Monday, June 29, 2009

 
As a Man Thinketh... so is he! Think Good Thots... Stay Adjusted... Be Well Within!

Monday, June 22, 2009

 

We call because we care...

Hello everyone...

Just a couple updates regarding our contact with you...

1. As most of you know, the Quote of the Day has been on hiatus due to a major personal computer melt down. Lost were contacts, who was on the QOD list... who was not. Rather than taking the considerable amount of time to rebuild the QOD list, it simply will take on another form... details below.

2. During the summer months, vacations and children out of school can cause havoc on schedules. Time management is crucial in a peaceful, maximized life. On Wednesday July 1st, we will be having a Maximized Living Workshop at our office titled the 12 Minute Revolution... exercise, nutrition and time management to add hours to your day and take inches off your waist. Sign up is in the adjusting suite at WWC.

3. Understanding schedules can get hectic, it is crucial to not neglect your spine and nerve system. When appointments are missed our team calls to get you rescheduled and keep you on track with your adjustment schedule. WE CALL BECAUSE WE CARE. Part of our responsibility as your health coach is to keep you on track with your program of care. Our calls are for accountability... we want you to be a beacon of health in Castle Rock... your appointments, your attendance at workshops are crucial to reach your goal of not only feeling good but functioning at 100%. Only then can you look forward to a life free from drug dependence, free from disease and a life where you enjoy abundance in every aspect of your life. When we call, it is part of your program. To avoid this necessary part of care, stay on program, call and reschedule ahead of time if you need to miss an appointment. We are here to serve you and being flexible and efficient in the office is how we accomplish this.

4. An easy way to stay in touch with the latest happenings at WWC... the latest research, the QOD and the latest activities at WWC is to get plugged into our office communications via FACEBOOK and TWITTER. I know, I know... I held out as long as I could to with 21st century communication... but now that I have done so, I am amazed at how easy it is and how much time it actually frees up. The power of the internet is now the latest in Health Coaching and WWC is leading the way. You can also check back on this blog for my latest posts.

If you do not have a FACEBOOK or TWITTER accounts, sign up at their websites... if you already have accounts, look us up and become friends and followers of our office to stay up to date with the latest in your extraordinary care.

Facebook address: www.FaceBook.com/in8doc
Twitter address: www.Twitter.com/DrKinch

Be well.
Dr. Joel

Monday, May 11, 2009

 

OFFICIAL CHIROPRACTIC FLU SHOT RECOMMENDATIONS:
Build a Titanium Immune System

1. Commit to every scheduled adjustment. Your spine houses your lifeline (YOUR SPINAL CORD). Without a healthy spine, your brain cannot properly communicate with your body, which will always lead to rapid sickness and disease. If you want energy, vitality, and a powerful immune system, make getting your adjustments a major priority. This is the #1 way to prevent sickness and disease & "CATCHING" THE FLU! A preliminary research study demonstrated by Ronald Pero, PhD, chief of cancer prevention research at New York's Preventive Medicine Institute, and professor of medicine at New York University revealed in his initial three-year study of 107 individuals who had been under chiropractic care for five years or more, the chiropractic patients were found to have an immune competence 200% greater than people who had not received chiropractic, and 400% greater than those with cancer and other serious diseases!

2. Make sure your entire family has been checked for subluxation. With a health spine and nerve system, your family will achieve superior health as well as save massive amounts of money on medical doctor visits and drugs.

3. Commit to every Well Within Chiropractic workshop. We have 3 this month alone!

4. Bring friends and family members to the Health seminars/workshops. Having health accountability partners is one of the greatest ways to make lasting and permanent changes in your health and life.

5. Refer friends and family to our no cost. It's a lot easier staying healthy when those around you are committed to their own health.

6. Read the weekly newsletters that are handed out at WWC. They are chock-full of life-saving info. If you are not on our e-mail list yet, please leave your address at the front desk. The e-mail newsletters will also keep you abreast of all upcoming events/workshops at WWC.

