Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

'It's Clearly A Witch Hunt'

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

http://www.channel3000.com/news/2643873/detail.html

 

I-Team: Fair Treatment?'It's Clearly A Witch Hunt'

POSTED: 3:34 p.m. CST November 17, 2003

UPDATED: 11:19 a.m. CST November 19, 2003

 

 

Some call it a witch hunt; others, total quackery. Caught in between are the

people who want alternative health care. A News 3 investigation into a

behind-the-scenes battle... over good -- or bad -- medicine.

 

 

 

 

It's the difficult job of some state regulators to watchdog health professionals

to protect the public, said I-Team reporter Linda Eggert in Part I of her

special report.

 

But some Wisconsin alternative care doctors and nurses allege they are being

unfairly targeted. It's all a question Of: " Fair treatment? "

 

 

 

 

 

The science may be far from clear, but the numbers are not.

 

Millions of people are spending billions of dollars to go beyond the boundaries

of conventional medicine.

 

More folks are putting their faith and money into a wide variety of natural,

complementary, and alternative treatments -- treatments for things like

allergies. Watertown nurse Barb Lemke (pictured, left) says she works with

energy imbalances.

 

" It has made a difference in how I feel, " said Kay Degner, who has a sugar

allergy and says treatment helps. " I don't get the depression, I don't have the

extreme fatigue that I would have. "

 

Madison's Robert Clark says his daily chest pain is gone and so are his

nitroglycerine pills, thanks to chelation therapy.

 

" It's helped me, and I'm grateful for the possibility to explore the improvement

that I hope it affords, " Clark said.

 

But his access to future treatments is up in the air because his doctor's being

investigated.

 

A News 3 investigation has found an expensive, and potentially precedent-setting

behind-the-scenes battle between two attorneys at the state Department of

Regulation and Licensing.

 

" It is quackery, " said Arthur Thexton, DORL prosecutor. " That is all it is. "

 

 

 

Some health care professionals' licenses hang in the balance.

 

" Financial loss, fear, worry, my staff never knows if I'll still be in business

-- this is very serious, " said Dr. Robert Waters (pictured, right), who runs a

Wisconsin Dells Clinic. He's had no patient complaints, ever. Still he says he's

spent $20,000 on lawyers, and another $8,000 for high-risk malpractice

insurance.

 

Why? Because the state's had an open investigation against him for six years.

 

" In 1997, the complaints were made, and I sent in documentation, " Waters said.

" I heard nothing until 2002. "

 

In 1997, a doctor and an insurance company separately complained about Waters

for using a therapy for a controversial purpose. Chelation therapy has long been

legal to rid the body of lead or heavy metal poisoning.

 

But Waters uses it mainly to treat heart disease.

 

One state attorney, Arthur Thexton, has said such therapy has no scientific

basis.

 

But Waters and Lemke, who says she spent $25,000 trying to keep her license,

believe other motives are at work.

 

" It's clearly a witch hunt, " Waters said.

 

" I think there are a couple attorneys within the Department of Regulation that

are very biased, and it almost seems as if they have a vendetta against

alternative medicine, " Lemke said.

 

" I have nothing against alternative and complementary medicine -- which can be

shown to be rooted in science, " Thexton said in a 2002 hearing.

 

But alternative care groups here and in California believe Thexton and attorney

James Polewski are trying to limit unconventional medicine in general.

 

They question their ties to a couple of groups vilified by the alternative care

community nationwide -- Quackwatch.com, and a related agency, the National

Council Against Health Fraud, which dispute the science behind all kinds of

alternative health care.

 

 

Acupuncture, they say, " cures nothing, and may be harmful.... "

 

 

Chiropractic care " constitutes a major consumer health problem. "

 

In one chelation case, Thexton's expert witness is someone he calls " extremely

qualified. "

 

Dr. Robert Baratz is also the president of the national council.

 

As for Polewski, News 3 finds he testified he was once a member.

 

" I think it's pretty inappropriate that a prosecutor for the state should become

a member of a political group that has as their very mission the exposure and

destruction of complementary and alternative medicine, " Waters said.

 

The National Council Against Health Fraud's Mission statement says it focuses

attention on health fraud, misinformation and quackery as public health

problems.

 

The two state attorneys didn't return phones calls from News 3, but cannot

comment on open cases.

 

When referred to Department Secretary Donsia Strong Hill, she told News 3 she

knows of no cases without merit.

 

Still she tells News 3 her staff is making numerous changes in the division of

enforcement to prevent future accusations of abuse:

 

" What I inherited were a group of prosecutors who basically had functioned in

the past with very little supervision over them or direction or even the

establishment of priorities, " Strong Hill (pictured, left) said. " We certainly

have changed that.

 

When News 3 asked Strong Hill, " You're supervising them more closely? " She

responded, " They are definitely being supervised more closely. "

 

But those new polices could come too late for a popular Green Bay doctor.

 

 

Copyright 2003 by Channel 3000. All rights reserved. This material may not be

published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

 

 

 

 

 

NEW WEB MESSAGE BOARDS - JOIN HERE.

Alternative Medicine Message Boards.Info

http://alternative-medicine-message-boards.info

 

 

 

Free Pop-Up Blocker - Get it now

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hmmmmmm, acupuncture cures nothing? I disagree! My husband used to

suffer from chronic cluster headaches and was only given poison drugs

by conventional medicine. As a result, he started having seizures.

I finally said that enough is enough, and there has got to be

something out there to help, besides the nasty drugs! We found a DO

who did accupuncture and recommended different nutritional suplements

and diet. These things have done wonders for my husband!

