Guest guest Posted June 11, 2007 Report Share Posted June 11, 2007 Hi Lorreta, I appreciate your passion and your love of " natural " medicine. Beyond that we can agree to disagree, however I'd like to try and clarify some of your claims. Obviously there are good and bad in every kind profession. Graduating from one of the 6 Naturopathic medical schools in the US and Canada does not ensure that you can do no wrong. What does " graduating " from a diploma mill or some " naturopathic " correspondence school ensure? Certainly one thing, it ensues that the person holding this title has not been trained as a doctor. As I've said, there are lay practitioners of all persuasions that practice in the healing arts. I've never suggested they are bad or good. I appreciate people like Tony and his passion. I very much appreciate that he's made Dr. Ozel's recipe available. Something that I dreamed about for years. I was much the same before medical school, and certainly not as accomplished. I also appreciate that he doesn't try to pass himself off as a doctor. He could easily purchase a degree as well. But why doesn't he? I'll let Tony answer that one, if he chooses. My only issue is over the misappropriation of the term doctor and the title of Naturopathic doctor. Regardless of your selective dictionary interpretations, the word doctor has a meaning and implication. Here is one dictionary definition: " a person who has earned one of the highest academic degrees (as a PhD) conferred by a university. " This is certainly what most people understand the word doctor to mean. More so, when discussing a doctor of medicine, a doctor of healing if you will, I believe the following dictionary definition is what is commonly understood by almost everyone: " a person skilled or specializing in healing arts; especially : one (as a physician, dentist, or veterinarian) who holds an advanced degree and is licensed to practice. " Do you think a graduate from Clayton or some diploma mill has earned " one of the highest academic degrees " or even " hold an advanced degree " ? If not, why do you call yourself a doctor? You asked me, " Why are you so protective of this " title " ? I'll tell you why. The title means something. I have done the work to earn the title. I think that's obvious. But what I can't understand is why are you so protective of a title you have clearly not earned. You state, " So many docs that have all these letters behind their names (letters that they PAY to get and do not require even one more hour of education!) and they are no more teachers than anything. " The only people I'm aware of that pay to get letters behind their names without requiring a proper education are the diploma mill " naturopaths " . It seems that your familiarity with the history of my profession - Naturopathic medicine - is somewhat lacking. I hope this helps put things in perspective for you. First of all Bastyr is not the only Naturopathic medical school - there are 4 in the US. It is also not the first Naturopathic medical school in the last 30 years. Naturopathic medicine has a distinct and clear history in this country. Benedict Lust originated the term and created the profession at the turn of the last century. Lust tirelessly lobbied for licensure laws. These laws required a 4-year residential medical education. There were as many as 20 Naturopathic medical schools in the early 1900's. You can read the original laws in the library at the National College of Naturopathic Medicine (NCNM) which was founded in the 1950's before Bastyr University which began in 1978. More senior doctors than I, some of whom were my teachers, were all taught by Naturopathic doctors - like Dr. Bastyr - who graduated from these original 4-year medical schools at the turn of the last century. Even in the 1970's there was no such thing as naturopathic correspondence schools or terms like " traditional naturopath " . If you want to read about the history of Natuopathic medicine " Nature Doctors " is one of the best resources. With all due respect to you, regardless of the name on your correspondence school diploma, you are not part of this history. You've had no teachers that were taught by the original Naturopathic doctors in this country. You are certainly not a doctor with respect to the way the word is understood by everyone. You are certainly not a Naturopathic doctor with regard to the history of this profession. I don't say this as an insult, but rather because it's true. Again this doesn't mean you are not knowledgeable, that you are incapable of helping sick people, that you don't have some form of education. You're just not a Naturopathic doctor. The state of Texas does not condone your profession. It is illegal for you to diagnose any medical condition, to preform physical examinations or to treat any medical condition. As long as you don't do that Texas is fine with you. That doesn't sound like a doctor to me. You've also suggested that Naturopathic doctors are somehow allopathic because of our education. Clearly you don't know anything about our education. With regard to training in natural therapies, you're entire education at Clayton requires less hours of study than we receive in just one modality, like homeopathy. We are physicians. This means we are trained in detail to diagnose with modern laboratory and imaging techniques and to perform physical examinations. That we are thoroughly educated in the basic sciences, like anatomy, physiology, biochemistry and pathology. This has nothing to do with using drugs to treat disease. This education doesn't make one allopathic. Undoubtedly, my education has significantly helped me to better