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Alternative Mental Health News -- Issue 3
Date: Sep 18, 2000
An ezine brought to you by AlternativeMentalHealth.com and Safe
Harbor, a nonprofit corporation.
Dan Stradford, Editor
Alan Graham, Assistant Editor:
SafeHarborProj@aol.com
www.AlternativeMentalHealth.com
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TABLE OF CONTENTS:
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1. THE SAFE HARBOR
2. EDITOR'S COMMENT
3. ARTICLE: URINE TEST CAN ISOLATE CAUSES OF
PSYCHOSIS, DEPRESSION
4. ARTICLE: "LOST" MEDICAL PROTOCOLS FOR PSYCH PATIENTS
DISCOVERED
5. ARTICLE: ESTROGEN'S ANTIDEPRESSANT PROPERTIES PASS NIMH TEST
6. ARTICLE: DIETARY FATTY ACIDS ESSENTIAL FOR MENTAL HEALTH
7. ARTICLE: DEMENTIA, OR JUST DRUG SIDE-EFFECTS?
8. ARTICLE: OVER-PRESCRIPTION OF STIMULANTS RAISES CONCERNS
9. ARTICLE: EXERCISE PROVIDES PHYSICAL, MENTAL BENEFITS
10. ABOUT ALTERNATIVEMENTALHEALTH.COM
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THE SAFE HARBOR
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Safe Harbor was founded in 1998 in the wake of growing public
discontent with the unwanted effects of orthodox psychiatric
treatments such as medication and shock therapy. Seeking to
satisfy the demand for safer, more effective treatments, the
Project is dedicated to educating the public, the medical
profession, and government officials on research and treatments
that, minimally, do no harm and, optimally cure the causes of
severe mental symptoms. Our primary thrust is education on the
medical causes of severe mental symptoms.
Contact info:
Safe Harbor
P.O. Box 37
Sunland, California 91041-0037
U.S.A.
(818) 890-1862
SafeHarborProj@aol.com
www.AlternativeMentalHealth.com
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EDITOR'S COMMENT
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In 1999 a man called the Safe Harbor office in great distress. His
wife was psychotic and he was at wit's end. His story - and the
happy ending - is featured in the following article on Great
Plains Laboratory, an unsung hero in this saga.
For decades various doctors have been claiming that much of what
passes for mental illness is actually a variety of metabolic
problems - yeast infections, unusual nutritional needs, allergies,
toxic reactions, and other unseen physical disturbances - that
turn normal children and adults into bizarre or disturbed ones.
And many physicians have had
recovered patients to back them up.
The problem has always been: How do you test for these metabolic
disturbances?
Recent breakthroughs, such as those by Great Plains Laboratory,
have now made such testing possible. This is a true godsend for
the autistic and others with severe mental symptoms. These tests
can detect such things as food allergies which can trigger
abnormal brain function.
There is a chasm of difference between being told you have a wheat
allergy and being told you have schizophrenia. We congratulate
Great Plains Laboratory for contributing so bountifully to the
quality of life of those suffering mental disturbances.
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URINE TEST CAN ISOLATE CAUSES OF PSYCHOSIS, DEPRESSION
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"She has catatonic schizophrenia," the doctor told Linda
P.'s husband. No further medical tests would be needed, he added.
Linda's husband was jolted. But he refused to accept this finding.
He went through several doctors and researched the internet until
he found a physician who would examine her further. The new doctor
ordered a unique 62-point organic acid urine test developed by
Great Plains Laboratory in Kansas.
Several abnormalities were found, including a citric acid level
that was 5 times normal. The solution? Injections of a simple
nutrient called glutathione plus other nutritional supplements.
Within 36 hours of her first injection, Linda P. - psychotic for
seven months and virtually mute - got on the phone and talked for
an hour. A month later she was perfectly normal. (Her full story
is listed on the www.AlternativeMentalHealth.com home page under Articles
"Dramatic Recovery.")
"She probably had a severe toxicity of some kind that
depleted her glutathione levels," says William Shaw, Ph.D.,
director of Great Plains Lab. Dr. Shaw helped create the lab's
remarkable tests. Glutathione helps clear toxins from the body.
Shaw reports that the organic acid test has been used to find
underlying causes in psychosis, schizophrenia, depression, autism,
attention deficit disorder, and a host of physical ailments.
"A high percentage of people have benefited," he says,
"because they pinpoint the physical basis of the
disease."
The organic acid test is commonly ordered to detect the presence
of Candida (yeast) overgrowth which can cause a broad spectrum of
mental disorders including depression and schizophrenia.
