Tuesday, October 23. 2007
The Texas State Board of Medical Examiners - - On the Grill!
Continue reading "The Texas State Board of Medical Examiners - - On the Grill!"
Tuesday, October 16. 2007
HCG Weight Loss - A Couple of Months Later.....
When I first heard about HCG weight loss I was convinced it was mostly "hype." Now, I've had nearly every patinet who's willing to do the protocol get outstanding results. From 2 pounds a day weight lost in the first week to an average pound-a-day after that I've seen truly amazing results. The question has to arise "Why isn't everyone doing this in their practices?" The Trudeau book "Weight Loss Cure" sums up the pressures faced by physicians and the medical community when it comes to providing novel treatments (especially that are very effective). I think this is one explanation.
The other viable explanation is that many doctors don't really have the time to spend wiht their patients to manage the ins and outs of a complex protocol that involves:
- Extensive laboratory evaluations to rule out and address hormonal problems
- Diet counselling and review of preferences that may sabotage the protocol
- Coaching skills to assist in directing energy into the most positive outcome
- Encouragement to endure a 40-day 500 calorie diet (even though it is a pleasure usually)
- Follow-up to evaluate hormonal control and health promotion
In other words, it's a great protocol if you're oriented toward health and prevention but it's a whole lot different than writing a prescription and sending a patient out the door.
It's hard to separate how much of the pressure to confrom with the "drugs-and-surgery" model of modern medicine contributes, but it is sizeable. The gratification of seeing really sick, sad, obese people regain their stamina, shape and sexuality makes it really worthwhile. I'm always amazed at how much more there is to learn with every year of experience in medical practice. Who says you can't teach an ol' dog new tricks?
Monday, October 15. 2007
Blinded by Greed - Genentech Needs a Better Spin Department!
I like to give people, groups and companies the benefit of the doubt. I got a news flash that Genetech will be restricting availability of Avastin (a blood vessel growth-limiter that slows blindness from macular degeneration). Lucentis will effectively become the only available treatment to the average "Joe" and their doctor. Avastin ($40/per treatment every few motnhs) versus Lucentis ($2000/per treatment) seems to have lost the clash of the greenbacks. I have always joked that effective medications often get pulled from the market more often than dangerous ones. The danger is mostly to the drug company's bottom line in this case. This is something that should become well-known to the general public. Doctors are the patients best source for compassionate decision-making. Accountants and executives at Genentech have made it clear where a patient should put their trust. Thank God for the great things Genentech has done. This ain't one of 'em!
If anyone wants to make the case that drug companies are "in it for the money" this would be difficult to impeach. The drug that costs 50 times more may be equally as effective but the patient and their physician should be able to discuss those risks and benefits without the conflicting economic hardship created through this decision by Genetech. Genentech's new byline ..."Blinded by the Cash!"
I hate to believe so much of what I hear about the sickening greed that comes out of this kind of activity. It is hard for me to deny the truth. Genetech sees profit as a more important driver than service to the health care consumer. Both can exist with good corporate governance. In Genentech's case they open themselves up to a PR nightmare.
Sunday, October 14. 2007
This is Why Good Alternative Physicians Are SOOO Hard to Find!
I got an email today from one of the finest integrative medicine dostors in the state of Texas. Dr. Hotze practices a progressive form of medicine that can't be denied from the scientific literature or his patient's outcomes. They are both excellent. I would like to think my style of practice is or will be similar someday. The email told me about the temperature of complete and total discontent in the field of healthcare. Not because people want socialized medicine, but because they don't want anyone limiting their choices when it comes to being healed. The National Foundation of Women Legislators (NFWL) (with over 2000 elected women representatives from throughout the US) passed a resolution that makes me want to dance a jig!
They basically said, "Don't try to sneak around the back door and make a mockery of excellent doctors through administrative abuse!" They are attacking a dishonest and conflict-of-interest driven system of "quackbusting" that has held sway for many, many years. The State Boards of Medical Examiners have had the ability to strip doctor's licesnes on a whim for decades and have been the hidden police force that limits medical innovators and innovation (that doesn't rely on pharmaceuticals). At every conference I've attended on alternative medicine for the past twenty years I have heard stories of the abuse and recklessness of State Boards only praying that I wouldn't be exposed to their tactics. I'll come back to that another time.
