"Strikingly, 25 percent of parents admitted giving anti-fever medications for fevers less than 100°F (37.8°C) and a full 85 percent would awaken their child to give fever medications. The survey revealed that 14 percent chose acetaminophen, and 44 percent opted for ibuprofen; however, both were given at too frequent dosing intervals. When it came to baths to cool children, 73 percent stated that they sponged their child to treat a fever. However, 24 percent sponged at temperatures less than 100°F (37.8°C) and nearly 20 percent used alcohol in a cool bath. REF: Pediatrics Vol. 107 No. 6 June 2001, pp. 1241-1246."
We practice the full range of natural therapies under the umbrella of Medical Heilkunst, from drainage, detoxification, and nutrition, through to sequential trauma removal, and all the way up to the highest domains of core beliefs and armoring structures.
Monday, February 21, 2011
The Importance of Fever
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Birth Advice from Labor & Delivery Nurses | Bloom Spokane
Birth Advice from Labor & Delivery Nurses
By Tine Reese • February 18, 2011 • Filed in: Doulas, Hospital Birth, Midwives, childbirth education, obstetricians, pregnancy
In the U.S., approximately 90% of women give birth in hospitals. It is the cultural “norm” in this country and the birth setting where most parents feel comfortable. However, the latest studies point to an unnecessary overuse of technology during pregnancy and birth. As Jennifer Block writes in Pushed, “Decades of research show that the healthiest birth for you and your baby — and that means your partner, your family, and your community — is a normal, vaginal birth with minimal intervention and maximum support.”
Since so many of us choose to have our babies in hospitals AND want to avoid unnecessary medical interventions, I thought I would talk to a couple of local labor and delivery nurses about what really happens in the hospital. Zibby Merritt and Rebecca Chadwick are registered nurses working at Deaconess Medical Center in Spokane, WA. They have seen thousands of births and had their own children in the hospital setting—two of Zibby’s births were natural!
Deaconess Labor & Delivery Nurses Zibby Merritt (with son Tyler) and Rebecca Chadwick (with daughter Allison).
When I sat down to talk with Zibby and Rebecca, what I most wanted to know was what advice would they give to women who want to attempt a natural birth in the hospital. These are nurses who jump at the chance to work with moms trying to achieve an unmedicated birth and I thought, “Who better to ask than the women who will provide the great majority of your care during labor.” They were excited for the opportunity to share their knowledge and experience with us in hopes to better prepare future mothers before they walk through the doors of Labor & Delivery.
What advice would you give to moms wanting a natural birth in the hospital?
- Plan your birth: Give a lot of thought to how you want your labor to go, whether or not you write a birth plan.
- Ask for the right nurse: When you come to the hospital, ask for a nurse who wants to help support a natural birth. Zibby said, “There are some nurses who cannot stand to hear a woman screaming and it kills the nurse NOT to put in an epidural. And there are others of us who totally gravitate toward helping with a natural birth. It is OK to make your wishes known.”
- Bring your own doula: Zibby said, “I love it when a patient has a doula because doulas can do the things we’d love to do, but can’t.”
- Be educated: Education about birth is a huge component of what nurses do, but a lot of that should happen before patients walk through the doors of a hospital. That’s why these nurses are big supporters of the midwifery model of care. Zibby said, “On the whole, midwifery patients are better educated than physicians’ patients…not that physicians wouldn’t want to provide that type of care for patients, but the medical model that we practice under is so limiting in that regard.” Rebecca noted that she has recently seen quite a few moms use HypnoBirthing techniques very effectively in labor.
- Choose the right care provider: If you want a natural birth, find a care provider who supports your wishes and is prepared to assist in a natural birth experience.
- Get rid of emotional baggage: I asked these nurses what is the biggest difference, from their perspective, in the patients who come in educated and emotionally ready to give birth. Rebecca said, “These moms tend to cope better and know what to expect. They handle difficulties with ease. When you come prepared, you are better able to handle whatever gets thrown at you.” Zibby goes on to say, “Then there’s the whole issue of baggage. Not only is it the patient’s baggage, but it’s her mom, her sister, and her friends that are in the room who all have their own birth experiences.” Both nurses agree that being emotionally ready to give birth is just as important as being educated about it.
- Be prepared to follow hospital procedure: Zibby said, “If you are going to have your baby in a hospital, you need to understand that there are certain things that come along with that. If you don’t want to follow hospital procedure (for things like Electronic Fetal Monitoring), then you would be better served to have your baby at home.” The nurses stress that the hospital allows mothers options to a certain point, but there are things that are non-negotiable.
- Be flexible and open: Come to your birth with an open mind. Zibby said, “Every birth is different. Every birth is unique. There are some things you can’t plan for or understand until you are in the experience.”
What keeps women from having a great birth experience?
Zibby and Rebecca have been working as labor and delivery nurses for a long time and have seen a lot of births. I asked them why they think so many women have difficult and disappointing birth experiences. Their number one answer was that most of us modern women are not open and accepting of ourselves. Zibby said, “We tend to be pretty controlling beings. Having a baby is a rare situation for us [as individuals] because we’re not used to the lack control. For most women, this is their first experience in a hospital or in any real pain.” Women also expect a perfect outcome at birth and are often disappointed when things don’t go exactly according to their birth plans. They look to place blame and that blame often falls on themselves for not being able to achieve the birth they wanted.
This negative emotional response often leads to moms not being able to bond with their newborns and can spell trouble for breastfeeding. Zibby and Rebecca see this scenario play out all to often. “I don’t know the numbers, but I’ve heard there’s a link between postpartum depression and c-section delivery because the mothers feel cheated out of their birth experience,” says Zibby. It appears that the most current research does not conclusively show a connection between cesarean sections and postpartum mood disorders but anecdotal evidence is mounting as more and more mothers bravely raise their voices and share their own experiences. To read more on this topic, see Lauren Hale’s article Is There a Link Between C-Section and Postpartum Mood Disorders?
