It seems like nearly everyone now takes some sort of prescription medication to manage mental illnesses ranging from depression to anxiety. Data from the Centers for Disease Control finds that 3.4% of American adults have suffered serious psychological distress with the past 30 days. Additionally, medical practitioners log nearly 60 million visits a year from patients with mental disorders as the primary diagnosis. However, popping a pill is not always the solution. A Bloomfield-based medical office offers an alternative approach that focuses on how you nourish your body.
“I don't treat the name of the illness, but treat the underlying cause,” said Eileen Comia, MD, Medical Director of Advance Biomedical Treatment Center, LLC. “In functional medicine, we realize that underlying causes of chronic illnesses are likely from a combination of hundreds, if not thousands of toxins and chemicals we imbibe over time.”
Dr. Comia explains chronic exposure to toxins such as nitrates in bacon or sausage, additives, preservatives and heavy metals affect people by destroying enzymes and blocking metabolic pathways. One example is the DPPIV enzyme which breaks down gluten and dairy, causing the need to remove gluten and dairy from the diet. Dr. Comia advises for those with psychosis, mood swings, insomnia, OCD, ADD and tics, that a gluten- free, dairy -free diet is imperative.
The COMT enzyme is another set of important enzymes that are likely destroyed and mutated in the methylation of neurotransmitters. When the COMT enzyme is disabled, this leads to neurotransmitters not being activated in the gut and therefore you have low levels of taurine, mostly GABA and sometimes serotonin in the brain, which leads to mental instability or illness.
“We are able to test for these neurotransmitters in the urine. So by increasing the good neurotransmitters that are low and decreasing the bad neurotransmitters that are too high, we are able to stabilize a person’s mood no matter what the diagnosis is,” said Dr. Comia. “There are no sets of patterns of neurotransmitter imbalances that are specific to each mental illness, however, most of the time, taurine and GABA are low and glutamate is too high.”
For people with depression, Dr. Comia notes that the single most effective natural way to improve their sadness is to give Methylated B12 injections, a preservative-free and activated form of Vitamin B 12. It is not the same as the regular Vitamin B 12 that most hospitals and doctor's offices offer as these are specially compounded and computed based on patient's body weight. Next to MB12 is zinc, taurine and GABA for depression. There are many other supplements and nutrients that are very effective for mood stability no matter what the diagnosis is, such as omega 3 fatty acids 5 HTP and L THEANINE.
“Important to point out, I always overlap their current prescription medications with our functional medicine approach,” said Dr. Comia. “I will never just discontinue a medication they are currently taking.”
The center treats an array of mental illnesses including Schizophrenia, bipolar, obsessive compulsive, eating disorders, depression, anxiety, insomnia, TIC disorder, ADD and autism spectrum disorder.
Advance Biomedical Treatment Center has great overall success in patients with the exception of those such as vegans and vegetarians, who have low protein diets. For this group, it typically takes a few months to respond substantially to neurotransmitter manipulation. Typically, patients at the center get better in 1 month.
Comment
This piece of news was published on May 3rd 2013 in the newspaper The Simsbury News and was written by Maurice Colgan.
This piece of news starts denouncing the abuse of medication for mental diseases such as depression or anxiety. Eileen Comia, MD, Medical Director of Advance Biomedical Treatment Center, affirms that there are other methods for treating these illnesses, alternative methods. These methods don't treat the illness but they cure the cause of it. There are natural methods that eliminate the toxins that produces these diseases, like depression, and in this way the disease never produces.
This alternative treatment also avoid the excess of medication which can create a dependence problem in the patient.
But we can't confuse alternative medicine with real medical treatments. These natural methods are not used alone, they are used as a complement for the medication. As Dr. Comia says, the medication which is taking the patient can't be discontinued for proving these methods.
This method is not as effective in vegans and vegetarians as it's in people who realise a normal diet. This happens because the diet of these people is low in proteins and it causes mismatches in their bodies.
To sum up, we can say that it's important to make this kind of research because it helps to make us less dependent of medication which can be really toxic.
domingo, 5 de mayo de 2013
More Oklahoma Pet Owners Turning To Alternative Medicine
News9.com - Oklahoma City, OK - News, Weather, Video and Sports |
More and more pet owners are turning to alternative medicine to meet the health needs of their four legged friends. News 9 found one dog whose owner says the difference after just one treatment was like night and day.
Sidney is having acupuncture needles inserted near her collar bone to treat her severe arthritis. Some relax her instantly. She's a 12-year-old Brittany Spaniel, 84 in dog years, and her owner says the pain used to be unmanageable.
"We were just giving her two kinds of pain medication and at first we kinda started slow and we had to go up and up and up and nothing was really helping," said owner, Connie Mugno.
"When you insert the little stainless steel needle there is a variety of functions inside the body, release of hormones and neurotransmitters that have a healing effect," said Alvarez.
Acupuncture, chiropractic care, herbal treatments and massage; not things we normally think of when it comes to our pets. But lately more and more people are turning to alternative medicine to treat their furry friends.