The whole resolution tells the story best , so I post it here!
NFWL
Health & Empowerment Policy Committee
Resolution
on State Medical Boards
Passed October 13, 2007
WHEREAS, the spectrum of services provided by medical
professionals in the United States comprises the foundation of our nation's
superior standard of living and enhances the very fabric of the lives of its
citizenry; and
WHEREAS, the State Medical Boards
(hereafter "the boards") exist for the purpose of maintaining the
high standards of excellence to which medical professionals in this country are
held, and the public good is served by the boards' oversight of these
standards; and
WHEREAS, the boards have
tolerated practices and behaviors that obstruct the sworn duty of medical
professionals in this country to provide health care services to the public,
namely:
(1) the acceptance of anonymous complaints
from insurance companies, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, attorneys and
competitors;
(2) the acceptance of opinions from
“expert” witnesses;
(3) the lack of accountability of board;
(4) the prohibition of notes and recordings
in hearings; and
(5) the denial of physicians their due
process;
(6) the administration of disciplinary
action for menial and trivial records’ findings;
(7) the use of tactics of intimidation;
(8) the manipulation of assignments to the
Informal Settlements Conference (ISC) panels rather than a fair system of
random assignments;
(9) the forcing of settlements, and:
(10) the act of ignoring conflicts of
interest that arise regarding members of the board;
BE IT RESOLVED, the National Foundation of Women Legislators
Healthcare and Empowerment Commitment advocates the elimination of the practices
listed above and their replacement with the following:
(1) a commitment to the sacredness of the
patient/doctor relationship;
(2) the increased transparency of charges
and proceedings;
(3) the increased accountability of board
members for their actions;
(4) the increased integrity on behalf of
board members in carrying out their responsibilities;
(5) the acceptance of and giving equal
weight to evaluations of a physician’s care by physicians other than those
chosen as “expert “ witnesses by the board;
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that
National Foundation for Women Legislators does hereby recommend for the
creation of independent and public Medical Board Oversight Committees in each
state, appointed by the legislature, and charged with a range of duties and
authority that will ensure the enactment and enforcement of such general
policies as advocated above, including the ability to receive and evaluate
complaints from patients and medical professionals against the boards and their
members.
This is Why Good Alternative Physicians Are SOOO Hard to Find!
I got an email today from one of the finest integrative medicine dostors in the state of Texas. Dr. Hotze practices a progressive form of medicine that can't be denied from the scientific literature or his patient's outcomes. They are both excellent. I would like to think my style of practice is or will be similar someday. The email told me about the temperature of complete and total discontent in the field of healthcare. Not because people want socialized medicine, but because they don't want anyone limiting their choices when it comes to being healed. The National Foundation of Women Legislators (NFWL) (with over 2000 elected women representatives from throughout the US) passed a resolution that makes me want to dance a jig!
They basically said, "Don't try to sneak around the back door and make a mockery of excellent doctors through administrative abuse!" They are attacking a dishonest and conflict-of-interest driven system of "quackbusting" that has held sway for many, many years. The State Boards of Medical Examiners have had the ability to strip doctor's licesnes on a whim for decades and have been the hidden police force that limits medical innovators and innovation (that doesn't rely on pharmaceuticals). At every conference I've attended on alternative medicine for the past twenty years I have heard stories of the abuse and recklessness of State Boards only praying that I wouldn't be exposed to their tactics. I'll come back to that another time.
The whole resolution tells the story best , so I post it here!
