On Tuesday, April 23rd, 2019, in honor of National Minority Health Month, Dr. Aline Charabaty (Director of Johns Hopkins IBD Center), Brooke Abbott (Patient Advocate, Crazy Creole Mommy Chronicles) & I (Patient Advocate, Own Your Crohn’s) had the honor of speaking with the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation on the very important topic of “The Impact of IBD on Racial & Ethnic Minorities.” Please view the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation’s video below: If you are a man or woman of color living with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), please know you are NOT alone. We are all here to support you through your journey. More is and will be done to tend…
- advocacy, Colorectal Surgery, coping with flares, Crohn's, Diet, Emerging Therapies, Fistulizing Disease, living with IBD, Mental Health, Minority Health, Ostomy, stigma, Ulcerative Colitis, Women's Health
- advocacy, awareness, Crohn's, Diet, Emerging Therapies, Fistulizing Disease, living with IBD, Mental Health, Nutrition, Ostomy, Ulcerative Colitis
5 Hot Topics Presented at Crohn’s & Colitis Congress 2019
I had the honor of attending the 2019 Crohn’s & Colitis Congress in Las Vegas, NV as a patient advocate and speaker on the Perianal Fistulizing Crohn’s Disease panel. From diet and nutrition to mental health and pregnancy in IBD, here are the most salient topics presented at the conference this year for us patients: https://www.oshihealth.com/crohns-congress-2019/ Originally published by Oshi Health, Inc., on February 26th, 2019. Written by Tina Aswani Omprakash Medically reviewed by Matthew Hamilton, MD Please feel free to leave comments and feedback. I would love to hear your thoughts as always.
- awareness, coping with flare, Crohn's, Diet, Disease Prevention, living with IBD, Nutrition, Ostomy, Ulcerative Colitis
Can a Low FODMAP Diet Help IBD? 7 Things to Know
Written by Emily Willingham, PhD Medically reviewed by Matthew Hamilton, MD When patient advocate and author of the blog OwnYourCrohns, Tina Aswani Omprakash, 35, reached an impasse with symptoms related to her inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), she turned in frustration to her nutritionist. On her nutritionist’s suggestion, Omprakash, who lives in New York City, decided to give the low-FODMAP diet a try. What Are FODMAPs Anyway? FODMAPs stands for “fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols,” all sugars that are common in foods. If these small sugars go unabsorbed and hang around in the intestines long enough, they can produce diarrhea and abdominal bloating and cramping, depending on where they linger. People who…