A Gluten Sensitivity Journal: Useful Notes with Practical Suggestions

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So many in our offices have more questions about Gluten Free Resources.

Try this great magazine, Living Without, to stay informed and continue your personal healing path.

I came across this pithy little journal whilst out in California two years ago, and apologize for not mentioning it here sooner. -Just had an offline posting note from a grateful reader in Australia, and sent her this reference – this is an excellent read, with easy articles to help individuals and families with the complexity of changing to gluten free meals.

Those dietary changes almost always become a family affair. Wheat is all over the place!

This page at Living Without shows an excellent diversity of topics in the contents, from peanut butter allergies, to the kids going off to camp, to eating gluten free in Paris. -And if you need some additional assistance eating gluten free in Paris, just give me a call.

Many of you new to the subject of gluten [wheat protein] or casein [milk protein] sensitivity and the multiple medical, brain and neurological downstream effects should go to the many resources listed here at CorePsychBlog.

Take a look at this CorePsychBlog post discussing why we often overlook these challenging conditions.

3 Comments

  1. Thanks Jay,
    Yes that link to the Ezine Articles is so excellent it does bear repeating, so I will link it here to simplify the connections.

    http://ezinearticles.com/?Why-Doctors-Frequently-Miss-Celiac-Disease-and-Gluten-Sensitivity&id=220137

    The science is moving so fast we all have problems chasing down the new evidence!
    Best,
    Chuck

  2. Hi. I was actually referring to the summary from the group of Ezine articles about doctors who are unaware of how “the spectrum of Celiac disease has changed.” I was talking about the doctors and not your post. 🙂 It just struck me how some doctors can misdiagnose patients just because they didn’t learn it in medical school or because it wasn’t known yet at that time.

  3. I think we all need to update ourselves every once in a while. Information then might have changed over the years. This is actually in response to the article link you posted in this article. Doctors, especially, should practice this since they hold lives in their hands.