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Today is the first day of the Biological Medicine Network (BMN) Seminar and there are practitioners from all over the country, Canada and even South America in attendance.
Dr. James Odell from Kentucky and Dr. Frank Pleus from Switzerland came all the way to New Bedford, Massachusetts, to teach practitioners about Contact Regulation Thermography (CRT), a thermodynamic diagnostic method that utilizes the physiologic behavior of the body's skin temperature when exposed to a cold stimulus in order to determine the functionality and health status of certain organs, glands and tissues.
On Friday and Saturday, they will be joined by Dr. Bradford Harding and Margaret McMorrow to explain the use of food and bee products as medicine, the importance of teeth in the overall health, the biological approaches to tick and mosquito borne infections, the radiation risks of wireless convenience and other topics.
The seminar is being held at the Waypoint Event Center, located in historic downtown New Bedford, in the old Baker-Robinson Whale oil refinery building, constructed in 1839. In its prime, the Baker-Robinson whale oil refinery was a pillar of this port’s reputation as the whaling capital of the world. The factory excelled in using the products taken from sperm whales to produce the finest candles, the best lubricants, and the purest oil for lamps.
BMN is a Program of the Marion Institute and is committed to fostering sustained dialogue and collaborative relationships, and will utilize its resources to expand the concept and precept of Biological Medicine through networking, informational gatherings, comprehensive trainings and educational seminars.
For more information on the Biological Medicine Network visit, http://www.marioninstitute.org/biological-medicine-network
Friday, April 20, 2012. 7:00 pm
147 Walton Ave., Hyannis, MA
Unity on Cape Cod | 508-775-8400 | www.unityoncapecod.org
Nothing changes the planet more than what we eat. Three well-known doctors come together with scientists and world famous chefs to show how our food choices impact our health, and contribute to global warming, land use and oceanic deadzones.
Followed by discussion with Kumara Sidhartha, MD, and Andrea Lyonnais, Physician Assistant
Against a backdrop of colorful and delicious food grown by organic farmers and prepared in the kitchens of world-famous chefs, PLANEAT for the first time brings together the ground-breaking studies of three prominent scientists; Dr. T Colin Campbell in China by exploring the link between diet and disease, Dr.Caldwell Esselstyn's use of nutrition to treat chronically ill heart disease patients, and Professor Gidon Eshel's investigations into how our food choices contribute to global warming, wasteful land use and lifeless oceans. More recently, Dr. Campbell and Dr. Esselstyn have become known for their role in turning President Clinton onto a vegan diet.
PLANEAT, which has been selected for film festivals around the world, shown in the English Houses of Parliament and endorsed by Sir Paul McCartney, inspires you to make the right food choices. Choices that can dramatically reduce your risk of heart disease and cancer, protect our environment and make our planet sustainable while celebrating the joys of food.

This May the Biological Medicine Network is offereing two seminars in New Bedford, MA. The first, May 10-12, is a Contact Regulation Thermography (CRT) Training and the second, May 11-12, will focus on Paradigms of Biological Medicine.
Both seminars will feature leading physicians Frank Pleus, MD and James Odell, OMD.
For more information on the seminars please visit, http://www.marioninstitute.org/biological-medicine-network/events/may201...
By Dana Ullman
The Swiss government has a long and widely-respected history of neutrality, and therefore, reports from this government on controversial subjects need to be taken more seriously than other reports from countries that are more strongly influenced by present economic and political constituencies. When one considers that two of the top five largest drug companies in the world have their headquarters in Switzerland, one might assume that this country would have a heavy interest in and bias toward conventional medicine, but such assumptions would be wrong.
In late 2011, the Swiss government's report on homeopathic medicine represents the most comprehensive evaluation of homeopathic medicine ever written by a government and was just published in book form in English (Bornhoft and Matthiessen, 2011). This breakthrough report affirmed that homeopathic treatment is both effective and cost-effective and that homeopathic treatment should be reimbursed by Switzerland's national health insurance program.
