UCI Researchers Uncover Cancer Cell Vulnerabilities; May Lead to Better Cancer Therapies – Newswise

Newswise Irvine, CA June 12, 2020 A new University of California, Irvine-led study reveals a protein responsible for genetic changes resulting in a variety of cancers, may also be the key to more effective, targeted cancer therapy.

The study, published today in Nature Communications, titled, Quantification of ongoing APOBEC3A activity in tumor cells by monitoring RNA editing at hotspots, reveals how the genomic instability induced by the protein APOBEC3A offers a previously unknown vulnerability in cancer cells.

Each day, in human cells, tens of thousands of DNA damage events occur. In cancer cells, the expression of the protein APOBEC3A is one of the most common sources of DNA damage and mutations. While the mutations caused by these particular proteins in cancer cells contribute to tumor evolution, they also cause breaks in the DNA, which offer a vulnerability.

Targeting cancer cells with high levels of APOBEC3A protein activities and disrupting, at the same time, the DNA damage response necessary to repair damages caused by APOBEC3A, could be key to more effective cancer therapies, said Remi Buisson, PhD, senior investigator and an assistant professor in the Department of Biological Chemistry at the UCI School of Medicine. However, to exploit the vulnerability of the cancer cells, it is critical to first quantitatively measure the proteins activity in tumors.

To understand the role of APOBEC3A in tumor evolution and to target the APOBEC3A -induced vulnerabilities, the researchers developed an assay to measure the RNA-editing activity of APOBEC3A in cancer cells. Because APOBEC3A is difficult to quantify in tumors, developing a highly sensitive assay for measuring activity was critical. Using hotspot RNA mutations, identified from APOBEC3A-positive tumors, the team developed an assay using droplet digital PCR and demonstrated its applicability to clinical samples from cancer patients.

Our study presents a new strategy to follow the dysregulation of APOBEC3A in tumors, providing opportunities to investigate the role of APOBEC3A in tumor evolution and to target the APOBEC3A-induced vulnerability in therapy, said Buisson. We anticipate that the RNA mutation-based APOBEC3A assay will significantly advance our understanding of the function of the protein in tumorigenesis and allow us to more effectively exploit the vulnerabilities it creates in cancer therapy.

This study was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health, a California Breast Cancer Research Program grant and an MPN Research Foundation Challenge grant.

About the UCI School of Medicine

Each year, the UCI School of Medicine educates more than 400 medical students, and nearly 150 doctoral and masters students. More than 700 residents and fellows are trained at UCI Medical Center and affiliated institutions. The School of Medicine offers an MD; a dual MD/PhD medical scientist training program; and PhDs and masters degrees in anatomy and neurobiology, biomedical sciences, genetic counseling, epidemiology, environmental health sciences, pathology, pharmacology, physiology and biophysics, and translational sciences. Medical students also may pursue an MD/MBA, an MD/masters in public health, or an MD/masters degree through one of three mission-based programs: the Health Education to Advance Leaders in Integrative Medicine (HEAL-IM), the Leadership Education to Advance Diversity-African, Black and Caribbean (LEAD-ABC), and the Program in Medical Education for the Latino Community (PRIME-LC). The UCI School of Medicine is accredited by the Liaison Committee on Medical Accreditation and ranks among the top 50 nationwide for research. For more information, visit som.uci.edu.

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UCI Researchers Uncover Cancer Cell Vulnerabilities; May Lead to Better Cancer Therapies - Newswise

Unlocking the Secrets of Brown Fat – Michigan Medicine

In recent years, brown fat has garnered attention as the so-called good fat that can protect against obesity and its associated health risks, like cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Two separate major studies, one led by Liangyou Rui, Ph.D. and one by Ling Qi, Ph.D., both with the department of molecular & integrative physiology, help explain brown fats properties.

Located in small pockets throughout the body, most mammals use brown fat (and its closely related cousin beige fat) to stay warm. In mice and humans, if you have more brown or beige fat, you are more protected from metabolic disease, says Rui, the Louis G. D'Alecy Collegiate Professor of physiology at U-M Medical School, whose lab studies the molecular and physiological mechanisms of obesity, diabetes and fatty liver disease. In a new study published in Nature Communications, Rui, first author Lin Jiang, Ph.D., and their colleagues reveal a pathway by which the hormone leptin contributes to weight loss.

Leptin regulates body weight by controlling appetite and energy expenditure, but exactly how has been a mystery. What is known, says Rui, is that leptin activates brown and beige fat. The new study elucidates a molecular accelerator of leptin action in the brain called Sh2b1. His team has found that Sh2b1 in the hypothalamus, an important brain region controlling body temperature and hunger among other functions, promotes the stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system. The sympathetic nervous system sends signals to brown and beige fat to activate it, thus maintaining body weight and metabolism.

The team demonstrated this proof-of-principle by creating two mouse models. Mice that lacked the Sh2b1 gene in the leptin receptor neurons had an incredibly reduced sympathetic drive to the brown and beige fat and reduced capability to promote energy expenditure, says Rui. This reduced the ability of brown fat to be metabolized into heat, lowering the mices core body temperature. Whats more, the mice also developed obesity, insulin resistance and a fatty liver. In contrast, mice with extra expression of Sh2b1 in their brains were protected from obesity.

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No one knew that Sh2b1 in the brain controls the sympathetic nervous system or was required for leptin to activate brown fat to increase energy expenditure, notes Rui. As for how this finding could be applied to humans, he says the hope is to eventually find a way to increase expression of Sh2b1 or its ability to enhance leptin signaling and fat burning.

Other U-M authors contributing to this paper include: Haoran Su, Xiaoyin Wu, Hong Shen, Min-Hyun Kim, Yuan Li, Martin G. Myers Jr, and Chung Owyang.

Brown fat gets its color from high amounts of iron-containing mitochondria, unlike the standard white fat linked to obesity. A team led by Qi, a professor of molecular & integrative physiology and internal medicine at U-M Medical School has been studying how mitochondria, the power plant of the cell, and another cellular structure called the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), which is involved in the production of proteins and lipids, interact inside brown fat cells.

In particular, theyve studied the role of a protein complex involved in a process called ER-associated protein degradation, or ERAD. Simply put, ERAD is the process of removing and destroying misfolded proteins, like taking out the trash out of the ER.

Everyone thought that ERAD was just part of the general cellular response when cells are undergoing ER stress, says Qi. Weve shown over the past six years that it plays a fundamental role in health and disease.

In a new study, published in Science, Qi along with first authors Zhangsen Zhou, Ph.D., Mauricio Torres, Ph.D., and their colleagues demonstrate how an ERAD protein complex affects the proper function of mitochondria.

Typically, the ER and mitochondria have ongoing interaction at touch points called mitochondria-associated membranes. These points of contact mark areas for mitochondria to divide for the production of new mitochondria and for the exchange of other molecules such as lipids and calcium. The ER forms tubules that surround the mitochondria to get them ready for division.

Using state of the art 3D imaging, the researchers discovered what happens to mitochondria in brown fat that are missing part of an ERAD protein complex, called Sel1L-Hrd1, when exposed to cold.

When you delete this complex in brown adipocytes, the mitochondria become elongated and enlarged, says Qi. The 3D image enabled them to view a previously unrecognized interaction between the mitochondria and the ER, with the mitochondria wrapping in a U-shape around the ER tubules.

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When the mice were placed in a cold environment, the ends of the outer membrane of the mitochondria folded back on itself, eventually fusing and completely enveloping the ER tubules. The result, says Qi, are abnormally large, misshapen, dysfunctional mitochondria.

We showed that these mitochondria dont function normally and the mice become cold sensitive, their body temperature dropping very quickly, says Qi. In other words, without this ERAD protein complex, the brown fat is not being used to generate heat. Under a microscope, this dysfunctional brown fat had larger droplets of lipids than brown fat from mice with the protein complex intact.

This is highly unexpected. The results here fundamentally change our understanding of ER-mitochondrial communication and further demonstrate the importance of an ER degradation complex in cell biology.

This paper also includes contributions from the following U-M authors: Christopher Halbrook, Franoise Van den Bergh, Rachel B. Reinert, Siwen Wang, Yingying Luo, Allen H. Hunter, Thomas H. Sanderson, Aaron Taylor, Costas A. Lyssiotis, Jun Wu and Daniel A. Beard.

Papers cited:

Leptin receptor-expressing neuron Sh2b1 supports sympathetic nervous system and protects against obesity and metabolic disease, Nature Communications, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-020-15328-3

Endoplasmic reticulumassociated degradation regulates mitochondrial dynamics in brown adipocytes, Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.aay2494

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Unlocking the Secrets of Brown Fat - Michigan Medicine

Greenpoint: Earth breathing easier as we hold our breath amid COVID-19 – The Daily Gazette

Ive been working from home for the past two weeks and I must say Im enjoying the commute.

Instead of carpooling or driving in dense traffic for an hour or more every day, Im traveling downstairs to the dinner table. If I have an online meeting or a conference call, I move into the upstairs room vacated by the college kid. I have to close the door to keep out the baby goats that are being bottle fed and still living part time in the house. They have discovered stairs, and think there is nothing more fun than galloping up and rolling back down.

The dog is allowed at meetings, though she doesnt have much to say. Pets throughout the country are reveling in the fact that their people are at home all day even if those people are working on their computers, video conferencing or yacking on their phones.

