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The Editors |
Dan Stradford, Editor
Alan Graham, Assistant Editor
Gloria McTaggart, Assistant Editor
SafeHarborProj@aol.com
www.Alternative
MentalHealth.com
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e-mail address above. Contact information is below.
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About Safe
Harbor |
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Safe Harbor was founded in 1998 in the wake of growing public
dissatisfaction with the unwanted effects of orthodox psychiatric
treatments such as medication and shock therapy. Seeking to satisfy the
desire for safer, more effective treatments, Safe Harbor is dedicated to
educating the public, the medical profession, and government officials
on research and treatments that, minimally, do no harm and, optimally,
cure the causes of severe mental symptoms. Our primary thrust is
education on the medical causes of severe mental symptoms and the use of
nutritional and other natural treatments.
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About
Alternative
MentalHealth.com |
ALTERNATIVE
MENTALHEALTH.COM IS THE WORLD'S LARGEST WEB SITE DEVOTED exclusively
to alternative mental health treatments. It includes a directory of over
240 physicians, nutritionists, experts, organizations, and facilities
around the U.S. that offer or promote safe, alternative treatments for
severe mental symptoms. Many of the physicians listed do in-depth
examinations to find the physical causes behind mental problems.
Also included on the site is an array of articles on topics ranging
from the medical causes of schizophrenia to the effects of toxic metals
on mental health.
Special AlternativeMentalHealth.com T-shirts and bumper stickers are
available at our online store.
A bookstore page lists top books that cover many areas of alternative
treatments with titles like Natural Healing for Schizophrenia and Other
Common Mental Disorders and No More Ritalin.
AlternativeMentalHealth.com has been created to educate the public,
practitioners, and government officials on the medical conditions that
create "mental illness" and the many safe resources available for
addressing and often curing severe mental symptoms.
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WE WELCOME YOUR DONATIONS. AS A NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION, SAFE HARBOR IS
SUPPORTED SOLELY THROUGH THE GENEROSITY OF THE PUBLIC. DONATIONS CAN
BE MADE ONLINE AT OUR WEB SITE OR MAILED TO THE ABOVE ADDRESS. WE ALSO
ACCEPT VISA/MASTERCARD BY PHONE. THANK YOU. |
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Editor's Comment |
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Usually our
editor's comment is on one topic but we have a lot of housekeeping to do
so I wanted to touch upon a number of things.
First of all, many thanks to those who attended Safe Harbor's Mood
Cure Workshop over the February 1 weekend in the Los Angeles area. It
was a great success and Julia Ross was a joy to watch as she laid out
her remarkably fast-acting amino acid therapies for anxiety, depression,
ADD, and other problems. CDs of the workshop will be available shortly.
We received MANY inquiries on whether we would be holding the event
again in another city and the answer is probably yes. We will know more
in the next month or so.
Safe Harbor's annual medical conference Non Pharma III -
Non-Pharmaceutical Approaches to Mental Disorders - is now scheduled for
the weekend of June 5 and 6, 2004, in the Los Angeles area. You will
hear a lot more about this in our next issue.
Also, we want to extend our appreciation to the Boston Foundation for
their recent grant to Safe Harbor, facilitated by the generous efforts
of one of the practitioners on Safe Harbor's directory (Thanks, Judy!).
Lastly, we want to thank you, our readers. Safe Harbor's work is
meaningless unless people like you pass the word on and USE or GET INTO
USE the information we put out. We hear from you regularly and the best
payment for our work are the stories that come in from those whose lives
have been improved through non-drug approaches.
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Six Announcements |
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"Dr. Laura" Schlessinger
to Speak at Safe Harbor Awards Benefit |
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Safe Harbor
takes great pleasure in announcing that Dr. Laura Schlessinger,
America's most popular radio therapist with over 15 million
listeners a week, has generously agreed to give of her time and be
the keynote speaker for Safe Harbor's Fourth Annual Awards Benefit
in Los Angeles on the evening of Thursday, October 7.
In
keeping with Safe Harbor's philosophy that recovery requires
actively participating in one's own wellness, Safe Harbor will join
with Dr. Laura in presenting an evening of hope and recovery with
the theme of "Taking Responsibility for Your Mental Health."
Mark
your calendars - you will not want to miss this one. (See next story
for even more remarkable details.)
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Safe Harbor to Honor Dr.
