Paradigm Shift Needed in Certain Aspects of Healthcare Policy

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Posted by admin | Posted in General Health Issues | Posted on 20-10-2009

By James Ong

If you are a regular reader of the Straits Times, you may have caught my letter which was published on the Forum page on October 20, 2009, calling for a paradigm shift in the regulation of foods and supplements.  Click on the link below to read the published letter:

http://www.straitstimes.com/ST%2BForum/Story/STIStory_444175.html

As there is a word limit on the letters that ST Forum publishes, important details were left out.

I am reproducing below the full contents of my letter:

PARADIGM SHIFT NEEDED IN CERTAIN ASPECTS OF HEALTHCARE POLICY

I refer to the letter entitled, “HPB shouldn’t be playing catch-up on healthy diets,” written by Mr. Richard Seah.  I strongly agree with his view that the HPB has not been at the forefront of nutritional science and as a result, the public does not always get the right information on what truly constitutes healthy eating.  The problem goes deeper however.

I feel that the three government agencies that are responsible for safeguarding and promoting the health of Singaporeans – the HPB, AVA and HSA – have not done a good enough job so far in fulfilling their objectives.  Here’s why.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), non-communicable (also known as chronic, degenerative) diseases are the major cause of death in almost all countries today – whether rich or poor.  Statistics for Singapore show that such diseases account for 83% of all deaths in this country in 2002.  That’s 15,000 deaths out of 18,000.  The economic cost to the country of these diseases is enormous, not to mention the emotional, psychological and financial distress they bring to the patient and their loved ones.  Since 2002, little has changed.  Cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic respiratory disease and other chronic diseases continue to claim about the same number of lives each year in percentage terms and have remained among the top ten leading causes of death in Singapore year after year.  It was not always so.  In 1950, statistics for Singapore showed that cancer and CVD was quite rare then (cancer was not even listed in the top ten).  So, we have not made real progress, despite all that conventional medicine promises.  If we compare with the progress made in IT and aeronautics, conventional medicine has performed very badly indeed.

The WHO estimates that 80% of premature heart disease, stroke and Type II diabetes and 40% of cancers can be prevented through healthy diet, regular physical activity and avoidance of tobacco products.  That is without supplements.  If one adds supplements and mind-body techniques to the protocol, many of these diseases can be effectively overcome.  Yet, despite the strong and indisputable link between diet and chronic, degenerative disease, distributors of health foods and supplements are not permitted to make health and therapeutic claims on their products.  This defies simple logic.

What is especially ironic is that books on nutritional therapy, herbal medicine and other forms of natural medicine are allowed to be freely sold in Singapore.  Such information is also easily accessible on the Internet, radio and TV.  Yet, for some strange reason, this same information is not allowed on foods and supplements.

Examples of prohibited health claims include chromium and its effect on blood sugar metabolism, selenium an its effect on cancer prevention, Vitamin D and its immune-enhancing benefits, folic acid and its role in preventing neural tube defects, probiotics and immune health, melatonin and sleep benefits, etc.  CoQ10 was not permitted to be sold in Singapore for many years despite its tremendous benefits for cardiovascular health.  Vitamin K, which is crucial for building strong bones, preventing osteoporosis and reversing arterial calcification, continues to be prohibited.  All this in spite of overwhelming scientific evidence documenting the therapeutic benefits of these nutrients.

It often saddens me that casinos are being built on this island-state and sexually explicit, coarse language or violent materials are allowed in videos, films and magazines in Singapore while foods and supplements that have documented health benefits are not allowed to carry health and therapeutic claims or worse still, are prohibited outright.  Why are the authorities permitting the “evil” while gagging/suppressing the “good”?