There are still extra walks, extra pats, extra time to lie on feet.

While a lot of businesses have shut down or curtailed services temporarily or permanently a lot of businesses are finding ways to continue effectively and efficiently with some or all of their workers on home assignment.

Its our first widespread experiment in telecommuting.

The earth has noticed. Levels of nitrogen dioxide a component of smog created mainly from burning fossil fuels have dropped markedly over major U.S. cities since March 10, when stay-at-home advisories and orders started. The lack of cars on the highways is a major factor.

Nitrous oxide levels also were way down over Wuhan in January and February, according to satellite data from NASAs Earth Observatory. In Italy, under a countrywide lockdown, the canals of Venice have turned to clear water and schools of fish returned, too.

In the air over New York City, Columbia University researchers found a 50 percent drop in carbon monoxide emissions, a 5-10 percent drop in carbon dioxide emissions and a solid drop in methane, the BBC reported, likely a result of the drop in traffic.

Two things to keep in mind: These changes are not permanent, and a pandemic is not the best way to improve the environment.

But it does shine a light on the impact that we humans have on our planet. Why do we drive so much? Why dont we treat our air and water as if its what keeps us alive on this planet? Its not like we dont breathe and drink the stuff.

This crisis will be over one day. Business and manufacturers will resume operations, concerts and games and parades will return, work-from-home employees will be invited back to the office. Should we return to business as usual?

Telecommuting has been an available tool for decades, but avoided by many businesses that thought employees wont work if they are not watched. Now were trying it, and we probably have enough time to figure out a lot of the kinks. Will it become a tool more businesses are willing to use? I know Im working more, not less, and more efficiently too. And saving on gas and reducing emissions at the same time.

Long-term telecommuting doesnt have to be an all-or-nothing deal. If people can split working time between home and the office, or if a business uses a combination of remote and onsite employees, we can significantly reduce rush-hour traffic and its accompanying pollution. We can reduce it more if the remaining commuters utilize mass transit if its available, or find carpool buddies if its not.

If companies continue using online meeting tools for working with sister offices across the country or the world, we can cut air traffic, further reducing carbon emissions.

Once were on the other side and being encouraged to do more to stimulate the economy, can we remember to do more to slow the degradation of our planets air and water?

Theres a tiny glimmer of hope in this time of anxiety maybe we can change our behavior, and maybe those behavioral changes can impact the earth for the better.

Greenpoint appears every other Sunday. Look for it next on April 12. Reach Margaret Hartley at [emailprotected] or @Hartley_Maggie on Twitter. Opinions expressed in Greenpoint are hers and not necessarily the newspapers.

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Cannabis and integrative medicine in Canada – Health Europa

Dr Dani Gordon is a double board-certified medical doctor, working with integrative medicine, as well as wellness expert and leading expert in clinical cannabis/cannabinoid medicine after treating 2500+ patients in Canada in a referral complex chronic disease practice where she specialised in neurological disorders, chronic pain and mental health conditions.

She speaks internationally on cannabinoid medicine and in mid-2018 moved to London to train the UKs first cannabis medicine specialist physicians, developing a leading online cannabis medicine physician training programme, helping to set up the UKs first cannabis medicine clinics and become a founding member of the UK Medical Cannabis Clinicians Society (MCCS), delivering the MCCS guidelines to 10 Downing Street.

Gordon is an American Board Specialist in Integrative Medicine, the newest American sub-specialty of mainstream medicine, focussed on the intersection of conventional and natural evidence-based medicine and therapeutics and she has studied herbal medicine and meditation extensively throughout India and south east Asia with traditional teachers, mind-body medicine at Harvard, neurofeedback brain training and EEG brain imaging techniques with leaders in the field in North America.

Here, she speaks to Health Europa Quarterly about her extensive background in cannabis medicine, patient experience, and the representation of women in the rapidly evolving industry.

I am medical doctor and Im trained in both integrative medicine, which is natural evidence-based medicine and a recognised speciality. I am also trained in family medicine in Canada, and I specialise specifically in herbal medicine, cannabinoid medicine as part of my integrative medicine practice.

I have been practising integrative medicine for the last decade in Canada and that is mostly what I do in my clinical practice. Around four years ago, I started experimenting with medical cannabis and I have been running a complex chronic disease clinic with a focus on medical cannabis for the last four years in Canada; at this point I have treated thousands of patients using medical cannabis and CBD.

I have also trained medical students, physicians and allied health care providers on how to use cannabis medicine. I am a writer, and I speak worldwide on cannabis medicine and other natural evidence-based medicine topics and integrative medicine. Last year I relocated back to the UK where Im also a citizen to get involved on this side of the pond.

Since that time, Ive been involved in quite a few major projects here, I advise on some of the high profile child epilepsy cases, and Im the vice chair of the Medical Cannabis Clinicians Society. I advise companies and I have overseen training the first group of UK specialist doctors in cannabis medicine along with overseeing the curriculum for the Academy of Medical Cannabis, which is the main body established to educate physicians and researchers on medical cannabis.

Integrative medicine is a subspecialty which started out in the States. I already had my postdoctoral fellowship and you already need to be a doctor to take the fellowship programme. Its a two-year fellowship which I completed in 2012 in the US, and the reason I decided to do it is because I was practising as a holistic medical doctor in Canada. I was already a conventionally trained medical doctor with the qualifications I had, but I wanted to add to my practice natural things such as herbal medicine, mindfulness-based stress reduction techniques and mind- body techniques for the benefit of my chronic disease patients.

I went to the states and completed this training in 2012, because there was no postdoctoral level training in natural medicine and I really wanted to have the most bona fide qualification. Since 2012, it has now become a fully recognised speciality in medicine in the US. Initially I wasnt interested in integrative medicine when I started my practice in 2009 as a family doctor helping people with chronic disease was my main interest. I realised that just using pharmaceutical drugs alone for complex chronic diseases, were not really cutting the mustard so to speak. It just wasnt really working very well for a lot of my patients with anxiety, stress related disorders, mental health conditions, fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, chronic pain and sleeping problems. Pharmaceutical drugs were just not helping enough on their own.

I became interested in cannabis specifically in 2015. At that time, I had been practising with herbal medicines and conventional drugs for almost half a decade. A lot of my patients started to tell me about their experiences with using cannabis therapeutically because I practised herbal medicine as well as the conventional kind.

I was really interested in the things they were doing, for example some of my patients were juicing cannabis in its raw form and saying that it didnt make them feel high. They explained that it was really a health supplement that their parents generation had been using it in West coast Canada where a lot of people grow cannabis on their land. That got me really interested in why they were juicing it and not getting high and what was what was happening with this plant; as a herbalist I became very intrigued.

I also had a few patients who were at the end of their life with terrible cancers and they told me how they were taking homemade cannabis tinctures to help reduce their morphine needs so that they could be more aware and alert. It allowed them to manage their pain, experience better quality of life and spend more time with their families in their final days.

I started to investigate it from there to find out how I could introduce it into my practice, so people wouldnt need to experiment with it alone and in isolation. I sought out additional training in cannabis medicine, and just found a few mentors but back in 2015, there really wasnt that much awareness. I started opening my door to cannabis medicine being included in my practice through the Health Canada legal system and I just started learning hand in hand with my patients. I was reading all the latest research and working with the plant just as I did with all my other herbal medicine practise. I started to see all these incredible changes in my patients so that really spurred me on to continue.

When I first started out in cannabis medicine, I was actually quite sceptical because I had a lot of ingrained training from medical school that cannabis was an addictive drug that it was going to make people lazy, hurt their brains and make them more tired.

What I found was the patients who were in orphan disease categories with conditions such as fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, chronic anxiety and chronic depression, chronic pain were improving when nothing else we had tried previously was really effective. When I started to study the endocannabinoid system, which is the cannabis system we have in our own bodies It made sense because essentially the cannabis plant regulates our own cannabis system which is involved in processes such as regulating our mood and pain signals.

We [doctors and researchers specialising in cannabis medicine] think that a deficient endocannabinoid system also known as Endocannabinoid Deficiency Syndrome theory may play a role in all of these overlapping symptom clusters that are very, very difficult to treat. Conditions such as irritable bowel syndrome, fibromyalgia, chronic daily headaches, chronic migraine, chronic depression and anxiety all these issues sometimes improve using traditional drugs, but it usually doesnt provide a good solution with few side effects.

What I started to do with cannabis is adding in different forms of cannabis medicines primarily the low THC and high CBD strains of the plant and then selecting different strains of the plant more specifically. I found with my background as a herbalist I was able to really personalise the therapy.

With many of my patients who suffered from chronic mental health conditions, I really wanted to get them practising something called Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) which I went to Harvard to study alongside some of the top researchers in the world. I really believe in it; however, it is not a quick fix. Unfortunately, people with chronic pain and chronic mental health conditions are often so poorly that they cant summon the mental effort to keep the practise going long enough for it to start working.

Once I got them onto cannabis, even the low THC cannabis which did not make them feel high, I started to get them to use it before their mindfulness or meditation practise. I found that they started to do more mindfulness and from there they started to exercise more because they werent fatigued. Many patients started to lose weight and become more social; it was kind of a snowball effect that allowed them to do a lot of other things. It allowed them to engage with a lot of non-drug therapies such as CBT that they couldnt engage with before because they were too ill.