Doris Rapp |
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The
legendary Dr. Doris Rapp has been named as Safe Harbor's 2004
Lighthouse Award recipient, to be presented on Oct. 7 in Los Angeles
at Safe Harbor's Fourth Annual Awards Benefit.
Our
Lighthouse Award is presented to men and women who have made
outstanding contributions to humanity by advancing the use of truly
safe and effective mental health treatments.
Dr.
Rapp, is a best-selling author whose work in showing how allergies
can affect adult and child behavior skyrocketed her to fame in the
1980s. She stunned television audiences with videos showing how
allergens turned normal children into behavioral problems. Appearing
on the Donahue show three times, one episode resulted in 140,000
letters to her office. Still high profile in the media, appearing on
Oprah and other programs, Dr. Rapp has positively impacted millions
of lives.
We at
Safe Harbor cannot think of anyone more befitting of the honor.
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Safe Harbor Los Angeles
Support Group, Feb. 11 |
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The Los
Angeles Safe Harbor Support Group meeting will be held at the Safe
Harbor office, 1718 Colorado Blvd, Eagle Rock, from 7 to 9 PM,
Wednesday, February 11th.
We will
have Gary Erkfritz, D.C., speaking on how NAET (an allergy
elimination technique) can be used to improve mental and physical
conditions.
The
meeting is free and open to all interested persons. Kindly RSVP
(323) 257-7338 if you will be participating.
The
support group will meet from 7 PM to 8 PM and the talk will be
presented from 8 PM to 9 PM.
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Safe Harbor Boston
Lecture, March 11 |
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Safe Harbor
Boston presents "The Mind/Body Approach to Health - A Talk by Eva M.
Selhub, M.D." Thursday, March 11 at 7:30 pm
Location: First Unitarian Society in Newton - Parish Hall
1326 Washington St., Newton, MA
(corner of Highland St., parking behind Sovereign Bank)
Dr. Eva
Selhub is a trained internist and specialist in Mind/Body Medicine.
She is currently the Medical Director of the Mind/Body Medical
Clinics at the Mind/Body Medical Institute in Boston, where she is
also a clinical trainer and researcher. Dr. Selhub also practices as
integrative health consultant at the Center for Balance in
Newtonville. She is on staff at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical
Center and is a clinical instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical
School and Tufts Medical School. Dr. Selhub has created a holistic
approach to healthcare, integrating Eastern and Western philosophies
into her practice. Much of her technique is based on the effects of
stress on health. Dr. Selhub offers consultations in all aspects of
health which include a unique stress physiology assessment,
nutrition and exercise counseling, integrative imagery and guided
relaxation, and energy healing (Reiki and Qigong).
Dr.
Selhub's lectures are based on the mind/body connection, the
physiology of stress and coping, and their relationship to illness.
She also lectures on spirituality in medicine. Dr. Selhub received
her B.A from Tufts University, and her M.D. from the Boston
University School of Medicine in 1994. She did post-doctoral
training in internal medicine at the Boston Medical Center in
Boston, MA. She is a member of the Massachusetts Medical Society and
the American Medical Association.
Safe
Harbor Boston is dedicated to increasing awareness about the
advantages of using alternative treatments for those interested in
mental health issues. We provide healing circle/support group
meetings the first and third Mondays of each month from 7:00-9:00 PM
at the First Unitarian Society for people who experience extreme
states of mind.
For more
information call: 617-964-5544 or write to
SafeHarborB@aol.com
Visit Safe Harbor's site:
www.alternativementalhealth.com
For directions to the First Unitarian Society in Newton:
www.fusn.org
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Safe Harbor New York
Lecture |
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Holistic
Psychiatry Lecture
Dr. Michael Gurevich will speak about using herbs, supplements, and
homeopathic remedies to treat mental disorders.
**NEW
DATE**: Wednesday, February 11, 6:30 - 8:30 pm
Where: Neighborhood Preservation Center, 232 East 11th Street
between 2nd and 3rd Avenues
Closest subway stops: Astor Place (6 train), Union Square (4, 5, 6,
L, N, R, Q, and W), or 3rd Avenue station (L) Closest bus stops: 3rd
Avenue between 10 and 11th (M101, M102, and M103) or 2nd Avenue
between 11th and 12th Streets (M15)
Donation: $5
Michael
I. Gurevich, M.D., C.Ac.
Founder and President, Lifestreams Integrative Health and Wellness,
a holistic health center in Glen Head, NY.