Practitioners of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM, e.g. those practicing TCM, therapeutic massage, aromatherapy, osteopathy, chiropractic, naturopathic, ayurvedic, herbal and nutritional medicine) rely on foods and supplements as a large part of their treatment protocol.  Denying the health and therapeutic benefits of such products is tantamount to denying the value of these professions in the treatment and alleviation of disease.  It should be borne in mind that what is termed CAM is actually “original” medicine, relied on by millions of people through the ages for health and wellbeing.  And conventional medicine is actually “later” medicine (only blossomed in the last 100 years), which has proven to be quite ineffective in the prevention and treatment of chronic, degenerative diseases and, besides, carries many potentially toxic side effects.

What is urgently required is a paradigm shift in the way these organizations regulate the industry and market.  While one would not consult a marine engineer if his sports car is developing engine problems, we continue to form panels of “experts” to regulate food and supplements who have received little or no training in CAM and may have no experience whatsoever with reversing health conditions using food and supplements.  These “experts” are invariably trained in allopathic (conventional)/pharmaceutical medicine or dietetics (which, as a profession has committed itself not to encroach on conventional medicine’s turf).  In their world view, only approved pharmaceutical drugs, prescribed by conventional MDs, can treat and overcome disease.

Hippocrates, the Father of Western Medicine said, “Let food be your medicine and medicine be your food.”  There is a Chinese proverb that states that the cause for disease is linked to what we put into our mouths.  There is so much truth and wisdom in these ancient sayings.  Let’s hope that the authorities respect our diverse ethnic and cultural roots and create a level playing field for all legitimate parties involved in healthcare.  One that does not stifle the efforts of the private sector – be they distributors of health foods and supplements or practitioners of natural medicine – by suppressing truthful health information from being communicated to the public.  Since the authorities have not done a very good job with overcoming the prevalence or reversal of chronic, degenerative disease, the private sector should be given a freer hand, even encouraged, to play a bigger role in promoting and safeguarding the health and wellbeing of Singaporeans.

Do make it a point to read Richard Seah’s as well as Dr. Yik Keng Yeong’s letters.

Why Our Health Matters, A New Book by Andrew Weil, MD

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Posted by admin | Posted in General Health Issues | Posted on 19-10-2009

By James Ong

9781594630668LI recently got hold of Dr. Andrew Weil’s latest book, “Why Our Health Matters,” published by Hudson Street Press, a division of Penguin Books.  I’ve started reading a few chapters and must say that this is a very good book indeed!  Dr. Andrew Weil is one of my favorite authors.  He is of course a world-renown authority on Integrative Medicine, which combines the best of conventional medicine and complementary & alternative medicine for the most effective treatment of many diseases.  I strongly recommend his latest book to anyone who is concerned with improving his/her own health while managing his/her own healthcare costs at the same time.  I feel that healthcare policymakers and healthcare professionals (especially MDs, pharmacists, anyone trained in conventional medicine) should also read this book.

The following is an excerpt taken from the book.

Chapter 1

You Have a Right to Good Health Care

“I now understand that when you lose your health, nothing else that you have matters. All you can think about is being well again.”

That’s what a patient of mine said to me recently, a woman in her mid-sixties who was well until a sudden painful illness, an inflammation of bones in her pelvis, disabled her completely and landed her in a hospital. Even with bed rest and aggressive drug treatment, her recovery was slow. For several weeks she lost control of her life, felt helpless and dependent.

It often takes an experience like this to make us realize the paramount importance of health. Without it, the worth of life diminishes.

I have long taught that health is an individual responsibility. It is up to you to learn how to maintain it and to protect your body’s potential for self-healing as you go through life. No doctors, no treatments, no system can do this for you or force you to do it on your own. Medical professionals and institutions can help, however, by improving your understanding of health. They can inform you about the influence of lifestyle choices on your risks of disease. They can provide preventive medical services to protect you from common serious conditions—for instance, by immunizing you against infectious illnesses and screening you for forms of cancer that are curable if detected early. They can identify and explain problems that require expert diagnosis and treatment, and then guide you in selecting the best therapy. Usually, the health-care establishment will be there for you if you are a victim of trauma, suffer a heart attack, or need other emergency medical or surgical attention.

