Blog Archive for the ‘Alternative Medicine’ Category

Burzynski: A Must-See Film

For those of you who don’t know, my friend and colleague Stanislaw Burzynski, MD, PhD, has made what I believe to be the most important cancer discovery of all time. Subscribers of my monthly newsletter Health & Healing have been following his triumphs and challenges since I first wrote about Dr. B in 1995. And now, a remarkable new movie entitled Burzynski can bring this amazing story right to your living room.

 

Burzynski was featured this spring in film festivals in California, New Jersey, Florida, and Australia and screened in major cities nationwide. It won the esteemed Humanitarian Vision Award at the Newport Beach Film Festival and has received glowing reviews from critics.

 

This film highlights Dr. Burzynski’s struggle against the FDA and other federal and state bureaucrats. In it, you’ll see the unjust persecution he’s faced simply because his effective therapy challenges traditional medicine’s expensive and unsuccessful cancer treatment paradigm.

 

For 90 minutes, you’ll ride a rollercoaster of emotions: from inspiration and motivation to infuriation and frustration. And at the end of the film, you’re sure to be as big of fan of Dr. Burzynski as I am.

 

My nonprofit Freedom of Health Foundation has been involved in the screenings and publicity of Burzynski, and we want to get it into the hands of as many people as possible. Please help me spread the word about this important movie. To get your DVD of this full-length feature film, along with key articles I’ve written about Dr. Burzynski, call (800) 792-4269, visit our Web site, thefhf.org, or send $20 (tax-deductible, postage included; make checks out to the Foundation) to:

 

Freedom of Health Foundation
P.O. Box 11599
Newport Beach CA 92658

Prolo Your Pain Away

Two weeks of hunkering over a computer for hours each day left Laura with severe low back pain shooting into her right leg. Josh had such intense pain in his neck after a surfing accident that he could barely get out of bed. Fred had another in a long line of recurring back spasms, this one caused by carrying in the groceries. And Marie—well, she’s been told she just has to learn to live with the pain in her lower back and legs.

 

Chances are that you have a neck or back pain horror story of your own. These very common flare-ups are like the villain in a scary movie, lurking about and attacking at random moments—or, in some cases, haunting you continuously.

 

Most people look to the medicine cabinet for pain relief, opting for ibuprofen, aspirin, or prescription painkillers to knock out discomfort. Others try chiropractic care, massage, or acupuncture for relief. In the short term, most of these solutions are okay. But the real goal is to get to the bottom of the pain and stop recurrent attacks before they start. And that’s where prolotherapy comes in. Prolotherapy relieves pain by addressing it at the source: weakness in the ligaments and tendons. The obvious solution is to strengthen these weakened areas, and that is precisely what prolotherapy does.

 

A slightly irritating solution (dextrose is the most common) along with a mild anesthetic is injected into the region where the ligaments attach to the bones. This causes the body to mount a healing response, and inflammatory chemicals and growth factors begin repairing and reconstructing the affected area. The end result is strong, tight new connective tissue that restores proper alignment. Pressure is removed from the nerves and discs, and pain resolves. Because prolotherapy tackles the underlying cause of chronic pain, its effects are in most cases permanent.

 

If you have neck, back, sciatic, or knee pain, you should consider a course of prolotherapy. But don’t expect to hear about it from your conventional doctor. Most physicians are far too entrenched in the drug and surgery paradigm to even consider this treatment. Instead, do your own research. You can start by reading prolotherapy testimonials from real Whitaker Wellness patients who are living pain-free lives thanks to this remarkable treatment.

Tips for a Bug-Free Summer

Summer is officially here. And along with the family picnics, friendly barbeques, and outdoor fun come the annoying bites and stings of mosquitoes, fleas, and other insects. Instead of reaching for chemical-laden bug repellents these next few months, try some of the solutions below.

 

A number of essential oils have proven to be effective natural insect repellants. Some of my favorites are lemon eucalyptus, neem, lemongrass, cedar, and citronella. Sprays that combine a number of these ingredients are available in most health food stores or from online retailers. You can also experiment with making your own concoctions at home.

 

If you’re thinking that electronic “bug zappers” are a viable option, think again. Research has proven that these contraptions are a dangerous source of airborne bacteria. They cause insects to explode, scattering bits of bugs and their germs six feet or more. Furthermore, most of the flying insects that fall prey to these zappers aren’t even the biting kind, and studies have shown that billions of insects that actually benefit humans may be killed each year by these devices.

 

Instead, get rid of known bug magnets. Eliminate sources of stagnant standing water. Be sure to change birdbaths, wading pools, and pet bowls often. You should also consider making yourself less appealing to bugs. Drinking beer, wearing perfume, and eating Limburger cheese all attract mosquitoes.

