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SIDS May Be Linked To A Genetic Inability To Digest Milk, Study Finds – Moms

Posted: October 18, 2019 at 5:45 pm

Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), sometimes known as crib death, occurs when an infant under the age of one dies inexplicably.The typically healthy child will often die while sleeping and is the leading cause of death of children between the ages of one month and one year, claiming approximately 3000 lives a year. There has been little known about the cause of SIDS but new research is now showing that some form of SIDS could be linked to a genetic inability to digest milk.

A study out of theUniversity of Washington School of Medicine focused on the "mitochondrial tri-functional protein deficiency, a potentially fatal cardiac metabolic disorder caused by a genetic mutation in the gene HADHA."

It found that newborns with had the genetic mutation are unable toproperly digest some of the fats found in breastmilk, resulting in cardiac arrest. It found that "the heart cells of affected infants do not convert fats into nutrients properly," and once these fats build up they can cause serious heart and heart health issues.

There are multiple causes for sudden infant death syndrome, said Hannele Ruohola-Baker, who is also associate director of the UW Medicine Institute for Stem Cell and Regenerative Medicine. There are some causes which are environmental. But what were studying here is really a genetic cause of SIDS. In this particular case, it involves a defect in the enzyme that breaks down fat.

Lead author on the study Dr. Jason Miklassaid that it was his experience researching heart disease that prompted him to look at the possible link with SIDS. There was one particular study that had noted a link between children who had problems processing fats and who also had cardiac disease that caused him to delve a little deeper.

Miklas andRuohola-Baker teamed up to begin their own research study.If a child has a mutation, depending on the mutation the first few months of life can be very scary as the child may die suddenly,Miklas noted. An autopsy wouldnt necessarily pick up why the child passed but we think it might be due to the infants heart-stopping to beat.

Were no longer just trying to treat the symptoms of the disease, Miklas added. Were trying to find ways to treat the root problem. Its very gratifying to see that we can make real progress in the lab toward interventions that could one day make their way to the clinic.

Ruohola-Baker says their findings are a big breakthrough in understanding SIDS. There is no cure for this, she said. But there is now hope because weve found a new aspect of this disease that will innovate generations of novel small molecules and designed proteins, which might help these patients in the future.

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Memories of bunga telang: Award-winning Dr Serena Nik-Zainal on how cardiologist dad inspired life in medicine – Malay Mail

Posted: October 18, 2019 at 5:45 pm

Dr Serena will receive the award together with her collaborators Dr Paul Calleja and Dr Ignacio Medina from the University of Cambridge at the University of Bern in Switzerland tonight. Picture via Facebook

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 18 When Dr Serena Nik-Zainal is not burying her head in cancer genome research, she finds herself outdoors and dabbles in the Chinese martial art of kung fu.

The mother of two, who studies mutation patterns in human DNA at the prestigious University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom, is also a lover of music.

However, medicine is the apparent first love of Dr Serena, who is set to receive the Dr Josef Steiner Award for cancer genome research later tonight. Speaking to Malay Mail, she paid tribute to her father for sparking her interest in the field.

I was inspired by the person who started what is now the National Heart Institute or IJN, she said in an email interview, referring to the late Datuk Dr Nik Zainal Abidin Nik Abdul.

I remember the old building very well, and playing in the small green area outside the front door with the bunga telang (butterfly pea flower).

He was hugely professional, dedicated and determined. But I was also inspired by a mother whom was worldly, solid, resourceful, intelligent in those human qualities, a kind person and a very strong soul, Dr Serena added.

The UK-based Malaysian scientist will be receiving the award with fellow Cambridge collaborators Dr Paul Calleja and Dr Ignacio Medina, at the University of Bern in Switzerland at around 11pm Malaysian time.

According to the University of Cambridges Academic Department of Medical Genetics, she will also be presenting her work under the title Accelerating holistic cancer genome interpretation towards the clinic during the award ceremony.

Based on her research, mutations in cancer tumours can be analysed using new bioinformatic methods which enabled new approaches to targeted therapies.

One may wonder if Dr Serena was ever pressured into pursuing the medical field, since she might have had to live up to her fathers reputation in the medical fraternity.

Dr Nik Zainal who died on October 29, 2007, was known as the cardiologist who brought fame to IJN and the country in general. He was also a member of the team involved in the countrys first coronary bypass surgery in 1982.

Was I pressured into medicine? Yes and no. I would have chosen medicine even if my father was not a doctor.

It has always been a bit of a joke that in Asian households, you have to be a doctor, engineer or a lawyer. But even without that, I suspect I would have ended up a doctor, she explained.

Award a young team effort

Although she has been deeply invested in her research work, Dr Serena said she still does clinical work.

In fact on Monday, I just did a clinic and I still love seeing patients. Thats why I do the research, because I want to fix things for people, she added.

Dr Serena said she was further moved by her patients who have inherited genetic abnormalities or children with learning disabilities and syndromes.

I am a doctor of rare, genetic, inherited disorders. My job is to try to make a diagnosis in these rare cases and to try to ensure that the patients get the best care possible.

Making a diagnosis can be quite tricky. And although there were new technologies available, I found it deeply frustrating to have the most up-to-date data in my hand but not fully understanding it.

So, I decided to try to understand the latest technology that had come along for being able to read the human genome very quickly, called massively parallel sequencing, she said.

She explained that through sequencing, doctors will be able to see all the genetic changes in the human DNA.

And I have never looked back, she added.

It is not just winning the prized dubbed Nobel Prize of cancer research that has sent Dr Serena over the moon, but the fact that her team and her have managed to bag an award at this point of their research work.

There are prizes in research that are awarded every year and many are usually for people whom are very senior in the field.

Prizes like the Dr Josef Steiner award is aimed at middle-career or up-and-coming people (or teams).

So for my team, this is a wonderful boost and an enormous recognition for the kind of work that we do, where we are trying to push bioinformatics towards clinical translation, said Dr Serena.

With this achievement, she is looking forward for accelerate the use of these tools in clinical applications.

She added that this is the beginning to understanding more in the related field.

My work is a speck in the entire genomics field internationally.

[I think] we have been recognised for making interesting, creative analyses and then taking these highly technical bits of genomics and trying to make it clinically useful, so that it will have an impact on patients, she said.

Age of wonders for cancer research

When asked how this research will facilitate the quest to seek a cure for cancer, Dr Serena said the research looks at the entire genome sequence in human cancers, three billion building blocks, or base pairs.