help my patients. You state this is nothing but worthless regurgitation of information. Even worse, you imply that this make me less of a Naturopath. This sort of anti-intellectual, complete rejection of science and education is difficult to comprehend. I let your point of view speak for itself. I was much like yourself before medical school. I knew a lot about nutrition and alternative medicine. I read lot's of lay health books - much like the curriculum at the Clayton. I've seen it both ways and I can assure there's a huge difference. While I have received extensive training in pharmacology, it doesn't mean that's how I treat my patients. Since many patients are already taking medications, don't you think it would be helpful to have some background in this area? Isn't it appropriate that I have a good understanding of how to discontinue a medication safely? Should I have to be beholden to an MD's to help me treat my patients? If a patient comes to me for an upper respiratory infection which does not respond to natural therapies, should I have to tell them to go to their MD and get treated with antibiotics? Isn't better that I have the skill to determine when natural therapies are not working and prescribe medications when they are needed? Isn't it better, since I am knowledgeable about the natural substances that can significantly enhance the effectiveness of antibiotics and protect them from the side effects of these medications? I'm not so arrogant as to completely reject allopathic medicine. Should I have let my HIV patients drop dead because of some zealot beliefs? They died like flies before the new medications. Natural treatments alone didn't cut it. Anyone working working with alternative therapies for AIDS will tell you the same. That doesn't mean alt therapies don't have great benefits for HIV/AIDS and in combination with medications. I use the safest most effective treatments and sometimes this is a medication. For me this is about helping patients that are sick, not a religious conviction. You're welcome to your point of view, but the complete rejection of education, science and all conventional medicine dose not make one a Naturopathic Doctor. It does make some people like Hulda Clark - one of your colleagues - a criminal in my oppinion. You can read my previous post on my experience with HIV. You are what you are, I wish you would come up with an appropriate name for it. I think I've made a very clear argument as to why the words " doctor " and " Naturopath " have nothing to do with the kind of training you've had. What exactly is the reason you refer to yourself as a Naturopathic doctor? I have to assume your intention is to mislead the public. Granted, I understand that you were unaware of our history and therefore you didn't know any better. But still, to use the word doctor, I see no excuse for that. Your community of lay healers and diploma mill frauds are taking the term Naturopathic doctor and bastardizing it. You're lowering the standards and dignity of the profession. Even the word doctor no longer suggests someone that has earned the highest academic degree. Now any old certificate can make someone a doctor. Do what ever it is you think is right to do to heal people, but why do you insist on calling yourself a naturopathic doctor? Legitimate Naturopathic doctors have made monumental achievements in elevating the perception and awareness of natural therapies. While our standards of education don't automatically make us great healers, it's to our credit, not our detriment as you suggest. Our standards provide the public with some assurance. We can speak to the mainstream medical community on the same level. They are more likely to listen to what we have to say and respect the therapies we use because of that. We are involved in the research that provides evidence for the benefit and success of natural therapies. We are working effectively to increase public awareness, respect and scientific support for natural therapies. People like yourself don't fight us because we are allopaths - we are not. That's a conveinent excuse and a lie. You fight us because you're making money with a title that means something. You want to use our reputation to your own advantage and you don't deserve the reputation or the title. This is fraud. At the same time you dirty the good names we've built with your lack of training and standards. I never said fake ND's are rich. It's you professional organizations that have far more money than ours. If it wasn't for Steve Bing's support in California's licensing efforts were certainly would have lost to the fake ND's, NOT the MD's. There are only 2,000 or so legitimate Naturopathic doctors in the US. There are tens of thousands mail order " naturopaths " . You're also wrong about Burzynski. You see his treatment doesn't work MOST of the time. I know this from experience with patients. He has always recommended conventional therapies when indicated. He not a religious fanatic. He's a doctor and knows what to do when his treatment isn't enough. I've explained in detail how much better things are today for alternative therapies. It sounds like you would prefer we went back to the 70's rather than see the positive changes and progress we've made. With your attacks on legitimate Naturopathic doctors you're certainly doing your best to bring us back to those times. Though, I know this is out of ignorance rather than intention. I've said more than enough, but since you're not familiar with Benedict Lust I'll give him the last word. I sincerely wish you the best. Michael Uzick, ND In a word, Naturopathy stands for the reconciling, harmonizing and