Use Your Voice

91rzmL0vklL
Co-Authors / Illustrators
Age Range
4+
Release Date
August 27, 2024
ISBN
978-0593752142
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From the author of the New York Times bestseller Raise Your Hand comes an important book about making your voice heard, especially when others refuse to listen.

After a harrowing experience at the hospital, Alice Paul Tapper—daughter of CNN's Jake Tapper—shares her story with the help of some imaginary friends.

When Alice wakes up with a terrible pain in her stomach, she's not sure what might be the cause. A doctor at the hospital asks her to pick which face on a numbered pain chart best shows the suffering that she's experiencing. The problem is, she's nervous and isn't sure. That's when the faces turn into imaginary friends who help her speak up about what she's feeling.

This fictionalized version of Alice's real experience chronicles her struggle to get the right diagnosis after suddenly being struck with appendicitis. Caregivers and kids alike will benefit from reading this meaningful book about advocating for yourself during a medical emergency. With whimsical and comforting illustrations by Fanny Liem, the gentle telling of this true story will resonate with anyone who has ever struggled to be believed.

Editor review

1 review
Spark Discussion on Patient Advocacy
Overall rating
 
4.0
Plot
 
4.0
Characters
 
4.0
Writing Style
 
4.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
4.0
Use for Voice is a unique picture book about a patient's self-advocacy to get the correct diagnosis. I am used to reading books that present medical personnel as superheroes and many books explaining a doctor's job so young children feel comfortable and trust their expertise. However, this book takes a different perspective, one where the doctor brushed off the child’s concerns and sent them home with a misdiagnosis. It wasn’t until a different doctor came and the child learned to speak up and demand more tests that a serious condition was discovered.
I have mixed feelings about this book's approach because it is good to make yourself heard until you get help but on the other hand, I don’t know the risk of children reading this and mistrusting doctors when most of the time they will be told good information. There is some attempt to lighten the topic by having imaginary friends from the pain meter stay with the girl and help her learn to speak up until she feels better. There is increasing attention on social media that females are more likely to be dismissed, and their pain not listened to by male doctors which was how this story unfolded so maybe it is good for girls to be ready to advocate for themselves. Overall, this book sheds light on patient advocacy and would spark good discussion afterward.
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