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ORTHOMOLECULAR
MEDICINE HALL OF FAME: 2007 |
Hall of Fame 2007 |
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Orthomolecular Medicine Hall of Fame Inductees for 2007 by Andrew W. Saul, Master of Ceremonies and Assistant
Editor, Journal of Orthomolecular
Medicine. (From the
Royal York Hotel, Welcome,
everyone, to the induction ceremony for the Fourth
Annual Orthomolecular Medicine Hall of Fame. It is my
privilege, speaking on behalf of all of us here, to honor the pioneers of
nutritional therapeutics. We do so with orthomolecular medicine’s
lifetime achievement awards. Yes, tonight, once again, we get to see who will
take home the “Orthie.” Let me tell you about the
most frightening man I have ever seen. He was not on a movie or TV screen. He
was a prisoner at the medium-security prison where I was teaching in 1991.
(And no, I was not an inmate.) Like most of my incarcerated students (I
called them my "captive audience") he ate a high-sugar, low-vitamin
diet. In class, I suggested improving it as much as possible, beginning with
high B-vitamin foods like wheat germ and whole grains, and by taking
supplemental vitamins. A number of classes
later, everybody was filing out of the room. But the Big Guy lagged behind.
He moved up close beside me. "Uh, can I talk to
you for a minute?" he whispered. "Sure, sure," I
answered. (You got a better answer?) "I, uh, I been eatin' that stuff, that wheat germ you told us
about," he said. "How did you come up
with it?" "They sell it in the
commissary," he answered. "They got those vitamin pills, too. Been
taking them." There was an
uncomfortable half-second pause, and than he continued: "Well, I just want
to tell you," he said, "that I’ve been taking those vitamins
for a couple o' weeks now." "And?" I said. "And, well, I just
want to tell you that I feel more clear." He put an unusual
emphasis on the word "clear," looking me straight in the eye. It finally dawned on me
that this was a compliment. "Oh, good!" I
said. "Keep right on doing it." He left, squeezing
through the door like a supertanker going under a low bridge. From time to time, I have
considered the benefits to society of having a man like that feeling more
"clear." Drugs will not correct
vitamin dependencies. Orthomolecular medicine can, and does. Preferring
nutrition over drugs is not a new idea. Hippocrates advocated food as
medicine. Benjamin Franklin said, “The best doctor gives the least
medicines.” And, observed 19th century physician Sir William
Osler: “One of the first duties of the
physician is to educate the masses not to take medicine.” One of my
all-time favorite quotes is from Oliver
Wendell Holmes: "If we doctors threw all our medicines into the sea, it
would be that much better for our patients and that much worse for the
fishes." And then there is the writing of Marx. It seems that In truth,
the biggest progress in medicine has been a growing realization that
vitamins, in sufficiently high doses, are an effective treatment for illness. That is
good news for all. Tonight, we offer our deepest appreciation to the
orthomolecular pioneers that have brought us this new paradigm of nutritional
healing. BERNARD RIMLAND (1928 – 2006) A Google
search will yield over 75,000 results for Bernard Rimland in just
two tenths of a second. Dr. Bernie Rimland has been honored all over the
world. In Recently,
TIME Magazine wrote: “In
1964, (Rimland) published Infantile Autism,
a landmark book that argued autism had biochemical roots and upended the then
conventional wisdom that it was a child's response to 'refrigerator
mothers" who didn't show adequate affection. An adviser to the makers of
Rain
Man - his son was a model for Dustin Hoffman's Oscar-winning
1988 turn as an autistic savant - Rimland also controversially claimed metals
like mercury (in vaccines) could trigger autism and vitamins could help treat
it.” The San Diego
Union-Tribune writes: “In 1967, while employed as a Navy psychologist,
Dr. Rimland founded his nonprofit institute a block from his home to create
an international source of research and information for biomedical
treatments. When he retired from his Navy job in 1985, he devoted the rest of
his life to autism research.” This was literally true. “Now I
spend 80 hours a week on autism,” he later said. I have read many tributes
to Dr. Rimland, but these next two I found especially moving: The first is from a lady
in “I never met Bernard Rimland. I never
heard him speak. And yet he touched my life. When my nephew was diagnosed
with autism, I read everything I could. I searched for answers. I don't
believe everything I read. But I believed everything that came from Bernard Rimland.
