Brought to you by The Best Years in Life Wednesday, January 13, 2010 by: S. L. Baker, features writer (NaturalNews) As NaturalNews has previously reported, the U.S. is a nation seemingly hooked on mind-altering drugs (http://www.naturalnews.com/027054_d...). A study released last fall in the Archives of General Psychiatry documented a dramatic increase in the use of antidepressant drugs like Prozac since l996. In fact, these medications are now the most widely prescribed drugs in the U.S.More evidence emerges that Americans are drugged out of their minds
Think Americans are maxed out on the number of psychiatric meds that huge numbers of them are taking? Think again. A new report says U.S. adults are increasingly being prescribed combinations of antidepressants, anti-anxiety and antipsychotic medications -- and they could be experiencing serious side effects as a result.
The study, published in the January edition of Archives of General Psychiatry, investigated patterns and trends in what is known as psychotropic polypharmacy, meaning the prescribing of two or more psychiatric drugs. Ramin Mojtabai, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., of the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and Mark Olfson, M.D., M.P.H., of Columbia University Medical Center and the New York State Psychiatric Institute, examined data gathered from a national sample of office-based psychiatry practices. In all, the researchers looked at the medications prescribed between 1996 and 2006 during more than 13,000 office visits to psychiatrists by adults.
The results showed a significant increase in the number of mind impacting drugs prescribed over these years. The percentage of doctor visits which resulted in two or more medications being prescribed increased from 42.6 percent to 59.8 percent. What's more, the percentage of visits at which three or more drugs were prescribed soared from 16.9 percent to 33.2 percent. And the median number of medications prescribed at each appointment with a psychiatrist increased on average by of 40.1 percent.
The combinations of drugs being prescribed with increasing frequency include antidepressants with sedative-hypnotics (the most prescribed combination), antidepressants given along with antipsychotics and combinations of several kinds of antidepressants. But at least the doctors prescribing these mixed drugs are only doing so based on solid research showing the combos are safe and effective, right? Wrong.
"Because scant data exist to support the efficacy of some of the most common medication combinations, such as antipsychotic combinations or combinations of antidepressants and antipsychotics, prudence suggests that renewed clinical efforts should be made to limit the use of these combinations to clearly justifiable circumstances," the authors wrote in their paper. "At the same time, a new generation of research is needed to assess the efficacy, effectiveness and safety of common concomitant medication regimens, especially in patients with multiple disorders or monotherapy-refractory conditions."
In other words, drugs are being given to patients in all sorts of combinations without sound science showing they even work well together -- much less that these drug cocktails are safe to take. In fact, the researchers point out specific dangers of taking multiple psychiatric drugs.
"While the evidence for added benefit of antipsychotic polypharmacy is limited, there is growing evidence regarding the increased adverse effects associated with such combinations," they concluded. A case in point: some combinations cause increases in body weight and total cholesterol level. Others have been associated with an increase in fasting blood glucose level.
For more information:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/...
"The study, published in the January edition of Archives of General Psychiatry, investigated patterns and trends in what is known as psychotropic polypharmacy, meaning the prescribing of two or more psychiatric drugs. Ramin Mojtabai, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., of the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore and Mark Olfson, M.D., M.P.H., of Columbia University Medical Center and the New York State Psychiatric Institute, examined data gathered from a national sample of office-based psychiatry practices. In all, the researchers looked at the medications prescribed between 1996 and 2006 during more than 13,000 office visits to psychiatrists by adults."
I find it surprising that the study only looked at "psychiatry practices." Just from looking around me at friends and family I'll bet that general practitioners are prescribing these drugs at a ratio of at least 5 to 1 of the rate of psychiatrists and they have no business doing it. That's just a top of the head figure because I know that GPs pass them out like candy. It also doesn't include licensed counselors who who have access to MDs who can also get the prescriptions.