By having a full map of all the genetic changes in cancer, because cancer are highly mutated entities, we can know exactly what the causes are of each persons individual cancer.

We are more likely to treat a patient more effectively and offer the patient a better quality of life, she explained.

She also pointed out that research on cancer has progressed tremendously because cancer research is funded very well.

Even in the decade that she had been doing this, Dr Serena has witnessed changes that are astonishing.

When I started doing whole genome sequencing, it took about three months to get a whole cancer genome. Today, we can do it in one day.

We still do not understand what initiates cancer, which ones do badly and do well.

How cancer cells interact with the other cells in our tissues. There is plenty more to do, and the genome is only one aspect. More yet to learn, she said.

She attributed the success of her research to patients who participated in sharing their materials, tutors, colleagues and collaborators worldwide, as well as charity organisations that had funded her research, training and grants to pursue her interests.

When I receive this award, it is truly on behalf of and due to a wonderful group of people as this achievement does not come from the work of only one person.

She has her family to thank, Dr Serena added that her older brother, Dr Nik Halmey, a cardiologist at Gleneagles Hospital here has always looked out for her.

Apart from her family in Malaysia, one of her biggest supporters is her Irish husband, Dr Eoin OBrien, who is a geriatrician and stroke physician.

He is a very kind, a very solid doctor and a rock in my life. I have two wonderfully energetic children, a 15-year-old boy and an 11-year-old girl. They keep me very busy, she added.

Dr Serena also said that she is slowly building links with her Malaysian counterparts at Universiti Sains Malaysia in Kelantan.

I hope to be part of the process of getting it going, back home, she said.

I have since been collaborating with another Malaysian clinician scientist, Dr Neil Rajan, and we have a scientific paper coming soon. We are so pleased to be flying the Malaysian flag on this paper!

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Memories of bunga telang: Award-winning Dr Serena Nik-Zainal on how cardiologist dad inspired life in medicine - Malay Mail

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Objective of St. Elizabeth Healthcare’s partnership with doTerra International is integrative cancer care – User-generated content

Posted: October 18, 2019 at 5:42 pm

By Mark HanselNKyTribune managing editor

St. Elizabeth Healthcares partnership with Utah-based doTERRA International will allow the Northern Kentucky health care provider to further its objective to provide integrative cancer care for its patients.

doTERRA has donated $5 million to the St. Elizabeth Foundation Cancer Center Community Campaign to support the development of a new facility focused on integrative care.

Much like the comprehensive approach to cancer treatment St. Elizabeth Healthcare embraces, a team of leaders working together will bring integrative oncology to the new Cancer Center. Left to right are, Dr. Doug Flora, executive medical director of oncology services at St. Elizabeth, Carri Chandler, vice president of the St. Elizabeth Foundation, Dr. Russell J. Osguthorpe, chief medical officer at doTerra, St. Elizabeth President and CEO Garren Colvin, doTerra Welness Advocate Nicole Chase, and Brannick Riggs, vice president of healthcare initiatives at doTerra (photo by Mark Hansel).

doTERRA will play a foundational role in the development and implementation of the Center for Integrative Oncology within St. Elizabeths new Cancer Center in Edgewood, scheduled to open next year.

Dr. Russell J. Osguthorpe, chief medical officer and vice president of medical and scientific initiatives at doTerra, said the company embraced the opportunity to partner with St. Elizabeth.

Northern Kentucky has a problem with cancer and we are privileged to help be a partner and part of the solution, Osguthorpe said. They are on the front lines and we are privileged to work alongside of them.

doTerra is an integrative health and wellness company. In just 11 years, it has gone from a start-up to being the world leader in the global aromatherapy and essential oils market.

Integrative care is to be used in conjunction with and throughout a patient experience as they go through their diagnosis and treatment to improve their quality of life, Osguthorpe said. Cancer is one of the great plagues that we face as a country and the treatment for it can be so hard for families to go through. Anything that we can do in partnership with St. Elizabeth to make that experience more human, more caring, is needed in health care.

Garren Colvin, president and CEO of St. Elizabeth Healthcare said when the St. Elizabeth Cancer Center opens next fall, it will include nearly an entire floor dedicated to the holistic, patient-centered approach to care known as integrative oncology.

We want patients (and their caregivers) to have as much support and access to resources as possible under one roof, Colvin said.

The doTERRA Center for Integrative Oncology will be more than 8,400 square feet on the first floor of the St. Elizabeth Cancer Center.

Dr. Doug Flora, executive medical director of oncology services at St. Elizabeth, said St. E is responding to changes in the way patients and their families want and need to be treated.

Fifty percent of all cancer patients report using some alternative or complementary medicine, Dr. Flora said. The number gets as high as 80 percent when you survey women with breast cancer.

Dr. Brannick Riggs, vice president of healthcare initiatives and chief medical director of doTERRAs medical clinic, said complementary medicine is critical to treatment and recovery.

Its a way of rebuilding the patient after the treatment, Dr. Riggs said. We know that traditional treatment by design wreaks some havoc on the human body. We hope that these modalities help support the rebuilding of a life afterward.

Dr. Flora said the relationship is a culmination of years of planning, during which St. Elizabeth has tried to build a sturdy table that will hold cancer treatment for the community.

The first leg was screening, prevention and early detection. The second leg was precision medicine and targeting therapies so we are more intelligently designing treatments for our patients who need care, Flora said. The third leg was the clinical trials themselves and how do we find the next drug, the next best agent to reduce morbidity and mortality. Then the fourth leg was how do you take care of the whole person, by keeping all of the science in mind.

Osguthorpe said that is one aspect of the partnership that really excites him. He calls the ability to collaborate on research around the use of integrated modalities in cancer care groundbreaking.

We know thats a neglected part of clinical trials, Osguthorpe said. If we study these things and we show with real scientific intent that there is use. That aromatherapy reduces fatigue or improves quality of life or that medical massage relieves anxiety or helps with depression we can publish that and people start using it as a standard of care.

Those treatments are now readily accepted in breast cancer.

Throughout all of our literature now, there is a lot of level-one evidence, randomized control clinical trials showing that things like this work, Osguthorpe said. Its now time to get that out there for the rest of the cancer patients.

Flora believes the therapies that will lead to real advances in cancer care and treatment can best be achieved by exploring new methods.

