As we are poised on the brink of moving into the new year 2013, this Issue 202 of Positive Health
PH Online similarly bridges many of the gaps which certain forces
believe to separate complementary / alternative medicine from
conventional / orthodox healthcare. As long time, devoted readers of PH
Online realize, I do not subscribe to the notion that various techniques
/ disciplines of healthcare constitute separate worldviews of medicine.
I have long been an advocate of the vision that healthcare is
multi-faceted and that there are a multitude of various disciplines and
techniques, practised by different practitioners. Hence, I don’t see the
sense of considering that osteopathic practitioners are alternative,
but that physiotherapists are conventional, or that nutritionists are
alternative but dieticians are orthodox.
The body of the past 18 years of published issues of
>3000 pages of PH Online, with its clinical, research, personal and
case studies, and book reviews are a testament to this unified vision.
That there is argument, discussion and disagreement regarding the best
way to identify, characterize and treat health problems is a given
across many disciplines in health, as it is across most human endeavours
regarding science, politics, legal and environmental issues.
Nowhere in the pantheon of health controversies is this
borne out more than when considering published research, as this
literature may be considered a bell weather of what is to come - when
new ideas, tested with results showing changed paradigms may predict the
changing shape of our world view and health clinical treatments. No one
human being is able to fully cover the entire bulk of research
publications, the scientific and medical literature, and also manage to
eat, drink, sleep and live a normal life. So in this respect, PH Online
cannot be perfect in attempting to walk this tightrope and evaluate all
aspects of healthcare, including research. However, looking back at the
assembled archive of now almost 19 years, I am pleased that this
provides a reasonable reflection of transpired research, and natural
health clinical treatment approaches.
Examples in Issue 202 of research studies fore-telling what is to come include:
“SAWANT and COLLEAGUES,
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Center for Pharmaceutical
Biotechnology and Nanomedicine, Northeastern University, Boston,
Massachusetts 02115, USA who evaluated the potential of palmitoyl
ascorbate (PA)-loaded micelles for ascorbate-mediated cancer cell
targeting and cytotoxicity.
“RESULTS: PA micelles
associated preferentially with various cancer cells compared to
non-cancer cells in co-culture. PA micelles exhibited anti-cancer
activity in cancer cell lines both in vitro and in vivo. The mechanism of cell death was due primarily to generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). www.positivehealth.com/research/sawant-and-colleagues”
“JACOBS and COLLEAGUES, UC Davis Center for Mind and Brain, Davis, CA This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
investigated the effects of a 3-month meditation retreat on telomerase
activity and two major contributors to the experience of stress.
“BACKGROUND: Telomerase
activity is a predictor of long-term cellular viability, which decreases
with chronic psychological distress (Epel et al., 2004). Buddhist
traditions claim that meditation decreases psychological distress and
promotes well-being (e.g., Dalai Lama and Cutler, 2009). Therefore, we
investigated the effects of a 3-month meditation retreat on telomerase
activity and two major contributors to the experience of stress:
Perceived Control (associated with decreased stress) and Neuroticism
(associated with increased subjective distress).
“RESULTS: Telomerase activity
was significantly greater in retreat participants than in controls at
the end of the retreat (p<0.05). Increases in Perceived Control,
decreases in Neuroticism, and increases in both Mindfulness and Purpose
in Life were greater in the retreat group (p<0.01). Mediation
analyses indicated that the effect of the retreat on telomerase was
mediated by increased Perceived Control and decreased Neuroticism.”
www.positivehealth.com/research/jacobs-and-colleagues-3
As Positive Health PH Online readers are
acutely aware, no area of medical treatment is more fraught with
controversy than is cancer; voluminous column inches, web pages and
media coverage is devoted to money-raising appeals for parents to fly
overseas to seek experimental or ‘groundbreaking’ cancer treatments; or
more sinisterly, frequent undercover exposés about so-called
experimental cancer treatments which are supposedly defrauding or
manipulating vulnerable cancer patients. For anyone suffering with a
cancer diagnosis and for their family, friends, or loved ones attempting
to cope with treatments which may be life-threatening and searching for
other potentially life-saving treatments, the feelings of helplessness
are indescribable, as so many people, including their loved one, die of
this disease. Issues about whether techniques are orthodox, therefore
legal, or alternative or experimental, are hair-splitting and unknowable
at the time, when a person’s life is at stake. Because of course,
progress continues to be made and techniques are always changing.
As for Meditation, it is no accident that this issue
publishes two features about meditation and the above excerpted Research
Study which documents that meditation increases telomerase activity, an
agreed parameter of long-term cellular viability and also contributes
to decreased stress. The article Transcendental Meditation: Health
Research Overview reviews the literature [50 references] and discusses
findings of numerous meta-analyses regarding cardiovascular health,
stress, ageing, cancer and quality of life:
www.positivehealth.com/article/meditation/zen-meditation-in-kerala-the-spiritual-quest-with-no-technique-to-learn
www.positivehealth.com/article/meditation/transcendental-meditation-health-research-overview
www.positivehealth.com/research/jacobs-and-colleagues-3
The articles included in Issue 202, as in previous
issues, are an inspiring testament to the important and pivotal clinical
treatment and research ongoing internationally with natural health
approaches. The articles include important contributions to herbal and
nutritional medicine, bodywork, dentistry and cancer and yoga.
www.positivehealth.com/issue/issue-202-january-2013
I would like to take this opportunity to wish the entire international community of Positive Health PH Online readers a healthy, happy and prosperous festive season and new year for 2013.