I trusted him. It was clear to me, from very early on, that his only agenda
was to help. Bernard Rimland wasn't afraid to speak out if he believed many
in the scientific community were wrong, and he didn't hesitate to defend
those who needed it. Mostly, he listened to parents. He was smart enough to
know that when he heard the same statements by numerous families, over and
over again, then there might be some truth there, or at the very least,
something worth investigating. “ “I met Bernie in
2004 in Hugh Riordan aptly summed up:
“The rest of us can learn a great deal from Dr. Rimland's
lifetime of pioneering work. If orthomolecular medicine can have such
positive effects on individuals who are autistic, just imagine the positive
effects that it can have on those of us who are not.” Tonight,
we offer our collective thanks to Dr. Bernard Rimland as we add his
distinguished name to the Orthomolecular Medicine Hall of Fame. HENRY TURKEL,
MD (1903-1992) It was
thirty years ago this year that Dr. Henry Turkel testified before the United
States Senate Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs. His presentation
was entitled, “Medical Amelioration of Down's Syndrome Incorporating
the Orthomolecular Approach.” Dr. Turkel was the very voice of
experience, having pioneered the nutritional treatment for Down’s
syndrome in the 1940s. Since then, he had successfully employed a combination
of vitamins and other nutrients, plus some medication, with over 5,000
patients. In addition, Dr. Turkel
wrote two key books: Medical Treatment of Downs Syndrome and Genetic
Diseases and Abram
Hoffer has written: “I
first became interested in Down Syndrome when I heard about the work being
done by Dr. Henry Turkel in Linus
Pauling has specifically recognized Dr. Turkel’s
work in his book, How to Live Longer
and Feel Better: “The
physician who has made the greatest effort to ameliorate Down Syndrome is Dr.
Henry Turkel of Now,
on behalf of the thousands of Down syndrome children whose lives have been
changed by nutritional treatment, we proudly induct Dr. Henry Turkel into the
Orthomolecular Medicine Hall of Fame. EWAN (1922-1991) Linus Pauling has told
the story of his first meeting with Dr. Cameron back in the 1970s. When
Pauling arrived at the Cameron home in It was over thirty years
ago, in 1976, when Cameron and Pauling published their famous paper,
“Supplemental ascorbate in the supportive treatment of cancer:
prolongation of survival times in terminal human cancer” in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences (USA. 73:3685-3689). In a 1979 interview in Prevention
magazine, he said: "If you can alter even a little
the very, very advanced cancer patients, then all logic suggests that you
should be able to alter the very early stages of the illness. And of course,
the earliest stage of the illness is before the person has cancer at all. I'm
pretty convinced that if people maintained a reasonable - I don't mean
astronomic - intake [of vitamin C], that we would see a diminished incidence
of cancer." Cameron and Pauling
published extensively, including their classic 1979 book, Cancer and Vitamin C. This was the
first book on the topic I had ever read, and my nutrition lectures changed
immediately. Not long afterwards, Dr. Cameron was appointed Medical Director
of the Linus Pauling Institute of Science and Medicine. Dr. Cameron, the most
dedicated of orthomolecular researchers, was way ahead of his time. He will
also be remembered as a very compassionate physician. Of his many vitamin C
and cancer papers, the title I like best has a marvelous subtitle, "My
God. I Feel So Much Better, Doctor!" (In Bland JS (ed), 1986:
A Year in Nutritional Medicine. Keats Publishing Inc., New Canaan Doesn’t this say it
all? We now welcome Ewan
Cameron into the Orthomolecular Medicine Hall of Fame. FANNIE KAHAN (1923 -
1978) The
United States Patent Office delayed issuing a patent on the Wright brothers'
airplane for five years because it broke accepted scientific principles. This
is actually true. And so is this: Vitamin B-3, niacin, is scientifically
proven to be effective against psychosis, and yet the medical profession has
delayed endorsing it. Not for five years, but for fifty-five. Fannie
was formerly an editor of Winnipeg Free Press, then editor of the Journal of Orthomolecular Psychiatry, and the Huxley Institute Newsletter. Humphry Osmond described Fannie as a
“greatly valued friend. She has played a great part in the
orthomolecular movement. The Journal
(of Orthomolecular Medicine) is a monument to her, because without her,