This is a combination of using really rigorous clinical trials and investigating these agents and these modalities to see if we can improve the quality of life of our patients, Flora said. It lets us combine our level of science and our enthusiasm for taking care of the whole patient in one package.

doTerra Wellness Advocate Nicole Chase of Burlington and St. Elizabeth Healthcare Dr. Doug Flora,executive medical director of oncology services, explain how the partnership between St.E and the integrative health and wellness company came about.

Colvin said that the addition of an integrative care center is a critical next step in methods St. Elizabeth has already embraced.

Its something that we have been doing and we have sold doTerra oils in our gift shop for quite a while, Colvin said. This allows us to achieve our main goal, which is to have all the services necessary for the mind, the spirit, and the total patient under one roof. We are trying to make sure that whatever our patients feel they need, we have the ability to deliver and this partnership allows us to do that.

The Center for Integrative Oncology will provide a calming space with holistic care options to complement St. Elizabeths comprehensive medical care.

A large portion of the first floor of the St. Elizabeth Cancer Center in Edgewood will be dedicated to the doTERRA Center for Integrative Oncology. (renderings provided by St. Elizabeth Healthcare)

It will include the use of doTERRA essential oils and aromatherapy, yoga, meditation and a spa-like atmosphere for patients undergoing cancer treatment.

I think the one thing that has become clear to me is that when you have a patient going thorough this, its not just the patient that needs care, the whole family needs care, Colvin said. This allows a space where the entire family can relieve tension, relieve stress, so they can better take care of the patient who needs the most care.

doTERRA first learned of the St. Elizabeth Cancer Center from Nicole Chase, one of its wellness advocates.

Six years ago Chase, who lives in Burlington, was diagnosed with cancer and was referred to Dr. Flora for treatment.

Obviously nobody wants to go in and be treated for cancer, Chase said. When I went in I didnt want to be happy and wanted to be a little bit miserable and he wouldnt let me. He pepped me up and made me laugh and I walked out of there really confused because I was happier leaving than I was coming in and he made the treatments bearable.

As Chase continued to go through chemotherapy and radiation, she realized she needed other ways to treat the whole person.

I began to use essential oils and additional modalities to help me through emotionally, Chase said. After I exited my cancer, I wasnt really living the life I needed to live and I needed to do more because I was getting a second chance. I started learning more about essential oils and I started helping other people who were just like me and it really fed me and helped me with my recovery to do that.

When Chase learned St. Elizabeth was building a new cancer center her first thought was that she wanted to be a part of that and wanted to help other people treat the whole patient.

So I reached out and asked (Dr. Flora) if he would take a meeting with me and thats how it got started, Chase said.

Flora soon came on board and that discussion led to meetings with Dr. Riggs and others from doTerra.

It was a vision I held and I wanted and I started passing it around and it grew, Chase said. It might have started with me, but it wouldnt have happened without a major collaboration between everyone.

The Integrative Center will provide a calming space with holistic care options to complement St. Elizabeths comprehensive medical care. It will include the use of doTERRA essential oils and aromatherapy, yoga, meditation and a spa-like atmosphere for patients undergoing cancer treatment.

Osguthorpe said Chases efforts and Floras support drove the partnership.

These two brought our two companies together to provide the type of care that both of our companies want and need, Osguthorpe said. They collaborated and shared it with us, and now we all sit here with the same vision that she had before any of us did.

The $130 million St. Elizabeth Cancer Center, with its integrative approach is the next step in Colvins vision to make Northern Kentucky the healthiest region in the country.

The 233,000-square-foot facility will be the regions leading comprehensive cancer center when it opens in the fall of 2020.

Carri Chandler, vice president of the St. Elizabeth Foundation said that at the Cancer Center groundbreaking 14 months ago, the foundation stamped its commitment to the project.

Foundation chair Bob Hoffer announced the ambitious goal of the foundation to raise $35 million for the project.

Prior to that, the largest goal achieved by the foundation was $15 million for the St. Elizabeth Heart and Vascular Institute.

Weve raised about $29 million, Chandler said. Its not just our foundation team, its our volunteers, our community leaders, its everyone getting engaged and being a part of the solution. With cancer being so pervasive in this area, everyone has been touched in some way and they just want to help out.

The 233,000-square-foot St. Elizabeth Cancer Center will be the regions leading comprehensive cancer center when it opens in the fall of 2020.

The $5 million donation from doTerra is the largest ever received from a corporation by the St. E Foundation.

In our early conversations, we discovered that Kentucky had the highest incidents of cancer and Utah had the least, Chandler said. It really says a lot that doTerra would go out of their own state to come and lend us a hand.

Riggs said as the team at doTerra learned about St. Elizabeth Healthcares approach to cancer treatment, they knew the company wanted to be a partner.

The culture of St. Elizabeth is very patient-oriented, very warm and mindful of the individual dealing with their challenges, Riggs said. doTerra has a very similar culture, so we are so well aligned as companies, this really is a partnership that makes sense for us. The time has come in health care and there is a rising tide, mainly brought on by patients asking for, but also physicians taking note, that there is a need for integrative care.

Colvin said doTerras commitment should spur even more involvement from partners within the region.

You have a Utah-based company, that is a world leader in their field of expertise, that wants to come to Kentucky to address a chronic issue that we all know that we have, Colvin said. It warms my heart and it fuels a passion that you know exists within the people in this room. It allows us to take that to our community and say you need to help us support this, because we are going to make all of you better.

Contact Mark Hansel at mark.hansel@nkytrib.com

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Deepak Chopra Has Never Been Sick – The New Yorker

Posted: October 18, 2019 at 5:42 pm

Deepak Chopra, the doctor and self-help guru, who turns seventy-three next week, has written more than one book for every year he has been alive. Chopra was born in New Delhi and studied medicine in India before moving to the United States, in 1970. After practicing as an endocrinologist in Massachusetts, he became involved in the Transcendental Meditation movement. He eventually relocated to the West Coast, left T.M. behind, and became a spiritual adviser to Michael Jackson and other celebrities. A quarter century later, his books have sold millions of copies, and his television appearancesespecially alongside Oprah Winfreyhave made him perhaps the most prominent advocate for alternative medicine recognizable around the world.

