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Pediatric Bipolar Disorder is a neurobiological disorder that requires medical treatment. Even with successful medical treatment, however, both children and adults with bipolar disorder usually need coping skillls to manage and live with this challenging illness. The purpose of this book is to help the child with bipolar disorder better understand his or her feelings, and feel less alone in this world. This book is written for elementary school age children, but may be of use for those younger or older. Children with bipolar disorder usually have strong emotional responses to their world. The first step to treating this illness is proper medical attention. Once these children receive treatment, it is important to help them identify, understand, cope with and manage these feelings. In order to give children a sense of control over these strong feelings, a caring adult can first learn how to label their feelings. Next, guide the child to strategize appropriate responses and practice or role play the strategies. Our hope is that this book facilitates discussions with your child to help in that process. In using this book, help the child understand that feelings are an emotional response to stimulus, and it's very hard, if not impossible, to change those initial feelings. What a healthy and stable child can learn to do, however, is manage the resulting behavior and choose how much control feelings have over their lives. In other words, while it is acceptable to be angry, it is not acceptable to act destructively because of that anger. That doesn't mean, however, that an unstable child should be expected to control their illness through sheer willpower.
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To start, I did not care for the artwork, but acknowledge that it might appeal to the intended age group.
I was so hoping that this book would have more information, either throughout the book or in a section in the back that is sometimes labeled as for parents/caregivers, etc. however there was none of that. The most ‘informative' piece of the book is on the last page with “Dr. Janet says it's only been a little while since doctors knew that kids could have bipolar disorder.” The book discusses his big feelings, but how is that different from ASD, highly sensitive person, ADHD, or other disorders? It does not discuss the how, when, or why the kid is diagnosed or if anyone else in the family has a known mood disorder. The book does briefly mention ‘all those pills' but I think that the topic of medicine could have been much better covered. Such a disappointment.