I believe strongly and passionately that every American has a right to good health care that is effective, accessible, and affordable, that serves you from infancy through old age, that allows you to go to practitioners and facilities of your choosing, and that offers a broad range of therapeutic options. Your health-care system should also help you stay in optimum health, not just take care of you when you are sick or injured. You should expect and demand this of your country, whether you are rich or poor and whatever the circumstances in which you live. A free democratic society must guarantee basic health care to its citizens—all of them—just as it guarantees them basic security and safety. It is in society’s interest to do so: The healthier our population, the stronger and more productive we will be as a nation.

Our Declaration of Independence identifies life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness as inalienable rights of all persons. A stated intent of our Constitution is “to promote the general Welfare.” These documents say nothing about the right to good health. Yet, as I’ve said, without health, life is diminished. Loss of health restricts lib¬erty as much as imprisonment does. Without health, the possibility of happiness is drastically reduced. To enjoy our inalienable rights we must be healthy, which means we must also have access to good health care.

Too many Americans today do not have that. In fact, we do not have a “health-care” system at all. Instead, we have a disease management system that is horribly dysfunctional and getting more so every day. Our health is deteriorating, and we have the high¬est percentage of uninsured citizens of any democratic society; no other nation comes close. With unemployment rising at an alarming rate, great numbers of Americans are losing their health insurance along with their jobs, further swelling the ranks of the uninsured. This is unacceptable if we want our nation to be a model democratic society.

We used to boast that American medicine was the best in the world, and once upon a time, it was. Today, with limited exceptions, that is no longer true. Even in some of our most prestigious medical centers the quality of care is poor, with nursing services in short sup¬ply and hospital-caused illness on the rise. In fact, we are beginning to see a trend toward outsourcing of care to other countries. Our citizens—American citizens—are going to first-class hospitals in Belgium, Thailand, and India for hip replacements, coronary artery bypasses, and reconstructive surgeries. Patients here are dissatisfied, frustrated, and increasingly angry about insufficient attention from doctors in managed care settings, the impersonal nature of medical encounters, and the adversarial attitude of insurers, not to mention the staggering costs of prescription drugs, medical tests and proce¬dures, and hospital services.

I am sure you or people you know have had disastrous interactions with our so-called health-care system, resulting in physical, emotional, or financial harm. Almost daily I hear medical disaster stories from patients, colleagues, friends, and those I meet when I give talks on the subject. Some have been misdiagnosed and mistreated. Others have come out of hospitals and clinics with more and worse problems than they had when they entered. Still others have been denied health insurance because of common preexisting conditions. The most unlucky ones were denied treatments for life-threatening diseases because insurance companies deemed the treatments “experimental” or “unnecessary.” More and more Americans are taking their chances by going without insurance altogether—they simply can’t afford it. Without access to primary care physicians, they go to the emergency room instead of a doctor’s office.

Doctors, for their part, are dissatisfied, frustrated, and increasingly angry about losing autonomy to corporate bosses and payers. The emotional reward of the therapeutic relationship has dwindled because “the system” has limited the time of patient visits in order to save money. Selection of treatments is dictated by policies of reimbursement, not by practitioner judgment and experience. Many good doctors are leaving the practice of clinical medicine. In the past few years a dismaying number of physicians have told me that they regret their choice of medicine as a career. A recent survey of U.S. primary care providers documents this trend: Nearly 50 percent said they would seriously consider getting out of medicine if they had an alternative. I cannot blame them.

Most people I talk to—patients, doctors, and other health-care providers—feel powerless to do anything to change the cost of health care, its impersonality and the minimal time allowed for visits, or the reimbursement practices of insurers. Most of us feel as if we are up against implacable forces and institutions that are beyond our influence.

You know all this, or most of it. There are plenty of words in print and online that document the medical establishment’s dys¬function and accelerating collapse. You don’t need me to give you more depressing details, facts, and figures or make you feel more anxious and angry about the colossal mess that is American health care.