Diplomate American Board of Psychiatry
Diplomate American Board of Addiction Psychiatry
Certified Acupuncturist
Please let us know if you will be attending:
Safe Harbor New York
ny@alternativementalhealth.com
New York: 212-302-9811
New Jersey: 201-656-2849
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Pfeiffer Treatment Center
Comes to Northern California, Oregon |
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The
Pfeiffer Treatment Center, the world's largest nutritional mental
health clinic (a nonprofit organization) will be delivering lectures
in Northern California and Oregon in the near future. Learn the
benefits of Nutrient-based therapy for chemical imbalances such as
ADD/ADHD, Autism, Behavior Disorder, Depression, Anxiety, and
Schizophrenia.
Additionally, they will be presenting a 3-day clinic in Northern
California from April 19-21, during which they will be seeing
patients for treatment. They are at 630-5050-0300 and
www.hriptc.org.
LECTURE
SCHEDULE:
NORTHERN
CALIFORNIA: Wed., March 17, 7-9 pm
Embassy Suites Hotel
San Francisco Airport
150 Anza Blvd.
Burlingame, CA
650-342-4600 (for directions only)
RSVP (helpful but not required) 630-505-0300 ext.216
OREGON:
Thurs., March 18th, 6:30-8:30pm Salem Library
585 Liberty St.
Salem, OR
503-588-6315 (for directions only)
Sponsored by Integrative Mental Health Care
RSVP to 503-316-8117
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MRI Tested As "Bipolar" Treatment |
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Magnetic waves
being used to examine "bipolar" patients actually made them feel better,
prompting further study with promising results, according to a study
published in the January 2004 issue of the American Journal of
Psychiatry.
"This is a very unusual MRI [magnetic resonance imaging] exam used
for the first time in this study. We were surprised at our good fortune
in discovering this effect and we are excited about the initial
findings," says Michael Rohan, imaging physicist in McLean's Brain
Imaging Center.
"We were using MRI to investigate the effectiveness of certain
medications in bipolar patients and noticed that many came out of the
MRI feeling much better than when they went in. We decided to
investigate further."
Researchers theorized that one type of magnetic pulse they were using
was having the positive effect. "This was purely accidental. We just
happened to use this set of magnetic gradients, which we think somehow
matches the natural firing rhythm of brain cells." Technically this kind
of scan is called EP-MRSI, or Echo-Planar Magnetic Resonance
Spectroscopic Imaging.
After realizing they may be observing a real effect, researchers
expanded the study to include sham EP-MRSI scans [equivalent of a
placebo control] with bipolar subjects, normal EP-MRSI scans in healthy
subjects, in addition to EP-MRSI scans in bipolar subjects.
The results showed 23 out of 30 bipolar subjects who received the
actual EP-MRSI tests reported mood improvement. Subjects who were not on
medication showed even greater response (100 percent) compared to the
response rate of those on medication (63 percent). These results were
not seen in either of the control groups.
The authors note that one other test using electromagnetic energy has
previously shown some positive effect in subjects with depression. This
rTMS, or repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation test, was
originally developed in the 1980s to test nerve function. It uses a
magnetic device that is held next to the head. Studies using this
treatment for depression typically result in a 40 percent to 50 percent
response rate. However, the McLean authors note that this test uses a
much stronger magnetic field (200 times stronger than theirs) that can
be painful to the subject.
Like a standard MRI, the magnetic field the McLean researchers are
using is not felt by the patient. Researchers are currently developing a
tabletop device capable of generating the same magnetic field as
originally used with the MRI scanner.
The smaller device is expected to prove more efficient and
cost-effective enough for use in routine visits at a doctor's office.
"We are also planning a much larger clinical study using this smaller
device to further test this effect," adds Rohan.
This story has been adapted from a press release by McLean Hospital,
a psychiatric affiliate of Harvard Medical School with the largest
research program of any private psychiatric hospital in the U.S.
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Fish, Essential Fatty Acids Linked to Lower Hostility |
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A study summarized in
the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, January 2004, finds that
high dietary intake of DHA (a fatty acid)and consumption of fish rich in
omega-3 fatty acids may be related to lower likelihood of high hostility
in young adulthood. (Iribarren C, Markovitz JH, Jacobs DR, Schreiner PJ,
Daviglus M, Hibbeln JR, "Dietary intake of omega-3, omega-6 fatty acids
and fish: Relationship with hostility in young adults-the CARDIA
study.")