Many years ago I was handed a prescription for Vallium by a GP after a 30 second visit for "anxiety" in my work place. I took the first one before work in the morning and because of the effects became so out of it that I couldn't even drive to work and went home and slept the rest of the day. I used the remaining 9 in the evening only as a recreational high and swore I'd never touch any mood altering drug again, and I never have. Except of course an occasional martini. It was because of that experience that I refused drugs during my severe PTSD recovery where I used meditation instead. I truly believe that in our fast paced Western Society that anyone can benefit from a dedicated period of time each day with a 20 minute minimum (I do an hour) of meditation, focused relaxation/breathing, or prayer. I know that particularly for working mothers with young children it is difficult to make time available, but many people do. Too many of us have been deceived by Madison Avenue, Hollywood and politicians regarding the myth of the "American Dream" which is really the American Rat Race.
Because I'm hearing impaired and am unable to hear your You Tube video, I'll sum up my opinion (just as good as any You Tube opinion). Those who bash psychiatry the most like Scientologists, are the ones who need it the most.
Psychiatry works for those who are willing to put in the effort to change themselves. It happens over, and over, and over. Those who don't wish to change, don't - like Scientologists.
Interesting how the thread has been psychiatry which is what my post was that you are responding to and how you so slyly changed the subject.
You know, no one knows how many thousands of people are killed by alternative medicine. (Americans spend $33 billion a year on it, not including vitamin supplements.) You know why? Because there are no alternative practitioners who can sign a death certificate and by the time you reach the morgue no one has a clue as to whether you were personally utilizing alternative medicine or not.
All I've go to say is that for all the folks out there who claim they will never go to a doctor - I hope you have a card in your wallet or purse specifying that request just in case of an accident and you are injured because if you don't, that's exactly where you are headed.
One very important factor that all of that "death by doctor" BS totally ignores is the fact that Americans (and the industrialized world in general) are living longer - in spite of the epidemic of the SAD diet (and I agree that it is bad), obesity and Type II diabetes and the other ills that go with it. Death by cancer is also decreasing. That in mind, the USA still isn't up to the standards of many other countries regarding longevity but it continues to see increases in that area all the time.
Your link is just more proof of the greed of practitioners - regardless of who they are and they are not better in their sales promotions than the pharmaceuticals.
"I am not against conventional doctors or pharmaceutical drugs. What I object to is that they don't allow any competition with alternative Science based medicine."
That was not the impression that I have perceived from your previous and many other posts. From your statement above, I think that actually we are in significant agreement in that regard.
What I took significant exception to was your link that provided the usual Scientology bash of psychiatry (I think so, as I said I can't hear well enough to listen). Psychiatry is far from perfect, but so is every professional category on the planet, yet that shouldn't prevent people from seeking professional help of any kind but you have to research the professional provider you plan to hire in any area. It's only common sense. I used the Scientology analogy previously and will continue to do so because the very ones who bash psychiatry are generally the ones who are nuts themselves and Scientology proves it. They provide an e-meter, "auditing" and programming/hypnosis of their members to "cure" mental issues or more correctly to correct "improper thinking." (Yes, I had a friend who went through the Scientology program who tried to get me to join.) My point is, if that's all the psychiatry bashers have for an alternative they have pretty lame reasoning for avoiding psychiatry. I find that true for most folks who bash the profession as a whole.
When real science discovers the validity of alternative medicine, they generally incorporate it into the mainstream - and Omega 3 is a recent example of that.
You continuously, over and over again, evade the topic of this thread which is psychiatry. My reference to Scientology is that you have the identical view of psychiatry that they have, and I've pointed out many times that psychiatry does work - but those who make it work participate in the solution. Your attempted association of Scientologists and the millions of people who use alternative medicine is a sick view of reality.
Not one of your links provides any scientific foundation for alternative medicine. Not one. Just because millions of people are spending 33 billions of dollars annually in the USA on alternative medicine doesn't mean that science in any way supports it. Ten years and $2.5 billion dollars worth of study have found that most alternative medicine is no better than a placebo. They have found some things to beneficial, and I have too - but your links have no supporting evidence whatsoever.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/31190909/
BETHESDA, Md. - Ten years ago the government set out to test herbal and other alternative health remedies to find the ones that work. After spending $2.5 billion, the disappointing answer seems to be that almost none of them do.
Echinacea for colds. Ginkgo biloba for memory. Glucosamine and chondroitin for arthritis. Black cohosh for menopausal hot flashes. Saw palmetto for prostate problems. Shark cartilage for cancer. All proved no better than dummy pills in big studies funded by the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine. The lone exception: ginger capsules may help chemotherapy nausea.