7. Join our run/walk club. Dr. Kathy meets twice a week with practice members to move Your Body By God. It is a great way to stay focused on your health throughout the year. A well oxygenated body wards off disease better than a stagnant, sedentary body...get moving!

8. Attend our AWESOME Maximized Living Makeover... THIS SATURDAY MAY 18TH! (see front desk for more info.)

9. Take advantage of our Neurotoxic/Detoxification program (Talk to Dr. Joel on your next visit or Dr. Joel will be going over this in detail this Saturday at the makeover).

10. Review your health goals and commitments regularly. The main cause of car accidents on our highways is due to people simply taking their focus off the road. Something will distract them to cause them to crash. Life is full of distractions and interferences and the only way we can stay focused on the path of life and insure that we hit our target and desired health outcomes is by constantly (daily) reminding ourselves of our goals and aspirations.

Always remember, I am here to help and serve in any way that I can. My purpose is to maximize the health potential of the families our community. Whatever I can do to help you or your loved ones, never hesitate to ask! You or your family members can contact me at 303.814.3980 or IN8Doc@earthlink.net. My personal cell. phone number is 720.641.1737.

***SICK of hearing your friends and family complain about their health problems? Then drag them to our office to get their nerve systems checked and have a full consultation with Dr. Joel. Our team takes care of the healthiest people in Castle Rock... Colorado and potentially the entire country... who's next! Reach out and save a life by getting them to our office.



Saturday, March 21, 2009

 

Quote O the Day!!! 3-21-2009

They always say time changes things, but you actually have to change them yourself.”

Andy Warhol

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"The way to outer peace is through law.
The only way to achieve inner peace is through love."
-- The Kinch Family Motto --


Friday, March 20, 2009

 

Quote O the Day!!! 3-20-2009

Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored.”

Aldous Huxley

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"The way to outer peace is through law.
The only way to achieve inner peace is through love."
-- The Kinch Family Motto --


Thursday, March 19, 2009

 

MUST READ: Cancer Screening: Doing More Harm than Good? -- RD Report LINK

http://www.rd.com/living-healthy/cancer-screening-and-prevention-news-in-health/article122134.html

Cancer Screening:
Doing More Harm than Good?

Reader's Digest
Beyond cancer: 3 other ways you could be overtreated

Suzanne Bull always half expected that she'd get cancer. [That’s what modern medicine has driven us too… scared to live… taught us to believe that cancer is part of life… that health is not what your in for rather than what God has designed for you a life free to fulfill His plan an purpose…] After all, she lived in Marin County, California, where breast cancer rates are among the highest in the country. Still, she was determined to do whatever she could to protect herself. She ate right and exercised, and every year, she went into San Francisco to get a mammogram.

Last year, when Bull was 54, she got the news she'd been dreading. An ultrasensitive digital mammogram showed a suspicious spot on her left breast. A biopsy confirmed it was cancer. Fortunately, the surgeon told her, it had been caught early: She had ductal carcinoma in situ, or DCIS, which meant that the cancer was still confined to a single milk duct. And it might well stay there, he added, since DCIS generally doesn't become invasive. That all sounded great, Bull recalls, until the surgeon told her that there was no way to know whether her cancer would turn out to be the lazy, nonthreatening type of DCIS or the potentially invasive kind. She needed a lumpectomy, he told her, and should also consider undergoing radiation and taking the drug tamoxifen.

Bull agonized over the decision for two weeks but in the end went ahead with the lumpectomy and radiation. "I had to do everything I could to stop this disease," she says. With two clean mammograms behind her, Bull feels lucky. "I'm just glad I had access to digital mammography," she says. "It finds things so much earlier."

It's hard to believe, but some researchers wouldn't call Bull lucky at all. They say that yearly mammograms are not nearly as effective at reducing the risk of dying of breast cancer as most women think, and that mammography leads many women to get unnecessary treatment -- especially those diagnosed with DCIS. The problem is bigger than just mammography: They say the prostate-specific antigen (PSA) test may do men more harm than good if they don't already have symptoms of prostate cancer. And they have similarly grim things to say about other widely used cancer screening tests.