"Hostility has been
shown to predict both the development and manifestation of coronary
disease," states the abstract of the study, which examined the
relationship between dietary intake of fish and of polyunsaturated
(omega-3 and omega-6) essential fatty acids with hostility.
The data analyzed
came from a 1990-1993 study of 3581 urban white and black young adults.
A dietary assessment in 1992-1993 and measurement of hostility and other
factors in 1990-1991 were used in the analysis.
The multivariate odds
ratios of scoring in the upper quartile of hostility (adjusting for age,
sex, race, field center, educational attainment, marital status, body
mass index, smoking, alcohol consumption and physical activity)
associated with one standard deviation increase in docosahexaenoic acid
(DHA) intake was statistically significant. Consumption of any fish rich
in omega-3 fatty acids, compared to no consumption, was also
independently associated with lower odds of high hostility.
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Bipolar Recovery with Fish Oil |
index |
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This
recovery story appeared on Safe Harbor's support group email list,
SafeHarbor2, and is reprinted with her permission: |
I "accidentally" discovered fish oil helped my bipolar immeasurably
when I started taking it as a natural alternative to surgery for my
wrist. They never did decide whether it was peripheral neuropathy from
an OLD injury, or if it was carpal tunnel, but they didn't hesitate to
recommend surgery. The fish oil sounded like a much better solution.
It worked... slowly. Meanwhile, a bipolar friend who saw me for the
first time for a few months said how much BETTER I seemed - and whatever
I was doing, to keep it up! I did, and the moods got even more stable.
And more, and more. I knew the DHA [docosahexaenoic acid, an omega-3
fatty acid] in the fish oil was shown to help depression, but while I
was taking it they discovered EPA [eicosapentaenoic acid, another
omega-3 fatty acid] was good for mood swings.
As this continued, my psychiatrist started weaning me off of the
drugs. Not just taking them away, but doing it in a controlled,
recommended manner. He kept taking more and more away, and I got MORE
stable. He kept taking them away until I wasn't taking any. I don't see
him anymore, but knowing him, he's just as happy about that! Everything
I need "talk-wise," I seem to be able to handle better by talking to
other mental health consumers or writing to them.
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Recovery From Years of "Bipolar Disorder" |
index |
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The
following comes from a woman who knew she had a parathyroid problem
and asked us if it could be causing her bipolar symptoms. Safe
Harbor responded an emphatic "Yes" and referred her to Dr. Sydney
Walker's book A Dose of Sanity, which discusses a case where this
occurred. Parathyroid problems are often marked by increase calcium
levels on blood tests because this gland plays a role in calcium
metabolism. |
Dear friends,
You will be pleased to know that I underwent surgery for a
parathyroid tumor December 23. Before the tumor was removed, my prime
identification was "60 year old female with bipolar disorder."
Immediately after surgery I had none of the markers of bipolar: gone
were the dizziness, confusion, nausea, depression, exhaustion. I kept
asking "What did you put in the anesthesia??"
As my calcium begins to pump into my nervous system, I have the most
extraordinary feeling of well-being. My memory, though still sluggish,
is becoming sharper, my spirits are full and I have never felt better in
60 years.
I do not want to get into the grief I know I will feel for the
agonizing years I have lost and did not need to. But I do want to put up
a red flag to those of you who can make a difference. Listen with all
your ears, test everything upside-down, hear the patient.
I told every clinician I was not a manic depressive and (upon reading
my files) was designated in severe denial, noncompliant, etc. I also
addressed my high calcium levels 10 and 15 years ago, but my concerns
were dismissed with "They're slightly high - nothing to worry about."
Thank you, Safe Harbor, for Sydney Walker's A Dose of Sanity, pages
56-57 (misdiagnosed parathyroid tumor). A very happy New Year to
everyone!
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B12 Lozenges Produce Bipolar Recovery |
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Here is
another recovery story sent to Safe Harbor: |
Our son was born with a blood disorder called spherocytosis and had
his spleen removed at age three. All was well and he had to take folic
acid for years.
At age 20 he was misdiagnosed as having bipolar disorder. This
diagnosis came after he had suffered something quite horrific which left
him in a manic state.