Chopras work evinces a consistent skepticism toward the scientific consensushe has called into question whether evolution is merely a process of the mindand a firm belief that mental health can determine physical reality. He has written of a place called perfect healththe title of one of his books, and now the slogan for one of his wellness retreatsin which human beings can go somewhere internally that is free from disease, that never feels pain, that cannot age or die. These beliefs have made him controversial among doctors and scientists. In 1998, Chopra was awarded the satirical Ig Nobel Prize for his unique interpretation of quantum physics as it applies to life, liberty, and the pursuit of economic happiness. A random Chopra-quote generator is popular online, and Chopra has been called out for tweeting and writing phrases that, in the words of one paper, may have been constructed to impress upon the reader some sense of profundity at the expense of a clear exposition of meaning or truth. (Example: Attention and intention are the mechanics of manifestation.)

Chopras latest book is Metahuman: Unleashing Your Infinite Potential, and it touches on a number of themes that have been present throughout his career: that human beings can become metahuman by reaching a new place of awareness; that science has served to block the way to the absolute freedom that metahuman holds out; and that self-improvement can move creation itself. I recently spoke by phone with Chopra. During our conversation, which has been edited for length and clarity, we discussed controversial remarks he has made about cancer and AIDS, his claim to have never been even a tiny bit sick, and whether there is a reality that exists independently of our own minds.

How do you define yourself and what you do?

I would say that to define oneself is to limit oneself. But Ive had various roles through my life. Im an internist, an endocrinologist, a neuro-endocrinologist; a teacher of integrative medicine and an author; a husband, a son, a father, a child.

I know you are a doctor, but does thinking about yourself as a doctor seem limiting to you in some way?

It seems limiting to me, but I would say I think of myself closer to a healer. Because, when I look at healing and the origins of the word healing, its related to the word whole. So wholeness means everything, including body, mind, and spirit, and the environment. I think of myself as a doctor who is interested in the physical body, but also in all aspects of human experiencehuman emotions, human thinking, human experience, and, ultimately, in understanding ourselves beyond the conditioned mind. So I would say I want to be a healer. Thats my aspiration.

At what point in your career did you become famous?

Some people think it happened with The Oprah Winfrey Show, in 1993, when she did a one-to-one with me for a book called Ageless Body, Timeless Mind, which then stayed on the New York Times best-seller list for thirty-some weeks. Actually, my most well-known book is The Seven Spiritual Laws of Success. But I have to say that Oprah helped me a lot with the launch of my career, and shes been an ally ever since. Weve taught six million people meditation online together.

How many books have you written now?

This is my ninetieth book.

Would you say your writing process has changed between your first and your ninetieth?

Yes. My process was more structured in the past. And now I feel its more a flow than anything else. I used to always be told by media and publishers, and even the BBC when I was in England, to dumb everything down, and I used to, and I dont anymore. I feel free to say whatever I want to.

Ive been looking for a through line in your work, and the one that Ive noticed most is the idea that our minds can determine reality, or that theres a connection between our minds and reality. Is that a fair way of phrasing it?

Yes. The correct phrase would be that our experience of the world, and of our body, is a projection of our conditioned mind. So, when youre born, you have no human constructs. Youre looking at the world as a messy, gooey experience of color, form, shapes, sounds, pictures, smells, tastes, and random thoughts, which are yet not clear. But then a construction process begins. And so youre told, Youre male, youre of a religious background, ethnic background, nationality, gender. And that begins to create a provisional identity. And then that provisional identity has perceptual experiences but interprets them as the physical body and the world. But, in the deeper reality, theres no such thing. All there is is consciousness experiencing itself perceptually, as perceptual activity, which is species-specific. You dont see the same world as a painted lady, a species of butterfly that smells the world with an antenna, tastes the world with her feet. So what is the picture of the world to a snake that navigates through the experience of infrared?

If you and a snake perceive the world differently and experience it differently, does that mean that the world is actually different? Or does it just mean that we perceive it differently?

We can only experience a narrow band with our perceptual reality. So there is no such thing as a physical world. Thats where Im going. Our experience of the world is species- and culture-specific. And that is what we interpret as fundamental reality.

You once said, Consciousness is key to evolution and we will soon prove that. What did you mean?

You know, Ive said in the past that Darwinian evolution is a human constructthat, ultimately, consciousness drives at least human evolution. We can direct our evolution by the choices we make. And now that we know the science of epigenetics and neuroplasticity, we can see very clearly that, because we are self-aware, unlike other species, we can consciously direct our evolution. And that is what epigenetics and neuroplasticity are showing us.

Epigenetics is not that we can direct our evolution, though, is it?

Well, we can trigger the activity of certain genes and decrease the activity of certain other genes. So, when people practice self-reflection or mindful awareness, or they have the experience of transcendence, you can actually see which genes get activated and which genes get deactivated. Theres a mechanism to that. So you can actually activate the genes that cause self-regulation or homeostasis, and actually decrease the activity of the genes that cause inflammation. So what is healing? It is nothing but self-regulation or homeostasis. And what is disease is mostly linked to chronic inflammation. Only five per cent of disease-related gene mutations are fully penetrant, which means they guarantee the disease. That includes everything, from Alzheimers to cancer to autoimmune disease. Only five per cent is related to genetic determinism. The rest is influenced by life style. [Gerard Karsenty, the chair of the Department of Genetics and Development at Columbia University Irving Medical Center, says, Those assumptions include non-Mendelian diseases. It is for now hard to precisely assess in multigenic diseases the extent of the contribution of gene mutations and the one of lifestyle taken in a broad sense. This is particularly true for autoimmune diseases that hit at all ages, including during childhood and with a higher incidence in women.]

You tweeted, An emerging view, alternate to Darwins random mutations & natural selection is that consciousness may be the driver of complexity/evolution.

Correct. But there are a few people who agree with that.

So, you know, scientists generally are nave realists. Which means they look at the picture of the world, and thats what it is.

What do you do, if not that?

Ive become aware of that which is having the experience rather than the experience, which in spiritual traditions is called the self. The body, the mind, and the world are the self.

It seems like all of these things are fitting under the rubric of what we were talking about earlier about consciousness and reality. I know you once said something like, The moon doesnt exist unless someone sees it. Is that right?

No, no. That was Einsteins quote, by the way. He actually said, I refuse to believe that the moon doesnt exist if no one is looking at it. [In his biography of Einstein, Abraham Pais recounted an interaction he had with the physicist who asked me if I really believed that the moon exists only if I look at it.] Thats a statement coming from a nave realist. The moon that you and I see is a human experience. A horseshoe crab doesnt have that experience living in the depths of the ocean.

Einstein was incredulously asking someone whether they really believe that the moon only exists when its looked at. Correct?

Yes. The moon is an experience in human consciousness. The moon that you and I see is an experience in human consciousness. If there was no human consciousness, no body, mind to go with it, there would be no awareness of the moon.

