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Reviews of Hospitals and Health: Your Orthomolecular Guide to a Shorter, Safer Hospital Stay |
Reviews of Hospitals and Health
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"Hospitals and Health fits exactly into our philosophy of health and healing. I attribute much of my good health (at age 89) to my total avoidance not only of doctors but of hospitals. I am thoroughly interested in the work of Dr. Abram Hoffer and the dramatic results he obtained. I hope his new book will get the wide distribution it deserves, and I'll certainly refer people to it." - Charlotte Gerson "For the inside scoop, I highly recommend reading Hospitals and Health." - Dr. Joseph Mercola
To order HOSPITALS AND HEALTH, Click Here
Hospitals and Health: Your Orthomolecular Guide to a Shorter, Safer Hospital Stay Dr. Andrew Saul is currently editor-in-chief of the Orthomolecular Medicine News Service, and has authored over 100 publications and seven books, including Hospitals and Health: Your Orthomolecular Guide to a Shorter Hospital Stay (1), which is the topic of this interview.
He is perhaps most prominently known for his appearance in the film Food Matters. Dr. Saul co-authored Hospitals and Health with Dr. Steve Hickey, and Dr. Abram Hoffer, the famous Canadian psychiatrist who, in 1953, demonstrated that high doses of niacin could cure schizophrenia and other similar mental disorders.
"Dr. Hoffer, in his study of biochemistry... noted that over the years there had been attempts to treat psychiatric illnesses by communities that didn't have hospitals. One was the Quaker community. And the Quakers, Dr. Hoffer said, found that if they took the mentally ill; put them in a nice house, gave them good food, and gave them compassionate care, they had a 50 percent cure rate," Dr. Saul says.
"Dr. Hoffer commented that drugs have about 10 percent cure rate. He was thinking that drugs might actually be going in the wrong direction, and hospitals give a lot of drugs... When people go into the hospital, they're going to have problems... Statistically, there are so many errors in hospitals that the average works out to one error per patient per day at the minimum. If you're in a hospital for four days, you can expect four medical errors in that time."
According to the 2011 Health Grades Hospital Quality in America Study (2), the incidence rate of medical harm occurring in the United States is estimated to be over 40,000 harmful and/or lethal errors each and EVERY day.
Hospitals have become particularly notorious for spreading lethal infections. In the United States, more than 2 million people are affected by hospital-acquired infections each year, and a whopping 100,000 people die as a result. According to the Health Grades report, analysis of approximately 40 million Medicare patients' records from 2007 through 2009 showed that 1 in 9 patients developed such hospital-acquired infections! The saddest part is, most of these cases could likely have been easily prevented with better infection control in hospitals—simple things such as doctors and nurses washing their hands between each patient, for example.
Hospitals-, home- and nursing home care account for over one-third of the $2.6 trillion the United States spends for health care. (3) This is TRIPLE what we surrender to drug companies. It wouldn't be so bad if we actually received major benefits for this investment, but, as Dr. Saul's book reveals, this oftentimes is not the case...
Hospital Nutrition and Supplements
However, there are solutions; it is possible to make hospitals better, and the book addresses this at depth. Nutrition is a key element. As Dr. Saul points out, hospital food is almost universally associated with bad food. Most of it is highly processed, but you can sometimes get better fare simply by asking for a vegetarian meal. He also explains why it can be helpful to get a simple note from your primary care physician if you take vitamins and want to continue taking them while in the hospital. And, your rights, should the staff insist you can't take them while staying there.
"If you want to take vitamins in the hospital, go ahead and do it," Dr. Saul says. "On the other hand, if the hospital, your physician, or surgeon, can explain to you why, for a particular procedure or a particular medication, you cannot take the vitamin, then you can accommodate that request if they are highly specific. Usually what happens is they'll say,
"You can't take any vitamins." But that's just not true. Everyone should take vitamin C before they go to the hospital. They should take vitamin C before they go to the dentist for less infection, less pain, quicker healing time, and less bleeding. The same is true with surgery. People who take high doses of vitamin C are much less likely to have blood clotting in healing, inflammation, and other complications that, unfortunately, are fairly familiar among surgical staff.
If someone says, "You can't take vitamin E because we're going to give you Warfarin (Coumadin)," that's a reasonable point. But then... there is evidence that if you take the vitamin E, you don't need aWarfarin.
