![]() |
|
JUNE 2013
Click the cover to read the complete digital edition
Features
Departments
All things to all people
Art
Community
Dining
Editor's Note
Education
End Note
Take 5
the guide
upcoming events
June 20, 11a. From the most popular legend of the 1001 Arabian Nights, watch as Aladdin thwarts the evil sorcerer, discovers the magical lamp,...
June 21, 6p. A fun night featuring live local bands Wild Card and the Joey Vitale Trio followed by DJ Ultra. Magicians, fortune tellers and...
June 21, 7:30p. Featuring the best local poetry talent and an open-mic forum for both new and established poets. West Las Vegas Arts Center...
{more...}
|
Profile: Dr. Rutu Ezhuthachan
Story by Jarret Keene
‘Schools offer a great opportunity to educate our children about nutrition.’ Meet Doctor Nose: Last year Dr. Rutu Ezhuthachan and her pediatric staff earned a Public Health Hero Award from the Southern Nevada Health District for getting inside kids’ heads — their noses, that is. It was a project in which her patients’ little noses were swabbed every week at her office to give real-time information to providers across the valley. “It helps us determine when H1N1 is starting, so other doctors in the community know what’s walking through their doors.” All over the world: Born 37 years ago in Bombay, India, Ezhuthachan and her family immigrated to New York then settled in Troy, Michigan. After med school in St. Maarten (in the Caribbean), she did her residency in Detroit before establishing her Vegas practice in ’03. No pain, no gain: Ezhuthachan received two Silver Syringe awards (from the Southern Nevada Immunization Coalition and Nevada Covering Kids and Families) in recent years for her efforts in childhood immunization. “Immunizing kids also protects the health of our community, especially those who for medical reasons can’t be vaccinated,” she says. Bulge battler: She created a summer camp program with the YMCA that teaches pre-teens about nutrition and activity; camp kids showed measured health improvements after just six weeks. She’s often invited to speak at conferences on pediatric obesity, a disorder she says qualifies as an epidemic. “Our society has created an instant-gratification culture. With two working parents, it’s harder to sit down together. And let’s face it: The economy makes it challenging for parents to eat healthy.” Still, Ezhuthachan insists we can do even more in schools to educate and incorporate nutrition into the curriculum. No Mac attacks? A single working mom, she packs her two kids’ junk-free lunches every morning. She enjoys Big Macs as much as anyone, but there’s a catch. “My kids and I walk three miles to the nearest McDonald’s,” she laughs.
Tweet |
Pick up your Desert Companion today at one of these Coffee Bean and Tea Leaf or Jamba Juice locations.
Also available at Clark County and Henderson libraries.
|
