NFWL
Health & Empowerment Policy Committee
Resolution
on State Medical Boards
Passed October 13, 2007
WHEREAS, the spectrum of services provided by medical
professionals in the United States comprises the foundation of our nation's
superior standard of living and enhances the very fabric of the lives of its
citizenry; and
WHEREAS, the State Medical Boards
(hereafter "the boards") exist for the purpose of maintaining the
high standards of excellence to which medical professionals in this country are
held, and the public good is served by the boards' oversight of these
standards; and
WHEREAS, the boards have
tolerated practices and behaviors that obstruct the sworn duty of medical
professionals in this country to provide health care services to the public,
namely:
(1) the acceptance of anonymous complaints
from insurance companies, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, attorneys and
competitors;
(2) the acceptance of opinions from
“expert” witnesses;
(3) the lack of accountability of board;
(4) the prohibition of notes and recordings
in hearings; and
(5) the denial of physicians their due
process;
(6) the administration of disciplinary
action for menial and trivial records’ findings;
(7) the use of tactics of intimidation;
(8) the manipulation of assignments to the
Informal Settlements Conference (ISC) panels rather than a fair system of
random assignments;
(9) the forcing of settlements, and:
(10) the act of ignoring conflicts of
interest that arise regarding members of the board;
BE IT RESOLVED, the National Foundation of Women Legislators
Healthcare and Empowerment Commitment advocates the elimination of the practices
listed above and their replacement with the following:
(1) a commitment to the sacredness of the
patient/doctor relationship;
(2) the increased transparency of charges
and proceedings;
(3) the increased accountability of board
members for their actions;
(4) the increased integrity on behalf of
board members in carrying out their responsibilities;
(5) the acceptance of and giving equal
weight to evaluations of a physician’s care by physicians other than those
chosen as “expert “ witnesses by the board;
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that
National Foundation for Women Legislators does hereby recommend for the
creation of independent and public Medical Board Oversight Committees in each
state, appointed by the legislature, and charged with a range of duties and
authority that will ensure the enactment and enforcement of such general
policies as advocated above, including the ability to receive and evaluate
complaints from patients and medical professionals against the boards and their
members.
This is Why Good Alternative Physicians Are SOOO Hard to Find!
I got an email today from one of the finest integrative medicine dostors in the state of Texas. Dr. Hotze practices a progressive form of medicine that can't be denied from the scientific literature or his patient's outcomes. They are both excellent. I would like to think my style of practice is or will be similar someday. The email told me about the temperature of complete and total discontent in the field of healthcare. Not because people want socialized medicine, but because they don't want anyone limiting their choices when it comes to being healed. The National Foundation of Women Legislators (NFWL) (with over 2000 elected women representatives from throughout the US) passed a resolution that makes me want to dance a jig!
They basically said, "Don't try to sneak around the back door and make a mockery of excellent doctors through administrative abuse!" They are attacking a dishonest and conflict-of-interest driven system of "quackbusting" that has held sway for many, many years. The State Boards of Medical Examiners have had the ability to strip doctor's licesnes on a whim for decades and have been the hidden police force that limits medical innovators and innovation (that doesn't rely on pharmaceuticals). At every conference I've attended on alternative medicine for the past twenty years I have heard stories of the abuse and recklessness of State Boards only praying that I wouldn't be exposed to their tactics. I'll come back to that another time.
The whole resolution tells the story best , so I post it here!