As for therapies, acupuncture has been shown to help certain conditions, and yoga, massage, meditation and other relaxation methods may relieve symptoms like pain, anxiety and fatigue.
However, the government also is funding studies of purported energy fields, distance healing and other approaches that have little if any biological plausibility or scientific evidence.
Taxpayers are bankrolling studies of whether pressing various spots on your head can help with weight loss, whether brain waves emitted from a special "master" can help break cocaine addiction, and whether wearing magnets can help the painful wrist problem, carpal tunnel syndrome.
The acupressure weight-loss technique won a $2 million grant even though a small trial of it on 60 people found no statistically significant benefit — only an encouraging trend that could have occurred by chance. The researcher says the pilot study was just to see if the technique was feasible.
"You expect scientific thinking" at a federal science agency, said R. Barker Bausell, author of "Snake Oil Science" and a research methods expert at the University of Maryland, one of the agency's top-funded research sites. "It's become politically correct to investigate nonsense."
Many scientists say that unconventional treatments hold promise and deserve serious study, but that the federal center needs to be more skeptical and selective.
"There's not all the money in the world and you have to choose" what most deserves tax support, said Barrie Cassileth, integrative medicine chief at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
"Many of the studies that have been funded I would not have funded because they seem irrational and foolish — studies on distant healing by prayer and energy healing, studies that are based on precepts and ideas that are contrary to what is known in terms of human physiology and disease," she said.
In an interview last year, shortly after becoming the federal center's new director, Dr. Josephine Briggs said it had a strong research record, and praised the many "big name" scientists who had sought its grants. She conceded there were no big wins from its first decade, other than a study that found acupuncture helped knee arthritis. That finding was called into question when a later, larger study found that sham treatment worked just as well.
"The initial studies were driven by some very strong enthusiasms, and now we're learning about how to layer evidence" and to do more basic science before testing a particular supplement in a large trial, said Briggs, who trained at Ivy League schools and has a respected scientific career.
"There are a lot of negative studies in conventional medicine," and the government's outlay is small compared to drug company spending, she added.
However, critics say that unlike private companies that face bottom-line pressure to abandon a drug that flops, the federal center is reluctant to admit a supplement may lack merit — despite a strategic plan pledging not to equivocate in the face of negative findings.
Echinacea is an example. After a large study by a top virologist found it didn't help colds, its fans said the wrong one of the plant's nine species had been tested. Federal officials agreed that more research was needed, even though they had approved the type used in the study.
"There's been a deliberate policy of never saying something doesn't work. It's as though you can only speak in one direction," and say a different version or dose might give different results, said Dr. Stephen Barrett, a retired physician who runs Quackwatch, a web site on medical scams.
Critics also say the federal center's research agenda is shaped by an advisory board loaded with alternative medicine practitioners. They account for at least nine of the board's 18 members, as required by its government charter. Many studies they approve for funding are done by alternative therapy providers; grants have gone to board members, too.
"It's the fox guarding the chicken coop," said Dr. Joseph Jacobs, who headed the Office of Alternative Medicine, a smaller federal agency that preceded the center's creation. "This is not science, it's ideology on the part of the advocates."
Briggs defended their involvement.
"If you're going to do a study on acupuncture, you're going to need acupuncture expertise," she said. These therapists "are very much believers in what they do," not unlike gastroenterologists doing a study of colonoscopy, and good study design can guard against bias, she said.
The center was handed a flawed mission, many scientists say.
Congress created it after several powerful members claimed health benefits from their own use of alternative medicine and persuaded others that this enormously popular field needed more study. The new center was given $50 million in 1999 (its budget was $122 million last year) and ordered to research unconventional therapies and nostrums that Americans were using to see which ones had merit.
That is opposite how other National Institutes of Health agencies work, where scientific evidence or at least plausibility is required to justify studies, and treatments go into wide use after there is evidence they work — not before.
"There's very little basic science behind these things. Most of it begins with a tradition, or personal testimony and people's beliefs, even as a fad. And then pressure comes: 'It's being popular, it's being used, it should be studied.' It turns things upside down," said Dr. Edward Campion, a senior editor who reviews alternative medicine research submitted to the New England Journal of Medicine.