"I usually recommend allergy tests for psychosis as
well," says Shaw. "Mold, for example, can trigger a
psychotic reaction in some people. One doctor videoed a female
patient who had to be restrained by three people after being
exposed to a single drop of mold extract."
In cases of psychosis or schizophrenia, Shaw recommends a standard
physical examination and tests to check for underlying medical
causes, such as a Chem-25 blood test, urinalysis, thyroid test,
and a 5-hour glucose tolerance test. If nothing significant shows,
he recommends the organic acid urine test, a comprehensive allergy blood test, and
an opiates peptide urine test. This last test is unique.
Psychotics commonly poorly digest wheat or milk which can result
in the production of opiate (as in opium) peptides (compounds
formed from amino acids). All three tests are available at Great
Plains Lab.
"We don't have any hard numbers," says Shaw, "but
I'd say that on 50% of individuals with psychosis you would find
significant abnormalities in these areas [of the tests] and they
would experience benefit."
The costs of the tests are: organic acid - $200; comprehensive
allergy - $200; opiate peptides - $100. They are covered by many
insurance policies.
Great Plains Laboratory is in Overland Park, Kansas, at (913)
341-8949.
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"LOST" MEDICAL PROTOCOLS FOR PSYCH PATIENTS DISCOVERED
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In recent hearings on proposed California Assembly Bill 1800 -
designed to toughen involuntary commitment laws - someone raised a
question about a "Medical Evaluation Field Manual."
The 60+page manual, an extensive study of the physical causes of
severe mental symptoms, gives the exact step-by-step procedures to
follow to examine psychiatric patients for a basic screening of
such ailments. Included are all tests to be run, questions to be
asked, and details of the physical exam to be done.
It was compiled by Dr. Lorrin Koran of the Dept. of Psychiatry and
Behavioral Sciences of Stanford University as part of an Assembly
Bill passed by the California legislature in 1988.
The protocols, if implemented, could clearly save thousands from
being misdiagnosed with psychiatric disorders when they are, in
fact, medically ill.
The manual seems to presuppose that these medical protocols will
be implemented throughout the California mental health
system.
It appears the manual has been "lost." When we contacted
the California Dept. of Mental Health, they had a single
recently-obtained copy and were in the process of having more
printed.
The manual states: "For several reasons, mental health
professionals working within a mental health system have a
professional and a legal obligation to recognize the presence of
physical disease in their patients. First, physical diseases may
cause a patient's mental disorder. Second, physical disease may
worsen a mental disorder, either
by affecting brain function or by giving rise to a
psychopathologic reaction. Third, mentally ill patients are often
unable or unwilling to seek medical care and may harbor a great
deal of undiscovered physical disease."
The study reported that in a review of patients treated in
Northern California, 39% "had an active, important physical
disease" and "the mental health system had failed to
detect these diseases in nearly half (47.5%) of the affected
patients."
Persons wanting immediate photocopies of the manual may obtain
them from the Safe Harbor Project for $12, obtainable at the
contact information above (under "Safe Harbor Project").
Others can get on the waiting list with the California Dept. of
Mental Health at 916-654-2309 for a free copy at a later date.
The manual will be posted on AlternativeMentalHeatlh.com within
the next few months.
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ESTROGEN'S ANTIDEPRESSANT PROPERTIES PASS NIMH TEST
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Women who suffer depression as they enter the early stages of
menopause (perimenopause) may find estrogen to be an alternative
to traditional antidepressants, a new study suggests.
Estrogen levels, body thermostats and mood often fluctuate in the
perimenopause. A minority of women become clinically depressed. A
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) study of 34 such women
found that estrogen improved mood in 80% of the cases.
The study, published in the August 2000 issue of the American
Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, is the first controlled
study of its kind. Only 20% of the women responded to the placebo.
Relief was obtained from early morning awakening, loss of
enjoyment, sadness and irritability. These were not women with
abnormally low estrogen levels prior to treatment, but researchers
Schmidt and Rubinow suggest that some women may be especially
sensitive to changing hormone levels.
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DIETARY FATTY ACIDS ESSENTIAL FOR MENTAL HEALTH
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Insufficient intake of essential fatty acids (EFAs) may contribute
to the onset of mental disorders, while their supplementation may
relieve some symptoms, according to researchers who attended a
National Institutes of Health (NIH) Workshop on the subject in
September 1998.
Omega-3 fatty acids are brain-specific nutrients that are highly
concentrated in the nerve endings.
"Epidemiological [disease] studies in various countries and
in the United States in the last century suggest that decreased
omega-3 fatty acid consumption correlates with increasing rates of
depression," wrote Jerry Cott, Ph.D. "There is evidence
that deficiency of long-chain,
omega-3 polyunsaturate may contribute to symptoms of
schizophrenia, alcoholism, multiple sclerosis and postpartum
depression."