 

The rest of these suggestions are more anecdotal than clinical but a few of my patients and plenty of stories on the Internet back their success. The first is Avon’s Skin-So-Soft Bath Oil. Rubbed full-strength on the skin, it reportedly wards off mosquitoes, ticks, and other pests. Marigolds planted around your yard are also supposed to be a good insect deterrent. Finally, though there’s little scientific evidence to support it, many people swear that taking 100 mg of vitamin B1 (thiamine) daily stops mosquitoes from biting. 

 

If you have suggestions of your own for keeping bugs at bay, please leave your comments on this blog. I’d love to hear from you!

Empower Yourself: Take Control of Your Health

At the end of the day, all businesses share a common goal of turning a profit. So it should come as no surprise to you that pharmaceutical companies, like other corporations, are in it to make money. Unfortunately, physicians often find themselves tangled up in Big Pharma’s drug-riddled web. And this entanglement trickles down and negatively affects you, the patient.

 

A primary reason our medical system is out of control is because the public tends to believe everything doctors say. Most patients take their physicians’ advice without any skepticism or questioning—they simply do what they’re told to do. Sure, doctors who fail to explore safer, less expensive therapies such as nutritional supplements and hand out drug prescriptions like candy on Halloween are negligent. But patients are ultimately responsible for their own health.

 

If you take at face value what another person says simply because he or she is wearing a white coat, then you are part of the problem. When we deal with car salesmen, real estate agents, lawyers, and the like, our skepticism protects us. But when we deal with doctors, we are worse than sheep being led to the slaughterhouse. Throughout history, physicians have been placed on a pedestal. This needs to stop. It just gives them too much power and power corrupts those who possess it.

 

The most important step you can take in dealing with your physician is to realize that you—and only you—are responsible for your own health. Don’t be afraid to stand up for yourself and ask questions. If your doctor prescribes a medication, see if there’s a natural alternative. Is surgery his go-to recommendation? Explore the possibility of noninvasive therapies. If he or she is unwilling to discuss these options, find yourself a doctor who will.

 

Remember, empowering yourself is the first of many steps on the road back to health.

Do You Really Need That Surgery?

Unlike drugs, surgical procedures require no proof of safety or efficacy. They’re adopted simply on the assumption that they work. Of course, some of the 75 million operations performed in this country every year are necessary, even lifesaving. But increasing scrutiny of medical costs has led to studies that show many common surgeries are of dubious value, a waste of health care resources, and a cause of costly, sometimes deadly, complications.

 
Angioplasty. According to findings from the COURAGE trial—the definitive study on elective angioplasty— eight of 10 patients who undergo this procedure are inappropriate candidates who would be better served by more conservative therapy.

 
Heart Surgery. Harvard cardiologist Thomas Graboys, MD, estimates that 90 percent of coronary artery bypass surgeries—the bread and butter of invasive cardiology—are unnecessary. For the overwhelming majority of patients, this risky procedure has not been proven to prevent heart attacks or death from cardiovascular events.

 
Arthroscopic Knee Surgery. Researchers at the VA Medical Center in Houston found that for patients with arthritis—which accounts for the bulk of the 650,000 arthroscopies of the knee done every year—placebo or sham surgery (the knee was cut and stitched up but no cartilage was removed) yielded results just as good as the real operation.

 
Back Surgery. A Dartmouth Medical School team found that lumbar diskectomy, often done on patients with sciatica, is no more effective in relieving pain than noninvasive treatment. And complex spinal fusions, which provide little advantage over simple decompression but cost more than three times as much ($81,000), have increased 15-fold over the past five years.

 
Hysterectomy and Cesarean Section. Studies suggest that about three-quarters of the 600,000 annual hysterectomies in this country are recommended prematurely and inappropriately. Nearly one in three American women now give birth by C-section, more than double the ideal rate.

 
Prostate Surgery. Invasive procedures for both prostate cancer and benign, age-related enlargement of the prostate (BPH) are rife with complications and questionable in terms of necessity and long-term success.

 
Other Surgeries. Gastric bypass and other surgeries for weight loss, tightening of the muscles at the esophagus and stomach to reduce reflux and heartburn, arthroscopy of the shoulder joint, and routine removal of wisdom teeth are other examples of overused surgeries.

 
If you are told you need to have any invasive procedure, get a second opinion, preferably from a doctor outside your physician’s network, and thoroughly research all your options. Safe, effective, noninvasive alternatives exist for virtually all of these surgical procedures.

Snorers Beware!

Do you snore? How about feeling tired in the morning or drowsy during the day? If you do, you may have sleep apnea, and you’d better a handle on it because this very common condition can destroy your health.