But the moon would still be there, correct?

How do you prove that? How do you validate that? How do you disprove that? How do you prove an unobserved phenomenon?

The moon is a human story. The universe is a human story. Its a human construct, or human experiences, and interpreted by the human mind.

So this would be akin to the question, which Im sure weve all heard, that if a tree falls in the forest and no one hears it, does it make a sound?

Correct. The sound is only in consciousness. Before that its a vibration of air molecules.

But the vibration of air molecules are occurring. Correct?

The vibration of air molecules is a human construct for a human mode of knowing and experience in human consciousness, so yes, they are constructs. The air molecules are as much of a construct as latitude and longitude, as The New Yorker, as Greenwich Mean Time, as money, as Wall Street, as Manhattan.

Im not sure what that means.

Human constructs are human ideas around modes of human knowing.

I see.

So an atom, a molecule, a force field, vibration of moleculesthese are all human constructs.

So its not that the tree is making a sound and we just happen to be there or not there to hear it. Its that the sound is only present to the degree that we are also present.

Actually, there is no tree and there is no sound and there is no body and there is no mind. Theres only consciousness thats having an experience. The rest is human constructs.

In your book Quantum Healing, you wrote, Research on spontaneous cures of cancer conducted in both the United States and Japan has shown that just before the cure appears, almost every patient experiences a dramatic shift in awareness. He knows that he will be healed and he feels that the force responsible is inside himself, but not limited to him. It extends beyond his personal boundaries throughout all of nature. Suddenly he feels, I am not limited to my body. All that exists around me is part of myself. At that moment, such patients apparently jumped to a new level of consciousness that prohibits the existence of cancer. Then the cancer cells either disappear, literally overnight in some cases, or at the very least stabilize without damaging the body any further.

So if you were a scientist and you saw one case of that, one in a billion, youd want to know the mechanism. And I feel the mechanism is a return to fundamental homeostasis, which means self-regulation, and total absence of fear, including the fear of death. Because your identity is no longer your body-mind.

And so is that more important than medicine?

No, I think medicine is very useful for acute illness. If you have pneumonia, I certainly tell you to take an antibiotic. You break your leg, Id have you see an orthopedic surgeon. If you have cancer, there are many types of chemotherapy and radiation and stem-cell therapies and immunotherapies that will help you. But, in todays age, if you dont understand that integrating that with good sleep, with meditation, with stress management, with mindfulness, with healthy emotions, with good food that actually changes the activity of your microbiomeif you dont conform to that, then youre out of date.

This is from your book Perfect Health: There exists in every person a place that is free from disease, that never feels pain, that cannot age or die. When you go to this place, limitations which all of us accept cease to exist. They are not even entertained as a possibility. This is the place called perfect health. Visits to this place may be very brief, or they may last for many years. Even the briefest visit, however, instills a profound change. As long as you are there, the assumptions that hold true for ordinary existence are altered. If you can be in this place, why would you necessarily need medicine to stay healthy?

We dont. Ive never used medicine myself. Im seventy-three years old, never been in the hospital, never had surgery. Cant even remember having a cold.

You would vaccinate your children, correct?

Of course I would, if Im in a surrounding where there is... You know, I would not vaccinate a child in New York City for polio, because it doesnt exist. But I would for measles, because it does exist.

Even if the child was in this state that you call perfect health?

The child is in a state of perfect health if its born normally. Its in a state of homeostasis. But we also live in a world that has environmental toxins, that has climate change, that has extinction of species, that has poison in our food chain, and that is ready for extinction. And all of that is the projection of our collective insanity.

You say, The cause of disease is often extremely complex, but one thing can be said for certain: no one has proved that getting sick is necessary.

Right. My own situation says that.

Because youve never been sick.

Yes.

Because youre in this place called perfect health?

Because Im aware of being aware and I can choose the experiences I want and I focus on love, compassion, joy, equanimity, and Im beyond the fear of personal death because I dont identify with my provisional, personal, so-called identity. The question you asked me when we started, How do you define yourself?I dont.

If we were all in this place, would we need medicine?

Yes. Because of the world weve created, we would, yes.

But not because

And, besides that, the ecosystem is a predatory play of consciousness where, you know, its a recycling of experience. Birth, death, illness: they are part of our provisional identity, but I dont identify with that identity. If you do not identify with the experience, if consciousness that is aware of experience, if the awareness of experience is not the experience, then youre intrinsically free of the experience. Do you know what Im saying?

Im not sure.

O.K. If you are aware of a thought, then youre not the thought, youre the awareness of the thought.

Dr. Stacia Kenet Lansman, whos a leading vaccine skeptic, cited your work as an inspiration. Do you

I have never been against vaccination.

I know you havent.

I have never spoken against medical treatment or intervention. You should do whatever works.

But do you worry that the idea that we can achieve this place of perfect health based on our own mental state can give license to anti-scientific thinking, like we see in the anti-vaccine movement?

You asked me if I worry about that. I dont worry about anything.

Which is why you havent gotten sick.

But people can take what I say and interpret it how they want to. Theres also a difference between scientism and science. Science is a very neutral activity: theories, observation, experiments, validation or invalidation. Period. I am a big proponent of science as the greatest adventure that human consciousness has taken. With scientism, its a different thing. Its being a fundamentalist and believing that science has all the solutions for human problems, including the existential dilemmas we have about our identity, our fear of old age, infirmity, and death.

There was an interview you gave many years ago, with Tony Robbins, about AIDS. Hed put forth the idea that H.I.V. is not the source of AIDS. You said, H.I.V. may be a precipitating agent in a susceptible host.The material agent is never the cause of the disease.It may be the final factor in inducing the full-blown syndrome in somebody whos already susceptible. He then asked,Butwhat made them susceptible? You answered, Their own interpretations of the whole reality that theyre participating in. Do you still feel that way about H.I.V. and AIDS?

I still feel that pathogens are precipitating factors in susceptible hosts, and that the outcome of illness and recovery is very complex. Now, having said that, when you can find a single agent that you can either attack or get rid of, then, of course, thats the solution. You know, you and I can be exposed to a pneumococcus and one person gets pneumonia and the other doesnt. So you can see that illness is not just one mechanistic happening, an encounter with the pathogen. It has to do with everything. Are you deeply rested, are you stressed, whats your nutrition, what are your personal relationships, what is your emotional stateall of these things have an influence. Every experience we have is ultimately metabolized into a molecule in the body. If I gave you bad news right now, your blood pressure would go up. In fact, if I sent a mean tweet to Mr. Trump, his blood pressure would go up even further.