That reasoning was used to justify the $2 million weight-loss study, approved in 2007. It will test Tapas acupressure, devised by Tapas Fleming, a California acupuncturist. Use of her trademarked method requires employing people she certifies, and the study needs eight.
It involves pressing on specific points on the face and head — the inner corners of the eyes are two — while focusing on a problem. Dr. Charles Elder, a Kaiser Permanente physician who runs an herbal and ayurvedic medicine clinic in Portland, Ore., is testing whether it can prevent dieters from regaining lost weight.
Say a person comes home and is tempted by Twinkies on the table. The solution: Start acupressure "and say something like 'I have an uncontrollable Twinkie urge,"' Elder said. Then focus on an opposite thought, like "I'm in control of my eating."
In Chinese medicine, the pressure is said to release natural energy in a place in the body "responsible for transforming animal desire into higher thoughts," Elder said.
In a federally funded pilot study, 30 dieters who were taught acupressure regained only half a pound six months later, compared with over three pounds for a comparison group of 30 others. However, the study widely missed a key scientific standard for showing that results were not a statistical fluke.
The pilot trial was just to see if the technique was feasible, Elder said. The results were good enough for the federal center to grant $2.1 million for a bigger study in 500 people that is under way now.
Alternative medicine research also is complicated by the subjective nature of many of the things being studied. Pain, memory, cravings, anxiety and fatigue are symptoms that people tolerate and experience in widely different ways.
Take a question like, "Does yoga work for back pain?" said Margaret Chesney, a psychologist who is associate director of the federally funded Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of Maryland.
"What kind of yoga? What kind of back pain?" And what does it mean to "work" — to help someone avoid surgery, hold a job or need less medication?
Some things — the body meridians that acupuncturists say they follow, or energy forces that healers say they manipulate — cannot be measured, and many scientists question their existence.
Studying herbals is tough because they are not standardized as prescription drugs are required to be. One brand might contain a plant's flowers, another its seeds and another, stems and leaves, in varying amounts.
There are 150 makers of black cohosh "and probably no two are exactly the same, and probably some people are putting sawdust in capsules and selling it," said Norman Farnsworth, a federally funded herbal medicine researcher at the University of Illinois at Chicago.
Even after a careful study, "you know one thing more precise and firm about what that agent did in that population with that outcome measurement, but you don't necessarily know the whole gamut of its effectiveness," as the echinacea study showed, Briggs said.
The center posts information on supplements and treatments on its Web site, and has a phone line for the public to ask questions — even when the answer is that not enough is known to rule in or rule out benefit or harm.
"I hope we are building knowledge and at least an informed consumer," Briggs said.
"#107689,
I agree with Jurplesman.
Scientology for one thing is a cult................."
Then you are in 100% agreement with me. Jurplesman has stated on this and other forums that psychiatry doesn't work. That isn't true. My only references to Scientology prior to the last post have been in relation to psychiatry - it is Jurplesman who has brought it up in relation to alternative medicine.
"Nutritional Medicine however is effective in the treatment of Schizophrenia.................."
Your link says that it is "...A BIOCHEMICAL IMBALANCE." Well now, welcome to the party. Repressed emotions create toxins in the brain and you wish to treat it with diet? It's no different than taking an SSRI prescription to "cure" the problem but it is not treating the source. Western Society is caught up in an oral fixation.
You free the body of toxins by healing the mind:
http://www.redirectingselftherapy.com/toxicmind.html
http://www.amazon.com/Mindbody-Prescription-Healing-Body-Pain/dp/0446675156#noop
The repressed emotions which create toxins in the brain actually cause cancer and a host of other illnesses.
http://www.altmd.com/Specialists/Counseling-Hypnosis-Reiki-Holistic-Healing/B...
Unresolved emotional issues cause disease:
http://chronicillness.suite101.com/article.cfm/the_mindbody_connection
Proper diet and nutrition are beneficial for many things but they do not cure emotional issues - with only one exception that I know of, and that is Omega 3 supplementation. By using nutrition alone you are only treating a symptom and not the underlying suppression of emotions and you will continue to walk through life in a straight jacket.
"Psychiatry generally is Junk-Science..........."
