In this issue:
- Subluxation Awareness Week
- Cholesterol Drug Linked to 40 Deaths Finally Pulled Off
Market
- Mo Money, Mo Money, Mo Health!
- Antibacterial Soap Overuse May Help Spread Disease
- Dr. Daniel David Palmer - The Father of Chiropractic
- Non Medical Care Usage Continues to Rise
Subluxation Awareness Week
The week of September 18th has been declared, "Subluxation
Awareness Week". In a recent proclamation by the
International
Chiropractors
Association, the week of September 18th was chosen to commemorate the
anniversary of the first chiropractic adjustment on September 18, 1895. The
proclamation reads:
The officers and members
of the International Chiropractors Association (ICA) understand the
devastating effects of vertebral subluxation on health and well-being. The
officers and members of the ICA further understand the advantages and
benefits of a life free of subluxation. These advantages include maximum
potential in health, performance, human potential and social well-being. For
these reasons, and to enlighten the world to these vital health principles,
the International Chiropractors Association hereby declares the week of
September 18th, the anniversary of the birth of chiropractic, to be further
known as, “SUBLUXATION AWARENESS WEEK”
Voted unanimously
August 1, 2001, ICA Board of Directors
The event was designed to alert the public of the dangers
of subluxations on the proper function of the nervous system. The
nervous system is the master controller of all other body functions.
Malfunction of the nervous system can lead to a wide variety of health
problems. More importantly, the proclamation was issued to raise the
consciousness of people as to the benefits of a subluxation free life.
When subluxations are removed, the body functions at a higher potential in
every aspect of life.
For further information on Subluxation Awareness Week, or
for more information on subluxations, a special website has been set up.
Please visit www.subluxaware.com
Cholesterol Drug Linked to 40 Deaths Finally
Pulled Off Market
Several recent stories reported that the Bayer Corp.
has voluntarily removed a popular cholesterol drug, Baycol, off the market
after it has been linked to as many as 40 deaths. One such
article appearing on the August 8, 2001 MSNBC website said that the drug was
taken by 700,000
Americans, and was pulled off the market because of muscle destruction
linked to at least 40 deaths around the world.
According to a similar story in the August 9, 2001 New
York Times Health section, the United States Food and Drug Administration
"agrees with and supports this decision," the agency said. It said
pharmacists would be instructed to return the drug to Bayer for refunds. The
F.D.A. approved Baycol for use in the United States in 1997. It should
be noted that no where in the reports does it say that the FDA has removed
its approval for Baycol.
Baycol was in a class of drugs called "Statins".
"All statins have been linked to muscle cell damage in rare cases, but
the problem is much more common with Baycol than with other such
drugs," said Dr. John Jenkins, the director of the office of drug
evaluation at the F.D.A. The Times article states, "From the
beginning, medical experts said, statins were known to cause the muscle
problem, rhabdomyolysis, which can lead to kidney failure and other
problems. But it occurred very rarely and was almost never fatal."
With Baycol, however, reports of serious rhabdomyolysis were about 10 times
as frequent as with the other statins, Dr. Jenkins said.
Lawsuits have begun to appear following the drug being
removed from the market. According to the website DrKoop.com, a Tallahassee,
Florida woman has sued Bayer Corp., claiming its recently recalled
cholesterol drug, Baycol, caused her to suffer muscle degeneration and
chronic fatigue. Separately the Chicago-based law firm of Kenneth B.
Moll & Associates said it plans to file a class action lawsuit against
Bayer in Cook County, Illinois, on behalf of all patients who were
prescribed Baycol. The law firm, which estimates that about 6 million
people worldwide have taken the drug, said the suit will seek among other
things the establishment of a medical monitoring fund "to enable people
that have taken Baycol to monitor the existence of dangerous side
effects."
Mo Money, Mo Money, Mo Health!
According to a story in Reuters Health on Friday Aug 31,
2001, a small increase in pay can have a very beneficial effect on your
health.
Researchers
at the University of California, San Francisco, assessed the health benefits
that San Francisco city contract workers would gain if a proposed wage
increase went into effect. Currently, these workers make an average of
$8.66 per hour, which would be increased to $11.00 per hour.
The lead researcher, Bhatia and his colleague Dr. Mitchell
Katz estimated how the wage hike would affect the health of the worker and
his or her family. Bhatia explained, "This is an applied
epidemiological study looking at what is known about income and health--that
people who earn more money tend to have better health outcomes--and apply
the findings to public policy."
The results of the researchers reports were published in
the September issue of the American Public Health Association's, American
Journal of Public Health. In that report the results showed that an
increase in salary would result in the following.
- 5% drop in deaths for all causes among workers
- reductions in the number of days sick in bed
- reductions in limitations of work and activities of
daily living
- reductions in depressive symptoms
- 34% increase in the odds that the children will
complete high school
- 22% reduction in the number of teen pregnancies.
- One negative, the increased salary would result in an
increase in alcohol consumption
"Our analysis demonstrates that a modest gain in
income resulting from a living wage would be associated with substantial
health benefits," Bhatia and Katz report.
Antibacterial Soap Overuse May Help Spread
Disease
From an August 1, 2001 MSNBC article come news that
scrubbing your hands too often with antibacterial soap may actually have the
opposite effect and make you and others more susceptible to disease.