The Real Scoop on Epidurals
The vast majority of laboring mothers in our country receive an epidural for pain relief. Even patients who have planned for an unmedicated delivery sometimes find themselves requesting or needing one. Zibby and Rebecca estimate that about 50% of women trying to achieve a natural birth at Deaconess end up with an epidural.
I wanted to know what really happens when a woman chooses to have an epidural. Both nurses were quick to say, “You now have to play by hospital rules. Once you commit to an epidural, you WILL have managed labor and lose a lot of the freedom you might have wished for your birth.” This includes:
- remaining in bed
- no more trips to the bathroom (usually patients are catheterized)
- constant Electronic Fetal Monitoring
- blood pressure checked every 15 minutes
- birth positions are drastically limited
- many times an epidural necessitates a Fetal Scalp Electrode (FSE), IUPC (Internal Uterine Pressure Catheter) for measuring the exact strength of contractions and Pitocin
Zibby said, “Once you have an epidural we’re not afraid to ‘push the pit’ and get the baby delivered because you’re not feeling any pain. We will put you in what we determine medically is an optimal contraction pattern, which to a naturally laboring mother might be every 5 minutes, but to an obstetrician or midwife is more like every two to three minutes.”
I ask, “When is an epidural a good thing?” Zibby responds, “We have seen time and time again, that when women give up fighting and let their body do what it wants to do, things will progress. An epidural is such a blessing for so many women who have gone through hours and hours of labor. Even moms wanting to go natural often realize that ‘Maybe this time, this is not how it’s suppose to be. Maybe this time I’m suppose to listen to my body and my body is exhausted. I need to sleep and I need to relax.’ Then 30 minutes later we have a baby.”
Zibby and Rebecca stress that “We don’t want people to have unnecessary or unwanted interventions. We are here to help you. Nurses are not there to push their own agendas. Epidurals can be a blessing for moms who aren’t able to release and let go. With an epidural you still have options, but they are limited. You are still the decision maker and have patient rights. Above all else, moms who get an epidural can remain active participants in their births.”
What are your biggest challenges?
Labor and delivery nurses are often torn between two opposing forces—the desire to act as a constant labor companion to every woman in their care and the ever-present thought that they are medically liable and must act in accordance with hospital policy to ensure they don’t lose their licenses. As Zibby says, “There is a freedom that is taken away by having RN after your name.” That freedom is the ability to devote themselves exclusively to one patient by supporting her physical, spiritual and emotional needs throughout labor and birth. Rebecca says, “When caring for a laboring woman, it’s not just her that I’m taking care of. The baby is also my responsibility and my patient. We absolutely need to document everything that happens in the labor room and all that we’ve done to ensure the mother and baby’s safety. Unfortunately, this is a must in the nursing world. If it’s not charted, it’s not done!”
Not only are there litigation and insurance issues to worry about, but nurses have very limited time due to the sheer number of tasks they have to complete—many of them involving hours of paperwork and carrying out standard operating procedures, even when common sense dictates they aren’t necessary. Rebecca and Zibby mention the many patients who check into the hospital before they are in need of medical care. In hospital lingo, the “ins and outs.” Nurses would like to be able do a quick assessment and say, “You aren’t in labor. You’re having Braxton Hicks contractions, which are totally normal. Go home and call your doctor or midwife to discuss your options and determine when you are really in labor.” Rather, these patients have to be admitted, examined, tested, deemed not in need of medical care and discharged, all of which takes nurses around 3 hours to complete. Zibby said, “That’s a LONG time when you have another active patient at 7 cm.” This scenario is not at all uncommon. The nurses I spoke to said that if women received better education about labor and what to expect, much of their time would be freed up to deal with the patients who actually do need their services.
Zibby says, “When you’re a doula, you’re there for the mother. When you’re a nurse, you’re there for the mother, the baby, the monitor, the physician, the midwife and the hospital. Plus, you may have one or two other patients.” Nurses are stretched thin yet constantly strive to provide the best possible care for each and every patient. Zibby strongly feels that being a caregiver and “mothering the mother” are her top priorities at every birth, no matter what else is happening. She and Rebecca say that this approach to nursing is the reason Deaconess nurses are able provide optimal care for the patients who give birth there.
Why do you LOVE your work?
After hearing Zibby and Rebecca talk about the limitations and frustrations of being labor and delivery nurses, I asked them, “What are the perks of the job?” Rebecca immediately responded, “I love it! I love babies and working with pregnant women. Putting the babies to breast and watching the daddy’s cry… Yes, it’s exhausting, but you go back and do it all over again.” Zibby adds, “Nothing is ever the same. Just throw away the manual. It’s different every time and amazing! It never gets old. It’s a huge gift and privilege to be there for women at the time when they need it most.”
About the Nurses
Zibby Merritt has an undergraduate degree in biology from University of Portland and was pre-med with plans to go to medical school. After college, she spent a year in AmeriCorp where she worked with HeadStart in Colorado Springs and volunteered at a midwifery clinic. It was there that she came to understand she wanted to work as a childbirth professional. After getting married, she went to nursing school at University of Washington. “In Seattle there’s a completely different birth culture. It is natural and about being into your body.” While in nursing school, Zibby also completed the doula training program at Seattle Midwifery School which she says, “was the best preparation for being a nurse. It taught me what laboring moms need…and that’s not always an epidural.” Zibby is the mother of three boys and now works as a labor and delivery nurse at Deaconess Medical Center.
