how and by whom is it made or provided?

Living Local.ca is a growing collection of links and discussions that helps Canadians reduce their carbon footprints by purchasing local goods and services. You can help build the Living Local community by submitting resources and joining the discussions.  Here are sample contributions:

- from Saskatchewan:

"A culinary journey dedicated to fresh local food from the province of Saskatchewan."
Recipes, humour and links to local Saskatchewan producers... a good read. http://homefordinner.blogspot.com/

- from the Yukon: 

"Aurora Mountain Farm is a small farm in the Yukon. The Rudge family (Tom, Simone, Claire and Graham) grow certified organic vegetables, grain for baking and cereal, and feed for the cashmere goats, Belgian horses and laying hens." http://auroramountain.yukonfood.com/

So I'm encouraging all my blog readers  in Canada, but especially fellow dietitians and dietetic students and interns, to contribute to the Living Local Forum.   Share your knowledge of local food resources and activities that support eating closer to home.