EFA deficiency could lead to depression through effects on immune
function and production of cytokines. A cytokine is a substance
that causes living cells to grow and divide. If cytokines get out
of control for some reason, they can contribute to conditions like
cancer, in which cells grow without limit.
Researchers Maes and Smith wrote that "Inflammatory cytokines
or lipopolysaccharide [molecules of fat-type substances and
sugars] given to animals or humans provoke an extensive set of
symptoms and signs similar to, if not identical to, those found in
major depression."
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DEMENTIA, OR JUST DRUG SIDE-EFFECTS?
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Elderly patients may be diagnosed and treated for senility when
they are suffering from the side-effects of medication.
Prescription and over-the-counter drugs used to relieve
Parkinson's disease, depression, allergies and migraine can
produce side-effects that could be mistaken for dementia in the
elderly.
The drugs, known as anticholinergics, can cause confusion, memory
loss,disorientation and blurred vision. Unsteadiness and a rapid
heartbeat can also occur.
Doctors could be misdiagnosing thousands of elderly people with
dementia because they are confusing the condition with the
side-effects of many common medicines, according to a report in
the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine. Dr Jacob Mintzer of
the Medical University of South Carolina and Alistair Burns of the
University of Manchester said
if a patient complains of symptoms, doctors and caregiverrs should
be aware that they could be caused by medication.
Elderly people are most at risk of experiencing these side-effects
because many are on a number of different medications for a
variety of conditions. Their bodies are also less efficient which
means that the drugs stay in their bodies longer.
In the UK, elderly people account for 18% of the population but
they consume 45% of all prescription drugs.
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OVER-PRESCRIPTION OF STIMULANTS RAISES CONCERNS
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The first long-term effort to track stimulant therapy in a large
population of children has reached some unsettling conclusions.
The research was reported in the August 4, 2000, issue of Science.
The Duke University study finds that most 9- to 16-year-olds
receiving Ritalin or other stimulants don't exhibit the symptoms
of attention-deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), the only condition for which such
drugs are approved.
The study adds to the public debate over ADHD, which has been a
controversial diagnosis questioned by some medical professionals.
Researcher found that only 1/3 of the children prescribed
stimulants actually met the criteria for ADHD. Children put on
stimulants typically took them for more than 3 years, regardless
of their psychiatric status, the researchers noted. Children
taking these drugs proved more likely than the others to exhibit
muscle tics, a side effect
of prolonged stimulant use.
The prevalence of stimulant treatment among the North Carolina
sample group doubled over 4 years to nearly 10 percent, supporting
other evidence from medical databases of increasing numbers of
stimulant prescriptions.
Stimulant treatment of children without ADHD symptoms occurred
half as often among children living in poor households as among
those in families above the federal poverty line.
Evidence of extensive stimulant treatment among children who don't
have ADHD symptoms is "surprising and perplexing,"
remarked psychiatrist Benedetto Vitiello of the National Institute
of Mental Health in Bethesda, Md. Researchers should do larger
studies of kids in different communities to probe this issue, he said.
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EXERCISE PROVIDES PHYSICAL, MENTAL BENEFITS
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A controlled clinical trial on the short- and long-term
psychological effects of a 12-week aerobic fitness program yielded
positive results, according to the January 1999 issue of
Preventive Medicine.
Following completion of the exercise program (and through 12
months of follow-up), 82 adult participants completed the Beck
Depression Inventory, Profile of Mood States, State-Trait Anxiety
Inventory, and the Tennessee Self-Concept Scale. The exercise
participants showed a positive fitness change and mental
improvement compared to a control
group.
At a one-year follow-up, physiological and mental benefits
remained significantly improved according to University of
Missouri researchers.
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ABOUT AlternativeMentalHealth.com
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AlternativeMentalHealth.com is the world's largest web site
devoted exclusively to alternative mental health treatments. It
includes a directory of over 140 physicians, nutritionists,
experts, organizations, and facilities around the U.S. that offer
or promote safe, alternative treatments for severe mental
symptoms.
Many of the physicians listed do in-depth examinations to find the
physical causes behind mental problems. Also included are an array
of articles on topics ranging from the medical causes of
schizophrenia to the effects of toxic metals on mental health.
A bookstore page lists top books that cover many areas of
alternative treatments with titles like Natural Healing for
Schizophrenia and Other Common Mental Disorders and No More
Ritalin.
AlternativeMentalHealth.com has been created to educate the
public, practitioners, and government officials on the medical
conditions that create "mental illness" and the many
safe resources available for addressing and often curing severe
mental symptoms.
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