Rebecca Chadwick attended nursing school at Montana State University-Northern in Havre Montana where she attended her first birth, transforming her life and leaving her hungry for more. After graduating she moved to Albequerque, NM with her husband where she worked as a labor and delivery nurse at Lovelace Health Systems, a birthing center where Certified Nurse Midwives and OBGYNs worked side by side. It was at Lovelace that Rebecca learned about the amazing Midwife Model of Care and became passionate about nursing. When her family moved to Spokane, she spent 2 years as a labor and delivery nurse at Sacred Heart before assuming her current position at Deaconess Medical Center. Rebecca has two children.
Disclaimer: Views expressed here are those of the nurses interviewed and do not necessarily represent those of Deaconess Medical Center or Bloom Spokane. See our full disclaimer for details.Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
Comments
By Hillary Barnett on February 19th, 2011 at 1:36 pmWhat a great article. I loved reading about how things go behind the scene. Often as a patient we dont realize all the other work nurses are doing. I had both of my boys at Deaconess, had GREAT experiences!!! I love all the staff there. So thank you to both of you for sharing your stories!!!!
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Get rid of emotional baggage: I asked these nurses what is the biggest difference, from their perspective, in the patients who come in educated and emotionally ready to give birth. Rebecca said, “These moms tend to cope better and know what to expect. They handle difficulties with ease. When you come prepared, you are better able to handle whatever gets thrown at you.” Zibby goes on to say, “Then there’s the whole issue of baggage. Not only is it the patient’s baggage, but it’s her mom, her sister, and her friends that are in the room who all have their own birth experiences.” Both nurses agree that being emotionally ready to give birth is just as important as being educated about it.
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Fibromyalgia: science validates homeopathy (again)
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(NaturalNews) Fibromyalgia is a chronic ailment without a known cause and without a safe, effective conventional medical treatment. However, the three to six million Americans who suffer with fibromyalgia will be pleased to know that several studies published in leading medical journals have found outstanding results from homeopathic treatment.Well-designed high quality scientific studies published in the British Medical Journal and in Rheumatology (the journal of the British Society for Rheumatology) have confirmed the real benefits of homeopathic medicines as distinct from a placebo.
Fibromyalgia is not considered to be a "disease" by the conventional medical standards but is recognized and referred to as a "syndrome." Although there are no specific blood tests, x-rays or any other type of technology that is presently accepted by conventional medicine for diagnosis of this condition, the diagnosis is based on clinical findings from the history and physical exam.
The syndrome of fibromyalgia can cause stiffness, fatigue, myalgias (muscle pain), subjective numbness, headaches (often migraine), dizziness, paraesthesias, IBS-like gastrointestinal disturbances, memory and concentration problems, sleep disorders and various states of anxiety and depression (Chakrabarty and Zoorob, 2007).
In 2010, a systematic review of the most recently used conventional drugs for fibromyalgia was published in a leading scientific journal (Clauw, 2010). Although some drugs had beneficial effects, the author acknowledged the significant limitations of these benefits and the need to utilize other treatment options. He wrote, "Because of the modest overall analgesic efficacy seen with any class of analgesic drug in any chronic pain state, we should be particularly aggressive about using more non-pharmacological therapies in treating patients with chronic pain."
Conventional physicians are usually forced to use combinations of drugs to control the numerous and varied symptoms expressed by fibromyalgia patients, though the use of multiple drugs concurrently generates additional pathology and further challenges when the patient wishes to slow down or end the medication. Further, little research has been conducted to date evaluating the use of polypharmacy methods for these patients (thus, whatever research has been conducted on individual drugs becomes questionably relevant to those patients taking multiple drugs).
Fibromyalgia affects women 10 times more often than men, and is most common in women 20-50 years old (Chakrabarty and Zoorob, 2007). This condition also has been observed in children and adolescence and is more common in relatives of patients with fibromyalgia, suggesting the contribution of both genetic and environmental factors, which naturopathic and homeopathic practitioners are especially trained to address and manage effectively.
Homeopathic Treatment:
Homeopathic medicine is a 200+-year-old system of medicine that utilizes specially prepared doses of medicines made from various substances of the plant, mineral or animal kingdom. Each medicine is prescribed for its capacity to cause, if given in overdose to healthy people, symptoms similar to those that the sick person is experiencing. Because basic physiology recognizes that symptoms represent defenses of the body (and mind) in its efforts to fight infection and/or adapt to stress, a homeopathic medicine is selected for its capacity to mimic a person's own symptoms, thereby augmenting their own defensive response.Just as vaccines and allergy treatments are in part based on this same premise - whatever a substance causes in overdose, it will elicit an immune response when taken in small doses - homeopathic medicines are a system of helping the "wisdom of the body" defend and heal itself.
In homeopathy, ALL ailments are considered "syndromes," that is, all disease is a constellation of physical and psychological symptoms, and each patient has his or her own subtly different syndrome of a disease. The fact that people with fibromyalgia tend to have sometimes slightly or overtly differing symptoms from each other is no significant problem for homeopathic treatment. In fact, homeopathic treatment tends to be easier when patients have idiosyncratic or unusual symptoms.
The good news for fibromyalgia patients who receive homeopathic medicines is that these remedies are not known to cause direct drug interactions with any conventional drugs the patient may be taking. The pharmaceutical lobby decries homeopathy for its lack of effect: the problem for them is that if one unfathomable homeopathic treatment works, their argument is in tatters. Patients are also spared some of the conventional drug artillery used to limit symptoms. Further, because people with fibromyalgia tend to have distinct and unusual symptoms, this situation actually makes it easier for homeopaths to treat them successfully.
Other advantages homeopathy has over conventional drug therapies are lower cost and the avoidance of the usual GI, headache and CNS side effects as well as reactions that can be life threatening.