 

Sleep apnea occurs when the fleshy tissues at the back of the throat relax and block the airway, causing you to stop breathing. The brain, sensing oxygen deprivation, sends signals that wake you up just enough to take a breath. This not only makes getting a good night’s sleep impossible, but also leads to a number of very serious problems. Sleep apnea causes significant drops in blood oxygen levels and wreaks havoc with normal metabolism. It triples risk of hypertension, more than doubles risk of stroke, and quadruples risk of arrhythmia. It is also closely linked with obesity and insulin resistance, and a five-fold increased risk of diabetes.

 

Fortunately, sleep apnea is easy to treat. I used to snore like a freight train until I discovered I had sleep apnea. Now, I use an automatic positive airway pressure (APAP) machine. This device gently blows a stream of air through a small mask worn over the nose that prevents the tissues in the throat from collapsing and ensures that oxygen levels remain in the optimal range throughout the night. It has changed my life. I sleep like a baby and wake up rested and invigorated. My wife loves it too—no more snoring or worrisome episodes when I would literally stop breathing.

 

At the clinic, we screen patients we suspect of having sleep apnea with an inexpensive overnight test that records pulse, blood oxygen levels, and oxygen flow. It doesn’t require a visit to a special sleep lab, where you’re hooked up to all manner of sensors and monitors and observed all night long. It can be done in your own bed or, for out-of-towners, in your hotel room. If a test is positive for sleep apnea, the patient is prescribed an APAP or CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) machine and instructed in its use by our sleep specialist.

 

Most insurance plans, including Medicare, reimburse for APAP/CPAP, as this therapy has been shown in numerous scientific studies to improve sleep, energy, memory, mood, and reduce risk of serious disease.

Are Nutritional Supplements Safe?

There’s been a lot of press lately regarding the safety of nutritional supplements. Let’s look at the facts—and the hype.

 

First, let’s compare the risks of supplements to the perils of everyday life.  Every year in this country, 9,000 people are injured by fireworks. Millions sustain burns, many of them in kitchen accidents, and 4,500 of them die. More than 500,000 people are seen in emergency rooms for injuries sustained while riding bicycles, resulting in an average of 700 fatalities per year. About 3,600 Americans die from choking on food and other objects. Even food itself is risky, causing 76 million illnesses, 325,000 hospitalizations, and 5,000 deaths a year!

 

 Where do supplements fit in? According to the most recent annual report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers, not a single death was attributed to a nutritional supplement in 2008. You’re more likely to die from lightning strikes, bee stings, dog bites, or diesel exhaust than from nutritional supplements—and you’re far more likely to be harmed by eating food.

 

There is one class of consumer products, however, that kills more people than handguns, automobiles, street drugs, and every type of poison combined. Each and every year, at least 106,000 patients die in our hospitals from adverse reactions to prescription drugs while under medical supervision. (This doesn’t count the untold numbers who die of medication side effects outside of hospitals.) Going with the conservative in-hospital figure, that’s 290 deaths per day, day in and day out—close to the equivalent of a 747 going down every single day.

 

Damage is not limited to prescription drugs. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as ibuprofen and aspirin kill 16,500 Americans every year and send 103,000 to the hospital with gastrointestinal bleeding. Now, add to these figures the two million people (5,500 per day) who have adverse drug reactions that require hospitalization or cause permanent damage.

 

Where is the hue and cry over this?  If any other consumer product had this dismal a record of safety, it would be history. Yet we rarely see exposés on the dangers of pharmaceuticals—until one of them kills hundreds of people and is yanked off the market.

 

Remind me again why supplements are under such scrutiny.

Supplements Reduce Health Care Costs

Although legislation revamping our health care system has been signed into law, debate continues to rage, and one topic of discussion is how we’re going to pay for it all. There is no doubt that health care costs are out of control. Annual spending is more than $8,000 per person, and government statisticians predict that by the year 2018, it will exceed $13,000 for every man, woman, and child. That’s 20 percent of our gross domestic product!

 

We must get a handle on this. Sure, we need to tackle inflated prices, inefficient and inappropriate care, poor management, and waste. But, according to a study based on an extensive review of the medical literature, targeted use of nutritional supplements could save more than $24 billion in health care costs over five years. Here are some of the study’s findings.

 

• If everyone age 65 and older took calcium and vitamin D supplements, approximately 776,000 hospitalizations for hip fractures could be avoided. Estimated savings: $16.1 billion.
• If people in that same age group took 1,800 mg of fish oil daily, we’d be able to cut back on 374,301 hospitalizations for coronary artery disease. Estimated savings of hospitalization plus physicians’ fees: $3.2 billion.
• If just a quarter of the women of childbearing age not taking folic acid took 400 mcg every day, 600 families could be spared the heartbreak of having a baby with spina bifida or other neural tube birth defects. Estimated savings, minus the cost of supplements: $1.4 billion.
• If people with macular degeneration took 6–10 mg of lutein with zeaxanthin daily, 190,927 of them might be able to remain independent and stay out of nursing homes due to vision loss. Estimated savings: $3.6 billion.