I think its been enormously important to the patient experience and I have to say that it has reinvigorated my love of medicine in many ways. It is the kind of medicine that is very well tolerated by most people and helps them with their quality of life so greatly, even though it doesnt cure their condition.

We dont know that cannabis cant cure things and maybe one day we can figure that out, but for now its about quality of life. It has changed my patients lives in ways I could never imagine. Nobody Ive ever prescribed an antidepressant to has ever said to me this has changed my life, but daily and weekly in my practice, I get letters from patients and verbal testimonials that starting them on cannabis has saved their marriage, or completely changed the relationship they have with their children because they can engage with their family life again.

I have seen patients who were so debilitated by very advanced arthritis that they couldnt work or play music anymore and they are able to go back to those things. I had one patient who surprised me with a concert; he hadnt played in 10 years and he was very depressed because his hands were so painful.

I have seen ranchers who live out in the middle of the countryside in Alberta who couldnt get on their horse anymore to round up their cattle and when I did a follow up consultation via a video app, they took me with them on a ranch ride for the first time in five years. It had been five years since theyd been on the horse.

Ive treated young adults with epilepsy who had been told that they would never be independent and that they were going to be in a care home for the rest of their lives, and seen them be able to go to a part time job and get an animal to keep them company these things were not possible before. It changes the whole familys lives not just the person with epilepsy. As far as a single thing I can give someone, although its not a cure it has been the single most powerful tool that I have found so far since going from a Western medicine doctor to a herbal medicine doctor.

One of the things that I get very excited about is changing the perception of cannabis because I think the old perception of cannabis was this kind of stoner culture. On the recreational side of cannabis, which is very different to the medical side. Its not a very wholesome image.

The images that were portrayed of women were often women in bikinis smoking cannabis which are not necessarily positive images of women in general and definitely not the image of cannabis the medicine as I practise it. I feel very lucky to be involved in kind of seeing the transformation of the image of the plant because a hundred years ago, it was a perfectly respectable botanical medicine and its coming full circle back to that.

I feel that women have played a large role in that to be honest, and really introducing a balanced movement into the modern era. It isnt just me, there is Hannahs Deacon, Alfies mother and Charlie Caldwell these are the women who have had kids with epilepsy and have had to fight for access to the treatment. Carly Barton is a good friend of mine and a patient advocate. I have needed and developed a network of women and through social media many of them have become my friends. I think it has been a powerful tool for connecting and empowering women.

One thing that you do find when you enter the business side of the cannabis world is a lot of the people may have come from a traditionally male dominated industry. Often, when I go to give a talk, I will be one of the only women there, but I do feel that is already changing. It is certainly the case that as with many male dominated, corporate professions, women are generally underrepresented which is something needs to be taken seriously; we might potentially have to work harder than men.

Dr Dani GordonIntegrative Medicine Specialistdrdanigordon.com

Please note, this article appeared in issue 11 ofHealth Europa Quarterly, which is available to read now.

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Cannabis and integrative medicine in Canada - Health Europa

World Cancer Day 2020: 6 Cancer-Causing Foods And Drinks That You Need To Quit Now – NDTV News

World Cancer Day: Processed food, junk food and aerated drinks can increase risk of cancer

World Cancer Day is observed on February 4. Every year, the Union for International Cancer Control organises Cancer Day to raise awareness about cancer, tips for prevention and how to ease suffering for cancer patients. The theme for World Cancer 2020 is "I am and I will". World Cancer Day 2020 theme acknowledges that everyone has the capacity to act in the face of cancer. Cancer is referred to uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells in the body. Cancer develops when the body's normal control mechanism stops working. Old cells are unable to diet and they instead grow out of control, forming new and abnormal cells.

A poor lifestyle with lack of exercise, poor diet and sedentary lifestyle is one of the many reasons why more and more people are getting cancer, believes lifestyle coach Luke Coutinho. Following is a list of cancer-causing foods and drinks that you must avoid:

Research has found that the more alcohol you drink, the higher is your risk of developing cancer. Excessive alcohol intake puts you at risk of liver, breast, oesophageal and colorectal cancer. When the body metabolises alcohol, it produces acetaldehyde, which is a chemical compound that may damage DNA, leading to cancer. This World Cancer Day, pledge to limit your alcohol intake and try to get off it in full entirety. Note that no amount of alcohol (not even two drinks in a day) is healthy for your body.

Reduce your alcohol intake in order to prevent cancerPhoto Credit: iStock

Also read:Is Alcohol Consumption Linked To Heart Disease: Let's Find Out

Processed food is one of the unhealthiest foods you can include in your diet. Processed and packaged food are devoid of any nutrition. They contain high amounts of unhealthy carbs, leading to weight gain and obesity-which is a known risk factor for cancer. Processed meat like sausage, bacon, hot dogs, pepperoni and salami are even more harmful. They are made with chemical preservatives, salting and smoking to increase their shelf life. Studies have found that processed meat can increase risk of colorectal cancer. Celeb nutritionist Rujuta Diwekar says that you should avoid everything that comes in a packet, and this includes everything from soya and kale chips to tomato ketchup, condiments and dips, etc.

Switch to fresh fruits, vegetables, homemade spices and food instead of processed food to reduce your risk of cancer.

Sugary drinks like diet soda and aerated drinks are the ones that cause weight gain and provide you with zero nutrition. These drinks contain artificial sweeteners that have been found to increase risk of cancer. Instead of aerated drinks, have lemon water, coconut water, sugarcane juice or unsweetened fresh fruit juice to reduce your risk of developing cancer.

Avoid aerated drinks to reduce your risk of cancerPhoto Credit: iStock

Also read:Nmami Agarwal Decodes Health Risks Associated With Sugary Drinks: You Will Be Surprised To Know These

No matter how quick and convenient microwave popcorn are, they are doing more harm to your health than you can imagine. Microwave popcorn bag linings contain perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA), which can be carcinogenic. The better alternative is to get fresh corn and prepare popcorn at home. It might take a few extra minutes but can reduce your risk of developing cancer.

Smoking is a lifestyle habit and is cancerous, as you all know. The top most cause of lung cancer in the world is smoking. Apart from cancer, smoking can cause coughing, breathing problems, asthma and a lot of other ailments that can affect your day-to-day functioning and reduce your lifespan. Take professional help if you are unable to quit smoking. Start with reducing one cigarette at a time. There is no tomorrow for quitting smoking.

Hydrogenated oil are commonly used for preserving processed foods and increasing their shelf life. Hydrogenated oils have the capability to alter structure and flexibility of cell membranes throughout the body, increasing your risk of cancer. Avoid foods with trans fats and saturated fats in order to reduce your cancer risk.

Along with avoiding these foods and drinks, you also need to be physically active and exercise regularly. Regular exercise can reduce your risk of cancer, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, heart disease, obesity and weight gain. This World Cancer Day, make more and more people aware of these cancerous foods, drinks and lifestyle habits and do your part in making the world cancer-free.

Also read:World Cancer Day: Follow These Expert Guidelines To Reduce The Risk Of Breast Cancer

(Luke Coutinho, Holistic Lifestyle Coach - Integrative Medicine)

(Rujuta Diwekar is a nutritionist based in Mumbai)

Disclaimer: This content including advice provides generic information only. It is in no way a substitute for qualified medical opinion. Always consult a specialist or your own doctor for more information. NDTV does not claim responsibility for this information.

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Power of regenerative medicine – KCTV Kansas City

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Power of regenerative medicine - KCTV Kansas City

Processed Foods Highly Correlated with Obesity, Study Finds – WholeFoods Magazine

Washington, D.C.Processed foods are highly correlated with obesity, according to research from George Washington University (GW).

GW researcher Leigh A. Frame, Ph.D., MHS, said in a press release: When comparing the U.S. diet to the diet of those who live in blue zonesareas with populations living to age 100 without chronic diseasethe differences are stark. Many of the food trends we reviewed are tied directly to a fast-paced U.S. lifestyle that contributes to the obesity epidemic we are now facing. Dr. Frame is Program Director for the Integrative Medicine Programs, Executive Director of the Office of Integrative Medicine and Health, and Assistant Professor of Clinical Research and Leadership at the GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences, and co-author of the paper.

The rising obesity epidemic in the U.S., as well as related chronic diseases, are correlated with a rise in ultra-processed food consumption, says the press release. The foods most associated with weight gain include potato chips, sugar sweetened beverages, sweets and desserts, refined grains, red meats, and processed meats. Other dietary issues include insufficient dietary fiber intake and an increase in food additives.

Dr. Frame added: Rather than solely treating the symptoms of obesity and related diseases with medication, we need to include efforts to use food as medicine. Chronic disease in later years is not predestined, but heavily influenced by lifestyle and diet. Decreasing obesity and chronic disease in the U.S. will require limiting processed foods and increasing intake of whole vegetables, legumes, nuts, fruits, and water. Health care providers must also emphasize lifestyle medicine, moving beyond a pill for an ill.