Conventional medicine failed terribly. Dr's just kept pumping the

pills......pharma drug pushers....no better than the drug pushers on

the street as far as I am concerned. Lynn

 

 

, Frank

<califpacific> wrote:

> http://www.channel3000.com/news/2643873/detail.html

>

> I-Team: Fair Treatment?'It's Clearly A Witch Hunt'

> POSTED: 3:34 p.m. CST November 17, 2003

> UPDATED: 11:19 a.m. CST November 19, 2003

>

>

> Some call it a witch hunt; others, total quackery. Caught in

between are the people who want alternative health care. A News 3

investigation into a behind-the-scenes battle... over good -- or bad -

- medicine.

>

>

>

>

> It's the difficult job of some state regulators to watchdog health

professionals to protect the public, said I-Team reporter Linda

Eggert in Part I of her special report.

>

> But some Wisconsin alternative care doctors and nurses allege they

are being unfairly targeted. It's all a question Of: " Fair

treatment? "

>

>

>

>

>

> The science may be far from clear, but the numbers are not.

>

> Millions of people are spending billions of dollars to go beyond

the boundaries of conventional medicine.

>

> More folks are putting their faith and money into a wide variety of

natural, complementary, and alternative treatments -- treatments for

things like allergies. Watertown nurse Barb Lemke (pictured, left)

says she works with energy imbalances.

>

> " It has made a difference in how I feel, " said Kay Degner, who has

a sugar allergy and says treatment helps. " I don't get the

depression, I don't have the extreme fatigue that I would have. "

>

> Madison's Robert Clark says his daily chest pain is gone and so are

his nitroglycerine pills, thanks to chelation therapy.

>

> " It's helped me, and I'm grateful for the possibility to explore

the improvement that I hope it affords, " Clark said.

>

> But his access to future treatments is up in the air because his

doctor's being investigated.

>

> A News 3 investigation has found an expensive, and potentially

precedent-setting behind-the-scenes battle between two attorneys at

the state Department of Regulation and Licensing.

>

> " It is quackery, " said Arthur Thexton, DORL prosecutor. " That is

all it is. "

>

>

>

> Some health care professionals' licenses hang in the balance.

>

> " Financial loss, fear, worry, my staff never knows if I'll still be

in business -- this is very serious, " said Dr. Robert Waters

(pictured, right), who runs a Wisconsin Dells Clinic. He's had no

patient complaints, ever. Still he says he's spent $20,000 on

lawyers, and another $8,000 for high-risk malpractice insurance.

>

> Why? Because the state's had an open investigation against him for

six years.

>

> " In 1997, the complaints were made, and I sent in documentation, "

Waters said. " I heard nothing until 2002. "

>

> In 1997, a doctor and an insurance company separately complained

about Waters for using a therapy for a controversial purpose.

Chelation therapy has long been legal to rid the body of lead or

heavy metal poisoning.

>

> But Waters uses it mainly to treat heart disease.

>

> One state attorney, Arthur Thexton, has said such therapy has no

scientific basis.

>

> But Waters and Lemke, who says she spent $25,000 trying to keep her

license, believe other motives are at work.

>

> " It's clearly a witch hunt, " Waters said.

>

> " I think there are a couple attorneys within the Department of

Regulation that are very biased, and it almost seems as if they have

a vendetta against alternative medicine, " Lemke said.

>

> " I have nothing against alternative and complementary medicine --

which can be shown to be rooted in science, " Thexton said in a 2002

hearing.

>

> But alternative care groups here and in California believe Thexton

and attorney James Polewski are trying to limit unconventional

medicine in general.

>

> They question their ties to a couple of groups vilified by the

alternative care community nationwide -- Quackwatch.com, and a

related agency, the National Council Against Health Fraud, which

dispute the science behind all kinds of alternative health care.

>

>

> Acupuncture, they say, " cures nothing, and may be harmful.... "

>

>

> Chiropractic care " constitutes a major consumer health problem. "

>

> In one chelation case, Thexton's expert witness is someone he

calls " extremely qualified. "

>

> Dr. Robert Baratz is also the president of the national council.

>

> As for Polewski, News 3 finds he testified he was once a member.

>

> " I think it's pretty inappropriate that a prosecutor for the state

should become a member of a political group that has as their very

mission the exposure and destruction of complementary and alternative

medicine, " Waters said.

>

> The National Council Against Health Fraud's Mission statement says

it focuses attention on health fraud, misinformation and quackery as

public health problems.

>

> The two state attorneys didn't return phones calls from News 3, but

cannot comment on open cases.

>

> When referred to Department Secretary Donsia Strong Hill, she told

News 3 she knows of no cases without merit.

>

> Still she tells News 3 her staff is making numerous changes in the

division of enforcement to prevent future accusations of abuse:

>

> " What I inherited were a group of prosecutors who basically had

functioned in the past with very little supervision over them or

direction or even the establishment of priorities, " Strong Hill

(pictured, left) said. " We certainly have changed that.

>

> When News 3 asked Strong Hill, " You're supervising them more

closely? " She responded, " They are definitely being supervised more

closely. "

>

> But those new polices could come too late for a popular Green Bay

doctor.

>

>

> Copyright 2003 by Channel 3000. All rights reserved. This material

may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

NEW WEB MESSAGE BOARDS - JOIN HERE.

> Alternative Medicine Message Boards.Info

> http://alternative-medicine-message-boards.info

>

>

>

> Free Pop-Up Blocker - Get it now

>

>

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...