I skimmed some of the section that pertained to my 19 month old and a few others before and after. I don't think I'm fond of her decisive parenting advice. I expected more about health and less about "your child should not have a pacifier anymore" type blanket statements that I encountered. Also, she makes the blanket statement that no two year old will open his mouth willingly for a tongue depressor at a dr. visit. Mine does and has consistently at the last several visits. There's nothing to be scared of about it and he thinks it's funny. I had written a much longer review pointing out enough of these discrepancies to make me feel better about disliking the book then erased them, mostly because the book is old. 2002. The most recent version I could find was 2009 (but I did only look very quickly). I think this book does more harm than good on library shelves (which is where I found it). Many changes in wisdom and medicine have occurred since then making this book a bit bleh, and bordering on obsolete. I don't have time to fact check this book to see if it has anything seriously outdated in the medical advice, but the general rule of thumb in public libraries is 5 years on books that provide medical advice. If you're looking at reviews to see if it's worth purchasing, my advice is No. Not unless there is one that has been printed in the last 3 or so years...