More and more pet owners are turning to alternative medicine to meet the health needs of their four legged friends. News 9 found one dog whose owner says the difference after just one treatment was like night and day.
Sidney is having acupuncture needles inserted near her collar bone to treat her severe arthritis. Some relax her instantly. She's a 12-year-old Brittany Spaniel, 84 in dog years, and her owner says the pain used to be unmanageable.
"We were just giving her two kinds of pain medication and at first we kinda started slow and we had to go up and up and up and nothing was really helping," said owner, Connie Mugno.
When the arthritis became crippling, Mugno turned to Dr. Leilani Alvarez at the Animal Medical Center in New York.
"When you insert the little stainless steel needle there is a variety of functions inside the body, release of hormones and neurotransmitters that have a healing effect," said Alvarez.
The American Veterinary Medical Association says the number of pet owners opting for alternative treatments is on the rise. Each acupuncture session costs about $100, and the physical therapy sessions are $150 each. Mugno says she noticed an improvement after the first treatment.
"When I think about surgeries and long-term medications and possibly other complications, I think this was the more economical way to go long-term" said Mugno.
Sidney is now walking and playing again, and has the energy of a dog half her age. Sidney still gets acupuncture and therapy once a month, but she's no longer on any pain medication.
Comment.
This piece of news was published on May 2nd 2013 in the webpage News9 and it was written by Evan Anderson.
It's about a new kind of treatment which is on the rise. Some of these treatments are acupuncture chiropractic care or massages, treatments which are extended among human medicine but they had never been used for animals.
For the moment, they are only used for avoiding pain to the animal, not for curing the disease but maybe in a few years new treatments will be developed and our pets would be able to be treated with treatments of alternative medicine, that is to say treatments with less toxic substances that can be harmful for the animal's body.
These are good news for alternative medicine because if people use it with their pets they were be more disposed to prove it with their own diseases and pains and in that way, alternative medicine will extend.
Comment.
This piece of news was published on May 2nd 2013 in the webpage News9 and it was written by Evan Anderson.
It's about a new kind of treatment which is on the rise. Some of these treatments are acupuncture chiropractic care or massages, treatments which are extended among human medicine but they had never been used for animals.
For the moment, they are only used for avoiding pain to the animal, not for curing the disease but maybe in a few years new treatments will be developed and our pets would be able to be treated with treatments of alternative medicine, that is to say treatments with less toxic substances that can be harmful for the animal's body.
These are good news for alternative medicine because if people use it with their pets they were be more disposed to prove it with their own diseases and pains and in that way, alternative medicine will extend.
Medicina alternativa: un 43% la realizan expertos en salud
Según cifras del registro voluntario del Minsal de 2012. Asimismo desde este organismo señalaron que se planea integrar estos tratamientos al Código Sanitario, como ya ocurrió con la homeopatía y la acupuntura
Por este motivo el mismo Minsal durante el año pasado realizó el registro voluntario de personas que realizan este tipo de tratamientos y que concluyó que un 43% de los casos se trata de profesionales ligados al área de la salud, tanto con un título técnico como universitario.
Al respecto el doctor y encargado de medicinas alternativas del Minsal, Jaime Sepúlveda, afirmó que si bien esta cifra puede ser engañosa ya que se trata de un registro “voluntario”, el organismo sanitario ante este incremento tiene la intención de reglamentar estas terapias para proteger al paciente ante la presencia de “charlatanes”: “Nos interesa que quienes se dediquen a esto ojalá sean profesionales de la salud. Pero para eso necesitamos primero reglamentar todos estos tratamientos, como ya se hizo con la acupuntura y la homeopatía”, afirmó el profesional, quien agregó que estas dos están regidas por el Código Sanitario y prontamente se les unirá la naturopatía.
En el caso de los tratamientos que sean reconocidos por el Minsal (como sucede con la homeopatía y la acupuntura), quienes quieran impartirlos deberán aprobar un examen de conocimientos y comprobar con resultados en por lo menos ocho pacientes que su método funciona correctamente, para contar con la respectiva autorización sanitaria para ejercer: “Por esto es necesario que sean profesionales de la salud, que den garantías y credibilidad para los pacientes”, dijo.
Consultado sobre este tema el presidente del Colegio Médico, Enrique Paris, afirmó que es necesario que estas terapias se incorporen al sistema de salud porque son “útiles y necesarias”, petición que ya han hecho en reiteradas ocasiones. Sin embargo, esto debe ser realizado siempre con “bases científicas sólidas”, finalizó.
Comentario
Esta noticia se publicó el 9 de abril de 2013 en la página web Publimetro y fue escrita por Mario Valle.
En esta noticia se recoge una necesidad que se viene denunciando desde hace tiempo y es la reglamentación de la medicina alternativa. La ausencia de una legislatura que regule esta
práctica aumenta su riesgo ya que favorece que personas que desconocen el verdadero funcionamiento de los productos y sus posibles efectos dañinos en el organismo puedan ejercer esta práctica. Esto hace que el riesgo de probar tratamientos alternativos sea mucho mayor y que aleje al público de esta medicina. Si se regulase el sector y se realizasen algunas de las medidas mencionadas en la noticia como un examen en el que se comprobase que estas personas realmente tienen conocimientos sobre la medicina alternativa y son capaces de ejercerla, se producirían muchos menos efectos secundarios dañinos ya que se utilizaría esta medicina con responsabilidad.