Read more from the original source:
Processed Foods Highly Correlated with Obesity, Study Finds - WholeFoods Magazine

Exercise the best antidepressant – Times of India

by Luke CoutinhoHolistic Lifestyle Coach- Integrative MedicineBeing chronically anxious and stressed, to a point where it starts affecting your health is not healthy. And being anxious or depressed and sedentary at the same time makes the whole situation all the more complicated. Not only does it lead to weight gain, it also slows down metabolism and causes stress eating... you end up having a lot of unused energy that should ideally be spent exercising or walking.Depression and anxiety are becoming a huge problem for human health because it upsets the entire hormonal balance. One of the best ways out of this mess is exercise. The magic of endorphins Physical movement stimulates the production of happy hormones called endorphins. Heard of runners high? Its exactly that. And mind you, exercise doesnt have to be a gym session or heavy functional training. Something as simple as a 10-15 minute walk amid nature can give you all the benefits. Endorphins are also natural pain killers. What a breather!The first thing that goes out of balance when we are stressed is our breath. It becomes quick and shallow. We either exhibit short breathing patterns or are hyperventilating. This means less oxygen going in and more carbon dioxide storage, which is why it can make us feel dizzy and nauseous. Some may even undergo an anxiety attack and pass out. So, bringing our breath back to balance is the first step towards managing stress. Breathing is one of the quickest ways to bring our bodies from a state of fight and flight to a state of rest and digest. When you break into exercise, you start breathing better which means you start taking in more oxygen. The more oxygen you inhale, the more balanced are your levels of cortisol, progesterone, testosterone, estrogen, and androgens. good distractionGenerally, when you are depressed, you tend to focus on all the negatives. You form a shell around yourself and start to move deeper and deeper into that shell. Hence, distraction can be very useful. It could be going out, speaking to a friend, listening to music, reading a book or even exercising. If you start engaging in walking or yoga or even mild stretching, you immediately create a distraction. If you are lucky and live in a place where there is contact with nature, even better. It brings instant calmness that is going to lessen your anxiety immediately. At the same time, it is necessary to practice balance and moderation even with exercise, especially if you are using it as a tool to manage your stress levels. There are some people who end up burning out through exercise. This is not a good thing because over-exercising can only add up to more stress. Listen to your body, know when to stop and focus on adequate rest and recovery.BREATHE EASYBringing our breath back to balance is the first step towards managing stress. Breathing is one of the quickest ways to bring our bodies from a state of fight and flight to rest and digest.

Read more:
Exercise the best antidepressant - Times of India

‘Processed’ Food Causes Obesity It Says, But The Paper Ignores Obvious Confounders – Science 2.0

In a Current Treatment Options in Gastroenterology review, a nutritionist and a gastroenterologist claim that "ultra-processed" food causes obesity.

If you are not familiar with ultra-processed food, that is a new-ish designation, an arbitrary metric of numerous things to separate it from regular processed food. All bread made in the last 10,000 years is "processed" food, for example, and 'all food is processed' reality hobbled efforts by integrative medicine/food is medicine proponents to claim our modern lifestyle is killing us, when the science community instead knows it's simply obesity that is the risk factor.

What is this "ultra-processed" food? Good luck getting a science answer. Because it's made up, it's definition has changed over time, to be varying levels of fat, sugar, salt, fiber, and even its "process", including whether or not it is advertised. It all depends on who is doing the scaremongering. In the past, if you canned your own fresh vegetables, it was processed and in the same category as Wonder bread you bought in a store - which is why in New Jersey it is illegal to sell bread or jelly you make in your house. Any processed food has the same rules before it can be sold to the public. By putting your fruit in a Ball jar and sealing it in your kitchen you are not obeying the fresh fetish.

Everyone knew that was stupid so now there are efforts to create strata that are just as arbitrary, but at least there are a lot more of them to be confused about. So instead of processed and unprocessed the public is now supposed to understand unprocessed, minimally processed, processed culinary ingredients, processed foods, and ultra-processed foods. And ultra-processed can contain foods whose advertising you happen not to like.

Baffling, right?

I can save you some time. The "ultra-processed" food gimmick is the same mindset that sold the public low-fat diets, trans fats, and the aa berry gimmick. The people promoting this latest thing basically want you to eat less food that is sold by companies producing the most successful products. Which is not a legitimate health guideline.

Articles about ultra-processed food have not kept pace with articles about obesity. The authors seem to believe that is a weakness of the academic literature rather than a better understanding of how metabolism works than folk/complementary'alternative/integrative medicine people have. It could also be everyone is scrambling to blame obesity on their pet cause using statistics and there are more people blaming something else.

Candy is a "processed" food, as is ice cream, even organic, peptide-fortified, holistic, free-range, dietitian-approved, shade-tree grown, low-fat Ben&Jerry's Hank-a-Hank-o-Burnin'-Fudge ice cream. That's right, peptide-fortified.(1)

In America's increasingly shrill culture war, calling food processed was not working very well, so in true Spinal Tap fashion 'food is medicine' proponents began to 'turn the amp to 11' and use this ultra-processed term. Regardless of its arbitrary category, candy and ice cream are a treat, enjoy those as a treat, don't consume them every day or you will get fat and somewhere a paper will get written claiming ice cream causes early death.

You'll also get fat if you work in an office and binge on 5,000 DASH diet calories a day. I guarantee it.

Food is not magic

Populist journalists really hate when I note that this century has been the first time in history even poor people can afford to be fat and we're all better off for that. But it's true. It means that we only need to solve a cultural maturity problem rather than let developing and rich nations alike be crippled by lack of basic necessities. History shows that when basic needs are affordable - like food and energy - culture follows. Child mortality improves, all health flourishes, crime goes down, science and art go up.

'Food is magic' alternative medicine/integrative medicine/wellness proponents often claim just the opposite - they believe that access to cheap food is a bad thing. Some actually believe they have found the Holy Grail of Obesity, and it isn't calories at all, it is any non-vegetable in the Trader Joe's freezer section. No. It's always the calories. There is no magic food that causes or prevents obesity, in 100 percent of studies people who consume more calories than they burn gain weight, regardless of how many legumes it involves.

All correlation studies, like this one on obesity and ultra-processed food, are only "exploratory" - that means they have no idea if they are really related, they are just creating a statistical correlation that might be interesting and someone else might want to find out if they are really linked.

Yet that is only buried down in the later parts of papers, and journalists write these correlation papers up as if they are causal. Media attention is why correlation studies are big business now. We have everyone from International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) to Ramazinni Institute to the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) to Harvard School of Public Health jockeying for media attention so they can get more funding. And statistical links are a lot less work than science. In simple form, you can just pick a product and a disease that can give you a "p-value" that editors in journals think is some sort of threshold for legitimacy (.05) and write the paper. You then send it to journals until someone accepts.

Next is to get a press release written and when Science Daily or PhysOrg runs it, a journalist will see it and pitch it in an editorial meeting. Media bosses know that writing an article about the latest Miracle Vegetable or Scary Chemical will get readers so they encourage their employees to grab that low hanging fruit. And nutritionists and epidemiologists know sugar is low-hanging fruit as well. It's been blamed for obesity, trumping calories, for over 100 years.

Comedians poke fun at each other for grabbing low-hanging fruit, epidemiologists will be left behind in their careers if they don't. Screen cap: Comedians In Cars Getting Coffee, now on Netflix.

In meetings with NIH I have asked epidemiology groups if it's possible for government to force grantees to watermark each page of funded epidemiology studies with EXPLORATORY so that journalists will stop claiming X causes Y, and though government sees the problem, their scholars go to parties with friends and hear food fad nonsense like we all do, they don't seem to be able to fix a problem they created by throwing money at survey papers. Which is all you need to know about government.

That means it is up to us to be the critical thinkers. People will write papers that use suspect methodology, sometimes they even mean well. It is not less wrong if their motivations are pure.

When papers have no plausible biological hypothesis for a link that is statistical, it should be regarded by journalists an op-ed with extra references, not a science fact of the week.

Ultra-processed food is not killing you, a Mediterranean diet is not saving you, but if you look at surveys of old people you can claim you find evidence for both.

If you want to promote a lifestyle, you can find centenarians that match - except this one thing

There are a lot of centenarians out there now, 80,000 just in the U.S., and these were all people born before the ballpoint pen was invented so you can imagine that with improvements in medical care, and far lower levels of smoking than decades ago, there will be millions of people over age 100 a generation from now.

This new correlation was created using pockets of centenarians in California, Costa Rica, Sardinia, Greece, and Japan. There is already a weakness in that. As an example, in the 19th century people with "consumption" - tuberculosis - were advised to go to Colorado because of the dry climate. A modern epidemiologist with an agenda would look at that cluster of TB deaths and correlate it so that it looked like moving to Colorado caused death.

That sounds ridiculous, and it is ridiculous, but it happens in food and chemical studies all of the time today. Hardly a paper comes out of our government's in-house scaremongering group, the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, that doesn't engage in this same sleight of hand.

By using clusters you can fall victim to lots of confounders, the same way you are fooling yourself if you take an ancestry test and it tells you you're "from" a country, when all it really means is that a bunch of people who moved to that country and also paid to take that test share things in common with you. So it goes with studies using surveys.

People may not live longer if they don't eat Almond Joy's, they may have moved to a place where other people live longer for other reasons. As noted above, statistical studies have attempted to blame sugar for obesity in a magical capacity for over 100 years - before many centenarians were even born.