What you may not know and what I must emphasize, even if you have heard it before, is that we spend more per capita on health care than any other nation in the world—by a long shot. Yet, by virtually every measure of health outcomes, including longevity, infant mortality, fitness, and rates of chronic diseases, we are at or near the bottom compared to other developed countries. We are paying more and more and have less and less to show for it. We are also paying more and more for health insurance plans that cover less and less. The average American family’s premiums now exceed the gross annual income of a full-time minimum wage worker.

Costs of medical care have spiraled out of control, rising at such an accelerating rate that they have become a leading cause of personal bankruptcy. (Every thirty seconds someone in America files for bankruptcy in the aftermath of a personal health problem.) Despite a citizenry so clearly in dire need of help, when I listen to talks about health care in America, especially from politicians and candidates for high office, I hear next to nothing about the real causes of the present crisis or the radical changes required to address it. I do not mean “radical” in the political sense—that is, left-leaning solutions such as socialized medicine in which the government runs the show. The word comes from the Latin, radix, meaning “root,” and only changes that go to the root of the health-care crisis can save us from disaster. Most commentators assume that the root problems are (a) how to give more people access to the present system and (b) how to pay for it. I strongly disagree.

The challenge is not figuring out how to give more people access to this disintegrating system. The challenge is to envision what we can create to replace it. In this book I will give you a picture of the kind of health-care system that America should have and that every citizen should demand. I will focus on medical philosophy and practice, my areas of expertise. I am not an expert on policy or medical economics, and therefore I will not make recommendations in either of those areas. It is the government’s job to find the money for the new system, and it should—must—recoup the millions of dollars lost to the present system’s administrative waste. The government must also end the abuses of those individuals and corporations in the health-care industry that are making outrageous profits while so many Americans cannot afford to buy health insurance or pay their medical bills.

I believe I have a unique perspective on the problem. I have worked for three decades to promote health, to encourage greater self-reliance and responsibility for well-being, and to transform medical education and medical practice in the ways needed to sup¬port a radically new and better health-care system for our country.

It is obvious to me that the root of the crisis is unmanageable costs. Over the past hundred years medical bills have gone up steadily and relentlessly. Worse, the rate of increase has accelerated, especially in the past few decades. Maybe the insane amounts of money that we spend on health care would be justified if they resulted in superior health of Americans, but, as I’ve said, they do not.

To understand how health care in our country has become the disaster it is today, just follow the money as it makes its way to the big health insurers, manufacturers of pharmaceuticals and medical devices, and for-profit hospitals, and into the pockets of their breathtakingly overpaid executives. If we cannot contain these costs and stop their accelerating rise, there will be no solution to the crisis and no hope of avoiding catastrophe. The best superficial fixes will merely postpone the inevitable. Even an efficient and fair system of national not-for-profit health insurance for all Americans will eventually be taken down by unmanageable costs. (Runaway costs will also sink the health-care systems of other countries, even those that now seem to be faring better than ours—Canada, the United Kingdom, and Japan, to name a few. Sooner or later the crisis that has brought American health care to its present sad state will engulf all developed countries.)

Why is health care so expensive?

I have two answers to that question:

First, because we give little more than lip service to the prevention of disease and the promotion of health, the whole industry of health care is geared toward intervention in established disease—much of it preventable. “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure” is more than a cliché; it is a profound truth that translates directly into dollars spent.

Second, the kinds of interventions that the present system favors are expensive because they depend on costly technology. The Congressional Budget Office reports that 50 percent of recent in¬creases in the cost of health care are attributable to the introduction of new technology. (I include pharmaceutical drugs in the category of treatments dependent on expensive technology.)