unifying of nature, humanity and God. Fundamentally therapeutic because men need healing; elementally educational because men need teaching; ultimately inspirational because men need empowering, it encompasses the realm of human progress and destiny. - Benedict Lust - It was Lust who tirelessly lobbied for the first licensure laws. At this time there was no " traditional naturopath " vs. " naturopathic physician " . These licensure laws (you can read the original laws in the NCNM library) called for 4-year residential medical education. There were as many as 20 4-years schools. You can read about many of them in the NCNM library. Lust established at least one. Lindlahr established one. My older teachers all graduated from one of these 4-years schools. When I started NCNM, in 1975, there were no correspondence schools, and there was no one who claimed that there were " traditional naturopaths " trained in some fashion other than 4-year schools. At the beginning of the 1900's, when Lust was first beginning to create a national profession, he provided a kind of correspondence education for MD's who wanted to become naturopathic practitioners. This process rapidly ceased as licensure laws came into effect. What does doctor really mean? It should mean “teacher”. In fact at dictionary.net the first definition is: 1. A teacher; one skilled in a profession, or branch of knowledge learned man. Why are you so protective of this “title”? It has been the last couple of generations that have made doctors equal to God. So many docs that have all these letters behind their names (letters that they PAY to get and do not require even one more hour of education!) and they are no more teachers than anything. They want you to believe everything they say, not ask too many questions and be impressed with all they know. They say things like “well, according to scientific evidence” or “I don’t see any clinical trials to indicate any effectiveness.” This allopathic “science” is one of many reasons as to why we have so many sick people today. There is a huge fraud rate with clinical trials. And just because a doc (natural or allopathic) hasn’t actually seen something work, doesn’t mean that it will or it will not. Everyone is different. At 01:47 PM 6/10/2007, you wrote: I would like to give some other thoughts to Dr. U’s comments. There are almost always two sides to every story and I hope to be effective in giving out the other side. If I come across as being very passionateI am. I am a seven year stage III colon cancer survivor using natural medicine (other than surgery to get the tumor out and 1 month of “preventative chemo”whatever that meansthey wanted me to do 6 months but I knew I wouldn’t make it if I followed their recommendations.). Just as many of you are, I am passionate about true natural medicine because I saw, first hand, what the allopathic community had to offer when it comes to degenerative disease and truthfully, their track-record stinks. The path God has me on has been nothing short of amazing. I am now a non-licensed naturopath (Texas does not require licensing) whose desire is to help people to get healthy and stay healthy using natural means. I did my internship under one of the best alternative-medicine (self-taught and not afraid to think-out-of-the-box) oncologists in America…he is also a chiropractor and un-licensed ND. Believe me when I say a lot of eyebrows were raised when friends/family found out who my “treating doctor” was. <smile> Had I stayed the path of conventional medicine with my oncologist who had ties to MD Anderson, I would probably not be here today. I have been taught “how” to research and “how” to recognize modalities that can work---even when others may say “no way”. What we must realize is that everyone is different and there are no magic bullets in natural medicine OR conventional medicine. However, the body has great healing capabilities when supported correctly and that is what I want to teach people. I want people to know that they can get well and be healthy without the use of drugs, surgery and radiation. We are fortunate to have blood and lab testing; however, no one should allow a piece of paper to be the end-all in their life. Labs are not consistent and are often wrong. The body does not get sick from a lack of synthetic chemicals. Yes, our trauma care medicine is the best in the world and I am thankful for it. Once in a blue moon there is a need for pharmaceuticalsbut this is usually very short-lived. So, again, yes I am passionate because I know what it is like to be sick and to come fact-to-face with death at the age of 45. Not many health care professionals really know what it is like to be very sick. But even better, I KNOW what it is like to regain your health. We must teach truthful preventative natural medicine and we must educate. Education empowers people and fear controls people. I, like Dr. Lorraine Day, can say that cancer doesn’t scare me any more. There have always been cures for every degenerative disease, but our allopathic community would have us believe otherwise---no cures, just managing care. Why would naturopaths even “want” to be associated with this type of philosophy? I want to help take the “fear” out of words like cancer and to help people realize that there is ALWAYS hope and ALWAYS an answer. Does everyone get well who uses natural medicine? No. Just as most don’t get well using conventional medicine. The difference? Natural medicine does not harm the body; but builds it up. Conventional medicine harms the body and only treats symptoms. This is one reason I joined this group, to learn more about Oleander and it viability as an