New research aims to help parents and doctors find celiac disease in children by getting the answers to 5 questions. The article published in WebMD: 5 Questions Find Hidden Celiac Disease in Kids. I would retitle it: 5 Questions Find Obvious Celiac Disease in Kids.
What would the United States look like if all of the celiacs were diagnosed? That’s approximately 3 million people. How would your life different? Or your child’s? Food…health care…general attitudes…we explore that in this post.
Celiac disease reveals itself in many unexpected ways: brittle bones, hair loss, poor teeth, even diseased organs, etc. Now new research adds another way it shows itself –neurologically or in their psyche.
A recently published article declares that “Journey is out”, “Hall and Oates is in”; “platform sandals are out” and “thigh-high boots are in”; “peanut allergies are out” and “celiac disease is in”. What? Someone who thinks celiac disease is popular? Could someone tell the rest of the country? And why is it at the expense of peanut allergies?
This week’s post that looked ahead at our hopes for the next ten years, showed how most celiacs hope for a cure or a pill to mitigate symptoms of a gluten-reaction. But just because some people didn’t have some of the most common answers doesn’t mean they’re not worthwhile to discuss…
The new year and the new decade are here. With great strides being made for celiac disease in the last 10 years, what do we hope will happen to benefit celiac disease in the next decade? Survey respondents had some great thoughts!
This last decade I think many celiac’s wishes came true, whether we knew we had those wishes or not (HELLO Betty Crocker GF Mixes!). But there are a few things that many people expected would progress in this decade that just simply haven’t. So what didn’t happen, that we thought would? I thought I knew the answer to this…but I was surprised.
Restaurant dining, celiac celebrities and social media/networking were top survey picks..but we’re not to the top pick of the decade yet…that’s what this post is. And there’s a good reason this one is tops…
With the end of the decade now just days away, I got to wondering what were some of the more significant moments that had an impact on celiac disease. While I certainly have my own thoughts on this, I felt like this needed responses from the greater celiac community. This post covers two of the top three answers.
I’m looking at the top two gluten-free or celiac-related stories of the year. In 2009, the top spot goes to innovation, awareness and commitment to the cause.