Our long-term goal must be to shift our health-care efforts from disease intervention to health promotion and disease prevention. That does not mean withholding treatment from those who need it. My concept of prevention goes well beyond immunization, sanitation, and diagnostic screenings. I am suggesting that the time has come for a new paradigm of preventive medicine and a society-wide effort to educate our citizens about health and self care. This must include the creation of incentives and disincentives to encourage people to make better lifestyle choices, better in that they reduce risks of the chronic dis¬eases that now absorb so many of our health-care dollars. I realize that this is a tall order, requiring that the government, private sector, and individuals all pull together and move in the same direction, but it must be done.

Breaking dependence on costly high-tech medical interventions will necessitate making fundamental changes in medical education and practice as well as rethinking the nature of health and healing, the role of treatment, and our expectations of medicine. Without a transformation of medicine we cannot have the health care we so desperately need: health care that is effective, serves everyone, and does not bankrupt us individually or collectively. It can happen. It is happening. I lead an effort at the University of Arizona to train doctors in “integrative medicine,” which values low-tech methods such as dietary change, exercise, breath control, and stress management as alternatives to outrageously priced pharmaceutical drugs. In fact, my work to advance this new field has provided part of the inspiration to write this book, because its early success makes me absolutely certain that it is key to getting American health care back on course.

My two main objectives in writing this book are to convince readers that we must:

1. Change the focus of health care in this country from disease management to prevention and health promotion.

2. Minimize interventional medicine’s dependence on expensive technology.

By taking these two fundamental actions I am certain that we will stop and then reverse the relentless rise of the cost of health care that has caused all the trouble. It is the radix—the root problem that must be addressed.

To get you to share my vision, it is my job to convince you that these steps are essential for our welfare. Then I will call on doctors, allied health professionals, corporate America, and you—the citizen-consumer-patient—to join the effort to fix the system.

The Three Major Myths of American Health Care

As a first step I would ask you to question a few powerful myths that support the massive enterprise of disease management that must be replaced.

Myth #1: Because America has the most expensive health care in the world, it must have the best.

Reality: The World Health Organization recently rated America thirty-seventh in health outcomes, on a par with Serbia.

Myth #2: Our medical technology is our greatest single asset.

Reality: We have powerful technology, but we misuse it and over-use it, driving up costs and worsening health outcomes.

Myth #3: Our medical schools and research facilities excel at creating the world’s finest physicians and most productive medical investigators.

Reality: Our medical and scientific infrastructure is extensive, but it is controlled by an almost fundamentalist orthodoxy that limits our ability to understand and promote health and to prevent disease. Medical education today omits whole subject areas of great relevance to those ends, including nutrition, mind/body interactions, and environmental effects on health. We train researchers to think simplistically and focus narrowly on single interventions directed at the physical body, especially pharmaceutical drugs. (The manufacturers of those drugs strongly influence researchers, practitioners, and the journals that report research results.)

I will discuss the power of these myths and my suggestions for moving beyond them in the following chapter.

Interview with Sherry Torkos, RPh., Integrative Pharmacist

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Posted by admin | Posted in General Health Issues, Maintaining A Healthy Body | Posted on 30-03-2009

By Lyle Hurd
From TotalHealth Magazine Online

Sherry Torkos is a holistic pharmacist, author and lecturer. She received her Bachelor of Science degree in Pharmacy from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science in 1992. She is a practicing pharmacist in the Niagara area. In 1999, she received the J.C. Gould Memorial Award for Distinguished Practice. She has authored nine books inclu29_4_20ding, The Glycemic Index Made Simple (Wiley, 2007), Winning at Weight Loss (Wiley 2004) and Breaking the Age Barrier (Penguin Books, 2003). She is a frequent guest on radio and TV talk shows where she discusses a variety of complementary medicine and health topics.

totalhealth magazine is delighted to have this opportunity to introduce Sherry to our readers with this issue’s cover story interview.

TH: What prompted you to become a pharmacist?

