Story of Woman's Courage and Medical Innovation Top Choice for Readers
28/04/2008 09:11
PR Newswire
TORONTO, April 28 /PRNewswire/ -- Readers in Europe and other parts of the world are enjoying Lifeliner:
The Judy Taylor Story, the debut book from London-born author Shireen
Jeejeebhoy. It tells the moving and poignant story of a Canadian woman who
made medical history as the first person to live long-term strictly on
intravenous feeding without eating any food.
The book has just scooped awards in the US for Editor's Choice and
Publisher's Choice and won first place in the Reader Views Reviewers Choice
Award in the Biography Category.
Judy Taylor's doctor was the author's father, Dr Khursheed Jeejeebhoy,
and his groundbreaking research on artificial feeding and nutrition helped
form the medical foundation of Total Parenteral Nutrition, or TPN, as it is
known today.
With thousands of patients in Europe facing artificial feeding issues,
the book has widespread medical interest. A European study showed that cancer
was the number one reason patients in Belgium, Denmark, France, Poland,
Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, The Netherlands and Germany went on Home TPN
or Home Parenteral Nutrition at 39 per cent followed by people suffering from
Crohn's (19 per cent).
Besides its medical story, the book is also winning accolades for its
powerful inspirational story-telling:
- "Jeejeebhoy's style of writing sets the right pace as we follow Judy's
medical difficulties." Gloria Oren, Writer and Editor
- "Shireen Jeejeebhoy has written an extraordinary account of Judy Taylor
and her fight for life." Carol Hoyer, Ph.D. Family Psychology
- "Shireen's pen has all the force of a great storyteller and the
artistic skills of reviving a past scene in its most original form. She shows
us the situation, taking us to the time and place of the event without
throwing in a single unnecessary word." Ernest Dempsey, Reviewer and Author
Shireen met Judy while a young girl and was inspired to share her story
to offer hope to all those going through crises of their own.
Despite her illness, Judy was an active mother and community volunteer.
She, along with her determined doctor, helped bring TPN out of the realm of
science fiction and into reality, allowing more patients, whether they have
bowel disease, cancer, or AIDS, to live longer, fulfilled lives.
"Lifeliner," available online, is a book written for the lay audience.
Besides detailing the evolution of TPN it is gripping readers around the
world with its inspiring story of a brave woman, who, together with her
inventive doctor, made medical history.
"When they sent her home on TPN, no one knew how long she would live or
what her quality of life would be like," Shireen says. "As far as Judy was
concerned, life itself was good enough and she had no intention of lying on
the couch all day. She had been given a second chance and she was running
with it." And run she did, right into the medical history books. Read more at
http://jeejeebhoy.ca.
Lifeliner: The Judy Taylor Story
by Shireen Jeejeebhoy
iUniverse
October 2007 / 186 pages
ISBN: 978-0-595-44544-8 Trade Paper US$16.95
Bestellen:
Lifeliner
Shireen Jeejeebhoy