The link between ultra-processed foods and longevity doesn't survive an obvious test.

There is no valid link between BMI and "ultra-processed" foods

America leads the world in adult science literacy, science output, Nobel prizes, GMOs, prescription drug use, and obesity. If you try, you can therefore look at the curves of any of those and correlate them to each other. These spurious correlations can be used to inform or for humor - when organic industry trade groups tried to claim that the rise in autism was due to conventional pesticides but not the more toxic organic certified pesticides their clients use, the science community responded with a spurious correlation of its own:

This study looked at what centenarians surveyed claim they eat (already a confounder - on surveys Donald Trump was going to lose by 80 electoral votes in 2016) and speculates about what they have in common, and they arrive at lack of ultra-processed food. Yes, they credited longevity to a nocebo - the opposite of a placebo, like if removing a pill that looks like medicine makes you feel better.

Using such a method is suspect. A look at centenarians objectively finds histories of smoking, and alcohol, and meat consumption, along with people who don't do any of those. The one characteristic you struggle to find in centenarians is ... obesity. You don't find lifelong obese people dying at 102. The authors ignore all that and posit that a peasant diet - and never having enough food of any kind - is great for health, but then they make a real reach to claim that "ultra-processed" food is the dietary culprit, not a sensible diet overall, and they use five areas where older people are over-represented, such as Loma Linda, California.

They believe it was not the sensible diet that helped, it was less "ultra-processed" food, even though most people in developed countries have eaten such food their whole lives. Even if they are 100.

Become a Seventh Day Adventist and you won't be obese

The problem with relying on statistical correlation is that it can do a lot of things. Loma Linda has a lot of centenarians, it has a lot of vegetarians, and it also has a lot of Seventh Day Adventists.

If you are trying to correlate a reduction in "ultra-processed" food to longevity, you can do it, because the numbers are there. But if you want to correlate being a Seventh Day Adventist to longevity, you can also do it. Those numbers are also there.

Using such simple correlation, you can "suggest"we live longer if we don't celebrate birthdays or give blood.

The reason it is so easy for suspect correlation to occur is because food frequency questionnaires don't cover 'not giving blood' or refusing to celebrate birthdays, and this review is based entirely on taking food diaries and correlating what people recall eating with their known disease outcomes. The former is a guess and subjected to recall bias but the latter is real.

The problem with this methodology is it can't be trusted. It is why every food can cause or cure cancer by now. Just go to WebMD and you will be terrified at how much cancer is waiting to get you.

No one can ever be wrong using statistics. Pick a common food and studies can show it helps and harms you.

Population level analyses are not helpful for making individual clinical recommendations

Say you take a community of crab fishermen in Alaska, and look at their diets. You create rows of foods and find a statistically significant number of them consume this food, let's say baked beans. You then note the alarming injury and death rate of these fishermen compared to people who live in the Mediterranean and work in an office job and who have much lower early mortality.

Would you conclude thatbaked beans cause people to die early? No, Alaska crab fishing is more dangerous than an office job on the Dalmatian coast.

Concluding anything else is misunderstanding what things mean.

It's hard to choose one best thing in a terrific movie like "My Big Fat Greek Wedding", but Andrea Martin has to be in the running.

Yet ther press release goes on to confuse the issue by invoking scary-sounding things likeemulsifiers and saying they "alter microbiome compositions" (What doesn't? The coffee I drank while writing this sentence did that) changed fasting blood glucose (ditto) but then you wonder where they are going because they cite woo papers claiming that these foods are magic, they cause hyperphagia, weight gain, and hepatic steatosis.

They even create a new form of that quasi-racist dig at Chinese food - 'you'll be hungry again in an hour' - by saying you won't feel full as soon if you eat delicious food versus crusty bread. They then claim people on the diet they're promoting have less obesity and therefore get fewer diseases related to obesity.

Those two things are not causal. There will be five times as many people living in the U.S. over age 100 30 years from now, whether they are ultra-processed food or not.

Sure enough the a co-author turns out to be a 'food is medicine' aficionado.

"Rather than solely treating the symptoms of obesity and related diseases with medication, we need to include efforts to use food as medicine," said Dr. Frame in their press release. "Chronic disease in later years is not predestined, but heavily influenced by lifestyle and diet. Decreasing obesity and chronic disease in the U.S. will require limiting processed foods and increasing intake of whole vegetables, legumes, nuts, fruits, and water. Health care providers must also emphasize lifestyle medicine, moving beyond 'a pill for an ill.' "

That's an incredibly disrespectful thing for a nutritionist who promotes alternatives to medicine to write about a physician, and a physician is her co-author so this was not only a premeditated slur directed at the medical community, it was signed off on by someone with an M.D. who feels the same way.

The fact remains that nanny government, labels, rules, and taxes are not how you change behavior. In New York City, government treats smokers like a cash cow, and when they created the highest taxes in the land, it did not reduce smoking, it caused a huge black market. A man of color died because selling "loosies" became popular and the police were ordered to crack down on sales of a $1 product because it avoided taxes.

Education about the harms of smoking did work, and smoking has plummeted in the United States. That is what we should do when it comes to the impending obesity crisis. Not look for particular foods to demonize because scholars are promoting wellness alternatives.

NOTE:

(1)

Yes, I have made that Elvis joke so many times that 11 years ago Professor Mike White made me my own Peptide.

See more here:
'Processed' Food Causes Obesity It Says, But The Paper Ignores Obvious Confounders - Science 2.0

Southeastern Integrative Health and Wellness | Holistic …

Welcome to Southeastern Integrative Health and WellnessWhere you are not just a set of symptoms

Dr. Matthew Strickland is the founder of Southeastern Integrative Health and Wellness, an integrative health clinic that specializes in science-based holistic medicine. As a naturopathic doctor, Dr. Strickland is a leader in integrative and functional medicine.

His personal philosophy is simple to do what it takes to get the patient well. Not bound by dogma, and well-informed both in the scientific and natural side of medicine, he will work to understand your unique health concerns and how they present in you.

Clues often come from your family history, work history, medications youve taken, past illnesses, stressors, foods youre eating, and more. Well go over all those things.

Your first visit will always be long enough that you will have enough time to ask questions and Ill have enough time to listen and really dig deep into what is causing your health concern.

It takes a doctor that has the time, training, and experience, to discover the root cause of your illness.

Once Ive gotten all the information I need, and sometimes this takes ordering labwork or going over your case outside of your appointment time, youll be given a comprehensive treatment plan. This may include: vitamin and nutrient therapies (supplements), herbal medicine, homeopathy, dietary recommendations and changes, mind-body medicine, counseling, biofeedback, and more. As a licensed naturopathic doctor, Im also well-educated in pharmaceuticals and it may be that those are the best option for you. Im not dogmatic and its important that my patients are healthy and safely taken care of. In some cases pharmaceuticals are the best option, especially before the more natural approaches begin to work.

I have successfully helped people with many conditions ranging from Migraines to Depression to Autoimmune disease and more. For more information click on what conditions we treat click on services or reach out to me through our contact form.

Continued here:
Southeastern Integrative Health and Wellness | Holistic ...

The Future of Healthcare With Dr. Myles Spar – Thrive Global

The annual physical needs to be completely overhauled to include a focus on prevention rather than merely identifying whats already broken. Studies have shown the annual physical, as is currently done, has no impact on mortality. We need to include more predictive biomarkers that can lead to proactive lifestyle or medication changes which can help to prevent serious problems down the road.

Asa part of my interview series with leaders in healthcare, I had the pleasure to interview Dr. Myles Spar. Dr. Spar is founder of the Tack180 Integrative Health Program and is now the Chief Medical Officer for Vault Health, an optimal health program for men. He is also the director of the Integrative Medicine program at the Simms-Mann Health and Wellness Center at Venice Family Clinic. He is a Clinical faculty member of the UCLA and University of Arizona Schools of Medicine. Dr Spar has served as a consultant to the NBA, working with many NBA teams on optimal health and Integrative Medicine issues. He co-edited Integrative Mens Health from Oxford University Press and his book, Optimal Mens Health: Your guide to being healthy in order to win! comes out in February 2020. Dr. Spar is the recipient of the Bravewell Award for Leadership in Integrative Medicine in 2013. Born in Charleston, South Carolina, Dr. Spar attended the University of Michigan Medical School and worked as a humanitarian for Medecins sans Frontieres/Doctors without Borders, which triggered his appreciation for the role of health in each persons ability to achieve their goals.

Thank you so much for doing this with us Dr. Spar! Can you tell us a story about what brought you to this specific career path?

Ifinished my medical training in Internal Medicine feeling wholly unprepared to really address a good 50% of what my patients needed help with preventing disease, being proactive or incorporating simple lifestyle changes in order to help manage chronic conditions. I was taught how to prescribe medications. So, I figured if I was only really trained to treat acute disease I might as well go where acute disease is really bad so I joined Doctors without Borders. It was when I was working abroad with that amazing organization that I saw the power of non-western interventions on the ability to stay healthy. I saw people who were eating relatively healthy and engaging in regular activity with tight family and community structures elements that were clearly contributing substantially to health. So, I came back to the U.S. committed to learning what else was science-based that I could include in my Doctors tool-kit besides a prescription pad.

Can you share the most interesting story that happened to you since you began leading your company?