ST: I have always been interested in health and medicine. As a teenager I worked at a local hospital as a volunteer and part of my experience was to spend time in the pharmacy department. I found it fascinating that we had all these drugs that could help people recover from serious health problems and I wanted to learn more so I decided to pursue a degree in pharmacy.

I went to the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and took a five-year degree. It was a great program; they are the oldest school of pharmacy with a very strong heritage and they provided me with an excellent learning experience.

Read on

Dr. Mehmet Oz: Global Medicine

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Posted by admin | Posted in General Health Issues, Maintaining A Healthy Body | Posted on 25-10-2008

By Sue Kovach
From Life Extension Online

sep2008_cover_global_medicine_011Changing the way millions of people actively incorporate preventive health into their lives has become a daily practice for Dr. Mehmet Oz. As one of the world’s most accomplished cardiac surgeons, Dr. Oz is taking life-saving medicine beyond the operating room. Now, in an effort to reinvent medicine on a global level, he has taken his visionary medical knowledge to every conceivable form of media to teach people how to use natural methods to live longer, reduce stress, and avoid the killers of heart disease and cancer.

A quick Google search reveals over 795,000 entries for Dr. Oz. On any given day, he can be heard on XM Satellite Radio, seen on Oprah or Good Morning America or read in Esquire magazine or in any of his bestselling YOU books. Everywhere one looks, there is Dr. Oz patiently instructing all of us—both patients and doctors—on a new kind of medicine that begins with taking an enlightened approach to preventing life-robbing diseases. Dr. Oz is at the forefront of an international revolution in health and medicine. 

Read on

Dr. Weston A. Price

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Posted by admin | Posted in General Health Issues, Healthy Immune System, Living Foods, Maintaining A Healthy Body | Posted on 16-10-2008

As many of our customers may already know, the findings and teachings of Dr. Weston A. Price, DDS, forms much of the nutritional foundation upon which we stand and conduct our business.  Learn more about this fascinating man, dubbed the “Charles Darwin” of nutrition, by reading this article.  It may be the most important document on nutrition you will ever read.

From the Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation

westonapriceDr. Price was a Cleveland dentist, who has been called the “Charles Darwin” of Nutrition. Searching for the causes of dental decay and physical degeneration he observed daily in his dental practice, he turned from test tubes and microscopes to study “people with fine teeth” – the isolated “primitives”.

Traveling worldwide, Dr. Price found that beautiful, straight teeth, freedom from decay, stalwart bodies, resistance to disease, and fine characters were typical of primitives on their traditional diets.

These primitives stand forth in sharp contrast to those subsisting on the “impoverished foods of civilization” – sugar, white flour, pasteurized milk, and convenience foods filled with extenders and additives.

His worldwide findings clearly showed that dental caries and deformed dental arches, resulting in crowded, crooked teeth and unattractive appearance, were merely a sign of physical degeneration, resulting from what he had suspected – nutritional deficiencies.

Dr. Price’s classic volume, Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, is published by and available from the Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation (Click Here to purchase). *Its photographs illustrate in an unforgettable way the physical degeneration that occurs when human groups abandon nourishing traditional diets in favor of modern convenience foods.  Read on

Prescription for Disaster – You Need to Watch this Video

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Posted by admin | Posted in General Health Issues | Posted on 05-10-2008

img_33680_bigA couple of years ago, I had highlighted this ground-breaking video.

Guess what?  Thanks to Dr. Joseph Mercola, we are now able to watch the entire video online through our computer.  This is one video you must watch if you care for your health and that of your family.

From www.mercola.com.

If you haven’t had the opportunity to watch the documentary “Prescription for Disaster” yet, I urge you to study Gary Null’s important investigation into the many “play-for-pay” relationships that exist between lawmakers, lobbyists, medical schools and the FDA.

These “sweet deals” constantly serve to harm your health, while keeping the coffers of drug companies flush with cash.

This film documents the problems with a health care system that supports the many and frequent scams evil marketing geniuses employed by drug companies foist on an unknowing public every day.  Click here to view the video.