it would never have survived.” Fannie
was a prolific author. She wrote a number of pamphlets for
the Canadian Schizophrenic Foundation, and many, many newspaper and magazine
articles. She also wrote six books, contributing significantly to
Hoffer and Osmond’s How to Live
with Schizophrenia (first published in 1966 and still popular) and New Hope for Alcoholics (1968) which,
you may be interested to know, now sells on the internet for between $232 and $300. Fannie
was an important pioneer of orthomolecular education. She had, writes her son
Meldon, “a rare knack for describing
schizophrenia in language the layman could understand.” Her husband Irwin fully agreed, saying:
“Without the public’s understanding, involvement and support,
research and new approaches cannot go very far. Fannie was a true soldier. . . and wanted to get things done so that more
and more people could be helped.” Tonight,
we are delighted to welcome Fannie Kahan into the
Orthomolecular Medicine Hall of Fame. GLEN GREEN, MD (b. 1923) “Glen,”
says Abram Hoffer, “was the first person after
1950 to take subclinical pellagra seriously, and to describe it
clinically.” A very
experienced physician, by 1980, Dr. Green had performed 18,000 anesthetics,
1,000 operations . . . and delivered
1,500 babies. Working from the Hoffer-Osmond Diagnostic Test (HOD), Glen
developed a simplified Perceptual Dysfunction Test that helps identify pellagric children that characteristically experience
reading difficulties, depression, and behavioral problems. Helping patients
get better with nutrition cost Dr. Green his medical license in 1982. That is
unjust, and here’s one of the many reasons why: I helped
raise a learning-disabled child that was conventionally, and erroneously,
diagnosed as ADHD. On prescribed medication, the child experienced such
dreadful psychotic episodes that at one point he had to be restrained. Then,
off medication and on 3,000 mg of niacin a day, he was an entirely new and
happy boy. The change was so profound that he regularly received compliments
from his teachers. This is
what happens when subclinical pellagra, a vitamin dependency, is corrected
with orthomolecular nutritional therapy. Thank you, Dr. Green. Incidentally,
Glen and Peggy were married in 1946. This year marks their 61st
wedding anniversary. Now one
more honor for a most honorable man: Tonight, we are genuinely delighted to
induct Dr. Glen Green into the Orthomolecular Medicine Hall of Fame. MASATOSHI KANEKO, PhD Medical Mavericks, the popular book by Dr. Hugh Riordan, is a collection of
biographies of history's most important medical innovators. Every physician
or researcher profiled there is an uncompromising, outspoken orthomolecular
nutrition advocate. One of these innovators singled out for praise by Dr.
Riordan is Masatoshi Kaneko. Conventionally trained
scientists who have embraced orthomolecular medicine know that they have
forever crossed the Rubicon. That takes courage, because physicians and
academics have not been educated to look for nutritional solutions to health
problems. Or, as Hugh puts it: “'Orthomolecular' is not the answer to any
questions posed in medical school." That did not deter Dr. Kaneko, who
continued to work successfully to raise Hugh writes: “From among the
more than 30,000 members of his Know Your Body (KYB) organization today, many
other physicians and health care professionals are now enjoying repeated
success by following the same vitamin supplementation methods that Dr. Kaneko
developed. He attributes the sustained success of his procedures not to his
own merit, but rather to the orthomolecular ideas first instilled in him by
Doctors Linus Pauling and Abram Hoffer.” The appreciation is mutual. Abram Hoffer has named
Dr. Kaneko as one of the major “Contributors to Orthomolecular
Research, Theory and Practice.” Hugh has paid Masatoshi an even more
unique compliment: He wrote a limerick about him.
As Dr. Kaneko has shown, The key to health is clearly
known! And now in Every woman and man May learn all about every muscle
and bone! It is our
great pleasure tonight to add to Dr. Kaneko’s already
highly-distinguished career as we add him to the Orthomolecular Medicine Hall
of Fame. Andrew Saul is the author of the books FIRE
YOUR DOCTOR! How to be
Independently Healthy (reader reviews at http://www.doctoryourself.com/review.html
) and DOCTOR YOURSELF: Natural Healing that Works. (reviewed at http://www.doctoryourself.com/saulbooks.html
) For ordering information, Click here
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