Tracy Rowan “dargelos” (Chicago, IL USA), Amazon reviewer, gives this 4 out of 5 stars!Disclaimer: I was given a copy of this e-book in exchange for an honest review.My best friend’s younger brother was discovered to have filled his nose, ears and...
Jennifer L. Newstead, Amazon Reviewer gives this 5 out of 5 stars!This is the perfect “pediatrician waiting room” book for parents and kids to read together. Although it deals with a serious subject, it is handled in a lighthearted manner, which will...
HomeMaidSimple, Amazon reviewer, gives this 5 out of 5 stars!You’ve been there right? Maybe it was you as a child sticking something where it didn’t belong, or maybe it was your child? I remember the first time I stuck a gummy up my nose..I don’t know what I was...
Israel Drazin (Boca Raton, Florida), Amazon reviewer, gives this 5 out of 5 stars!One of the many problems parents and child care people have is how to deal with children who place objects in their ears and noses. Speaking to children doesn’t always help. Dr. Jerald...
Worked with the grade 6-8 students at school to raise awareness and to help students understand homelessness
S. Power (Austin, Texas, United States), Amazon reviewer, gives this 5 out of 5 stars!Don’t Stick Sticks Up Your Nose! Don’t Stuff Stuff In Your Ears by Dr. Jerald Altman is a great book to read to young children.The book rhymes and has a fun repetitive...
Maureen, Amazon reviewer, gives this 5 out of 5 stars! Don’t Stick Sticks Up Your Nose, Don’t Stuff Stuff In Your Ears, is really a delightful help book for parents of toddlers. The pictures are enticing for youngsters, and the rhyming words draw their attention.We...
It’s inevitable. Children discover things by poking and prodding and often that begins with the face. Tasting everything that their little fingers can grab, and eventually, those things may end up in an ear or way up in a sinus cavity. Don’t believe it?...
I am off to Me’Kele, Ethiopia where we will work alongside Ethiopian doctors examining and caring for the people of Ethiopia. I don’t know if they put things in their ears and nose as often as the U.S. kids (and adults) do… we will see. For those...
My patient, this 6-year-old boy, didn’t know how these thin little crayons got into his ear! They don’t seem to have feet on them, so I doubt they walked in there. Nonetheless, a good rinsing out in the pediatricians’ office wasn’t successful...