The Swiss government's inquiry into homeopathy and complementary and alternative (CAM) treatments resulted from the high demand and widespread use of alternatives to conventional medicine in Switzerland, not only from consumers but from physicians as well. Approximately half of the Swiss population have used CAM treatments and value them. Further, about half of Swiss physicians consider CAM treatments to be effective. Perhaps most significantly, 85 percent of the Swiss population wants CAM therapies to be a part of their country's health insurance program.
It is therefore not surprising that more than 50 percent of the Swiss population surveyed prefer a hospital that provides CAM treatments rather to one that is limited to conventional medical care.
Beginning in 1998, the government of Switzerland decided to broaden its national health insurance to include certain complementary and alternative medicines, including homeopathic medicine, traditional Chinese medicine, herbal medicine, anthroposophic medicine, and neural therapy. This reimbursement was provisional while the Swiss government commissioned an extensive study on these treatments to determine if they were effective and cost-effective. The provisional reimbursement for these alternative treatments ended in 2005, but as a result of this new study, the Swiss government's health insurance program once again began to reimburse for homeopathy and select alternative treatments. In fact, as a result of a national referendum in which more than two-thirds of voters supported the inclusion of homeopathic and select alternative medicines in Switzerland's national health care insurance program, the field of complementary and alternative medicine has become a part of this government's constitution (Dacey, 2009; Rist, Schwabl, 2009).
The Swiss Government's "Health Technology Assessment"
The Swiss government's "Health Technology Assessment" on homeopathic medicine is much more comprehensive than any previous governmental report written on this subject to date. Not only did this report carefully and comprehensively review the body of evidence from randomized double-blind and placebo controlled clinical trials testing homeopathic medicines, they also evaluated the "real world effectiveness" as well as safety and cost-effectiveness. The report also conducted a highly-comprehensive review of the wide body of preclinical research (fundamental physio-chemical research, botanical studies, animal studies, and in vitro studies with human cells).
And still further, this report evaluated systematic reviews and meta-analyses, outcome studies, and epidemiological research. This wide review carefully evaluated the studies conducted, both in terms of quality of design and execution (called "internal validity") and how appropriate each was for the way that homeopathy is commonly practiced (called "external validity"). The subject of external validity is of special importance because some scientists and physicians conduct research on homeopathy with little or no understanding of this type of medicine (some studies tested a homeopathic medicine that is rarely used for the condition tested, while others utilized medicines not commonly indicated for specific patients). When such studies inevitably showed that the homeopathic medicine did not "work," the real and accurate assessment must be that the studies were set up to disprove homeopathy... or simply, the study was an exploratory trial that sought to evaluate the results of a new treatment (exploratory trials of this nature are not meant to prove or disprove the system of homeopathy but only to evaluate that specific treatment for a person with a specific condition).
After assessing pre-clinical basic research and the high quality clinical studies, the Swiss report affirmed that homeopathic high-potencies seem to induce regulatory effects (e.g., balancing or normalizing effects) and specific changes in cells or living organisms. The report also reported that 20 of the 22 systematic reviews of clinical research testing homeopathic medicines detected at least a trend in favor of homeopathy.* (Bornhöft, Wolf, von Ammon, et al, 2006)
The Swiss report found a particularly strong body of evidence to support the homeopathic treatment of Upper Respiratory Tract Infections and Respiratory Allergies. The report cited 29 studies in "Upper Respiratory Tract Infections/AllergicReactions," of which 24 studies found a positive result in favor of homeopathy. Further, six out of seven controlled studies that compared homeopathic treatment with conventional medical treatment showed that homeopathy to be more effective than conventional medical interventions (the one other trial found homeopathic treatment to be equivalent to conventional medical treatment). All of these results from homeopathic treatment came without the side effects common to conventional drug treatment. In evaluating only the randomized placebo controlled trials, 12 out of 16 studies showed a positive result in favor of homeopathy.