alternative treatment for disease. It is part of my research and part of what I love to do. Dr. UI do not say anything to purposefully cause offense, but only to offer another side of the story. You have been passionate and so will I. I realize that you will not agree and that’s ok. I respect your right to your opinions, but disagree completely, just as you will most likely disagree with me. I am not saying in any shape or form that you are not authentic or not effective at what you do and this is not an attack on you or your philosophy. It is beneficial for the list to get another perspective and then people can do their own research and come to their own conclusion as to what is best for their situation. Dr. U’s comments in black and mine in purple. I never suggested or implied that the organizations representing these diploma mills have more lobbying influence than pharmaceutic companies. I said that the fake ND's et al. have largely put forth the money and effort to stop state licensing of formally trained Naturopathic physicians. It is a known fact that Bastyr has tried very hard to become the ONLY college to seemingly graduate “accepted” naturopaths---whatever that means. They have lobbied to get everything on “their terms” so they can set the rules and they have been un-tiring in this effort. This is nothing more than conventional medicine tactics. Natural medicine needs to be left alone and Bastyr has no idea what true/traditional naturopathy really consists of Just how many unlicensed natural medicine docs have hurt people to the extinct that allopathic and even some integrative docs have?? How about drugs vs supplementation? Conventional medicine wants us to believe that when it comes to our own health, we are nothing but dumb sheep incapable of helping ourselves. They want to be “god” in this area of our lives, continually experimenting on us, hoping at some point to actually get it right. Conventional oncology is a prime example of this experimentation. Once they decide that your time is limited, they offer clinical trials to you so that they can continue to experiment on you. They know that when someone realizes they are dying, the person will do absolutely anything. By the way, it has been the “fake ND’s” that through the years have truly helped people to get well. Bastyr hasn’t been on the scene that long (28 years) and how convenient to want to be the only school acceptable and have all the students come their way. There have now been others that are “accredited” but Bastyr still wants people to think they are turning out the best. Make no mistake about it---this is very political. It's a very specific issue that mostly the people involved in working on state licensure or those working against it are aware of. The following is an article on the recent licensing in California. I think the article confirms many of my contentions - i.e. that the major opposition comes from mail order ND's. While MD's not thrilled they don't mount much of an effort against us. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2003/07/05/MN214713.DTL Below is what the article you site says. I guess because some of the naturopaths are not licensed you are calling them quacks? Just because someone can pass a test and get a license does NOT mean they will be good at what they do. There are a lot of lousy MD’s that are licensed and are not good docs or even good professionals. Although it appears headed for fast approval and the governor's signature, the bill's primary opposition comes from within the naturopathic community itself, because most practitioners don't meet the proposed license requirements, which include graduating from one of a handful of accredited four-year naturopathic colleges. It's not known how many naturopathic practitioners are working in California, but one trade group says they number in the thousands. Opponents of the bill say it is on the fast track because of generous donations to Democratic causes by Stephen Bing, a wealthy Hollywood figure and supporter of alternative medical approaches. He has given $1 million to Bastyr University in Seattle, one of just five schools worldwide whose graduates would be eligible for licensure under the proposed bill. Although many CMA members quibble with naturopathic practice, Docherty said the group had sent several members to visit Bastyr University, and they came back impressed with its program. Of course the California Medical Association would be impressed with an institution that is basically like allopathic medicine. Not much difference, so they approve. That is not an endorsement that natural medicine should be proud of. Possibly a better article to read is found at: http://naturalhealthline.com/newsletter/15oct03/licensing.htm (Be sure to read the whole article) You said that all of the opposing ND’s were rich. Looks like Bastyr was out soliciting for some pretty high bucks alsoeven in Hollywoodand were very successful. I had to grin about your comment about the rich ND’s as this is just so not true for most. Possibly they may “seem” to be rich because they use their money wisely. You also commented about Dr. Andrew Weil. While he may have helped blaze some trails for natural medicine through the media, he is very far from being “natural”. Talking about herbs and a seemingly healthy diet, does not make you knowledgeable in natural medicine. He is very allopathically minded. What I do commend him for is that he realizes the importance of mind, body and soul. Not sure if you were around during the 70s. More importantly if you were involved in the alternative health movement at the time. I was kid, but because of my parent's