En la noticia también se exige otro requisito, que aquellos que quieran impartir la medicina alternativa debebn probar que su método realmente funciona. Esto sería de gran ayuda ya que evitaría varias cosas. Primero que el paciente perdiese el tiempo con un tratamiento que no va a funcionar. Quizás esta persona padecía una enfermedad cuya curación está determinada por su tratamiento temprano y perder el tiempo con un tratamiento que no sirve supone que su curación sea más improbable. Y segundo evita que el paciente, especialmente de enfermedades graves, se cree esperanzas falsamente y se desilusione al verlas incumplidas.
Como conclusión señalar que esta regularización es extremadamente necesaria y que, posiblemente, hasta que no se lleve a cabo la medicina alternativa no avanzará propiamente dicho porque no contará con suficientes pacientes.
La Cámara apoya que la medicina alternativa entre en la Sanidad Pública
Más de 200.000 canarios recurren a la Medicina Complementaria y Alternativa (MAC) como la homeopatía, la acupuntura o la medicina naturista para algunos problemas de salud. Con los argumentos del ahorro, la prevención y el apoyo de más de 25.000 firmas por el momento, representantes de la Liga Médico Homeopática Internacional, y de la Sección de Medicinas Complementarias del Colegio de Médicos y de la Asociación Canaria de Usuarios y Amigos de la Homeopatía están trabajando para que Canarias sea la primera comunidad autónoma en liderar la incorporación de las MAC a la Sanidad pública
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Esta es una de las reivindicaciones que el vicepresidente para España de la Liga Médico Homeopática Internacional (LMHI) y secretario de la Asamblea Nacional de Homeopatía, Antonio Marqués, trasladó esta semana al director de la Cámara de Comercio de Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Vicente Dorta Antequera con quién mantuvo un encuentro de trabajo en el que también participó el presidente de la Sociedad Canaria de Homeopatía, Rodolfo de la Torre, la presidenta de la Asociación de Herbolarios de Tenerife y miembro de la Federación de Alimentación y Consumo de Canarias ( FACA), Marta Díaz y el representante de la Asociación Canaria de Usuarios y Amigos de la Homeopatía, (ACUAHOM), Mario Ramos.
Durante la reunión, los representantes de las MCA informaron de la labor que desde diferentes colectivos se esta desarrollando para que las medicinas alternativas formen parte del sistema de salud canario. En este sentido, explicaron que en el Parlamento de Canarias se ha tramitado una Proposición de Ley de Iniciativa Popular "Para la Defensa y Promoción de la Salud y la Sanidad Pública en Canarias", que fue publicada en el Boletín Oficial en mayo de 2010 y en la que se contempla ya en su Disposición Adicional IV la utilidad pública de estas medicinas complementarias y alternativas.
De hecho, recoge textualmente que "se potenciarán los programas públicos correspondientes a la denominada por la Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) como Medicina Complementaria y Alternativa (MCA), que deberá contar con unidades asistenciales públicas, de forma progresiva, en el Servicio Canario de Salud".
Hasta ahora son 25.000 las firmas recogidas para apoyar la incorporación de las MCA al Servicio Público a través de una campaña promovida por la asociación de usuarios y las asociaciones médicas y de farmacéuticos. Para sus defensores, su integración en la Sanidad generaría un ahorro a medio y largo plazo considerable al que hay que sumar su carácter preventivo. Más de un 10% de los canarios utiliza las MAC y unas 400 farmacias realizan habitualmente pedidos de Homeopatía. Además, unos 500 médicos prescriben Homeopatía desde las recetas blancas de la Seguridad Social, costeadas por los pacientes.Comentario
Esta noticia fue publicada el 4 de mayo de 2013 en el periódico El Día y fue escrita por Antonio Cornelles.
Esta noticia se publicó a raíz de una recogida de firmas realizada en Canarias para la incorporación de la Medicina Alternativa y Complementaria a la Seguridad Social.
Esta medida, que cuenta con el apoyo del Parlamento de Canarias y de hecho, desde 2010 se recoge que estos tratamientos pasarán progresivamente al Servicio Canario de Salud. Esta medida no sólo servirá para ahorra gran cantidad de dinero a aquellas personas que ya empleaban estos métodos para tratar sus enfermedades y tenían que pagarlo con su dinero propio, sino que también contribuye a mejorar la imagen que los tratamientos alternativos tienen en la sociedad.
Si se lleva a cabo su introducción efectiva en la Seguridad Social puede servir como un primer paso para su aprobación en el resto de España y de ese modo el alcance de la medicina alternativa será mucho mayor. Esto no es necesario porque la medicina alternativa sea mejor que la tradicional sino porque así habrá mayor cantidad de tratamientos diferentes que podrán utilizar los enfermos y su curación será más probable.
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