Their view stands in stark contrast to the message being put out by groups like the American Cancer Society and even the federal government, which say that finding and treating tumors as early as possible is the surest way to avoid a cancer death. But a growing group of scientific heretics -- published in highly respected medical journals, working at some of the most august institutions -- strongly believe that it's time to rethink our whole approach to cancer screening.

That's because screening tests pick up many small cancers that would never have caused any symptoms. "Screening for cancer means that tens of thousands of patients who never would have become sick are diagnosed with this disease," says H. Gilbert Welch, MD, codirector of the Outcomes Group at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in White River Junction, Vermont, and a leading expert in cancer screening. "Once they're diagnosed, almost everybody gets treated -- and we know that treatment can cause harm." Tamoxifen for breast cancer can trigger life-threatening clots in the lungs, for instance. Surgery for prostate cancer leaves 60 percent of men unable to have an erection. For that matter, some of the screening tests themselves carry risks: Up to 5 out of every 1,000 people who get a colonoscopy have a serious complication, such as a colon perforation or major bleeding.

Most people diagnosed with cancer undoubtedly see these risks as the price they must pay to avoid dying of cancer. "The reality is not so simple," says Dr. Welch. Screening tests are very good at catching tumors that would never bother us, he notes, but they're actually pretty bad at catching the fastest-growing and most deadly cancers in time to cure them. The bottom line, says researcher Floyd Fowler, Jr., PhD, president of the Boston-based nonprofit Foundation for Informed Medical Decision Making: "Screening's power to cut your risk of dying has been wildly overinflated."

How Cancer Can Fool a Screening Test

The idea that getting tested for cancer might be useless or even harmful may strike you as completely wrongheaded. After all, smaller cancers are easier to cut out. They're also less likely to have metastasized, or spread to other parts of the body -- and metastasis is generally what makes cancer deadly. Sure, it's possible for a tumor to kill without metastasizing: A brain tumor, for example, can cause devastating harm when it grows big enough to squeeze healthy tissue inside the skull. But most cancers threaten life only after a few cells break free and travel through the bloodstream or lymph fluid to set up shop in another part of the body. Once that's happened, a surgeon can no longer cure a patient by removing the tumor. And even powerful chemotherapy drugs are often unable to kill every last errant cell.

Physicians used to think that a tumor needed to get to a certain size before it would spread. But that's not necessarily so, says Barnett S. Kramer, MD, associate director for disease prevention at the National Institutes of Health. "Some tumors spread extremely early," he says. They begin metastasizing when they consist of only a few million cells, which sounds like a lot but is smaller than the period at the end of this sentence -- too small to detect with most screening tests. By the time this kind of cancer is big enough to be seen on a mammogram or other test, it's already sent seeds to other parts of the body.

The flip side of this problem is that many screening tests do a great job at catching cancers that would never have caused problems and could simply have been left alone. This notion violates most of what we think we know about cancer, says Dr. Kramer, because most of what we know is based on the tumors that cause harm. If you think of all the different varieties of cancer as making up an iceberg, cancers that cause symptoms represent only the part of the berg above the waterline. For most of human history, these were the only tumors we knew anything about: the breast cancer that had grown big enough to feel, the lung cancer that was causing shortness of breath.

Screening allows us to look under the water, at the tumors that haven't yet become symptomatic. We assume they will eventually cause symptoms, but increasing evidence suggests that's not always the case. Evidence from autopsies, for instance: In one study, postmortem exams showed that nearly 9 percent of women of all ages who died of any cause other than breast cancer had undiagnosed DCIS. Among women from Denmark, where mammography is not as common as it is here, a whopping 39 percent of middle-aged women who died of other causes had undetected breast cancers. Similarly, says outcomes researcher Dr. Welch, a 1989 study found that 60 percent of men over age 60 have undetected prostate cancer -- yet only about 3 percent of deaths in men are due to prostate cancer.

