It seems unbelievable that here we are with Issue 200 of
Positive Health PH Online. The launch of PH was inspired by a
suggestion from my partner and co-director Mike Howell while I was
building the Cancer and Nutrition database for the Bristol Cancer Help
Centre in 1993.
That assignment came about in an attempt to put the
Cancer Centre on a more solid scientific footing, after it nearly closed
in the early 1990s following the disastrous Chilvers study which
concluded that women with cancer attending Bristol were more likely to
die than those receiving conventional cancer treatment. The results were
plastered all over the media; it later transpired that the research was
flawed - the group of women attending Bristol were generally more
seriously ill than the other group, and it all ended tragically in the
suicide of the lead researcher Dr Chilvers. I have written about this at
greater length over the years. For detailed references to the published
literature please see: www.positivehealth.com/article/editorial/editorial-issue-176
So what do I know now that I didn’t know then? And what
have I learned in nearly two decades, managing to survive the many
technological transitions from pre-press film to pdf direct to plate
printing to online publication? How do I count the endless things I have
learned: commissioning articles, editing, renting premises, taking on
staff, letting staff go, dealing with printers, mailing houses, the
Royal Mail, websites, search engines?
A main salient point stands out - that despite the fact
that things that used to take hours or days to find can now be sourced
in seconds online, the same gems which show through the thousands of
articles published since 1994 have remained the constant factor
throughout the past 200 issues of Positive Health PH Online.
This Issue 200 is a case in point, with authoritative
and clinically informative features spanning a spectrum of clinical
interest - herbal and nutritional treatment for acne, strategies for
building a personal health recovery, stress factors at work, bodywork
approaches for osteoarthritis, how to operate the body’s lymphatic pump,
in addition to energy healing of humans and animals. This is the
essence of the archive of PH Online and its usefulness to individuals,
clinicians and researchers alike. For the Research Update archive
provides the taste of what is yet to come, as research becomes
translated and embedded into treatment in the future. www.positivehealth.com/issue/issue-200-november-2012
As most PH Online readers do, I periodically undertake
inner reflection upon my own nature and character. I have been going
back to decisions I have made, first of all during the late 1960s to
change from a course to become a medical doctor, for a mixture of
political and idealistic reasons, and during the mid 1980s to change my
research field from agricultural molecular biology to human medicine,
also for political, global environmental reasons that the problems of
feeding hungry and starving people were more due to political and
economic rather than lack of crops to grow. The past 20 years have
combined, as a publisher, many of my deepest interests and concerns -
for natural approaches to healthcare, nutrition and eating and the
communication of research and treatment approaches.
However I still experience deep concerns for what I
perceive is a lack of fundamental change to embrace these most valuable
clinical treatment approaches and the persistence of schisms between
what is termed conventional allopathic medicine and complementary and
alternative medicine. This divide is a permanent feature within
governmental, political and international bureaucratic organizations at
the highest levels, embodied in the EU Directives and CODEX drives to
ban or at least neuter the majority of nutritional and herbal medicines.
I am also disappointed at the snail’s pace within oncological medicine
to integrate and apply nutritional, herbal and other effective
adjunctive approaches to cancer treatment, just as molecular biological
approaches are applied to designing better cancer drugs. The benefits of
embracing these advances will be improved treatment for all of us.
However, the current mood across many countries is of
recession, cost-cutting and regression rather than progress in health
issues. Having been driven for many decades by money, the knee-jerk
response to the lack of funding has been to reduce services, which may
be a reality, but doesn’t really get at the root causes of how to enable
people to be healthy. Certainly individuals must play their role and
take some responsibility for their health - spending a life smoking,
drinking, eating rubbish and popping pills, drugs and indiscriminately
harming their bodies will inevitably take its toll eventually. And at
the other end of the spectrum, spending endless resources to keep very
ill people alive at all costs, even though they are in great pain and
suffering and don’t have a quality of life worth living, is not
sustainable either.
It appears that we are always at a pivotal juncture; the
next twenty years will inevitably see huge changes which are not
necessarily predictable nor desirable. It is, however vital that each of
us strives to work and effect changes in their own spheres of expertise
and influence, trusting that it will all result in a transformative
synergy, just as I can see that having the complete archive of Positive
Health PH Online all together is definitely more than the sum of its
individual issues by itself. Will I still be at the helm of PH Online in
twenty years? Who can say, probably not, but part of the work I will be
doing will be to ensure that this unique collection of natural medicine
articles and research continues to serve as a valuable educational and
health-enhancing resource.