influence, quite aware of alternative medicine and the attacks against it. Things are dramatically different today. They were sending doctors to jail and suspending licences for using vitamins! Today there are dozens of integrative medicine departments in hospitals around the country. There are 14 states that recognize and license formally trained Naturopathic as primary care physicians. The climate is drastically different today. Integrative does not equal “true” natural medicine. If the state is willing to license a “trained” Naturopath then it most likely means they look at them as being trained allopathically and absolutely no threat to allopathic medicine. Don’t think for one minute that the state or federal government is going to say yes to true natural healthcare. It goes against the powerful lobby of Big Pharma, Big Med and Big Insurance which are just not going to allow it to happen without a HUGE fight. Are things perfect? Of course not. Are there still Quack busters and opponents of alternative medicine, sure. But it's been a long time now since Jonathan Wright, MD had his clinic surrounded by machine gun toting, flack jacketed, ATF officers pointing guns in patient's faces. That kind of stuff isn't happening anymore. There are just as many “quacks” in allopathic medicine, if not more, except they get to hide behind the AMA and their degree certificate. But just let one of them try to perform modalities that are considered advanced natural medicine or “out of the box” (treatments that would never harm the patient) and the AMA will be down on them in a New York minute. Most MD’s will not even research about health modalities that might would save their patients lives or even get them well. They get all their continuing education from the drug reps and assume that anything else is quackery. Now we have naturopaths that are following in their footsteps. Dr. U this “kind of stuff” IS still happening today. You are way out of touch with the happenings in natural medicine if you think otherwise. It’s just happening with the smaller guys now---the ones they can come in and put out of business, trash all their files and computers and ruin their reputation. The ones that don’t have the money to fight the FDA lawyers. The FDA is coming down on good supplement companies (I’m not talking about those that have pharmaceutical ties.) left and right and it all has to do with the impending threat of CODEX. They allow Big Pharma to advertise their wares on TV but yet shut companies down that even suggest that a vitamin might help with certain disease. They are doing this so that the pharmaceutical companies can eventually control all vitamins and supplements. We all need to wake up and realize that it is a real possibility that one day, soon, we may have to have a prescription to get Vitamin C and then it will not even be near therapeutic dosages. And don’t think you will get enough from your food, because if they continue, our food will be so adulterated that there will be absolutely no nutritional content at allit’s almost there now. Conventional medicine is just too big of a business to support true natural healing. The way they get around iteasyjust call them “quacks without proper education.” Which is kind-of what you have done, Dr. U. The government tried to imprison Drs. Burzynski and Gonzales for their alternative treatment against cancer. Not only are they permitted to practice freely today. The Government is funding studies of their treatments! Things are way different today. Do you know the particulars of “why” Dr. Burzynski is now being allowed to practice? Do you understand that the only way they allowed these trials was that he had to agree to use Chemo and radiation? They have been no friend to Burzynski but he is trying to play their game in order for his protocol to be given a chance. Cancer patients, looking for natural help, that have been to his clinic says that it is allopathic to the hilt. By the way, the initial visit with him for 30-45 minutes is around $850. That’s what it was in 2001 so it’s probably more now. He is playing a game that will most likely end up biting him. The FDA will not allow children who have brain cancer to use his protocol UNTIL they have perused ALL conventional means. In other words, the children must be chemo’d and radiated to an inch of their life and THEN they may try Burzynski’s treatment. So you REALLY think he is permitted to practice freely? He is totally being set up for failure so it can be said “see, Burzynski’s treatment doesn’t work after all.” There's no rub. Lay " healers " are just that. If different kinds of " healers " or " health counselors " want state licensing or government or private accreditation of some kind, I wish them all the best. Trying to pawn themselves off as doctors is an issue of fraud. What does doctor really mean? It should mean “teacher”. In fact at dictionary.net the first definition is: 1. A teacher; one skilled in a profession, or branch of knowledge learned man. Why are you so protective of this “title”? It has been the last couple of generations that have made doctors equal to God. So many docs that have all these letters behind their names (letters that they PAY to get and do not require even one more hour of education!) and they are no more teachers than anything. They want you to believe everything they say, not ask too many questions and be impressed with all they know. They say things like “well, according to scientific evidence” or “I don’t see any clinical trials to indicate any effectiveness.” This allopathic “science” is one of many reasons as to why we have so many sick people today. There is a huge fraud