Im always asked why I cant include women in my mens health program. I think many women also appreciate a goal-oriented, direct, heres what to do next approach to health, yet most practitioners talk a lot about general ideas of wellness and prevention without specific plans.

Can you share a story about the funniest mistake you made when you were first starting? Can you tell us what lesson you learned from that?

One of the funniest mistakes I made early on was to use the language of Integrative Medicine that I had learned focusing on holistic practice and wellness. This was funny because I was trying to reach men, and I was having a very hard time getting my business going. It took me a while to realize that men arent ever going to miss eating a hotdog in the name of wellness. But tell him that eating hotdogs will impact his ability to get erections, and hell never eat a hotdog again. I learned how to engage men in their health by focusing on their goals not just sexual goals, but what goals mattered to them beyond abstract ideas of wellness.

What do you think makes your company stand out? Can you share a story?

We offer men specific strategies to achieve their goals and see health as a tool to achieve those goals not as the goal itself. I had a patient who had high blood pressure that he was trying to get under control. Every time he went to his doctor, they reviewed his blood pressure log and tweaked his medications. He came to me and I asked about his goals why did it matter to him whether or not his blood pressure was under control and he was floored. No one had ever asked him that . Once we identified that his goal was to play tennis without getting as winded or worrying about his heart, he was much more engaged in changing his diet and working on stress things that made a big difference in his blood pressure.

We focus on what matters to the patient not whats the matter with the patient and offer a strategy to optimize health so that he can achieve his goals. Thats unlike most medical encounters.

What advice would you give to other healthcare leaders to help their team to thrive?

Keep the patient front and center and treat each one like youd want to be treated or like youd want your Mom to be treated.

Ok, thank you for that. Lets jump to the main focus of our interview. According tothis studycited by Newsweek, the US healthcare system is ranked as the worst among high income nations. This seems shocking. Can you share with us 35 reasons why you think the US is ranked so poorly?

1 Social determinants of health weigh heavily on outcomes. Your zip code is a stronger predictor of when you will die than anything else. That speaks volumes.

2 Many people in the U.S. would rather eat poorly, avoid exercise and sleep minimally and take a pill to deal with the repercussions rather than change their lifestyle.

3 Our training as doctors is all about treatment of acute illness, so that remains our focus. We dont learn about prevention or lifestyle approaches to staying healthy.

You are a healthcare insider. If you had the power to make a change, can you share 5 changes that need to be made to improve the overall US healthcare system? Please share a story or example for each.

1 Focus on goals rather than chief complaints. If we started each visit asking patients what they wanted their health for, it would frame all encounters differently making it about what the patient wants and needs, rather than simply what is wrong that needs fixing. Its a very different dynamic that gets created, with practitioner as guide and facilitator rather than purveyor of medications.

2 The annual physical needs to be completely overhauled to include a focus on prevention rather than merely identifying whats already broken. Studies have shown the annual physical, as is currently done, has no impact on mortality. We need to include more predictive biomarkers that can lead to proactive lifestyle or medication changes which can help to prevent serious problems down the road.

3 At Vault, we will equip every member with a wearable device and a dashboard, enabling men to track their outcomes of interest and learn what health interventions really impact the aspects of their health that matters to them. That helps gain real insight into which lifestyle habits make the biggest impacts for each individual.

4 We need to make it easier for men to want to learn how to get healthier making it macho to seek care when needed.

5 We need a single payer system for primary health care. When profit is the goal, quality of care becomes secondary and access to care becomes tiered in unfair ways

Ok, its very nice to suggest changes, but what concrete steps would have to be done to actually manifest these changes? What can a) individuals, b) corporations, c) communities and d) leaders do to help?

1 Practitioners can learn more about the healthiest diets, ways to exercise and manage stress and ways to help patients with sleep focusing more on lifestyle recommendations than medication prescribing.

2 Communities can strive to be like the Blue Zones, incorporating schools, health departments, city planners and local restaurants in initiatives that make it easier to move, interact and eat in healthier ways.

3 Male professional athletes and other male role models can encourage men to take better care of themselves and to reach out for help when needed.

4 We need to change our industrial agriculture policy such that nonorganic GMO crops are not subsidized and organic fruits and vegetables are, so that there can be cheaper good quality food available across all populations.

Im interested in the interplay between the general healthcare system and the mental health system. Right now, we have two parallel tracks, mental/behavioral health and general health. What are your thoughts about this status quo? What would you suggest to improve this?

1 Life expectancy is dropping, largely from drug-related deaths and suicides. There needs to be less of a stigma for men to admit to feeling anxious or stressed or depressed and to seek help when needed. Professional athletes like Kevin Love and Demar Derozan have gone public with their mental health issues, opening up this door for men to seek help when needed. We need to make more of an effort to make it comfortable for men to get help.

How would you define an excellent healthcare provider?

One who meets the patient where they are at and focuses on what matters to the patient, not whats the matter with the patient.

Can you please give us your favorite Life Lesson Quote? Can you share how that was relevant to you in your life?

Assume a virtue if you have it not.

William Shakespeare

I often tell patients who dont think they can change their diet or start to exercise, that they should act as if they eat healthier or are an avid exerciser, and by, God, they will become that which they pretend to be.

Are you working on any exciting new projects now? How do you think that will help people?

I just started as Chief Medical Officer of Vault Health a corporation dedicated to bringing performance and prevention-oriented health tools to men. I think we will engage men in caring for their health such that we will shrink the difference in life expectancy between men and women.

What are your favorite books, podcasts, or resources that inspire you to be a better healthcare leader? Can you explain why you like them?

I love the podcasts The Drive by Peter Attia and the Rich Roll Podcast. Peter is a brilliant doctor who covers in-depth information about cutting edge health topics related to aging and prevention. Rich is an ultra-triathlete who is plant powered he is also brilliant and a terrific interviewer.

I am excited by the work of David Perlmutter and Dale Bredesen regarding neurologic health, so I am an avid reader and listener to anything they write or say.

You are a person of great influence. If you could inspire a movement that would bring the most amount of good to the most amount of people, what would that be? You never know what your idea can trigger.

I aim to inspire a movement for men to engage in being proactive about their health, recognizing that healthy food, regular movement, managing stress, sleeping better and connecting with others are fundamental to achieving their goals.

How can our readers follow you on social media?

Instagram @DrSpar

Twitter @drspar

Facebook MylesSparMD

Thank you so much for these insights! This was so inspiring!

Read more here:
The Future of Healthcare With Dr. Myles Spar - Thrive Global

Integrative Medicine Clinic of Arizona | Integrative …

Rising healthcare costs and decreased reimbursement payments have created an environment where most primary care physicians are forced to see 30 to 50 patients per day. This makes it virtually impossible to establish strong relationships and serve the needs of patients. You have most likely felt the end effects of these changes with rushed medical appointments, lack of focus on your concerns and overuse of pharmaceuticals to treat the symptoms, but not actually fix the cause of your condition.

We have a better solution.

The Integrative Medicine Clinic of Arizona is committed to focusing on you and thoroughly addressing your health.

Our physician, Cheri Dersam, M.D., is trained in both Traditional and Integrative Medicine. This allows her to fully address your health concerns today and reduce your risks for health problems in the future.

She takes the time to listen to your concerns and turn the focus back to you. By fully exploring your past and present health, nutrition, activity and lifestyle and utilizing conventional and innovative lab testing, she will explore the root cause of your health concerns. She will also investigate genetic risk factors that can predict the likelihood you may develop conditions such as cardiovascular disease, stroke, Alzheimers Disease and certain cancers. Dr. Dersam will then recommend a health promotion plan personalized to you. This will include balancing your nutrition, digestion, activity, stress, sleep, hormones, and adjusting medications as needed.

Because we do not participate with any insurance company contracts, this frees us from all of the time-consuming administrative hassles and we can spend more time with you. This translates into more time with the physician and allows us to offer you a team approach to your healthcare. This team includes a physician, nutritionist, health coach and acupuncturist with the addition of a chiropractor, psychologist and/or other alternative therapists as needed at discounted prices.

Choose a primary care physician who has time to listen to your concerns, is highly trained and offers an effective treatment plan that is personalized to you.

If you are ready to take charge of your health, join our membership practice today or book a free 20-minute consultation appointment by calling us at (480)766-3586.

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Integrative Medicine Clinic of Arizona | Integrative ...

Riobe Institute of Integrative Medicine

Because we look at your lifestyle, habits, and genetics when putting a personalizedplan together to keep you healthy and happy. We dont justlook for conditions that already exist. We look for problems that could evolve if preventative measures arent taken. Preventative medicine.

A mammogram may detect cancer in its early stages but will not prevent it.

A colonoscopy may detect cancer in its early stages but will not prevent it.

An EKG can detect heart problems but will not prevent a heart attack or stroke.

At Riobe Institute of Integrative Medicine, we see you as a unique whole all of you what and how you eat, your sleep and exercise habits, your genetics and cellular biology. Our holistic, integrative and comprehensive approach is customized to YOUR needs. We look to treat the cause of the symptom, not to just cover up the problem.

Reach out to talk to us about the kind of Concierge program that fits your needs. Ask about our corporate wellness programs too!

Follow this link:
Riobe Institute of Integrative Medicine

Integrative Medicine Universities and Schools in the U.S.