The authors of the Swiss government's report acknowledge that a part of the overall review of research included one negative review of clinical research in homeopathy (Shang, et al, 2005). However, the authors noted that this review of research has been widely and harshly criticized by both advocates and non-advocates of homeopathy. The Swiss report noted that the Shang team did not even adhere to the QUORUM guidelines which are widely recognized standards for scientific reporting (Linde, Jonas, 2005). The Shang team initially evaluated 110 homeopathic clinical trials and then sought to compare them with a matching 110 conventional medical trials. Shang and his team determined that there were 22 "high quality" homeopathic studies but only nine "high quality" conventional medical studies. Rather than compare these high quality trials (which would have shown a positive result for homeopathy), the Shang team created criteria to ignore a majority of high quality homeopathic studies, thereby trumping up support for their original hypothesis and bias that homeopathic medicines may not be effective (Lüdtke, Rutten, 2008).
The Swiss report also notes that David Sackett, M.D., the Canadian physician who is widely considered to be one of the leading pioneers in "evidence based medicine," has expressed serious concern about those researchers and physicians who consider randomized and double-blind trials as the only means to determine whether a treatment is effective or not. To make this assertion, one would have to acknowledge that virtually all surgical procedures were "unscientific" or "unproven" because so few have undergone randomized double-blind trials.
In my view, for a treatment to be determined to be "effective" or "scientifically proven," a much more comprehensive assessment of what works and doesn't is required. Ultimately, the Swiss government's report on homeopathy represents an evaluation of homeopathy that included an assessment of randomized double blind trials as well as other bodies of evidence, all of which together lead the report to determine that homeopathic medicines are indeed effective.
The next article will discuss further evidence provided in this report from the Swiss government on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of homeopathic care.
source: Huffington Post
Groton Wellness is a comprehensive holistic medical center in Groton, Massachusetts that specializes in the diagnosis and non-toxic, non-pharmaceutical treatments of chronic health challenges that are not well served by conventional pharmaceutical approaches. They also provide adjunctive cancer support by integrating state-of-the-art dental, medical and detoxification protocols that remove obstacles to cure and activate the natural healing intelligence inherent in us all.
They are seeking a like-minded MD or DO who is interested in working as an equal part of an integrative team. Their clinical staff works collaboratively and consists of medical and naturopathic doctors, holistic dentists, a nurse practitioner, acupuncturists, massage therapists and colon hydrotherapists.
They are willing to train the right candidate but would prefer someone with at least an academic understanding of biological medicine and functional medicine principles and a sincerely demonstrated interest in alternative approaches to the treatment of chronic disease.
To find out more, please respond with a letter of interest and CV to drhartmann@grotonwellness.com
Mistletoe is a semi-parasitic plant that grows on several types of trees, including apple, oak, maple, elm, pine, and birch. It was used by the Druids and the ancient Greeks, and appears in legend and folklore as a panacea or "cure -all", being used for centuries to treat medical conditions such as epilepsy, hypertension, headaches, menopausal symptoms, infertility, arthritis, and rheumatism.
Modern interest in mistletoe as a possible treatment for cancer began in the 1920s and is one of the most widely studied complementary and alternative medicine therapies for it. In certain European countries, products made from European mistletoe are among the most prescribed therapies for cancer patients.
Extracts of mistletoe have been shown to kill cancer cells in the laboratory and to boost the immune system and for this reason, it has been classified as a type of biological response modifier. It has also been shown in the laboratory to prevent the growth of new blood vessels needed for tumors to grow, kill mouse, rat, and human cancer cells, and protect the DNA in white blood cells, including cells that have been exposed to DNA-damaging chemotherapy drugs.
The chemical makeup of mistletoe products varies, depending on many factors, including:
- The type of host tree on which the mistletoe plant grows.
- The time of year the plant is harvested.
- The species of mistletoe.
- Whether the extract is fermented or unfermented.
- Whether the extract is prepared with homeopathic methods.
- The company that makes the product.
Mistletoe extracts are usually given by injection under the skin (subcutaneous). Less common ways to give mistletoe include by mouth, into a vein (intravenous or IV), into the pleural cavity, or into the tumor.
Source: www.cancer.gov
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