So screening tests raise red flags about cancers destined to loll about quietly, causing no problems. But there's more. They also blare the alarm about cancers that would actually go away on their own -- because, in fact, some cancers simply disappear.

Brandon Connor, now age seven, was suspected of having cancer even before he was born. It had been a difficult pregnancy, and Brandon's mother, Kristin, then 35 and a lawyer in Atlanta, was undergoing regular ultrasounds. [Blasting a growing baby in womb with ultrasonic waves in and of itself can cause mutations… a medical test that might actually coax proliferation of cancerous cells!] One of the tests picked up what looked like a tumor on Brandon's spine. Doctors made a tentative diagnosis of neuroblastoma, a nervous system cancer.

Neuroblastoma comes in two forms, one of which is deadly. But there was no way of knowing if Brandon's tumor was indeed a neuroblastoma, much less whether it was dangerous, without doing a biopsy, and its location made that risky. The Connors opted instead to keep a close watch to see if the cancer grew; the doctors said Brandon's tumor should regress within his first year if it was going to. It didn't, and by the time Brandon was two years old, he'd undergone more than a dozen MRI scans. [Blasting a growing baby (or anyone for that matter) with regular doses of radiation can cause mutation of cells… a medical test that might actually coax proliferation of cancerous cells!]

Finally, the doctors advised the Connors to go ahead with surgery. The day before the operation, though, the surgeon ordered one last imaging test. The neuroblastoma was gone. "We couldn't believe it," says his mother. Today, physicians know that many neuroblastomas regress on their own during infancy or early childhood.

"People kept telling us, 'Thank God they found it on the ultrasound,'" Kristin Connor says. Looking back on the years of worry, she adds, "In hindsight, I'd say it was more like a curse."

The Damage Screening Can Do

Forget the fact that unnecessary therapies for cancer are a tremendous drain on our health care budget, already strained to the breaking point. "Many oncologists would probably tell you that they've had patients who suffered serious side effects, even death, from treatment that they might not have needed," says William C. Black, MD, a professor of radiology at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center. No one intentionally prescribes unnecessary treatment, of course. But it's often difficult to know if a patient really needs to be treated, so the tendency is to be aggressive, just in case. [Just in case… read above: “… that they’ve had patients who suffered serious side effects, even DEATH, from treatment that they MIGHT NOT HAVE NEEDED…”]

Treatment can exact a profound toll. Take the case of George Brown. At 75, Brown was still a practicing lawyer in Denver last year when he was diagnosed with prostate cancer. His doctor prescribed Lupron to block production of testosterone (which many prostate tumors need in order to grow). "I didn't realize that Lupron was chemical castration," says Brown. "I was extremely depressed. I was having hot and cold flashes. I cried at everything." Radiation therapy damaged his rectum and left him with little control of his bladder or bowels. He is now facing another round of a different testosterone-blocking drug.

Despite his troubles, Brown believes his care was lifesaving. And there's no way to know in any particular case. But the fact is that most men diagnosed with this cancer have invasive therapy, even though statistics say that many men could safely choose "watchful waiting": getting PSA tests to monitor the cancer and treating it only if it begins to grow rapidly.

Does Screening Save Lives?

For many people, even serious side effects like the ones Brown suffered would be worth putting up with if the treatment reduced their risk of dying of cancer. That's the point of getting screened, isn't it? Yet only one cancer screening test, the venerable Pap smear, has truly slashed the risk of death. Between 1955 and 1992, according to the American Cancer Society, Pap smears cut the death rate for cervical cancer by 74 percent, and deaths have continued to decline each year.

But no other test has had such a powerful effect. The PSA test has been widely used in the United States since the late 1980s, but it's not clear that it's had a big impact on the death rate for prostate cancer. Between 1975 and 2005, the latest year for which statistics are available, the death rate dropped from 31 per 100,000 men to 24.6. That's a real decline, but many experts doubt that PSA testing deserves all the credit -- especially given what happened during a "natural experiment" in Seattle and the state of Connecticut in the late 1980s.