However, newspapers, magazines and even books on fibromyalgia, typically ignore studies showing the efficacy of a homeopathic medicine in its treatment. This omission occurs despite evidence of its significant efficacy as verified in several studies published in major medical journals. In addition to the scientific evidence for homeopathic treatment, surveys of people with fibromyalgia tend to show that homeopathic medicine is one of the more popular alternative treatments used by people suffering from this ailment. For instance, Dietlind et al (2005) found that 10 percent of patients answering a survey on their use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine for fibromyalgia symptoms reported using homeopathy.
Scientific Evidence for Homeopathy
The first controlled trial testing the homeopathic treatment of patients with fibromyalgia was an impressive and sophisticated double-blind "crossover" trial that was published in the prestigious British Medical Journal (Fisher et al, 1989). A crossover trial is a sophisticated method to test the efficacy of a treatment because each patient's results with the "real treatment" are compared with that same patient's results with a placebo. While most double-blind studies compare one group of people who receive the "real treatment" with another (hopefully similar) group of people who receive a placebo, crossover trials compare the results of each person and his/her response to real treatment with his/her response to placebo.Because of the nature of a crossover trial, the researchers chose to accept into this study only patients that fit the symptom-syndrome for needing just one homeopathic medicine that tends to be one of the most commonly indicated remedies for fibromyalgia patients. The researchers found a surprisingly high percentage of patients (42 percent) whose symptoms indicated a need for this medicine, Rhus toxicodendron (Rhus tox).
After the researchers found 30 patients who seemed to fit the symptoms of Rhus tox, half of the subjects were given a placebo during the first half of the experiment, while the other half were given the homeopathic medicine. Then, halfway through the experiment, each subject's treatment was switched.
The homeopathic dose of the medicine used was 6C. The researchers specifically chose to use a low potency dose of this medicine for this trial because these less potent doses provide short-term results. Over 200 years of homeopathic practice have found that homeopathic medicines that are of a higher potency - that is, those that have undergone a greater number of dilutions, with vigorous shaking of the solution in between dilutions - have a longer term effect [1]. Because halfway through this study each subject was given either a placebo or a homeopathic medicine, the researchers only wanted to use a medicine that provided a short-term result and this is precisely what their results confirmed.
The researchers found that there was a substantially significant degree of improvement in the reduction of tender points and improved pain and sleep when the subjects were taking the homeopathic medicine, as compared to when these same subjects were taking a placebo. In other words, twice as many people experienced significantly less pain or significantly improved sleep when they were taking the homeopathic medicine as compared to when they were taking the placebo.
Iris Bell, M.D., Ph.D. and her colleagues at the University of Arizona School of Medicine conducted a study funded by National Institutes of Health which resulted in four articles published in peer-review medical journals (Bell et al, 2004a; Bell et al, 2004b; Bell et al, 2004c; Bell et al, 2004d). The primary clinical results from this study were published in the highly respected journal, Rheumatology (published by the British Society for Rheumatology), and it found statistically significant results from homeopathic treatment. This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial with 62 fibromyalgia patients received an oral daily dose of an individually chosen homeopathic medicine (or a placebo) and were evaluated at baseline, two months and four months (Bell, et al, 2004a).
The study found that 50 percent of patients given a homeopathic medicine experienced a 25 percent or greater improvement in tender point pain on examination, whereas only 15 percent of those who were given a placebo experienced a similar degree of improvement. After four months, the homeopathic patients also rated the "helpfulness of the treatment" significantly greater than did those who were given a placebo. It is therefore not surprising that the study also showed that the average number of remedies recommended by the homeopaths was substantially higher to those in the placebo group as compared with the real treatment group.
One special additional feature of this trial was that the first dose of medicine was given by smell and that both groups were monitored with EEG. The researchers found that there was a significant and identifiable difference in the EEG readings in patients who were given the real homeopathic medicine as compared to those given the placebo (Bell et al, 2004b; Bell et al, 2004c). Each patient had three laboratory sessions, including at baseline, at three months and at six months after initial treatment. The researchers found that the active treatment group experienced significant increases in the EEG relative alpha magnitude, while patients given a placebo experienced a decrease in this measurement.
Another unique feature of this study was that it included an optional crossover design, allowing patients who had initially been prescribed one treatment (placebo or medication) to switch to the "other" treatment (Bell et al, 2004d). The researchers found that 31 percent of those patients who had been prescribed the real medication chose to switch, while 41 percent of those patients who had been prescribed the placebo chose to switch.
The combined evidence of clinical improvement along with physiological response to the homeopathic medicine gives these results additional significance.
The newest randomized controlled trial was conducted comparing "usual medical care" compared with usual medical care plus adjunctive care by a homeopath for patients with fibromyalgia syndrome (FMS)(Relton et al., 2009). Adjunctive care consisted of five in depth interviews and individualized homeopathic medicines. The primary outcome measure was the difference in Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire total score at 22 weeks. ("Usual care" refers to one or more of the following: physiotherapy, aerobic exercise, analgesics, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, antidepressants.)
A total of 47 patients were recruited. Drop out rate in the usual care group was higher than the homeopath care group (8/24 vs 3/23). Adjusted for baseline, there was a significantly greater mean reduction in the FIQ total score (function) in the homeopathic care group than the usual care group (-7.62 vs 3.63). There were significantly greater reductions in the homeopath care group in the McGill pain score, FIQ fatigue, and 'tiredness upon waking' scores. The study also found a small effect on pain score (0.21, 95 percent CI -1.42 to 1.84) (despite what may be considered a relatively small effect on pain, this degree of benefit resembles the small to modest effect from conventional medications described above); but this trial found a surprisingly large effect on function (0.81, 95 percent CI -8.17 to 9.79). Of additional importance, there were no reported adverse events from homeopathic medicines.
Ultimately, the homeopathic treatment of patients with fibromyalgia requires individualized care by clinicians who are adequately trained in homeopathy. This condition is too complex for 'self-care treatment' or for treatment by clinicians who have not received professional training.