Doctors
at the summer scientific meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology said
that, "When overused, the relatively harsh detergent action of
antibacterial soaps leaves you vulnerable to open sores that can attract
bacteria, resulting in skin problems such as eczema."
Dr. Marianne O’Donoghue, associate professor of
dermatology at Rush-Presbyterian St. Luke’s Medical Center in Chicago in
referring to over washing with antibacterial soap said, "This
begins a vicious cycle, whereby a person who develops hand eczema or another
form of dermatitis touches a surface, leaving microscopic germs behind.
Another person comes along, touches that surface and he too can be infected
with the bacteria."
Dr. William Baugh, chief of dermatology at the Beaufort
Naval Hospital in Beaufort, S.C., agreed. “I’ve seen patients who have
developed hand eczema from these [antibacterial] products,” he said. “It
certainly can occur [and spread].” Baugh went on to say, “When I ask
patients [with eczema] how often they wash their hands, they say 20 to 25
times a day. They think they are being good citizens by washing
frequently. But you can over do a good thing.”
Presently it is estimated from a recent survey that nearly
half of 1,100 liquid and solid soaps contain antibacterial agents.
From a dermatologist’s point of view, antibacterials are among the most
worrisome products contributing to skin problems, O’Donoghue said. She
continued, “They literally strip away fatty acids, moisture and
amino acid from the skin.” Baugh added, "Overuse of
antibacterials is worse than frequent use of other soaps as chemicals in the
detergents strip away the naturally protective fats and oils on the
skin."
Dr. Daniel David Palmer - The Father of
Chiropractic
September 18th, is the anniversary of the first
chiropractic adjustment and the birth of the chiropractic profession. D.D.
Palmer gave the first adjustment to Harvey Lillard in 1895 in Davenport,
Iowa, along side the Mississippi River. D.D. Palmer was himself
a colorful figure. During his lifetime, Palmer was a school teacher,
a
farmer, a grocer and eventually began practicing as a "Magnetic
Healer" in Davenport for a number of years prior to founding
chiropractic.
Magnetic healing had nothing to do with magnets, rather it
was a cross between massage and meridian therapies--which is based upon the
concepts of acupuncture and Chinese medicine. Magnetic healing rose up as an
alternative to main stream medicine at the end of the Civil War (keep in
mind that in 1895, it was still common for medical doctors to use blood
letting as a method for curing disease).
D.D. Palmer was practicing magnetic healing when the first
chiropractic patient Harvey Lillard entered his office. Palmers own
accounts of that historic event are as follows. "Harvey Lillard a
janitor in the Ryan Block, where I had my office, had been so deaf for 17
years that he could not hear the racket of a wagon on the street or the
ticking of a watch. I made inquiry as to the cause of his deafness and was
informed that when he was exerting himself in a cramped, stooping position,
he felt something give way in his back and immediately became deaf. An
examination showed a vertebrae racked from its normal position. I reasoned
that if the vertebra was replaced, the man's hearing should be restored.
With this object in view, a half-hour's talk persuaded Mr. Lillard to allow
me to replace it. I racked it into position by using the spinous process as
a lever and soon the man could hear as before. There was nothing
"accidental" about this, as it was accomplished with an object in
view, and the result expected was obtained. There was nothing
"crude" about this adjustment; it was specific, so much so that no
Chiropractor has equaled it."
For more history on the first chiropractic adjustment
please visit the link http://www.subluxaware.com/history2.htm
Non Medical Care Usage Continues to Rise
A study by Harvard Medical School, published in the August
21, 2001, issue of the Annals of Internal Medicine, examined trends
in the use of 20 different CAMs (Complementary and Alternative Medicine),
covering everything from acupuncture to yoga, among representative groups
across the U.S. The study continued to show that the use of what the
study termed "CAM" has continued to rise. The study was done by a
nationally representative telephone survey of 2055 people.
The results
showed
that approximately 3 of every 10 respondents in the pre–baby boom cohort,
5 of 10 in the baby boom cohort, and 7 of 10 in the post–baby boom cohort
reported using some type of CAM therapy by age 33 years. The study
also noted that of the respondents who ever used a CAM therapy, nearly half
continued to use it many years later. A wide range of individual CAM
therapies increased in use over time, and the growth was similar across all
major sociodemographic sectors of the study population.
The term CAM is a medically created term that may itself
not be very representative as most of the procedures included in the list
are neither complimentary or alternatives to medicine. In fact, many
such as chiropractic are completely separate primary health care professions
that are not even considered alternative in many references.
The conclusion of the Harvard study as published in the Annals
of Internal Medicine, was that the "Use of CAM therapies by a large
proportion of the study sample is the result of a secular trend that began
at least a half century ago. This trend suggests a continuing demand for CAM
therapies that will affect health care delivery for the foreseeable
future."
We
all know someone who could benefit from knowing about chiropractic. We
ask you to please forward this email newsletter to everyone you feel could
benefit from it. Please let us know when you forward this copy and
also what you think of this issue by sending us an email at the address we
have listed above. If you feel you have received this newsletter in
error please email us and let us know. Thank you.
Past
Newsletters |
Subscribe |
Unsubscribe
Dr. Darryl W. Roundy - © 2008 - All Rights
Reserved