rate with clinical trials. And just because a doc (natural or allopathic) hasn’t actually seen something work, doesn’t mean that it will or it will not. Everyone is different. Generally speaking it takes eight years of higher education to earn a PhD. It's not so much the years, as the work required. It's really quite an achievement regardless of what field one holds their doctorate. I think we would all agree that it's not OK to simply purchase a doctorate over the Internet. What kind of person does this and tries to pass themselves off as such in the market place? If it were a diploma mill PhD in chemistry, anthropology, psychology or almost any field, I think the typical answer would be, " This kind of person is a fraud, a crook, a flim flam artist. " Yet, if it's someone pretending be a Naturopathic doctor, SOME people seem to think that's OK because they believe natural therapies. Again, your opinion (first sentence). Traditional naturopathy, of which you are not, has been around for a long, long time and was never required to come under some institution’s governing laws. There is no reason to come under law when what you do is harmless to the body. These institutions have tried to change the definition of naturopathy to include conventional medicine and have come up with the term “integrated medicine” in order to make patients “feel” like they are getting the best of both worlds. Most naturopaths trained today, in the colleges like Bastyr are drenched in allopathic medicine and philosophy. When people come to naturopaths it is usually because they are sick and tired of the allopathic philosophy of “take this med and come back in a month. Oh, that med caused constipation? Well, I’ll give you a script for something to take care of that constipation.” Before you know it, the patient is on ten different meds, all to alleviate symptoms that one of the other drugs caused. Sure, people who go through the diploma mill for any profession are certainly questionable and frauds. But you even mentioned Clayton College in one of your posts as a diploma mill. My goodness, Bastyr has really done a number on you. There are some great and VERY knowledgeable naturopaths that have come out of Clayton College and it does take time, commitment and money to finish their program and they do require internships. You are trying to make naturopathy fit into the allopathic box. In my opinion, this is sad and just one more way that the allopathic community and drug cartel is trying to smudge the line between healing medicine and medicine that keeps people sick. What would you think of homeschooling, Dr. U? I suppose that if a child is not trained in conventional schools then they are somehow lacking? Most colleges and universities now seek out home schoolers? The reason? Because they are usually more mature, have learned more, more well-rounded and are actually ready for higher learning…they are usually serious about their studies. They have received their education in a manner that is “out of the box” and not “conventional.” But they are some of the brightest students out there. Their parents went against the “flow” and produced young adults who can stand as tall or taller than their public school peers. Now, certainly not all home schoolers fall in this category, but very many do. What I am saying is that they got their education, and a good one, without doing it the way everyone else does. AND, they accomplished the same end. There is nothing sacred about sitting in a classroom for 8 hours/day---undergraduate, graduate or doctorial. There are many “ways” to obtain an education. There are a lot of people that do their research and heal themselvesand do an awesome job! They do not have the “formal” education that you are trying to sell as “the only way” but yet are mush more knowledgeable than so many licensed and non-licensed naturopaths. Licensing or going to school for 8 years does NOT insure a good “anything.” It just means you endured, met the qualifications and can take a test well. Where the rubber meets the road is when you begin helping people with their health concerns. We are in the Information Age and if you are willing to do your research you can become as knowledgeable as any one about any thing. I know lay people who know more about pharmaceuticals than many docs Solely would be an over statement. Largely would be more accurate. The fake ND's and MD's have some times joined forces. It wasn't like the MD's were welcoming the recent licensure of Naturopathic physicians in California. But the big fight comes from the fake ND's. See above. Again, there is totally another side to this. I would guess that your definition of fake ND’s is any naturopath that didn’t graduate from Bastyr or the other 4-5 “accredited” colleges. Not a good or even fair definition but certainly one that Bastyr and the AMA would like for people to believe. As I explained before, licensed Naturopathic doctors must meet the same pre-medical education requirements as conventionally trained MD's. That's 4 years of undergraduate work which includes specific course work such as 1 year of organic and inorganic chemistry, biology, physics, statistics etc. Then there are 4 years of full time medical school. Not a weekend course every month for 4 years. That's 8 years. By meeting these same pre-medical educational requirements it is supposed to make one “impressive” to people? For those who have been harmed by conventional medicine, I think they might NOT be impressed with all this “education.” When someone begins spouting off their educational achievements, I tend to run the other way. If a person has to continually remind people of