Because of his disoriented state, my son was taken to the hospital,
where he was deemed "medically fit enough" to sign a form giving the
hospital permission to keep him as a psychiatric patient for an
indefinite period of time. When we realized what all those meds were
doing to him, we tried to get him released, or perhaps transferred to a
hospital nearer to our home. The response was that he was "not mentally
fit" to sign a form giving us his medical power of attorney (something
that he has since made sure that we now have).
We found ourselves in a "catch-22" situation in which our son seemed
to be a pawn. We knew his normal behavior, the hospital didn't and we
knew that something horrific had happened to him, something that the
hospital didn't seem to think was important. We have since learned that
severe stress can quickly deplete the body of B12, causing mania and
bipolar-like symptoms. Because our son was in that age group when
bipolar symptoms often begin, he fit that profile and was exhibiting
abnormal behavior, he was admitted to the psychiatric ward.
He couldn't tolerate the meds and quit taking them. After five years
of taking no meds, the doctors had to re-evaluate their original
diagnosis, as a bipolar person cannot go five years without proper meds
and maintain good mental health. He seemed fine but bouts of depression
and anxiety will hit him now and again.
I remember reading an article which stated that a deficiency in
vitamin B12 could cause a person to be misdiagnosed as having bipolar
disorder. I sent my son this article and after reading it he started
taking B12 in the form of lozenges which are dissolved under the tongue.
He is 29 now and still takers B12 in lozenge form daily. He doesn't
suffer anxiety or depression unless he forgets to take them.
Today he has still not been able to get that initial bipolar
diagnosis removed from his file, a fact which prevented him from passing
his medical after being accepted into the armed forces last year. He was
accepted ROTP (Regular Officer Training Plan) and they had had agreed to
fund his final year of university, but unfortunately he failed to pass
his medical, based solely on the bipolar diagnosis. He was rejected and
had to struggle financially in order to finish his degree.
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UK to Probe Antidepressant/Suicide Connection |
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The British
government's medicines agency says it will look into whether new
anti-depressant drugs increase a patient's suicide risk, according to a
Reuters story released January 6, 2004.
The Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency said the
study will estimate the risk of suicide, suicidal thoughts, non-fatal
overdose and self-laceration in patients taking selective serotonin
re-uptake inhibitors (SSRI) and tricyclic anti-depressants (TCA).
Among health regulatory agencies, Britain's has taken the lead in
reviewing the safety of SSRI drugs following reports that some depressed
patients turn violent or suicidal while under the influence of the drugs
or undergoing withdrawal from them.
A safety review in children last year resulted in the UK agency's
advice against prescribing nearly all SSRIs to under-18s due to risks
found to outweigh the benefits.
The new study will follow patients of all ages up to 90 who were
diagnosed with depression between 1995 and 2001, the agency said.
Relative risks of suicide and other problems would be calculated for
SSRI and tricyclic anti-depressant treatment versus no drug treatment,
SSRI versus TCA treatment, and for each SSRI compared with
GlaxoSmithKline's SSRI Seroxat/Paxil (paroxetine), perhaps chosen as a
benchmark because it is Britain's most commonly prescribed SSRI.
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Stroke Effects Can Be Reversed |
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Strokes can now
often be treated successfully with medications years after the original
incident. Dr. William Hammesfahr, a Florida physician, discovered that
the use of FDA-approved hypertension and cardiac disease medications can
produce significant improvement in cognitive, personality, intellectual
and memory function in most patients with brain injury or stroke. For
this discovery, Hammesfahr was nominated in 1999 for the Nobel Prize in
Medicine and Physiology.
Previously, it was believed that stroke victims saw whatever
improvement there would be within the first few hours, and that there
would be little or no improvement thereafter. Medications given after
strokes were mainly to prevent further strokes.
Understandably, Dr. Hammesfahr's announcements have met with
skepticism and outright attack. Claims that the revolutionary stroke
therapy could not possibly be true, and therefore must be fraudulent,
were brought before the Florida Department of Health. After a thorough
investigation, Judge Susan Kirkland declared that Dr. Hammesfahr was
"the first physician to treat patients successfully to restore deficits
caused by stroke."
The evidence presented included results of independent studies done
on stroke victims using Hammesfahr's protocol. Diane K. Harley, a
court-recognized expert in physical therapy located in the Tampa Bay
area, reported that most patients in her study had been paralyzed for
longer than a year and had no hope of improvement. She tested patients
in the study prior to the protocol, and then three weeks into the
procedure. Of 242 patients tested, 221 improved within three weeks, and
none were harmed.