Consider the following when looking for integrative medicine schools:

Associate's degree programs in integrative medicine introduce students to the basics of using alternative medical techniques to maintain health and treat disease. Students take foundational courses in human anatomy, physiology and medical terminology, and they may have the opportunity to choose a concentration in a particular area of interest, such as aromatherapy, herbal medicine, holistic spa or massage. Prior to graduation from one of these two-year programs, students must also fulfill general education requirements.

Similar to associate's degree programs, Bachelor of Science (BS) programs in integrative medicine provide students with a broad overview of the field, but they also allow students to more thoroughly explore particular aspects of the field. Beyond core coursework, students may have the opportunity to learn more about specific healing modalities, such as homeopathy or Ayurveda, or they may take advanced courses in healthcare ethics or psychology. Some programs also provide internship opportunities in the field. There are also programs that are specifically intended for students who plan to enter a graduate program in the field upon graduation.

There are several types of master's degree programs in integrative medicine. One option is a research-focused Master of Science (MS) in Integrative Medicine, in which students conduct publishable research in a topic such as nutrition, herbal medicine, hydrotherapy or acupuncture. These programs culminate in a final master's thesis. An alternative is an MS program that includes a series of advanced courses that cover advanced topics in the field and common research methods. Students in these programs also gain clinical experience through practicums. These programs often appeal to trained healthcare professionals who want to boost their careers by increasing their knowledge in alternative health, so they are often offered in online or part-time formats.

Education for aspiring naturopathic doctors is available through Doctor of Naturopathic Medicine (ND) degree programs. These four-year programs include a combination of traditional biomedical coursework and alternative health-focused classes. In addition to classroom and lab-based studies, students also fulfill extensive clinical training requirements. When they finish, they are prepared for the Naturopathic Licensing Examinations (NPLEX) so that they can practice in the field. An alternative doctoral program for experienced nurses is a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) program with a specialization in integrative health and healing. In these three-year programs, students learn about the scientific, organizational, social and political aspects of integrative medicine.

Students can find both undergraduate certificates and graduate certificates in integrative medicine. Undergraduate certificates typically cover the same basic topics as associate's degree programs, but they do not require students to complete general education classes. At the graduate level, certificates allow students to take more advanced courses in the field without committing to a full master's degree. These programs are typically aimed at experienced healthcare workers who want to expand their knowledge of the subject, and they are commonly available online.

Students who wish to integrate alternative healing methods into traditional practices may pursue programs ranging from undergraduate certificates to doctoral degrees at a number of colleges and universities around the country.

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Integrative Medicine Universities and Schools in the U.S.

Home – Integrative Medicine US

On the weekend of Saturday and Sunday November 4 & 5 of 2017, the Integrative Medicine US team attended a Functional Medicine Boca Raton Seminar at the Embassy Suites Hotel and Convention Center. "Fundamentals of Blood Chemistry" The event is hosted by Apex...

In Honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Integrative Medicine US attended and supported the 8th Annual, Not My Daughter Fundraiser. All Proceeds from the event go to the Sylvester Campus University of Miami Oncology Department for Research on finding a cure for...

Integrative Medicine US was invited to an event in Davie, FL to speak and educate the public about Acupuncture, Chinese Herbal Medicine and Functional Nutrition. In addition, they had demonstrations and showcased information at their table about cupping therapy,...

ESPN recently published an article about NFL Players on the Tampa Bay Buccaneers using Cupping Therapy and Acupuncture to speed up recovery time. The article centers around professional ball player, Akeem Spence, and his use of Cupping Therapy and Acupuncture to...

Traditional Chinese Herbal Medicine uses thousands of substances in it's Herbology practice. It can literally be anything from grass and flowers to earthworms or even gold. The Hemp plant has a long history of use in China as Herbal Medicine for many types of...

The Integrative Medicine US Team are all highly trained professional Florida acupuncturists, massage therapists, herbalists, doctors, physical therapists, martial artists, yoga instructors and personal trainers. We employ the most Cutting Edge Technology as well as...

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What is Integrative Medicine and Health? | Osher Center for …

What is Integrative Medicine and Health?

Integrative medicine and health reaffirm the importance of the relationship between practitioner and patient, focuses on the whole person, is informed by evidence, and makes use of all appropriate therapeutic approaches, healthcare professionals and disciplines to achieve optimal health and healing.

Integrative medicine combines modern medicine with established approaches from around the world. By joining modern medicine with proven practices from other healing traditions, integrative practitioners are better able to relieve suffering, reduce stress, maintain the well-being, and enhance the resilience of their patients.

Although the culture of biomedicine is predominant in the U.S., it coexists with many other healing traditions. Many of these approaches have their roots in non-Western cultures. Others have developed within the West, but outside what is considered conventional medical practice.

Various terms have been used to describe the broad range of healing approaches that are not widely taught in medical schools, generally available in hospitals or routinely reimbursed by medical insurance. Integrative medicine is a term that emphasizes the combination of both conventional and alternative approaches to address the biological, psychological, social and spiritual aspects of health and illness. It emphasizes respect for the human capacity for healing, the importance of the relationship between the practitioner and the patient, a collaborative approach to patient care among practitioners, and the practice of conventional, complementary, and alternative health care that is evidence-based.

According to the 2012 National Health Interview Survey:

Read the 2012 report What Complementary and Integrative Approaches Do Americans Use?

CAM is attractive to many people because of its emphasis on treating the whole person, its promotion of good health and well-being, its valuing of prevention, and its often more personalized approach to patient concerns.

Most people who use CAM combine it with conventional medicine, because they perceive the combination to be superior to either alone. Independent predictors of CAM use in one written survey were higher level of education, poorer health status (chronic pain, anxiety, etc.) and a holistic interest in health, personal growth and spirituality.

Funding for biomedical research in the field of integrative medicine has increased dramatically over the past several years. In 1992, Congress established the Office of Alternative Medicine (OAM) as part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) with an annual budget of $2 million. In 1998, it was elevated to a full NIH center and renamed the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM), and again renamed in 2015 to the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH). NCCIHs mission is to support research and training in CAM and to disseminate evidence-based information to both the public and professional worlds.

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What is Integrative Medicine and Health? | Osher Center for ...

Family Medicine | Family Medicine | Michigan Medicine …

Overview

The University of Michigan Medical School's Department of Family Medicine is a nationally recognized leader in patient care, education, and research. Since the Department was founded in 1978, our presence has exemplified the principles of family medicine. Our 100 faculty run six thriving health centers; educate 33 residents, 12 fellows and hundreds of medical students annually; and foster a top-rated, innovative research program.

Our Residency Program Residents' outstanding performance on the recent In-Training Exam and the 100% pass rate for residency graduates on the ABFM Certification Exam demonstrates the quality of Family Medicine residents and of the teaching and training at U-M.

The Department of Family Medicine provides a full-range of comprehensive, coordinated family-centered services guided by our core values: accessibility, accountability, and compassion. We maintain a strong commitment to community involvement, diversity, and the under-served.

Family is important to us. Our physicians will care for your whole family. This continuity of care means you will have a doctor who is familiar with your total health picture. Your family physician will know you and your family as people, not just as patients.

Our goal is to help prevent illness, maintain good health, and control disease. Family physicians provide prenatal care and delivery, well-baby, pediatric, adolescent, adult, and geriatric services, to allow your family to be seen by the same physician throughout your lifespan.

Education is of the highest priority in the Department of Family Medicine, from ourpredoctoralandresidencyprograms, to faculty development and continuing medical education.

Our residency program is among the top programs in the nation today.

As the Department has grown the number offellowshipshas increased to include Academic, Geriatrics, Integrative Medicine, MD-MPH, Sports Medicine, and Women's Health.

Our predoctoral program provides academic and clinical experiences across the four years of medical school, mentoring, elective courses, clinical preceptorships, and involvement in research.

Faculty development andcontinuing medical education, are supported and promoted for all faculty members.

The Department continues to foster one of the most competitive and innovative research programs in the speciality of family medicine. Home to a diverse ecosystem of clinical researchers, methodologists, biostatisticians, and health economists, the Department of Family Medicine research group is a consistent leader in fields of:

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Family Medicine | Family Medicine | Michigan Medicine ...

Integrative Medicine Fellowships – ABPS

Integrative Medicine Fellowships

The following is a listing of Fellowships currently approved by the American Board of Integrative Medicine. Completion of one of these fellowship programs satisfies eligibility requirement 7(1). The program listed in red may no longer be open to new applications.