The body of scientific evidence showing efficacy of individualized homeopathic treatment in the care of patients with fibromyalgia suggests significant benefits. If you or someone near and dear to you has fibromyalgia, consider getting professional homeopathic care for both safe and effective treatment. Further, although fibromyalgia is not officially considered a type of arthritis, a review of homeopathic research found patients with this more common ailment also benefit from homeopathic treatment (Jonas, et al, 2000).
A Note to and about Skeptics of Homeopathy:
Skepticism of homeopathy, like skepticism of any subject, can be healthy, except when this skepticism is based on ignorance of the subject and except when one maintains a closed mind or denies good scientific evidence. Sadly, the vast majority of people who express skepticism about homeopathy do not maintain a "healthy skepticism" but tend to be uninformed, misinformed, and simply in denial about homeopathy and the body of evidence that confirms its benefits.It is more than a tad ironic that those people who hold themselves out as "defenders of medical science" tend to have such an unscientific attitude towards homeopathy. These people tend to show evidence of both ignorance about homeopathy and (worse) arrogance about their viewpoints. These people who are "medical fundamentalists" love to attack homeopathy saying that "there is no evidence that homeopathy works." In fact, they make this assertion so often that they have gotten some people to actually believe them. Needless to say, anyone who says that there is no scientific evidence that homeopathic medicines work is simply proving their ignorance of the subject (as this article on fibromyalgia validates) or verifying their propensity for misinformation.
These fundamentalists also love to assert that "there is no plausible mechanism" for how homeopathic medicines work. Such statements display a serious ignorance of medical history because people who say this ignore the fact that it was only relatively recently did physicians understood how aspirin worked, and yet, no doctor (or patient) chose to not use this drug simply because the mechanism of action was not adequately understood.
Whenever good scientists or physicians make reference to the many clinical and laboratory studies that verify the efficacy of homeopathic medicines, the "deniers" assert that the scientist is only "cherry-picking" the good studies and ignoring the others. In reference to fibromyalgia, there have been no studies that have shown that homeopathic medicines don't work. The only studies that have been conducted to date have shown efficacy of homeopathic treatment. Obviously, there is no cherry-picking here.
Sadly, many people who claim to be skeptics are simply representatives of Big Pharma. In England, the leading anti-homeopathy organization, Sense about Science, is led by a former public relations expert who has a long history of representing Big Pharma companies (SourceWatch.org - see link in References).
Some "deniers" are audacious enough to suggest that the "weight of evidence" evaluating homeopathy shows that these medicines do not have any benefit beyond that of a placebo. Was Thomas Edison's discovery of electricity false because 999 experiments failed to produce electricity and only one that was successful? Is the weight of evidence that he failed?
Deniers will inevitably assert that Edison's discovery is proven every day, and yet, homeopaths likewise will say that homeopathy is proven every day by the hundreds of millions of its users worldwide, including many of the most respected scientists, physicians, corporate leaders, political leaders, clergy and spiritual leaders, literary greats, sports superstars, and everyday average people.
The bottom line about research on homeopathy is that the denialists tend to evaluate a study by determining whether it was "well-conducted" according to inappropriate scientific standards. They do not evaluate whether the homeopathic medicine tested was the RIGHT medicine for the patient or not. For instance, if a researcher gave every patient the SAME drug no matter what disease they had, this study would not be a good test of that drug, even if it was "well-designed" (ie, it was randomized, double-blind, and placebo controlled). And yet, it is common for these denialists to assume that just because a study testing homeopathy was well-controlled does NOT mean that it was a fair or adequate test of the homeopathic method.
People still skeptical about homeopathy might benefit from reading of body of previous articles that I have written, including website.
Perhaps the best evidence to verify the value of homeopathic medicines and the serious threat that homeopathy plays occurred in mid-2010 when the British Medical Association deemed homeopathy to be "witchcraft" (Donnelly, 2010). Because history confirms that "witches" were women healers, herbalists, and intuitives who were a threat to local doctors and the church, many of us who are involved in homeopathy are honored to be aligned with witches.
Finally, it may be appropriate for the medical fundamentalists to heed to words of the founder of homeopathic medicine, Samuel Hahnemann, M.D. On his gravestone are the Latin words, "Aude sapere," which translates as "dare to taste, to experience." Indeed, despite whatever skepticism one has, the proof is in the pudding. Try it yourself and see for yourself.
Special appreciation to June Riedlinger, R.Ph, Pharm.D., ND, who contributed to an earlier version of this article.
REFERENCES:
Bell IR, et al: Improved clinical status in fibromyalgia patients treated with individualized homeopathic remedies versus placebo, Rheumatology, 43:577-82, 2004a.
Bell IR, et al: EEG alpha sensitization in individualized homeopathic treatment of fibromyalgia, Int J Neurosci.114(9):1195-1220, 2004b.
Bell IR, et al: Electroencephalographic cordance patterns distinguish exception clinical responders with fibromyalgia to individualized homeopathic medicines. J Alt Comp Med, 10(2):285-299, 2004c.
Bell et al, Individual differences in response to randomly assigned active individualized homeopathic and placebo treatment in fibromyalgia: implications of a double-blinded optional crossover design. J Alt Comp Med, 10(2):269-283, 2004d.
Chakrabarty S, Zoorob R: Fibromyalgia, Am Fam Physician, 76:247-54, 2007.
Clauw DJ. Fibromyalgia Drugs are 'As Good as it Gets' in Chronic Pain, Nat Rev Rheumatol., 2010;6(8):439-440.
Dietlind L, et al: Use of complementary and alternative medical therapies by patients referred to a fibromyalgia treatment program at a tertiary care center, Mayo Clin Proc, 80(1):55-60, 2005.
Donnelly L. Homeopathy is witchcraft, says doctors. The Daily Telegraph, May 15, 2010.