NFWL
Health & Empowerment Policy Committee
Resolution
on State Medical Boards
Passed October 13, 2007
WHEREAS, the spectrum of services provided by medical
professionals in the United States comprises the foundation of our nation's
superior standard of living and enhances the very fabric of the lives of its
citizenry; and
WHEREAS, the State Medical Boards
(hereafter "the boards") exist for the purpose of maintaining the
high standards of excellence to which medical professionals in this country are
held, and the public good is served by the boards' oversight of these
standards; and
WHEREAS, the boards have
tolerated practices and behaviors that obstruct the sworn duty of medical
professionals in this country to provide health care services to the public,
namely:
(1) the acceptance of anonymous complaints
from insurance companies, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, attorneys and
competitors;
(2) the acceptance of opinions from
“expert” witnesses;
(3) the lack of accountability of board;
(4) the prohibition of notes and recordings
in hearings; and
(5) the denial of physicians their due
process;
(6) the administration of disciplinary
action for menial and trivial records’ findings;
(7) the use of tactics of intimidation;
(8) the manipulation of assignments to the
Informal Settlements Conference (ISC) panels rather than a fair system of
random assignments;
(9) the forcing of settlements, and:
(10) the act of ignoring conflicts of
interest that arise regarding members of the board;
BE IT RESOLVED, the National Foundation of Women Legislators
Healthcare and Empowerment Commitment advocates the elimination of the practices
listed above and their replacement with the following:
(1) a commitment to the sacredness of the
patient/doctor relationship;
(2) the increased transparency of charges
and proceedings;
(3) the increased accountability of board
members for their actions;
(4) the increased integrity on behalf of
board members in carrying out their responsibilities;
(5) the acceptance of and giving equal
weight to evaluations of a physician’s care by physicians other than those
chosen as “expert “ witnesses by the board;
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that
National Foundation for Women Legislators does hereby recommend for the
creation of independent and public Medical Board Oversight Committees in each
state, appointed by the legislature, and charged with a range of duties and
authority that will ensure the enactment and enforcement of such general
policies as advocated above, including the ability to receive and evaluate
complaints from patients and medical professionals against the boards and their
members.
Friday, October 5. 2007
Vaccinations = Mother's Milk - NOT!
The latest nonsense from vaccine manufacturers and their willing accomplices is that we can get more "compliance" with loading 5 shots into just one injection. The immune response is just as good, so why not? Well, the fact that the children who received the new vaccine had much higher fevers for much longer didn't seem to make a difference to the researchers. I believe that the hundreds of autistic children who I've treated are a significant testimony to the ham-handed approval of vaccines for the purpose of improved "compliance." This is the kind of language that's used in veterinary medicine to describe the passive acceptance of a treatment by an animal that lacks informed consent ability to refuse treatment. I am nauseated by the thought that the groups that are supposed to be looking out for the best interests of our children have been bought and paid for................
I don't believe that we need to fight for compliance but informed consent. That means that everyone is capable of being educated about the risks and benefits of vaccination. Instead of insisting that the data is too complex, it is better to acknowledge that all people ae capable of being taught. Unlike animals, the ultimate goal is to allow all participants (who have to manage the brain-damaged children who suffer from their complince) to choose what they want to do. Infections or vaccination? Your choice. I've made mine!
Tuesday, October 2. 2007
Multivitamins and Medical Madness!
I can't believe the steady stream of nonsense from the American Acedemy of Pediatrics we have to put up with every time they opine about nutrition. This is a subject they know virtually nothing about. I only make this comment because if they actually did know then I'd have to say they are liars because the preponderance of evidence shows a clear benefit from nutritional supplementation in both academic performance and overall health. ABC News just spewed back the opinion of the Academy that "We really don't have any evidence that nutritional supplementation really helps children!" What?!
I have had the pleasure of working with some of the brightest and best minds in nutritional medicine over the past decade and they all have concluded that nutritional supplementation is critical to optimal health. Dr. Kyl; Smith penned Brighter Mind to showcase a simple plan to augment brain function through nutritional supplementation, exercise and diet (among other things). I bring this to your attention because the book has hundreds and hundreds of scientific references from peer-reviewed medical journals that support the use of supplements. It's not as if the studies were inconclusive or more needs to be determined to establish safety. Supplementation is safe and effective in nearly every circumstance. The American Academy of Pediatrics freely supports immunization for every illness imaginable (and halucinated) but shies away from the "shadowy world" of vitamins and minerals. Who knows, God may have been having a bad day when He created them.
It makes me angry that people are given such lopsided advice from the medical establishment that is supposed to be encouraging the best practices. Natural remedies are nearly always given negative press and highly profitable drug therapies are cheered for their wonderful impact on the life and health of all parties involved. If you want to know what to do to help your children be at their best, ignore the mainstream press when they tell you to be "careful" about nutrition. Eat well and organuc. Supplement wisely (read Brighter Mind) and exercise. It's highly likely you'll find yourself at the top of the heap "healthwise!"


