About the Book

Now available in hardcover, paperback, and e-book!

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Praise for “You’re Still Sick?”

‘You’re Still Sick?’ triumphs on many remarkable levels. It should be required reading in medical school and for friends and family members of those who face chronic ailments. It’s also a sweet tale of compassion and small-town life, a parable of empathy. Get your copy … share it with a friend, and visit invisibledisabilities.org to get a nonfiction look at the realities faced by the Dreas of this world.”

-BlueStone Press

“The story does an excellent job of portraying the relentless difficulties of suffering from hard-to-treat, chronic illnesses…its message of self-advocacy and love is palpable.”

“A sometimes-exhausting but realistic portrait of life under physical duress.  ”

-Kirkus Reviews

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Popular culture would have us believe that there are only two options when one gets really sick–miraculously recover or die. Unfortunately, there is a third option. One remains sick. No tragic death, no inspiring recovery, just chronic illness.

Adrea Ragnason is a frustrated young woman who has been going to doctors for several years. Yes, she’s still sick. No, she doesn’t look sick. Doubting her doctors’ diagnoses, she researches her symptoms while coping with her chronic illness, trying to find a doctor who will look at the whole picture. Disappointed by her lack of success, she uses positive thinking as an outlook for her frustrations, harboring the hope that it will provide her with answers.

Helene Gundersen is a psychologist with a new practice. The daughter of a doctor, she is not surprised that many of her clients are doctors, yet is surprised they share similar symptoms. Her comments and suggestions nudge them toward research. Meanwhile, she attempts to remain detached as she helps a chronically ill client. But Helene is hopeful when learning about POTS, a condition caused by a malfunctioning autonomic nervous system and one of many conditions listed under the broad term of Dysautonomia.

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Click here to find out more about Julie
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Feel free to share your experiences of chronic illness or questions for the author
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