University of Arizona/Arizona Center for Integrative MedicineFellowship in Integrative Medicine

Academy of Integrative Health & Medicine (AIHM)AIHM Interprofessional Fellowship in Integrative Health & Medicine

University of California Los Angeles Center for East-West MedicineFellowship in Integrative Medicine

Santa Rosa FamilyMedicineResidencyIntegrative Family Medicine Fellowship

UCSF Osher Center for Integrative MedicineTraining in Research for Integrative Medicine (TRIM)

Scripps Center for Integrative MedicineIntegrative Cardiology

Middlesex Hospital Cancer CenterIntegrative Medicine Fellowship Program

Stamford Hospital, an affiliate of Columbia University Integrative Medicine Fellowship

George Washington University and the Jesse Brown VA Medical CenterIntegrative Medicine Employee Education/FellowshipPilot

Osher Center for Integrative Medicine at Northwestern UniversityIntegrative Medicine Fellowship

University of KansasIntegrative Medicine Fellowship

Maine Medical Center Family Medicine Residency Program (MMCFMRP)Integrative Family Medicine (IFM) Program and Fellowship

Harvard Medical School Research Fellowship in Integrative Medicine(multiple locations)

Greater Lawrence Family Health CenterHIP Fellowship

University of MichiganIntegrative Medicine Fellowship

Mayo Clinic

Albert Einstein College of Medicine/ Beth Israel Medical CenterAcademic Integrative Medicine Fellowship

Weill Cornell Medical CollegeFellowship Program in Complementary and Integrative Medicine

University of North CarolinaFellowship in Research in Integrative Medicine

Ohio State UniversityIntegrative Medicine Fellowship Program

Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine Integrative & Lifestyle MedicineGraduate Training Program in Integrative Medicine

University of Texas Medical Branch (UTMB Health)Integrative & Behavioral Medicine Fellowship

Swedish Cherry HillIntegrative Medicine Fellowship

University of Wisconsin, Department of Family MedicineAcademic Integrative Medicine Fellowship

The George Washington UniversityIntegrative Geriatric Fellowship

The George Washington UniversityIntegrative Medicine Fellowship

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Integrative Medicine Fellowships - ABPS

Integrative Medicine – 9780323358682 | US Elsevier Health …

Part I INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE

1. The Philosophy of Integrative Medicine

2. Creating Optimal Healing Environments

3. The Healing Encounter

4. The Whole Health Process

Part II INTEGRATIVE APPROACH TO DISEASE

Section 1. Affective Disorders

5. Depression

6. Anxiety

7. Attention Deficit Disorder

8. Autism Spectrum Disorder

9. Insomnia

10. Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

Section 2. Neurology

11. Alzheimer's Disease

12. Headache

13. Peripheral Neuropathy

14. Multiple Sclerosis

15. Parkinson's Disease

Section 3. Infectious Disease

16. Otitis Media

17. Chronic Sinusitis

18. Viral Upper Respiratory Infection

19. HIV/AIDS

20. Herpes Simplex Virus

21. Chronic Hepatitis

22. Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)

23. Lyme Disease

Section 4. Cardiovascular Disease

24. Hypertension

25. Heart Failure

26. Coronary Artery Disease

27. Dyslipidemia

28. Cardiac Arrhythmia

Section 5. Allergy/Intolerance

29. Asthma

30. The Allergic Patient

31. Food Allergy and Intolerance

Section 6. Metabolic/Endocrine Disorders

32. Insulin Resistance and the Metabolic Syndrome

33. Diabetes Mellitus

34. Hypothyroidism

35. Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome

36. Osteoporosis

37. Obesity

38. MTHFR, Homocysteine and Nutrient Needs

39. Adrenal Fatigue

Section 7. Nephrology

40. Chronic Kidney Disease

Section 8. Gastrointestinal Disorders

41. Irritable Bowel Syndrome

42. Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease

43. Peptic Ulcer Disease

44. Cholelithiasis

45. Recurring Abdominal Pain in Pediatrics

46. Constipation

Section 9. Autoimmune Disorders

47. Fibromyalgia

48. Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

49. Rheumatoid Arthritis

50. Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Section 10. Obstetrics/Gynecology

51. Preconception Counseling and Fertility

52. Labor Pain Management

53. Postdates Pregnancy

54. Nausea and Vomiting in Pregnancy

55. Menopause

56. Premenstrual Syndrome

57. Dysmenorrhea

58. Leiomyomata

59. Vaginal Dryness

Section 11. Urology

60. Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia

61. Urolithiasis

62. Chronic Prostatitis

63. Erectile Dysfunction

64. Testosterone Deficiency

Section 12. Musculoskeletal

65. Osteoarthritis

66. Myofascial Pain Syndrome

67. Chronic Low Back Pain

68. Neck Pain

69. Gout

70. Carpal Tunnel Syndrome

71. Epicondylosis

Section 13. Dermatology

72. Atopic Dermatitis

73. Psoriasis

74. Urticaria

75. Aphthous Stomatitis

76. Seborrheic Dermatitis

77. Acne/Rosacea

Section 14. Cancer

78. Breast Cancer

79. Lung Cancer

80. Prostate Cancer

81. Colon Cancer

82. Palliative and End of Life Care

Section 15. Substance Abuse

83. Alcoholism and Substance Abuse

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Integrative Medicine - 9780323358682 | US Elsevier Health ...

What is Integrative Medicine? – Verywell

What is Integrative Medicine?

What is integrative medicine and what careers are available in integrative medicine? This is a growing approach to healthcare which is gaining popularity among both patients and providers of all types.

Lisa P. McDonald is the owner of Integrated Connections, a firm which specializes in search and placement of medical professionals in the field of integrative medicine. Over time, she has grown a passion for integrative medicine based on its effect on her own personal health and well-being.

She then decided she wanted to help others have access to this type of care, which she feels is empowering for patients and enables them to be more involved and proactive in their own health treatment.

Integrative Medicine (IM) is a standard of healthcare that focuses on the individual and addresses the whole person - mind, body, spirit and environmental influences that impact a persons health, according to Lisa McDonald.

Integrative Medicine combines Western modern medicine with appropriate natural medicine therapies to achieve optimal health and healing.

IM care uses an integrative approach that is tailored to the individual and is focused on health maintenance, prevention, education and healing, while recognizing the bodys innate ability to heal itself.

Two main reasons:

It truly is gratifying to work in a field that educates and supports people in achieving optimal health, vitality and happiness. The practitioners are not only directly impacting the quality of life for individuals, they are major influencers of the transformation of our healthcare system from disease management care to health promotion. They are healers and teachers, and they experience rewarding results daily.

The demand is increasing for integrative medicine, because chronic illnesses are very costly to US healthcare, costing more than $1 trillion annually. The majority of chronic illness is preventable, according to the CDC, and currently they are a leading killer in America.

Furthermore, the government is on board with integrative med, posting jobs for licensed acupuncturists (LAc) on usajobs.gov, and the NIH (National Institute of Health) has funded an entire agency of 65 employees to study complementary and integrative medicine.

Even the Affordable Care Act includes IM language, in that it speaks to covering licensed and credentialed integrative practitioners. Four of the healthcare professionals appointed to the Federal government's Advisory Group to the National Prevention Council are specialists in integrative medicine as well.

The U.S. military has incorporated integrative medicine into its healthcare system, including acupuncture and stress management therapies to manage chronic pain and PTSD for warriors, veterans, and their families.

Additionally, the number of privately owned integrative clinics/centers opening is on a steady increase and conventional practices are revamping their business models to include integrative therapies to remain competitive.

Some of the most respected medical centers in the nation have established integrative medical centers, including Mayo Clinic, Duke University Medical Center, Scripps, and Beth Israel Deaconess. Fifty-one academic medical centers now include CAM (complementary and alternative medicine) programs.

Sure. Integrative medicine combines therapies and treatment approaches to ensure the best results for patients. These great results will keep the field growing.

First, an Integrative Primary Care Provider (MD, DO, Naturopath, PA, NP) will meet with a patient with an increased level of attention and time to understand the whole person and review their medical history, lifestyle choices, symptoms and create a personalized plan based on the patients specifics needs.

This personalized plan would include education for healing and to develop healthy patterns of behavior with possible referrals to integrative practitioners for recommendations on diet, exercise, supplements, pain and stress management techniques.

Integrative MDs, DOs, NPs, PAs and CNMs, naturopathic physicians, acupuncturists, chiropractors, Reiki practitioners, healing touch, nutritionists and massage therapists. This is not an all-inclusive list, but those are some of the most common professions associated with integrative medicine.

I see a steady increase in positions for practitioners specializing in integrative medicine. Also, NDs (naturopathic doctors) are being recognized as a solution to assist in the current shortage of primary care providers. NDs are also increasingly being employed in research and administration positions for academia and health supplement companies. Additionally, many hospitals and cancer care clinics are more commonly hiring Reiki practitioners and health touch practitioners as part of their provided services.

Insurance coverage is one current challenge, but I'm optimistic about the progress with the Affordable Care Act giving more people access to integrative healthcare services from licensed IM practitioners.

Perception is another challenge. Skeptics and those referring to integrative med as "woo-woo" medicine prevent others from being more receptive to learning more about the value of integrative med and experiencing the benefits of integrative therapies.

First, decide which profession interests you the most in practicing. I think it is critical to love what you do every day for your own well being and because you will perform best doing what you enjoy. Experiencing the benefits of one or more integrative therapies is a great way to start exploring, and interview integrative practitioners to understand what their practice involves.

Next, I also think its also critical to obtain licensure/certification from accredited institutions. Refer to websites of national professional societies that provide you with comprehensive information and direct you to accredited institutions for licensure.

Medical professionals who are already licensed in a field and wish to expand their skill set to include integrative medicine can pursue a fellowship in Integrative Medicine at Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine (AzCIM). AzCIM offers a residency in integrative medicine as well. There are many other educational opportunities to study integrative medicine with online courses or onsite learning for anyone. Several are offered through the American Board of Holistic Medicine.

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What is Integrative Medicine? - Verywell