their achievements, then something might be wrong. I, just as you probably do, look for results. It matters not to be about educational qualifications, unless I am having surgery. ;o) I amazes me that people will blindly go to any doctor and willingly accept what he tells them, but when they go to a natural healthcare provider they questions are endless. I’m not saying don’t ask questionseveryone should. However, I am saying “why” do we blindly believe anything an MD says to us? And they later, because we didn’t do our homework, we wonder why we aren’t getting better! Regardless, we are talking about fully trained physicians who have graduated from a post graduate 4 year medical school and passed state medical board exams. There is absolutely no comparison with an untrained mail order " ND " . I, respectfully, disagree. It’s so easy to regurgitate from books and for testsanyone can do this. But it is getting out there and practicingthat is where the education takes place, Dr. U. If you lean solely on book knowledge and allopathic thinking then patients will likely suffer. And to add one more thingmany of the “untrained” naturopaths have actually done internships under some of the most gifted minds in natural medicine. " Looking down their noses " is something subjective that perhaps some people attribute to others. Looking down your nose at an honest well meaning lay practitioner involved in some kind of natural healing is very different from looking down your nose at a dishonest but well meaning fraud. This is not a caste system. It's a matter of standards. It's a matter of achievement. Formally trained Naturopathic physicians have resurrected a system of medicine that once flourished and was brought to the brink of extinction by the AMA and government racketeering. Our modern Naturopathic medicals school are an incredible achievement and I feel beyond proud of my profession and our contribution to the advancement natural medicine in this country. Who has set the standard for an age-old professiona profession that offered people HOPE when the local doc said “no hope”. A new college named Bastyr? The modern naturopathic medical schools are NOT an incredible achievement and again are nothing more than allopathic training grounds under the guise of natural medicine. If that is where a person wants to get training then that certainly is their choice. However, when you make it sound like the only ones qualified or can use the title Dr must come from one of these colleges then you are adding to what naturopathy really is all about. You are setting qualifications that have just not played out as truth. If you want to seek health advice from an old woman in the woods that heals with roots and berries, I have no problem with that at all. I'd pay her a visit myself if I needed. If you want to seek health advice from an authentic physician formally trained in the natural healing arts, I think that's wonderful too. Isn't it absolutely fantastic that these kind of doctors are available and acknowledged by 14 states in this country? Things have change a lot since the 70's. I would definitely choose the old woman in the woods because she is much more trained in the tradition healing arts than any “authentic” physician. She obviously understands the healing properties of the body and I would bet that she hasn’t had a formal course in human anatomy and physiology. I am so glad that Texas DOES NOT license naturopaths. This is one (among many) good thing about Texas. A license can be taken away, but certification cannot which is another reason that licensing is being heavily promoted. With a license you are bound to the state/government and THEY decide if you are worthy or not. It can be very political and absolutely nothing about your true qualifications. There are a lot of good naturopaths that were not educated in the so-called accredited schools. Calling them Fakes because they don’t meet a particular person’s definition or some college’s definition is ridiculous, at best. A scenario to consider: What would happen, if one day all these conventionally trained naturopaths are called together by the government and told: “You have been trained in naturopathy and allopathic medicine. We now believe that allopathic medicine is superior in nature, so we are taking your naturopathic license away and you will now only be permitted to practice medicine in the way we deem as best. We will provide you with more allopathic education so you can be called “Doctor” but you are to cease all natural forms of medicine.” Then where does this proper education and licensing get you? Say it won’t/can’t happen? No one 20-30 years ago thought we would be fighting a mindset like CODEX. We are vastly heading in the direction to where government controls all forms of medicine/health. You see, if they can’t control us then they will make us think that the two types of medicine can co-exist. So we follow, giving them the trump card. We are just where they want us to be and now they can call all the shots. I know this sounds real conspiracy mindedbut there is a conspiracy against any thinking, modalities or food (including supplements) that will allow the body to heal. Sickness has become BIG BUSINESS and they want complete control so the money comes to them. The saying “just follow the money” rings very, very true. Be Well~ Loretta “Truth is so obscure in these times, and falsehood so established, that, unless we love the truth, we cannot know it.” --Blaise Pascal ------------------------------- www.DoctorUzick.com ------------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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