Fisher P et al: Effect of homoeopathic treatment on fibrositis (primary fibromyalgia), BMJ, 299(6695):365-6, 1989.
Garcia-Campayo J, et.al: A meta-analysis of the efficacy of fibromyalgia treatment according to level of care, Arthritis Research & Therapy 10(4):R81-96, 2008. Clin-eguide: Drug Information. Facts & Comparisons 4.0., St Louis, MO, 2009, Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.
Jonas WB, Linde K, and Ramirez G, Homeopathy and rheumatic disease, Rheumatic Disease Clinics of North America, February 2000,1:117-123.
Relton C, et al: Healthcare provided by a homeopath as an adjunct to usual care for Fibromyalgia (FMS): results of a pilot randomized controlled trial, Homeopathy 98(2):77-82, 2009.
SourceWatch.org: http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.ph...
FOOTNOTE:
[1] People who are interested in understanding how and why homeopathic medicines have this increased effect will benefit from reading, "The Case FOR Homeopathic Medicine: Historical and Scientific Evidence" (http://www.naturalnews.com/029419_h...). Further, interested individuals will benefit from reviewing the writings of Professor Martin Chaplin, a world renowned expert on water: http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/homeop.html and http://www.lsbu.ac.uk/water/memory.html.
About the author:
America's leading advocate for homeopathic medicine and author of "The Homeopathic Revolution." Learn more at www.Homeopathic.com or watch Dana's videos at http://naturalnews.tv/Browse.asp?me...
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"The study found that 50 percent of patients given a homeopathic medicine experienced a 25 percent or greater improvement in tender point pain on examination, whereas only 15 percent of those who were given a placebo experienced a similar degree of improvement. After four months, the homeopathic patients also rated the "helpfulness of the treatment" significantly greater than did those who were given a placebo. It is therefore not surprising that the study also showed that the average number of remedies recommended by the homeopaths was substantially higher to those in the placebo group as compared with the real treatment group."
Naturally for Life's - Tip of the day - Why Aluminum based deoderants are unsafe!
Well done little Youtube video on the harmful nature of aluminum-based anti-perspirants and the natural products you can use to solve any "stinky" issues safely. Terri-Ann and Naturally For Life can ship her products to you anywhere in the world!
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Jenna Woginrich - A Vegetarian Converted to Farmer and Meat Eater
Every meal you eat that supports a sustainable farm changes the agricultural world. I cannot possibly stress this enough. Your fork is your ballot, and when you vote to eat a steak or leg of lamb purchased from a small farmer you are showing the industrial system you are actively opting out.
Love Is What We Need | Dr. Mark's Blog
Out of the three definitions above, intimacy provides us with the clearest and most beautiful vision. Intimacy requires and is a beautiful space. Sex and love can both contain highly negative qualities in normal human expression, but intimacy is something that happens between souls when we reach out to others with trust; it’s a space we enter when we dare to open our hearts and just be. It happens when we put away all the fancy airs and just be who we really are without fear of judgment. Though sexuality and love can be selfish, intimacy seems to represent a pure space between beings. Intimacy is very much connected to vulnerability for it is the sharing of vulnerabilities between beings that creates intimacy.
Friday, February 11, 2011
(sneak peek!) February Newsletter
This is the newsletter set to be emailed out on Monday morning. Take a look at the lecture we are doing on Tuesday evening.
You can't overdose on homeopathic remedies; Why won't homeopathy skeptics drink their own medicine?
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(NaturalNews) It's really quite hilarious to see this unfold: Homeopathy skeptics and vicious Big Pharma attack dogs are running around the globe in ludicrous demonstrations where they consume huge doses of homeopathic remedies in public and then claim that because they don't die of an "overdose," these medicines therefore don't work.Notice that they never consume their own medicines in large doses? Chemotherapy? Statin drugs? Blood thinners? They wouldn't dare drink those. In fact, today I'm challenging the homeopathic skeptics and other medical fundamentalists to a "drink-a-thon" test to see which medicines will kill you faster. But we'll get to that in a minute...
First, let's get to the understanding of why the idea that you could "overdose" on homeopathic remedies is ridiculous to begin with.
It requires an elevated worldview
Teaching the so-called "skeptics" about how homeopathic medicine really works is a bit like trying to convince flat Earthers that the planet is really spherical. These skeptics, you see, approach homeopathy as if it were a drug (because that's all they really know). And in their world, all drugs are dangerous if you overdose on them, which makes sense from their point of view because they're educated solely in dangerous, synthetically-derived chemicals that are incompatible with the human body.So it may be understandable at some level that since this is all the medical fundamentalists (skeptics) know, they have probably not attained the level of sophistication required to understand the far more advanced mechanisms of homeopathy. It's a bit like trying to teach a five-year-old child how to play Mozart. And while that may have worked if your child was Mozart, it probably doesn't work for anyone else.
Homeopathy isn't a drug
Homeopathy, you see, isn't a drug. It's not a chemical. So you can drink all you want and you won't overdose on it. That's not a defect in homeopathy -- it's a remarkable advantage! It means that while 200,000+ Americans are killed each year by toxic pharmaceutical drugs, no one is harmed by homeopathy. Not even those who are desperately trying to be harmed by it!It seems these skeptics really want everything to be more dangerous because the world of toxicity is so much more familiar to them. What these not-so-amazing skeptics would like to see, it seems, is more people dropping dead from dangerous side effects. Then they would believe homeopathy was real.
That's the way ignorant conventional medicine operates today: You know the drugs are kicking in when you start getting worse. Toxicity and conventional medicine go hand in hand.