You went on to say, I have a lot of patients with so-called AIDS, this label that weve given them, that are healthier than most of the population thats living in downtown Boston. They havent had a cold in ten years. And then Robbins said, But someone has told them they have this disease. You said, Yes, somebody has told them that. And Robbins says, And they bought into it. And you said, Exactly.

Listen. You can do a five-hour interviewyou can edit it into any way you want. You can take statements out of context.

No, thats the whole context.

And then you can say, This is what you said. Right? I had that experience myself as a physician. I said to the patient, You have cancer. Immediately, he looked like he was going to have a stroke. He was going to faint. And then I realized I read the wrong chart and I said, Sorry, that was somebody else. In two seconds I could see him recover from high blood pressure, sticky platelets, a jittery heart, and so on. So, you know, there is a lot more to reality than just a simple diagnosis and the label.

But to go on to the point youre just making now, about diagnosis, when Robbins said about the diagnosis of AIDS, People are accepting this, and when they accept this, what happens to them? You replied, When they accept it, then they make it happen. It is a self-fulfilling prophecy. Is that what youre saying?

Yeah. I might have said that. And, if I did, I regret it.

What I say today is, Believe the diagnosis, but dont believe the prognosis.

Youve been criticized before for selling products that people claim can help cure cancer or other diseases via meditation.

No, Ive never claimed that. No.

Never?

If you find a reference of that, let me know.

Well, there was a video called Return to Wholeness: A Mind-Body Approach to Healing Cancer. And the release about it says, Meditation and visualization are two of the most

Right. That video was a program to help people visualize and get into a relaxed state. I believe it was promoted as that on my Web site until I became aware of it, and then it was taken off.

And then you took it down?

Yeah. It was actually an artificial-intelligence program for meditation and self-regulation. And, by the way, used at many cancer-therapy clinics across the world as an aid to relaxation. [A member of Chopras staff named Cancer Treatment Centers of America as one of the clinics that use the video, but a representative for the treatment centers was unable to verify this.]

So, when you say in your best-sellers, like Super Brain, that increased self-awareness can reduce the risks of aging and help people achieve freedom and bliss, do you feel that youre doing that at all, or not?

I am. Of course. Im seventy-three years old, and I dont think my biological age is seventy-three. In fact, I have publicly declared that I am slowing down my aging process. And I think you can go on social media and look at all the pictures over the last few years and you can see, physically, that I am not looking as old, or feeling as old, as I was twenty-five years ago. I know what Ive said is outrageous, but, if people actually listen carefully, they will see that they determine a lot of what goes into well-being and health. And, ultimately, I dont think that health is physical at all. Because, ultimately, we are all going to die, and all going to have some kind of infirmity. But most of what we do is creating anxiety from living a full life in the present moment.

So you feel that youve reached a different stage of human existence?

Im just following the example of people who have lived long, healthy lives without any infirmity and died peacefully in meditation. In the Indian tradition, its called mahasamadhithe big meditation.

When youre selling books by saying that theres a network of intelligence in the human body that has the potential to defeat cancer, heart disease, and even aging itself, is that not selling to people that cancer can be beaten by something other than medicine?

Have you read the book? Or have you read criticisms of the book?

Ive read several of the books, and some criticisms.

So then you have to make up your own mind. Im not a purveyor of false hope. In fact, I think the term false hope is an oxymoron. Either you have hope or you dont. And those that have hope do better than those who dont.

So there is no false hope?

Its up to you how you interpret this, and it doesnt actually affect me. You know, Im at a stage in my life where Ive gone beyond criticism and/or flattery. I dont need that.

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Deepak Chopra Has Never Been Sick - The New Yorker

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UCI professor named to CDC committee on sexually transmitted infections – Newswise

Posted: October 18, 2019 at 5:42 pm

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Newswise Irvine, Calif. October 15, 2019 Sean Young, PhD, professor at the University of California Irvine School of Medicine and Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences, has been appointed to the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine ad hoc committee to address the alarming increase in sexually transmitted infections (STIs). The Center for Disease Control (CDC) through the National Association of County and City Heath Officials requested the formation of the committee.

STIs have reached epidemic proportions nationally and continue to rise. Our committee is charged with investigating the problem and recommending novel and implementable solutions, said Young. Solutions exist. We are optimistic about the CDCs request for help that there will be resources and support to implement the committees solutions.

The Prevention and Control of Sexually Transmitted Infections in the United States committee will examine the epidemiological dimensions of STIs in the United States and factors that contribute to the epidemic (changes in population demographics, sexual and other behaviors, social determinants), as well as changes in the understanding of the agents that cause STIs.

Additionally, the study will attempt to address the economic burden associated with STIs and review current public health strategies and programs to prevent and control STIs (including STI diagnostics, STI vaccines, STI monitoring and surveillance, and treatment. Barriers in the healthcare system and insurance coverage associated with the prevention and treatment of STIs will also be surveyed.

Young was appointed to the committee due to his work at UCI leveraging social and behavioral data to detect real-world problems. He applied insights from psychology to online behavior change interventions and saw social norms could be modified.

Young uses this approach to transform time-consuming and expensive community-based interventions into online variants that more efficiently reach the masses. By analyzing peoples behaviors, problems from these behaviors can quickly be detected and addressed. Working with public health officials, Young is now developing tools that mine social data to identify potential areas of disease outbreak, crime, and poverty. His expertise will be used to address the STI epidemic.

We can now use technologies as a way of predicting and changing behavior, leading to positive and ethically delivered social change, said Young.

About the UCI School of Medicine: Each year, the UCI School of Medicine educates over 400 medical students, as well as 200 doctoral and masters students. More than 600 residents and fellows are trained at UC Irvine Medical Center and affiliated institutions. The School of Medicine offers an MD; a dual MD/PhD medical scientist training program; and PhDs and masters degrees in anatomy and neurobiology, biomedical sciences, genetic counseling, epidemiology, environmental health sciences, pathology, pharmacology, physiology and biophysics, and translational sciences. Medical students also may pursue an MD/MBA, an MD/masters in public health, or an MD/masters degree through one of three mission-based programs: the Health Education to Advance Leaders in Integrative Medicine (HEAL-IM), the Leadership Education to Advance Diversity-African, Black and Caribbean (LEAD-ABC), and the Program in Medical Education for the Latino Community (PRIME-LC). The UCI School of Medicine is accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Accreditation and ranks among the top 50 nationwide for research. For more information, visit som.uci.edu.