Gee, that's exactly what Scientology says. Actually, psychiatry is an alternative medicine. It is very recent and has been slammed since its conception. It isn't perfect - but it can and does work, but the individual has to take responsibility for their condition and work toward a mental solution.
"Your post is entirely discredited just by mentioning Dr Stephen Barrett of Quackwatch................"
Where did I quote Barrett? The statement that he was never board certified and flunked his test is an out and out lie - something that real quacks have to do in order to promote their own irrational beliefs.
"In addition, mainstream studies of Alternatives are biased and have predetermined outcomes."
Paranoia is an irrational mental condition based on fear and it's showing bright and clear in your statement above.
"You
have a lot to learn it seems.
Chrisb1."
Well
Chrisb1 I've cured long-term depression and suicidal PTSD - through meditation,
and I've cured prostate cancer with alternative medicine. Yes, I'm still
learning but what I've learned over and over again is that those who slam
psychiatry out of hand are the ones who need it the most.
"Indeed, Schizophrenia is a biochemical imbalance; that is a
biochemical imbalance and not an emotional imbalance.
The hub of the matter is whether this biochemical imbalance has its roots in
biochemistry and of a physiological origin, or whether this imbalance is of an
emotional/psychosomatic origin. A case of whether the chicken or the egg comes
first.
It is established that Schizophrenia can be treated successfully via
Orthomolecular means by using Vitamin B3 and other nutrients. There are
Scientific references at the end of each article in support of this
approach..........."
Actually, it is psychological/mind/spirit in origin. Again, Western Culture is so orally oriented that we have created a generation of obesity and whether you take a pill for your schiz or whether you take "nutrition" for it - you will never get to the source. I'm in no way denying that nutrition is beneficial, but then about 95% of Americans can benefit from nutrition.
You will find schiz mentioned at the site below, but what the author - and major scientific studies have found is that repressed anger in particular cause the chemical imbalances. (By the way, one symptom of repressed emotions is intellectualizing everything - instead of allowing yourself to have feelings - a common problem with Western males.) If you free your repressed anger and emotions - your mind will cure your toxicity - it has happened many times over.
http://www.neurovector.com/depression.html
All children are born with an instinctive fight or flight reaction, which is Nature's gift for survival. We use this reaction throughout life to get our needs met and to avoid danger. Anger is expressed instinctively as a part of this reaction.
The cry of a newborn child is an expression of anger. When parents mistreat or neglect their children, they usually cause them to suppress their justifiable anger. When the anger that accompanies the fight or flight reaction is continually suppressed, a toxicosis develops in the brain consisting of the neurotransmitter that processes anger.
This is the source of future depression, emotional disorders, and addictions. It does not mean our parents were abusive people in the usual sense. It takes very little to cause this toxicosis.
"I do not doubt that repressed emotions can create toxins within the
brain and the body generally, but there seems to be very little evidence that
"talk-therapy" or psychotherapy/psychiatry has any therapeutic value
and is even dangerous.............."
Research has discovered that repressed emotions, particularly repressed anger, create toxins in the body. Just because you doubt it in now way makes it true. Your statement is a complete lie and is more evidence of the mass paranoia in our society. We in the USA are the wealthiest, most abundant, and freest nation in human history and we are also the most paranoid. You statement proves it.
PBS had a recent series on mental illness and I paid close attention to the part which followed two veterans with PTSD. One was a Desert Storm veteran who refused psychiatric treatment and continued his downhill spiral. The other was a Marine Viet Nam veteran who had dealt with PTSD for 30 years and had lost jobs, become addicted to alcohol and street drugs, and was even homeless at times. He had tried all sorts of things - including psychiatry for his condition with no beneficial results. He then entered a program at the University of Pennsylvania school of psychiatry which uses Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and within four months (17 sessions) he was completely cured - without a change in nutrition. He said that he felt better than he had at any time in his life. The Veteran's Administration has had significant success with CBT and PTSD which was once thought to be difficult to cure, but they are getting more and more responses all the time.