Dr. Alex T. Gimon, a Tampa Bay psychologist and a court-recognized
expert in neuropsychology and brain injury, tested a group of 168
patients, and then a group of 164 patients. Again, most of these
subjects had experienced stroke or brain injury at least a year before
the study began, and had discontinued physical and cognitive
rehabilitation. Gimon reported marked improvement in most of his test
subjects within 15 days.
Further testimony was made by two private physicians who themselves
experienced strokes, underwent Hammersfahr's treatment, and returned to
their practices. A former NFL football player, Steven Putnal, testified
that after being paralyzed for 18 months, he was now able to return to
his hobbies of hunting and walking in the woods. A man who had been
unable to speak after a stroke testified verbally for over two hours
about his recovery.
Acceptance by Medicare is a good sign that a treatment has been
accepted into the medical mainstream. In November of 2002, Medicare
approved federal funds for the Hammesfahr treatment, identifying the
innovative physician as the first to treat patients with permanent
neurological deficits who were previously felt to be untreatable.
Finally, the U.S. Patent Office, after a five-year investigation,
declared the therapy innovative and effective, and issued a patent.
Dr. William Hammesfahr has offices at the Hammesfahr Neurological
Institute, 600 Druid Road East in Clearwater, Florida, 33756, (727)
461-4464, Fax (727) 443-1984.
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Medical Societies Warn of Anti-Psychotics' Side Effects |
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A new
recommendation jointly signed by the American Diabetes Association, the
American Psychiatric Association, the North American Association for the
Study of Obesity, and the American Association of Clinical
Endocrinologists urges caution in administering the anti-psychotics
Abilify, Clozaril, Geodon, Risperdal, Seroquel and Zyprexa.
People taking these drugs - commonly prescribed for schizophrenia,
bipolar disorder, autism, and dementia - should be carefully watched for
signs of diabetes, obesity or high cholesterol, according to the
statement, published in the journal Diabetes Care (February 2004).
Recent studies were cited linking those side effects to the
antipsychotics.
Obesity and diabetes, like high cholesterol, raise a person's risk of
heart disease.
The recommendation says doctors should screen patients before
starting them on such a drug or as soon as possible afterward, noting
such things as a history of obesity and diabetes in the patient and the
family, and the patient's weight, blood pressure and cholesterol levels.
Doctors should also monitor the patient during the course of treatment.
Patients and family members should be informed of the potential for
the side effects, and be told of signs of diabetes and especially those
of a life-threatening complication called diabetic ketoacidosis, the
statement says. That complication is marked by such symptoms as weight
loss, nausea, vomiting, rapid breathing and dehydration.
That complication has appeared in some people using anti-psychotics,
and it was an early indicator that the drugs might be linked to
diabetes.
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Book Review: Our Toxic World, A Wake Up Call by Doris Rapp, MD |
index |
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Dr. Doris Rapp,
internationally recognized authority on allergies has come up with an
outstanding work in her latest book, Our Toxic World, A Wake Up Call:
Chemicals Damage Your Body, Brain, Behavior, and Sex.
This book exposes the disturbing truth about the multifaceted daily
assault humans experience in the industrial world through our air and
water. She discussed the primary chemicals we are exposed to, their
effects, and what you can do about it.
Chapters include How Can You Tell if Chemicals Hurt You?;
Can Chemicals Affect Behavior, Activity, Learning, and Child
Development?; Sex and Chemicals; and Just How Contaminated
Are We?
She not only addresses those with Multiple Chemical Sensitivities but
also the millions of other who are harmed, often unknowingly, by
chemical, mold, and other exposures, resulting in debilitating physical
and mental injury. The book also gives specific instructions on how to
spot if you or your loved ones are being adversely effected by chemical
exposure.
Like all of her books, Our Toxic World is an extraordinary
contribution and will save and improve many lives. Always the
humanitarian, Dr. Rapp ensures that readers are empowered with plenty of
tools to improve their own health and that of the planet.
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Parody of Zoloft Commercial |
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For those of
you who have winced while watching the Zoloft commercial with the little
oval creature becoming happy and sad as the announcer explains that it's
all a chemical imbalance - the following Web site may give you some
relief from this depressing advertising.
It is a full action cartoon with sound so takes a little time to load
but it is very funny:
http://www.astonishedhead.com/images/OVOID.swf
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