About the University of California, Irvine: Founded in 1965, UCI is the youngest member of the prestigious Association of American Universities. The campus has produced three Nobel laureates and is known for its academic achievement, premier research, innovation and anteater mascot. Led by Chancellor Howard Gillman, UCI has more than 36,000 students and offers 222 degree programs. Its located in one of the worlds safest and most economically vibrant communities and is Orange Countys second-largest employer, contributing $5 billion annually to the local economy. For more on UCI, visit http://www.uci.edu.

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Altru hosts Pretty in Pink, women’s health event at Red River High School – Grand Forks Herald

Posted: October 18, 2019 at 5:42 pm

Altru Hospital is hosting its Pretty in Pink event in the commons of Red River High School from 6 to 8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 16.

The annual event is held by the hospital to celebrate Breast Cancer Awareness Month. The event is free and open to the public. Parking is available at the Cushman Field entrance. Attendees are asked to use door 1.

Beginning at 6 p.m., people can explore educational booths and community resources such as Womens Way, Breast Reconstruction Awareness, and get information about Altrus prosthetics and orthotics.

The evening will feature a little pampering as well, with free nail painting and chair massages, in an effort to bring community members together for the womens health awareness event.

People can sign up to win a bicycle donated by Scheels All Sports, and there is also a raffle with several prizes, as well as door prizes. All proceeds from the raffle go to Altrus Breast Cancer Coalition Fund, which seeks to help patients with breast health services not covered by insurance. All attendees will get a small gift to take home.

From 7 to 8 p.m., there will be presentations by breast cancer survivor Wendy Dahlberg, and Jen Haugen, supervisor of Integrative Medicine at Altru Health System.

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Altru hosts Pretty in Pink, women's health event at Red River High School - Grand Forks Herald

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Concerns in covering alternative therapies in PM-JAY – The Hindu BusinessLine

Posted: October 18, 2019 at 5:42 pm

Two pet ministries of Prime Minister Narendra Modi Ministry of Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha and Homeopathy (AYUSH) and Ministry of Healths National Health Authority which runs Pradhan Mantri Jan Arogya Yojana (PM-JAY) are not on the same page, when it comes to practicing integrative medicine.

Currently, PM-JAY cashless insurance up to 5 lakh for poor families only offers hospitalisation based on allopathic medicine. However, the AYUSH Ministry is keen on pushing alternative treatments in the scheme.

A Health Authority official said that inclusion of AYUSH packages in PM-JAY is not feasible currently. It will be too difficult to work our way around fraud control in AYUSH procedures, where we will not be able to ascertain if hospitalisation is for correct purposes, said the official.

AYUSH Secretary Vaidya Rajesh Kotecha said that even though such an inclusion has not happened yet, the Ministry is trying hard to get the packages included. We will help the NHA with adequate fraud control mechanisms, Kotecha added.

Last month, AYUSH Minister Shripad Yesso Naik had said that a total of 33 packages had been sent to the Health Authority for consideration to be included under PM-JAY.

The list of pacakges proposed by AYUSH, seen by BusinessLine, includes 19 Ayurveda, Unani and Siddha, eight Yoga and six Naturopathy treatments. These are treatment of respiratory disorders such as asthma, pneumonia, gastrointestinal problems like hepatitis, stomach ulcers, cardiac issues like high blood pressure, metabolic disorders like diabetes, thyroid, gynaecological issues like endometriosis, reproductive tract infections, infertility, skin problems like vitiligo, psoriasis, neurological disorders like mental retardation, Parkinsons, Alzheimers, Dementia, eye problems like diabetic retinopathy and glaucoma.

It also proposes to include mental health issues such as clinical depression, anxiety, manic disorders, and other miscellaneous illnesses like varicose veins, diabetic foot in the in-patient hospitalisation packages. AYUSH Ministry has proposed a flat rate of 4,000 per day for hospitalisation in a routine ward, and has said that the average length of stay of a patient could be 14 days costing 56,000 and could extend up to 28 days costing 1.2 lakh. Similarly, cost for Yoga and Naturopathy related to above disorders has been pegged at 1,000 for each specialty per day of hospitalisation.

According to experts, while there is a need to include AYUSH treatments for access to poor, standardisation of procedures is a must. Naresh Trehan, Chairman of Gurgaon-based Medanta Medicity said, There is no harm in including AYUSH packages in PM-JAY, however, standardisation must be done. The authority must ascertain if a hospital is certified to mete out alternative treatments, otherwise anybody can open a centre and claim to give those treatments.

Partha Dey, Chief Operating Officer at Artemis Health Institute in Gurgaon said, It is difficult to control fraud as of now in the scheme, even with allopathic treatments. As far as AYUSH packages are concerned equal standard setting is a must. Dey also said that there is a resistance from patients on addition of alternative therapies apart from allopathy and it causes a confusion for them.

Kotecha said that while there is a popular perception that there are no standards as far as alternative treatments are concerned, this is not entirely true. AYUSH is working with All India Institute of Medical Sciences to develop integrative model for treatment of breast cancer patients. Also, it has been seen that adding ayurvedic treatments to Tuberculosis regimen reduces liver damage. The ministry also showed evidence in Germany for treatment of Osteoarthritis through Ayurveda, he said.

However, Kotecha too agreed that there is a need to have quality services. For this we have proposed to National Accreditation Board of Hospitals that such hospitals which provide alternative therapies should receive Entry Level Certification, he said.

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Concerns in covering alternative therapies in PM-JAY - The Hindu BusinessLine

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How To Get Access To Holistic Practitioners No Matter Where You Live – mindbodygreen.com

Posted: October 18, 2019 at 5:42 pm

Luckily, new tech-forward startups are finding ways to solve that problem. Enter: Begin To Heal, an online platform connecting patients with vetted holistic health professionals. Started by a former busy exec who found herself battling adrenal fatigue and frustrated by traditional medicine, Pooja Khanna finally found healing in holistic medicine. Determined to make this type of treatment more widely available, Pooja developed Begin To Heal. "The idea is to make alternative medicine as accessible as possible, especially to those who might be hesitant to seek less conventional methods of healing due to unfamiliarity with the industry," explains Pooja.