I had a client once who had this exact dilemma. He had thrombophlebitis, and he was on Warfarin. He wanted to take vitamin E instead... He said, "Well, what should I do?" I said, "The best thing to do is to gradually decrease the drug with your doctor's cooperation while increasing the vitamin – again, with your doctor's cooperation. Talk to your doctor. The doctor that put you on the drugs should be the one that you'll talk to about the drugs."... He said, "I don't want to talk to the doctor about this." He actually was afraid to talk to his doctor. He did not want the confrontation. What he did instead was he just started taking the vitamin E. Eventually, his clotting time was extended to the point where the doctor said,
"What's going on?"
... Too much Warfarin causes extended bleeding. Too much vitamin E can also cause slightly extended bleeding, but not out of the normal range. I said to him... "You got to talk to your doctor. If your doctor's asking what's going on, [then] tell him. He'll take you off the Coumadin." The fellow talked to the doctor, and the doctor took him off the vitamin E..."
Unfortunately, that's a typical example of "standard care." Dr. Saul, on the other hand, believes one of the first things doctors need to do is to make sure each patient has a multivitamin with each meal. The same goes for inmates in prisons, and senior citizens in nursing homes.
"Diets in institutions are terrible," Dr. Saul says. "We can change that right away. People have to refuse the crap that they put on the plate and demand fresh, whole, unprocessed food. If enough people do that, the hospitals will do it. This is something that we can do. Vitamins, multivitamin supplements we can do...
The next thing that you can do is demand to be addressed by your title. Do not let them call you by your first name. You are a Mr., Ms., Mrs., or a Dr. This is a small point seemingly, but it can actually change your care.
Another thing that people need to do when they go into the hospital, and I got this from a nurse herself, she said, "Bring a guard.
I would never let a family member go into the hospital alone. Make absolutely sure that a friend or family member is with them 24 hours a day." What does this do? It makes sure that mistakes aren't made, or if mistakes are made, you've got a witness. At the very least, the person is going to have some company. That's something we can do. Not everybody has an advocate. Not everybody has family members available, but this is still a doable situation. What else can we do about hospitals? We can avoid them..."
Knowing How to Play "the Hospital Game" Can Help Keep You Alive
Why Avoiding Elective Procedures During July May Be a Lifesaving Choice
Who has the MOST Power During Your Hospital Stay?
Knowing how to prevent disease so you can avoid hospitals in the first place is clearly your best bet. But knowing what to do to make your hospital stay as safe and healing as possible is equally important. For the inside scoop, I highly recommend reading the book.
Hospitals and Health is available through any online bookseller, or you can order an autographed copy Here References:
1. Hospitals and Health: Your Orthomolecular Guide to a Shorter, Safer Hospital Stay
2. HealthGrades 2011 Healthcare Consumerism and Hospital Quality in America Report
3. US Health care costs, KaiserEdu.org
4. "A July Effect in Fatal Medication Errors: A Possible Effect of New Medical Residents," Journal of General Internal Medicine, August 2010: 25(8); 774-779
Hospitals and Health: Your Orthomolecular Guide to a Shorter, Safer Hospital Stay
To order HOSPITALS AND HEALTH, Click Here .
Hospitals and Health reviewed at Amazon.com: Too often, it's Hospitals OR Health There are a number of good "hospital survival guides" in print. This one is quite a bit different: it is a natural-healing, orthomolecular-medicine, megavitamin version, written by a qualified physician with extensive vitamin therapy experience. Dr. Abram Hoffer has long been an outspoken critic of hospital care, and has pressed for hospital reform for over 50 years. He worked in enough of them to know. His main point is that if you have to be hospitalized, make sure it is not a one-way trip. The book pulls no punches as it criticizes hospital care, past and present. But it also provides a great deal of surprisingly upbeat, very practical tactical suggestions: a preferred model of what an orthomolecular (nutrition-based) treatment facility should be; specific supplement and diet parameters; use of vitamins in hospitals; do/don't checklists; and several hundred scientific references. In my opinion, the book is an excellent guide for families, a positive, how-to patient handbook. Job one, the authors say, is to "be sure you leave the hospital by the front door," not the basement (morgue) door. This means taking charge of the menu; knowing how to question authority and complain; learning how to win medical arguments, or at least lose less often; how to keep staff from taking away your vitamin supplements; getting inside the heads of what it is like to be a hospital staffer; how to be an orthomolecular nutrition advocate; what to do to prevent and quickly reverse bedsores; and most of all, how the rights of the patient override the rules of any institution. Everyone has had a family member that has had to be hospitalized. None of them have had a guide to help them using orthomolecular vitamin therapy . . . until now.