More about mind creating toxins:
http://www.redirectingselftherapy.com/toxicmind.html
Abstract -- The continual suppression of emotions during fight or flight reactions results in atrophy and endogenous toxicosis in noradrenergic neurons. Diminished synaptic levels of norepinephrine (noradrenaline)are associated with depression. During periodic detoxification crises excess norepinephrine and other metabolites flood synapses. The norepinephrine overexcites postsynaptic neurons and causes symptoms ranging from mild anxiety to violent behavior. Some of the other metabolites, which may include dopamine, epinephrine (adrenaline), serotonin, gamma-aminobutyric acid, peptides, amino acids, and various metabolic waste products, are bound by noradrenergic receptors and alter neurotransmission. When they prevent norepinephrine from exciting postsynaptic neurons, depression returns. A mechanism is proposed for the binding of norepinephrine and for the effects of the other metabolites, many of which have been thought to be neurotransmitters. The diverse receptor proteins presumed to be specific for false neurotransmitters may instead encode specific memories. The shift in depressive and excitatory behavior is characteristic of nearly all nervous and mental disorders, including addictions, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, and psychosomatic disorders. When toxins accumulate in regions of the brain that control specific activities, the symptoms observed will be related to those activities, giving rise to supposedly distinct disorders that represent the same detoxification process. Recovery can be facilitated by therapy and self-help measures that involve the releasing and redirecting of repressed emotions.
http://www.toxic-energy-healing-therapy.com/toxic-energy-mind.html
......emotional experiences are not negative in themselves; in fact, they are vital for our survival.
It's only when these feelings are denied, so that they cannot be... processed through the system and released, that the situation becomes toxic…And the more we deny them, the greater the ultimate toxicity, which often takes the form of an explosive release of pent-up emotion. That's when emotion can be damaging to both oneself and others, because its expression becomes overwhelming, sometimes violent.""So my advice is to express all of your feelings, regardless of whether you think they are acceptable, and then let them go…When your emotions are moving and your chemicals flowing, you will experience feelings of freedom, hopefulness, joy, because you are in a healthy, "whole" state."
Barret was mentioned in an article about $2.5 billion dollars spent researching alternative medicine - I didn't mention him, the article about research mentioned him, and your paranoid reaction is to throw out $2.5 billion and ten years of research because Barret is in name in the article? You still didn't address the lie that was in your quote regarding his certification.
"Your comment........
"those who slam psychiatry out of hand are the ones who need it the
most".
Is a comment based on ignorance.
You have absolutely no idea as to what you are talking about................."
You say I have no idea what I'm talking about? You've got it backwards. Your link is to psychiatric drugs, not to therapy. The two are not necessarily connected - except in your head.
My comment is not based on ignorance, it is based on many years of
observation.
"If Schizophrenia is of a psychological/mind/spirit origin, this does not explain why those who have had this illness go on to lead full, normal and healthy lives, after receiving biochemical treatments exclusively."
The mind can easily continue to produce the imbalances and your "biochemical" treatments are not treating the origin. You haven't cited any source for your "cure" statement.
"GP's, who usually prescribe mind-changing prescription drugs to
patients with emotional/mental health challenges such as depression, and only
then offer psychotherapy as a way of releasing suppressed emotions and feelings
that they believe to be are the root cause of their mental-health issues.
This approach didn't work for me, and for those many people that I associated
with as a result of depression and other cognitive issues.
Those who elected to take the Orthomolecular route exclusively (as I did) are
today totally free from their mental health issues. A healthy mind in a healthy
body."
Here in the USA GP's also administer mind-altering drugs and it's epidemic. I in no way support that at all. There are many psychiatrists who do not use them in their practice. Glad that you took care of your depression. I did too, with meditation - with NO orthomolecular nor nutritional support of any kind. Once more, your statement that "Those who elected to take the Orthomolecular route exclusively (as I did) are today totally free from their mental health issues" does not cite legitimate studies to that effect. Meditation is known to cure depression - in fact it is recommended even by allopathic medicine in many cases, if it is the kind that frees repressed emotions. If your route does not address repressed emotions then you are only treating the symptoms and not the source and your method is anything but holistic. Besides, if you do not deal with your repressed emotions, particularly anger, you continue to walk through life without experiencing it.
"Leaving aside traditional and conventional approaches in the
treatment of psychiatric disorders, and which I insist are nothing more than
next to useless, I do not doubt the efficacy of mind/emotional treatments such
as CBT, EFT, NLP and so on, where I am sure they should have a more prominent
role in resolving mental health issues.