 

Routine use of just a handful of supplements would result in astounding savings, not only in money but in pain and suffering as well. The government conducts public health campaigns encouraging people to get vaccinations, to say no to drugs, and to wear seatbelts. Why not broadcast the benefits of nutritional supplements? Insurance companies require only a small co-payment for drugs, hospitalizations, and surgeries. Why not help pay for supplements, too?

Act Now: Your Supplements Are in Danger

Sen. John McCain has introduced a bill to give the FDA broader regulatory control over the manufacture, sale, and use of nutritional supplements.

 

The Dietary Supplement Safety Act of 2010 would require registration and extensive reporting by any business engaged in “manufacturing, packaging, holding, distributing, labeling, or licensing” of supplements. This includes everyone from large manufacturers to people who sell multilevel products out of their homes. Failure to comply would be a violation of the law.

 

This bill would also make it easier for the FDA to remove supplements from the market. A list of “Accepted Dietary Ingredients” would be prepared, and if a nutrient didn’t make the list, it would be banned. It would also be easier for the FDA to outlaw any supplement with even a suspicion of potential harm. Furthermore, there are no safeguards to protect against abuses of these extensive powers—a real concern with this bureaucracy, which is openly hostile towards nutritional supplements.

 

Quite a few individuals and organizations are jumping on this bandwagon. After all, isn’t it all about safety and protecting the public? Wrong. Supplements are among the safest of all consumer products. The American Association of Poison Control Centers in their 2008 annual report did not attribute even one death to a nutritional supplement. Compare this to the 100,000 deaths per year caused by prescription drugs. These guys should be going after pharmaceutical companies instead of the supplement industry.

 

Current laws are perfectly adequate to ensure supplement safety. Let’s not invite in more unnecessary government red tape. Contact your U.S. Senators and encourage urge them to oppose the Dietary Supplement Safety Act of 2010. To learn more and to email your Senators on this very important issue, visit anh-usa.org.

Natural Solutions for Conquering Colds

A sore throat, runny or stuffy nose, headache, and sneezing—the common cold is just no fun. Head to any supermarket or drug store and you’ll be overwhelmed by the vast number of products at your fingertips. But these over-the-counter remedies have their drawbacks—from treating symptoms you don’t have to being only marginally effective.

 

Though I know it sounds trite, prevention is always the best medicine. That’s why you should wash your hands regularly and/or use hand sanitizer often, get plenty of sleep, stay away from sick people, stay hydrated, and take a high-potency multivitamin and mineral supplement. After all, a good offense is the best defense.

 

But sometimes, you just can’t avoid getting sick. If you do, here are a few natural steps you can take to conquer the common cold.

  • Boost Your Vitamin C Intake. At the first sign of a cold, take 500-1000 mg of vitamin C and continue doing so every hour that you are awake. Some gastrointestinal distress can occur with high doses so if you are sensitive, try taking smaller doses—500 mg every two hours for the first day and moving up to higher, more frequent doses on subsequent days. 
  •  Try Echinacea. Echinacea extracts can be tricky because there are so many different brands and delivery systems. The important thing is to look for a standardized product and use as directed. 
  • Use Zinc Lozenges. If you think you are coming down with something, start sucking on zinc lozenges every two hours. They’ve been shown to reduce cold duration by an average of three days compared to placebo.
  • Your Mom Was Right, Eat Chicken Soup. This folk remedy has more than word-of-mouth to support it.  A landmark study published in the medical journal Chest demonstrated chicken soup’s symptom-fighting ability and other research has shown that chicken soup acts on white blood cells to prevent them from causing inflammation and congestion.
  • Break a Fever With Cayenne Pepper. Despite its fiery taste, cayenne is a cooling herb with a long history of use as a fever reducer. Cayenne is a natural decongestant, which works much like cold and flu medications to restore free breathing. Add some to your chicken soup for added benefits or simply take a bite of hot pepper. This will quickly clear your airways and, as an added bonus, will provide a healthy dose of infection-fighting vitamin C.
  • Drink Ginger Tea. Ginger tea boasts myriad health benefits from relieving nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea to boosting immune function due to its high zinc content. To make ginger tea at home, grind a one-inch slice of fresh ginger and squeeze the juice of half a lemon. Add to a cup of steaming hot water, along with 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon.

Let me know how these remedies work for you and if you have solutions of your own, I’d love to hear them. Email me at testimonials@whitakerwellness.com. Here’s wishing you and your family a healthy remainder of the cold season.