Here is an idea of
what you will find in this new book by Abram Hoffer, M.D., Andrew Saul, and Steve Hickey:
A hospital, by
definition, is a collection of the sick, the injured, the infirm, and the
stressed. All these situations call for larger than the normal
quantities of dietary vitamins. When is the last time you saw a hospital
or nursing home routinely give even a daily multivitamin,
let alone specific high-dose therapeutic supplements?
This can immediately
change, and you can help do it. Prepare to stand firm on what is
most important, and negotiate the rest.
1. If you want
to take your vitamins while hospitalized, bring them with you. A
written statement from your doctor that you will be doing so may save a lot
of fuss. I'm not exaggerating: hospital staff
often tell patients they may not take anything that the hospital
didn't authorize them to take. You can hardly count on them to provide
megadoses of vitamins. So it is a bit like a movie theater telling you that
you can't bring in your own popcorn, but they won't sell you any,
either. Vitamins are vastly more important to an enjoyable hospital stay
than popcorn is to a movie.
2. If you are given
a plausible medical reason why you should not take vitamins, be bold and ask
for written references. Look up each surgical procedure or medicine
you are offered. Is there REALLY a problem with a vitamin? Complete
information on drugs is contained in the PHYSICIANS' DESK REFERENCE (PDR),
found in any hospital pharmacy, library or doctors' lounge. Your public
library will probably even look it up for you if you telephone them from your
room.
The PDR lists all
prescription medications (and there is another book for nonprescription
medicines) with all their side effects, contraindications and any
nutrient-drug interactions. It is quite rare for a vitamin to interfere
with a prescription drug. Any such caution is in the PDR in
writing. The same information is on drug package inserts. Do not
assume that you doctor or nurse has memorized the nutrient/drug connections
of some 3,000 drugs in the PDR.
Surgical information may
be obtained from sources other than your surgeon. Try the public or
hospital library for the non-technical Good Operations, Bad Operations
by Charles Inlander (Penguin, 1993). To know
every aspect, two standard reference works are Textbook of Surgery,
David Sabiston, ed. (Saunders, 1993) and Principles
of Surgery, S. I. Schwartz, et al (McGraw Hill, 1989).
By the way, any doctor or
nurse who makes fun of you for being thorough probably should be more
thorough themselves. Don't stand for harassment, especially when you
are in the right. Tell a supervisor.
Unacceptable Reasons
for Stopping Vitamins: b. "Vitamins
will be dangerous after surgery." Since all nutrition
textbooks indicate a substantially increased need for vitamins during
wound healing, this is illogical. Some patients have been told that
their blood-thinning medications (like Coumadin brand warfarin) are
incompatible with vitamins, especially K, C and E. First of all, your
supplements do not contain any vitamin K, because your intestinal bacteria
make it for you.
Vitamin C may lessen
clotting time, and vitamin E may increase it. Taking both allows the body to
achieve a natural balance. If you are given Coumadin, your prothrombin time should be monitored. Since they are
constantly taking blood for some reason or other anyway, your
"pro-time" can be checked often. Instead of reducing your
vitamins, doctors can simply adjust the amount of their drug.
c. "Vitamins
are unnecessary if you eat right." I say, long hospital stays
are unnecessary if they FED you right. Since they don't, supplements are
the simple answer. If you find a hospital that feeds you a
vegetarian, three-quarters raw food diet (blended or juiced for some
patients, as needed) then I will lighten up. Until then, "hospital
food" will continue to deserve its almost pathogenic reputation, and supplements
are completely justified.
It may be their
building, but it is your body. Accept nothing without an explanation that is
satisfactory to you. If the nurse or doctor or aide or clerk or orderly
or anyone else "says so," ask for a supervisor. If the
supervisor "says so," ask to see the hospital administrator.
If she or he is "too busy" for such contact, leave. There are
other hospitals. If this sounds like shopping for a new car, well, it
very nearly is. Only this is more important.
To order HOSPITALS AND HEALTH, Click Here .
Introduction: Dangerous Places, 1 PART ONE Diagnosis—Hazardous to Your Health CHAPTER 1 How Did We Get Here?, 15 PART TWO Antidote—Patient Power CHAPTER 6 The Hospital Game, 115 Conclusion, 201 Andrew Saul is the author of the books FIRE
YOUR DOCTOR! How to be Independently Healthy (reader reviews athttp://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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