But homeopathy isn't a chemical. It's a resonance. A vibration, or a harmony. It's the restructuring of water to resonate with the particular energy of a plant or substance. We can get into the physics of it in a subsequent article, but for now it's easy to recognize that even from a conventional physics point of view, liquid water has tremendous energy, and it's constantly in motion, not just at the molecular level but also at the level of its subatomic particles and so-called "orbiting electrons" which aren't even orbiting in the first place. Electrons are vibrations and not physical objects.
But, oh yeah, I forgot. The skeptics don't know that yet. That won't be taught that in university physics classes until probably 2020, at which point most of them will probably be dead from taking pharmaceuticals to treat their own diseases. For now, they've all convinced themselves that electrons are -- get this -- tiny "particles" flying around atomic nuclei and tremendous speeds which just happen to stay in their little orbits like little perpetual motion machines (which they say are impossible), until all of a sudden, these electron "particles" inexplicably leap to a higher or lower orbit without occupying the space in-between those orbits at any moment. Yep, magic teleporting particles! That's the "scientific" explanation of these folks. No wonder so many of them are magicians: Believing their explanations requires that you believe in particle magic!
But getting back to water and vibrations, which isn't magic but rather vibrational physics, you can't overdose on a harmony. If you have one violin playing a note in your room, and you add ten more violins -- or a hundred more -- it's all still the same harmony (with all its complex higher frequencies, too). There's no toxicity to it.
Homeopathy works much the same way: You can drink a few drops or a few gallons. It's the same harmony being introduced into your body's living cells, regardless of the quantity. And drinking a few gallons of it will only make you urinate a whole lot, which I suppose the skeptics have been doing a lot these days, staring down into the toilet bowl with their pants unzipped, declaring, "I was right! I can't overdose on it!" Talk about expensive urine, eh?
It's hilarious, in fact, that those who would try to disparage homeopathy would even think that attempting to "overdose" on it proves anything at all. What it really shows is that they utterly lack any understanding of the underlying theories of how homeopathy works -- theories that Nobel Prize winner Luc Montagnier -- the discovered of the AIDS virus -- now publicly supports, by the way. (http://www.naturalnews.com/031210_L...)
Bent on their own destruction
What really drives the skeptics crazy is that no matter how hard they try, they just can't seem to kill themselves. To be so out of touch with the beautiful, loving and holographic nature of the universe around us is to retreat to a self-loathing worldview that can only be resolved through self destruction. These skeptics just want to kill themselves... and they wouldn't mind taking a few of you along with them, too. Hence their promotion of vaccines, pharmaceuticals, chemotherapy and water fluoridation.These public demonstrations of chugging what they call "drugs" can only be called psychopathic "public suicide attempts" -- and they can't even get that right, either. (They're drinking the wrong stuff...)
I would suggest they try a few fluid ounces of their own medicines if they want to achieve the overdoses they're looking for. A few ounces of chemotherapy would do the trick nicely. Let me know if one of them tries that, and we'll carry the news: "Skeptic dies after drinking his own medicine. Story at eleven..."
In fact, if these skeptics are looking to kill themselves, they need look no further than the tens of thousands of toxic drugs, vaccines, chemotherapy agents, radiation procedures and barbaric surgical procedures that they claim will heal you! Yep, the stuff they say is good for you is the stuff they won't drink.
And therein lies my challenge...
Why I'm challenging skeptics to drink a gallon of chemotherapy
I am hereby challenging the skeptics to a public drink-a-thon, each drinking the medicines we advocate. I'll meet them in a public place, and we'll each drink the medicines we believe in the most.I'll bring a gallon of homeopathic remedies and healing raw juices, and the medical fundamentalists and their supporters (the more, the merrier) can each bring a gallon of the liquid forms of chemotherapy, blood pressure medications, coumadin, or statin drugs. We'll chug them in public and see who's left standing. The results get posted on YouTube for the whole world to see. We'll title the video, "SKEPTICS COMMIT MASS SUICIDE BY DRINKING PHARMACEUTICALS AS IF THEY WERE KOOL-AID." Jonestown, anyone?
Do you have any doubt which of us will be left standing? Sure, I may need to pee a whole lot, but the restrooms won't be crowded, because all the skeptics won't be needing them anymore.
That outcome, my friends, would be sad, but newsworthy. More importantly, it would prove an important point: Medicine should be safe for people to consume, not so deadly that you drop dead after consuming it, which is what often happens with pharmaceuticals.
But, alas, my challenge will certainly never be accepted. None of the magicians, skeptics of medical fundamentalists will be publicly chugging chemotherapy any time soon, nor any other large doses of liquid pharmaceuticals. Why? Because they know how toxic those chemicals are.
Do you notice the irony here? The only medicines they're willing to consume in large doses in public are homeopathic remedies! They won't dare consume large quantities of the medicines they all say YOU should be taking! (The pharma drugs.)
And therein rests the truth in all this: Even the skeptics know that homeopathy is inherently safer than their own medicines.
No wonder they keep attacking it: If people found out about safe medicine, where would all of Big Pharma's repeat business come from? After all, the best thing about chemotherapy (from Big Pharma's point of view) is that it creates repeat business from liver damage, kidney damage and brain damage.
All these pharmaceutical poisons are so damaging to the human body -- and brain -- that these is probably one of the main reasons why the skeptics who take all these drugs are incapable of understanding high-vibration advanced medicine. A vaccine shot every year does wonders for lowering the IQ and killing off the creative thinking portions of the brain, after all.
So if you're looking for safe medicine, definitely take a look at homeopathic remedies. They so safe that even the critics can't overdose on them... but you have to admit the attempt makes for great entertainment.
Oh, by the way, speaking of homeopathy, did you know that Dana Ullman recently joined NaturalNews as a featured contributing writer? Check out his stories at: http://www.naturalnews.com/Author_D...
