dietitian online

Entries from August 2007

New post on my new blog

August 23, 2007 · No Comments

I’ve just published a post on food allergies and intolerances at my new blog home, Greens and Berries.

Categories: Food Sensitivity

Change of address notice

August 21, 2007 · No Comments

I’ve moved about one-third of Dietitian Online’s content to its new blog home. Please come visit me at Greens and Berries. I’ll be moving the rest of the content during the next few days. If you can’t find what you’re looking for on the new site, it will still be here.

I’ve tried to keep the same simple look for the new blog but there are a few new features I’d like to tell you about.

1. New name: Greens & Berries

2. New address (URL): This means that you if you’ve been using Google Reader, Bloglines or another blog reader, you will need to update your subscription.

3. A separate page, Archives, will list all published posts. These will be organized by category, title and month.

4. Another distinct page, Links, will list my favourite websites and blogs. These, too, will be organized into groups to aid your navigation.

Oh, you were wondering about the new blog name. It is a big change, I agree. Naming is one of the most challenging tasks in setting up a new blog. But I really wanted to have food, glorious food in the title. Also, I wanted something with a gardening connection because I also blog about my edible balcony garden, which is an experiment in year-round gardening, and I may eventually move that blog to the same site. And finally, I hope that soon there will be many dietitians online with their own blogs.

Categories: Housekeeping

Housekeeping: fixing broken links, packing & moving

August 20, 2007 · No Comments

I’m in the process of moving the contents of this blog to a new hosting service so I won’t be posting anything new for a couple of days.  The new blog will look and feel much like this one but the writing and publishing features will make it easier for me to post, store and retrieve information. I hope, in turn, you will find it easier to read, seek and find. 

Addendum: more details, my new address, and tips for navigating the new site to come later this week.

Categories: Healthy Eating

Housekeeping: new page added

August 16, 2007 · No Comments

I’ve added a new page, which you can access by clicking on the text next to the About pages. (All these pages are at the top, above the image header.)

Dietitians’ Practice Resources will be a never-completed work-in-progress, but it’s my attempt to collect, categorize, find,  retrieve, and of course, share resources using the minimum amount of time, space, and mental effort (as in trying to recall where I put that classic resource on subjective global assessment).

Categories: Housekeeping · Welcome to my blog

Heart & Stroke Foundation’s feature for August

August 15, 2007 · No Comments

Here’s a link to an article that connects two of my favourite blogging topics that I usually write about separately: nutrition for stroke prevention and local eating. 

Eat locally, eat healthfully

Categories: Healthy Eating · Stroke · Sustainability

Education on secondary stroke prevention

August 15, 2007 · 4 Comments

Earlier today I provided some last-minute nutrition counseling to a stroke patient and wife as “they were heading out the door.”  OK, I admit for effect I’m exaggerating the time pressure, but this morning I really did get one of those typical phone calls from the nursing unit: “Mr. X is being discharged today and he and his wife want to talk to a dietitian before he goes home.” I immediately thought, “This is the perfect opportunity to test some of the education checklists and resources we are developing and compiling for our stroke program.” So, rather than use our department’s heart-health focused materials that, although very good, may not be completely up-to-date and also are not targeted to stroke patients, I decided to put together a customized nutrition and secondary stroke prevention resource package. (more…)

Categories: Healthy Eating · Stroke

Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog

August 10, 2007 · 1 Comment

This week, thanks to Alex Steffan’s Worldchanging post, I discovered a real gem to help broaden and deepen my nutrition knowledge and take it well beyond its usual geographic and professional interest boundaries. The Weblog is: 

Agricultural Biodiversity Weblog

A good place to begin exploring the blog is on the About page. Then, as dietitians, we probably will want to check out the posts in the Nutrition, Organic Agriculture, CookingFruits & NutsVegetables, and Nibbles.

I’m working my way through the nutrition archive today. Here is a sample of well-written posts on various topics: 

Food is good
Kids eat more if fruit and veg are home-grown
School gardens
Heirlooms are better for you

Categories: Blogroll · Community of Practice · Food Security · Healthy Eating · Inspiration · Learning · Sustainability

Open Medicine Journal & Blog

August 2, 2007 · No Comments

Hat-tip and a huge thank you to Gillian for introducing me to the Open Medicine (OM) Journal and Blog.

The blog writer and associate editor of the journal is Dean Giustini, a medical librarian at the University of British Columbia.

Here is an excerpt from one of Dean’s introductory blog posts, which gives me several reasons to keep reading today and revisit the blog regularly:

So, why visit OM blog? What are the benefits? First, blogs play a key role in the evolution of the web; they bring people together to share knowledge and to help them learn about new information technologies. We are, after all, in the information age. Furthermore, blogs are increasingly used to support continuing medical education, and viewed as an enhancement to clinical practice and rapid research dissemination. I hope that the OM blog will facilitate open discussion and collaboration, and function as a completely open repository of useful clinical cases and websites.

As a medical librarian, I will also share my thoughts about locating reliable medical information on the Web. In contrast to the original research published in Open Medicine, the blog will highlight interesting or emerging ideas from the blogosphere that are not covered elsewhere - thereby filling an important information gap. Topics I will cover include perspectives on information technologies, health care systems, research funding, drug releases and alerts, health legislation and government policies.

Who will find this blog useful? Physicians, medical students, residents and other health professionals; information professionals such as clinical/ medical librarians and informationists; health consumers and patients who need information about emerging diseases (e.g. SARS), global health issues and important research published elsewhere. (Link)

Open access to scholarly information is a principle I strongly believe in. I’ve talked about my reasons for blogging in previous posts (#1, #2, #3), but one of them is the desire to freely share new nutrition practice discoveries as well as classic resources because it benefits everyone — practitioners and the patient/clients we serve.

You can read more about the concept of open access here and more about the Open Access medical journal here.

Categories: Blogroll · Evidence-Based Practice