Medicare patients in Seattle were five times more likely than those in Connecticut to get PSA testing between 1988 and 1990 and were also more likely to have surgery and radiation for prostate cancer. But when researchers followed up through 1997, they found the Seattle men were just as likely to die of prostate cancer.

"Prostate screening seems to make sense," says Nortin M. Hadler, MD, a professor of medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the author of Worried Sick: A Prescription for Health in an Over-treated America. "If only it worked."

Mammograms also offer a smaller benefit than many patients -- and doctors -- assume. Mammography's effectiveness has been hotly debated, but a carefully conducted 2005 analysis suggests it cuts the risk of dying of breast cancer by 15 percent, says the NIH's Kramer. That means a 60-year-old who gets regular mammograms shaves her risk of dying of the disease in the next decade from 7 per 1,000 to 6 per 1,000.

As for colonoscopy: It allows the doctor to remove polyps, growths that can turn into cancer. The best estimates suggest that colonoscopy can cut the risk of death from colon cancer by as much as 60 percent. (We don't know for sure if it reduces the risk of death, because those studies haven't been done.) [I thought, and I am sure you did too, that medicine was EVIDENCE BASED!!!] Sixty percent sounds great, until you realize that the chances of dying of colon cancer aren't all that big to start with. The average woman has a 2.1 percent risk of dying of colorectal cancer. (So of all the things that can kill her, this will be the culprit about 2.1 percent of the time.) The average man's risk is a little higher, about 2.3 percent. Knocking a 2.3 percent risk down by 60 percent means it drops to 0.9 percent -- a benefit, yes, but not necessarily big enough to outweigh all other considerations.

To Screen or Not to Screen

The fact is, there's no single answer. It depends on many factors, including how old you are, what other diseases you have, and what you value most in terms of your health. Dennis Fryback, PhD, is a former member of the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, a group of experts convened by the federal government to make recommendations about screening. The task force recommends colonoscopy every ten years for people between the ages of 50 and 75, yet the 61-year-old Fryback has concluded it does not make sense for him to get screened.

He came to that decision in part because he has no family history of colon cancer. If he did, his chances of getting it would increase, and so would the odds he'd benefit from the test. He also knows that getting the exam requires at least a day of taking laxatives to clean out the colon and then facing the possibility of a perforation from the procedure, a risk that goes up with age. He balanced the possible reduction in his chances of dying of colon cancer against his other health problems. He had a heart attack last year and suspects he will die of heart disease [Lifestyle changes like Maximized Living Principles can take care of that risk!] before a colon polyp has a chance to kill him.

Given his circumstances, Fryback figures, colonoscopy "is like an expensive lottery ticket. I might get some extra time, but chances are much better that I won't get anything. It's like paying, say, $5 to have a very long-shot chance at a few hundred dollars."

When looking at his odds, Fryback has an advantage: He's an expert in medical decision making. Most of us, of course, are much less familiar with medical statistics, but there are tools to help average patients come to a decision that's right for them. Called patient decision aids, these tools come in the form of brochures, videos, and Web-based interactive programs; some include interviews with cancer survivors and people considering getting screened, who discuss their own decisions. Patients can sometimes take them home to study at their own pace.

Decision aids aren't widely available yet, but some insurance companies and a handful of medical centers offer them. Suzanne Bull used a patient decision aid DVD before opting to undergo radiation treatment for her breast cancer. "Watching it was the best thing I did," she says.

Eventually, researchers and doctors hope, better screening tests will be able to distinguish between cancers that need to be treated and those that don't. But until then, many experts believe, the decision to get screened should rest on an individual's values and his or her ability to handle uncertainty. "We have come to fear dying from disease more than dying at the hands of overzealous doctors," says Dartmouth's Dr. Black. The fact is, both are risks when we get screened for cancer.