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About the author: Mike Adams is an award-winning journalist and holistic nutritionist with a passion for sharing empowering information to help improve personal and planetary health He has authored more than 1,800 articles and dozens of reports, guides and interviews on natural health topics, impacting the lives of millions of readers around the world who are experiencing phenomenal health benefits from reading his articles. Adams is a trusted, independent journalist who receives no money or promotional fees whatsoever to write about other companies' products. In 2010, Adams created NaturalNews.TV, a natural living video sharing site featuring thousands of user videos on foods, fitness, green living and more. He also launched an online retailer of environmentally-friendly products (BetterLifeGoods.com) and uses a portion of its profits to help fund non-profit endeavors. He's also the founder of a well known HTML email software company whose 'Email Marketing Director' software currently runs the NaturalNews subscription database. Adams volunteers his time to serve as the executive director of the Consumer Wellness Center, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization, and regularly pursues cycling, nature photography, Capoeira and Pilates. Known by his callsign, the 'Health Ranger,' Adams posts his missions statements, health statistics and health photos at www.HealthRanger.org
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"Homeopathy, you see, isn't a drug. It's not a chemical. So you can drink all you want and you won't overdose on it. That's not a defect in homeopathy -- it's a remarkable advantage! It means that while 200,000+ Americans are killed each year by toxic pharmaceutical drugs, no one is harmed by homeopathy. Not even those who are desperately trying to be harmed by it!"
Monday, February 7, 2011
peaceful parenting: My Adoptive Breastfeeding Journey
At one point in the meeting the social worker looked at me and asked, “Are you going to breastfeed her?” For a moment I wondered if this was a trick question. My heart skipped a beat. But it wasn’t a trick. “We were so excited to see that you are a La Leche League Leader, and were hoping that you would plan to breastfeed her.” I knew this baby needed to be breastfed and I wasn’t going to have to do it “behind closed doors” as many fost/adopt moms told me they did.
US Government Starts its Own Drug Company
As per Dr. Mercola, " The $1 billion in funding being used to start a new government-funded drug company dubbed the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) may sound innocuous -- but it isn't. The definition of fascism includes centralized government, government control of business, and repression of criticism or opposition. In fact, Benito Mussolini, the originator of fascism, defined it as "the moment when you couldn't put a cigarette paper between political and corporate power." Soon the government and "private investors" will be working even more closely together to define what medicine is -- and repress whatever they say it isn't. This is a strong indication of the United States is transitioning into a fascist government." Buyer beware!
No Value in Any Influenza Vaccine: Cochrane Collaboration Study
We've known for over 30 years that vaccines are not based on any real observational science. They've been shamelessly plugged by Big Pharma and claim significant real estate in our natural health and immune function (code name of sense of self). The fact that we're awakening to the truth is a function of each individual's capacity to claim for themselves the truth outside of the matrix. It is only the beginning of the wisdoms to be revealed to our pure hearts and bodies.
Friday, February 4, 2011
Why isn't Allopathic medicine being shut down?
Dr. Mercola (@mercola):11-02-04 11:00 AM
What is this common, but preventable cause of death responsible for almost a quarter-million deaths in the US? http://goo.gl/3Aida #health
https://twitter.com/mercola/status/33540375238942720
via Twittelator
Thursday, February 3, 2011
HomeopathyWorldCommunity | Internet Radio | Blog Talk Radio
Courtesy of Dr. Tenpenny on Facebook. Greg Glaser, an expert in Constitutional law joins Alan Phillips, JD, as our guide through the U.S. legal system. His years of experience with vaccination law in the United States
puts him in a unique position to answer our questions with wisdom. He helps us understand the court's interpretation of the law.
Rival journal attacks Lancet for publishing Wakefield MMR study
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(NaturalNews) Efforts to discredit and destroy the work of Dr. Andrew Wakefield, the man responsible for raising awareness about the dangers of the measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) combo vaccine via the study he published in the late 1990s, continue with attacks now coming from rival medical journals. According to MedPage Today, the British Medical Journal (BMJ) recently went after The Lancet for ever publishing Wakefield's work in the first place, even though such work was peer-reviewed and was conducted in a sound, scientific manner.Wakefield's study on the correlation between the MMR combo vaccine and high cases of both gastrointestinal disorders and various autism-related symptoms was never well-received by the medical elite and the drug companies that control them. So over the years, these groups have worked not only to destroy Wakefield's credibility by claiming he committed fraud, but also by targeting his entire career, which eventually led to the revocation of his medical license.
Now, BMJ is accusing The Lancet of dragging its feet in investigating the claims made against Wakefield by Brian Deer, the now-infamous reporter from the U.K. Sunday Times that aggressively went after Wakefield's work. According to the accusations, The Lancet allegedly failed to investigate the situation sooner and retract the paper in a timely manner.
But if anything, the The Lancet began the retraction process too soon, having initiated a partial retraction less than three weeks after Deer's abrupt accusations came forward. And recent documents have revealed that Deer's accusations against Wakefield were false to begin with, and that Wakefield's work had been verified and replicated by two other researchers more than a year before it was even published (http://www.naturalnews.com/031116_D...).
But the actual facts seem to be of little importance to the medical organizations and mainstream media outlets involved in the raging attack against Wakefield. Rather than carefully examine Wakefield's study and the issues he raised, as well as the safety of the MMR combo vaccine and the implications of its widespread use, these agenda-driven groups continue to falsely slander him.
To hear the truth for yourself, be sure to catch Mike Adams' exclusive interview with Dr. Andrew Wakefield that is soon to be posted at www.NaturalNews.tv.
Sources for this story include:
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"But if anything, the The Lancet began the retraction process too soon, having initiated a partial retraction less than three weeks after Deer's abrupt accusations came forward. And recent documents have revealed that Deer's accusations against Wakefield were false to begin with, and that Wakefield's work had been verified and replicated by two other researchers more than a year before it was even published (http://www.naturalnews.com/031116_D...)."