Begin To Heal is partnered with more than 200 licensed wellness practitioners, with services including everything from acupuncture, nutrition coaching, and integrative medicine to hypnotherapy, energy healing, reiki, spiritual coaching, ayurveda, and psychotherapy.

You can view practitioner profiles, sort by specialty, read reviews from other customers, and book your session, all through their website. The Begin To Heal team has even taken sample sessions with every practitioner on the site and verified their licenses and certifications.

And the best part: You can schedule virtual appointments, meaning even if you don't live in New York, where their in-person practitioners are based, you can have access to top holistic healers and alternative therapies through secure HIPAA-compliant video calls. Energy healing from the couch, anyone?

Plus, they offer online courses and guided meditations to round out your care. "Think of it like matchmaking for healing, and then add to it the comfort of being healed in your own home," Pooja explains. "Having it be an online service gives us the capability to create a global wellness universe."

Another New Yorkbased health practice, Parsley Health, just announced they'll start seeing patients virtually as well with new telehealth memberships. Billed as a primary care practice with a whole-body approach, Parsley's online membership is currently available in four states, with plans to go nationwide over the next six months.

When asked why they had expanded to online services, Parsley Health founder and mbg Collective member Robin Berzin, M.D., said it's all about access. While much of Parsley's practice was already digital, with doctor-patient messaging services and video call follow-ups, the first visit always had to be in person. "People shouldn't have to wait for a Parsley Health center to come to their area. We wanted to make Parsley accessible to them now," Berzin explained. "Our new telemedicine memberships will allow anyone, anywhere to do all of their visits online, including the first oneand that's really special."

Worried you won't be getting the "full Parsley experience" by doing it digitally? Robin promises, "For many, it will be even better. The convenience of anywhere access means you can kick off your journey with us from your home or office." Can't beat that.

Another newcomer, Milwaukee-based WellnessScript, has created their own virtual holistic health care program. To get you started, they offer a symptom quiz to learn more about where you are coming from. From there, you can book a one-hour phone or video consultation, followed by two 30-minute follow-up sessions with one of their licensed practitioners. Founded by two physicians, WellnessScript is committed to providing quality functional medicine to anyone, anywhere.

While not all of the services on these online platforms are covered by major health insurers right now, in many cases FSA/HSA benefits and out-of-network reimbursements can be used to cover most of the cost. Hopefully, as alternative medicine options become more widely available, the price will go down, make holistic health care even more accessible. As Robin put it, "This is just the next step. We have so many more steps to take to make comprehensive, holistic, personalized medicine available and accessible to everyone who needs it."

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What Are the Benefits of Turmeric? – The New York Times

Posted: October 18, 2019 at 5:42 pm

Dr. Amit X. Garg, a professor of medicine at Western University in London, Ontario, knew about turmerics medicinal use because of his Indian heritage. He knew firsthand of its rich cultural significance too: On his wedding day, his relatives rubbed the spice all over him because it is believed to be cleansing.

After seeing the effectiveness of curcumin, in smaller studies, Dr. Garg and his colleagues decided to test it on a larger scale in hopes it would make elective aortic surgery safer by reducing the risk of complications, which include heart attacks, kidney injury and death. In the randomized clinical trial that followed, about half of the 606 patients were administered 2,000 milligrams of curcumin eight times over for four days, while the others were given a placebo. It was a bit disappointing, but we couldnt demonstrate any benefit used in this setting, Dr. Garg said of the study, published last year in the Canadian Medical Association Journal.

In fact, there is not enough reliable evidence in humans to recommend turmeric or curcumin for any condition, according to the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health. Turmeric became a nutritional golden child partly because of its promise in laboratory studies cellular and animal. Some research indicates that both turmeric and curcumin, the active ingredient in turmeric supplements, have anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antibacterial, antiviral and antiparasitic activity. But this has mostly been demonstrated in laboratory studies, and, in many cases, the benefits of preclinical research isnt observed in clinical trials.

According to Natural Medicines, a database that provides monographs for dietary supplements, herbal medicines, and complementary and integrative therapies, while some clinical evidence shows that curcumin might be beneficial for depression, hay fever, hyperlipidemia, ulcerative colitis, osteoarthritis and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, its still too early to recommend the compound for any of these conditions.

And Natural Medicines has found there isnt enough good scientific evidence to rate turmeric or curcumins use for memory, diabetes, fatigue, rheumatoid arthritis, gingivitis, joint pain, PMS, eczema or hangovers.

Physicians say more research is needed. Dr. Gary W. Small, a professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at the David Geffen School of Medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles, who studies curcumins effect on memory, sees a lot of therapeutic potential. He also states that existing research demonstrates curcumins biological effects.

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What Are the Benefits of Turmeric? - The New York Times

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Nutrigenomics Testing Market 2019 Overwhelming Transformation and Growth in 2026: Holistic Heal,CURA INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE,Nutrigenomix,GX Sciences. -…

Posted: October 18, 2019 at 5:42 pm

The Research Insights has announced an exploratory data titled as Nutrigenomics Testing market. Demanding trends have been analyzed on the basis of type, size, and applications. The global scope for the Nutrigenomics Testing sector has been analyzed and predicted for the forecast period and the year Overwhelming Transformation and Growth in 2026.

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Holistic Heal,CURA INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE,Nutrigenomix,GX Sciences,Interleukin Genetics,NutraGene,Metagenics,Pathway Genomics,Salugen,Gene Box,Xcode Life,Sanger Genomics

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What report offers:

Regional analysis:

Geographically, the global Nutrigenomics Testing market has been fragmented into several regions such as North America, Latin America, Asia-Pacific, Africa, and Europe on the basis of productivity of several companies.

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Table of Contents

Global Nutrigenomics Testing Market Research Report

Chapter 1 Nutrigenomics Testing Market Market Overview

Chapter 2 Global Economic Impact on Industry

Chapter 3 Global Market Competition by Manufacturers

Chapter 4 Global Production, Revenue (Value) by Region

Chapter 5 Global Supply (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Regions

Chapter 6 Global Production, Revenue (Value), Price Trend by Type

Chapter 7 Global Market Analysis by Application

Chapter 8 Manufacturing Cost Analysis

Chapter 9 Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers

Chapter 10 Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributors/Traders

Chapter 11 Market Effect Factors Analysis

Chapter 12 Global Market Forecast

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Nutrigenomics Testing Market 2019 Overwhelming Transformation and Growth in 2026: Holistic Heal,CURA INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE,Nutrigenomix,GX Sciences. -...

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