What I do believe to be a mistake is that these cognitive therapies are used in
isolation and not in conjunction with an Orthomolecular and Nutritional
approach."
CBT is a very conventional approach to psychiatry. You are not keeping up on what's happening in that field. Psychiatry can and does work - if people cooperate. You can deny all you wish, but your denial still doesn't make it true.
"By resolving the physical/nutritional issues of the body/mind as a priority, then many emotional/mental issues are resolved (as in my own case) and without recourse to cognitive behavioral techniques: which I am sure are of distinct benefit as a secondary or (in conjunction) measure for some."
Like I've said before, you've got it backwards. I know far too many people personally who have overcome depression through both psychiatry and/or meditation - without any nutritional changes.
"As a western male I was not expressing my anger in my previous
posts, merely pointing out how we differentiate in our first-line approach to
mental/emotional/spiritual and physical health problems, which all operate in
unison and should not be viewed in isolation.
I do agree with your comment however, that repressed emotions and anger in
particular can create toxins via placing undue stresses on the body."
Between your picture and your posts (here and elsewhere) I can tell you that you are one very angry male. I can tell you things about your childhood that you have buried and forgotten and even the things you remember that you will deny are affecting you.
"You seem to be quite fond of the word "paranoid", but you
did actually mention Stephen Barret in your post as part of this $2.5 billion
pseudo-scientific research into alternative medicine/therapies that came to the
wrong conclusions.
Perhaps these researchers would like to visit curezone and witness all of the
testimonials of health-recovery: they could have put that money to better use
(or better still) given it to us.
To give one example: within the last few years a medical team within the USA did
some research into the alleged prophylactic use of Vitamin D3 in Breast Cancer ;
the study involved over 1000 women over a period of approx' 2 years. Their
conclusion was that it had no benefit. The problem lay in the dosage used which
was of a "minimal" amount, instead of the "optimum" dosage
which current esoteric research has recommended.
An erroneous conclusion with a flawed study, and given full publicity.
Pseudo-science at its very very best."
You totally missed my post that women who repress their emotions were five more times likely to develop breast cancer than those who didn't. Even cancer is caused by repressed emotions. I DID NOT mention Barret - the article that I cited and included in my post did. Your attitude and written comments regarding psychiatry are paranoid. I do not in the least bit call a decade of $2.5 billion, government financed research to be pseudo-science. It is amazing how you can look at real research and flippantly call it pseudo-science - just because it doesn't agree with your placebo effect results. The placebo effect has been found to be as high as 60% effective in some scientific studies and is commonly around 30% effective - all in scientific studies.
Regarding Barret you posted:
""Dr Barrett, although claiming to be a retired Psychiatrist, was
never able to become "Board Certified." He failed his test. Also,
Barrett gave up his MD license in 1993. I suspect he just couldn't keep up with
new things. His employment record shows he NEVER was able to hold a full-time
job - and his claim to "Psychiatric fame" was his part-time (4 to 8
hours a week) employment at a Pennsylvania Mental Hospital - from 1978 through
1993. From 1976 through 1978 he COULD NOT GET a paying
job"................."
Those are lies. He WAS board certified until he retired from active practice and then he let that certification lapse.
You and many Westerners (of which I am one) are hung up on body concepts. We (me too) have been programmed that bodies and their emotions and normal functions are somehow evil and we deny or suppress them - including our sexuality. In the process we are creating illness and despair - with our minds/spirit, even in this age of technological advances in every area including medicine. The spirit/mind is more powerful than any drug or supplement and the "placebo" effect proves it over and over again. I've mentioned before that proper nutrition can benefit about 95% of Americans and that it is well known and researched that Omega 3 in the form of fish oil can cure depression in some cases, but to cite is as the origin of neurological problems is complete denial of the fact that suppression of emotions is the leading cause of depression and this has been well known for decades.
Learn what your emotions are saying to you and learn to express them, including anger and hate, and when you do you can also experience real love and real joy. By the way, everyone has hate. We create it daily and we need to deal with it daily. If you don't believe that fact, then you are lying to yourself - not to me, but yourself.
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