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"The way to outer peace is through law.
The only way to achieve inner peace is through love."
-- The Kinch Family Motto --


 

Baxter Vaccine released with LIVE BIRD FLU in it!!! -- LINK

Talk about creating your own market!!!

http://www.torontosun.com/news/canada/2009/02/27/8560781.html

Baxter: Product contained live bird flu virus

The company that released contaminated flu virus material from a plant in Austria confirmed Friday that the experimental product contained live H5N1 avian flu viruses.

And an official of the World Health Organization’s European operation said the body is closely monitoring the investigation into the events that took place at Baxter International’s research facility in Orth-Donau, Austria.

“At this juncture we are confident in saying that public health and occupational risk is minimal at present,” medical officer Roberta Andraghetti said from Copenhagen, Denmark.

“But what remains unanswered are the circumstances surrounding the incident in the Baxter facility in Orth-Donau.”

The contaminated product, a mix of H3N2 seasonal flu viruses and unlabelled H5N1 viruses, was supplied to an Austrian research company. The Austrian firm, Avir Green Hills Biotechnology, then sent portions of it to sub-contractors in the Czech Republic, Slovenia and Germany.

The contamination incident, which is being investigated by the four European countries, came to light when the subcontractor in the Czech Republic inoculated ferrets with the product and they died. Ferrets shouldn’t die from exposure to human H3N2 flu viruses.

Public health authorities concerned about what has been described as a “serious error” on Baxter’s part have assumed the death of the ferrets meant the H5N1 virus in the product was live. But the company, Baxter International Inc., has been parsimonious about the amount of information it has released about the event.

On Friday, the company’s director of global bioscience communications confirmed what scientists have suspected.

“It was live,” Christopher Bona said in an email.

The contaminated product, which Baxter calls “experimental virus material,” was made at the Orth-Donau research facility. Baxter makes its flu vaccine — including a human H5N1 vaccine for which a licence is expected shortly — at a facility in the Czech Republic.

People familiar with biosecurity rules are dismayed by evidence that human H3N2 and avian H5N1 viruses somehow co-mingled in the Orth-Donau facility. That is a dangerous practice that should not be allowed to happen, a number of experts insisted.

Accidental release of a mixture of live H5N1 and H3N2 viruses could have resulted in dire consequences.

While H5N1 doesn’t easily infect people, H3N2 viruses do. If someone exposed to a mixture of the two had been simultaneously infected with both strains, he or she could have served as an incubator for a hybrid virus able to transmit easily to and among people.

That mixing process, called reassortment, is one of two ways pandemic viruses are created.

There is no suggestion that happened because of this accident, however.

“We have no evidence of any reassortment, that any reassortment may have occurred,” said Andraghetti.

“And we have no evidence of any increased transmissibility of the viruses that were involved in the experiment with the ferrets in the Czech Republic.”

Baxter hasn’t shed much light — at least not publicly — on how the accident happened. Earlier this week Bona called the mistake the result of a combination of “just the process itself, (and) technical and human error in this procedure.”

He said he couldn’t reveal more information because it would give away proprietary information about Baxter’s production process.

Andraghetti said Friday the four investigating governments are co-operating closely with the WHO and the European Centre for Disease Control in Stockholm, Sweden.

“We are in very close contact with Austrian authorities to understand what the circumstances of the incident in their laboratory were,” she said.

“And the reason for us wishing to know what has happened is to prevent similar events in the future and to share lessons that can be learned from this event with others to prevent similar events. ... This is very important.”

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"The way to outer peace is through law.
The only way to achieve inner peace is through love."
-- The Kinch Family Motto --


 

Quote O the Day!!! 3-19-2009

“I forgive myself for having believed for so long that...

I was never good enough to have, get, be what I wanted.”

Ceanne DeRohan

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http://www.youtube.com/user/DrKinch

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"The way to outer peace is through law.
The only way to achieve inner peace is through love."
-- The Kinch Family Motto --


Wednesday, March 18, 2009

 

Quote O the Day!!! 3-18-2009

“Whenever you have truth it must be given with love, or the message and the messenger will be rejected.”

Mahatma Gandhi

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"The way to outer peace is through law.
The only way to achieve inner peace is through love."
-- The Kinch Family Motto --


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