I would like to ask James & Barbara Hyman the ‘practitioners” of the so called ‘quantum theta energy healing’ (QTEH or Kew-Tee as I prefer to call it)) if I can do a side-by side clinical trial with methods that are equally questionable.
May I suggest that the trial be a head-to-head (or, in this case a knee-to-knee) comparison, and that you test VooDoo, Snake Healing, Accupressure, high dose homeopathy (drink one gallon of water a day, and since all the water on the Earth is "joined" then it all has the memory of everything!
I call this Zen Water Treatment, since it makes the subject "one" (with everything)), Witchcraft, phlebotomy to rid the body of evil humors (humors in Ozland),
The Hyman's having fallen victim to their scams being called out by skeptic's everywhere and have now resorted to hawking and pushing "Detox Retreats" in that bastion of reality;
Sedona Arizona!
(Hey, isn't that where they allowed James Earl Ray of "The Secret" fame, the ability to rent space for the purposes of charging $10,000.00 per person to ridicule and then commit manslaughter?
Well, now the Hyman's, undeterred, have taken to hawking A "Total Body Cleanse."
For those of you not familiar with this rather unpleasant scam, it's a coffee enema (use StarButts Coffee only),personally I would prefer a Zapper treatment, or simply a placebo (ie. Doing nothing).
I guarantee it's just as effective!
Here is what I can tell you about "Colonic Irrigation" And "Coffee Enema's"
From The United States Senate Special Committee on Aging
Hearing on Swindlers, Hucksters and Snake Oil Salesmen:
The Hype and Hope of Marketing Anti-Aging Products to Seniors
September 10, 2001
A Written Response to the Statement of the Honorable Dan Burton (R-IN),
Chairman, House Committee on Government Reform
By Timothy N. Gorski, M.D., F.A.C.O.G.
Assistant Clinical Professor, University of North Texas Health Science Center
President, Dallas/Fort Worth Council Against Health Fraud
Board Member, National Council Against Health Fraud
Associate Editor, Scientific Review of Alternative Medicine
According to Dr. Gorski:
"Especially shameful was the allocation of $1.4 million to the work of Nicholas Gonzalez and his bizarre coffee enema and psychic hair analysis cancer treatments. Even Barrie Cassileth, PhD, Chief of the Integrative Medicine Service at Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, called Gonzalez' claims and methods "voodoo magic silly Not scientific. Worse than not scientific. This is pure ridiculousness."
"Coffee Enema's" "Enema's" were standard practice of fifth-century C.E. "medicine men" who believed blood letting and purging rid the body of "corrupt humors" [15] Kelley/Gonzalez use of laxatives and enemas seems to endorse this ancient concept when they state that poisoning occurs when people eat "processed foods" and that an "unpoisoned body" can recognize and destroy cancer.
From Dr. Stephen Barrett, Editor QuackWatch:
Gastrointestinal Quackery:
Colonics, Laxatives, and More
Stephen Barrett, M.D.
The importance of "regularity" to overall health has been greatly overestimated for thousands of years. Ancient Egyptians associated feces with decay and used enemas and laxatives liberally. In more recent times, this concern has been embodied in the concept of "autointoxication" and has been promoted by warnings against "irregularity." [1]
The theory of "autointoxication" states that stagnation of the large intestine (colon) causes toxins to form that are absorbed and poison the body. Some proponents depict the large intestine as a "sewage system" that becomes a "cesspool" if neglected. Other proponents state that constipation causes hardened feces to accumulate for months (or even years) on the walls of the large intestine and block it from absorbing or eliminating properly. This, they say, causes food to remain undigested and wastes from the blood to be reabsorbed by the body [2].
Around the turn of the twentieth century many physicians accepted the concept of autointoxication, but it was abandoned after scientific observations proved it wrong. In 1919 and 1922, it was clearly demonstrated that symptoms of headache, fatigue, and loss of appetite that accompanied fecal impaction were caused by mechanical distension of the colon rather than by production or absorption of toxins [3,4]. Moreover, direct observation of the colon during surgical procedures or autopsies found no evidence that hardened feces accumulate on the intestinal walls.
Today we know that most of the digestive process takes place in the small intestine, from which nutrients are absorbed into the body. The remaining mixture of food and undigested particles then enters the large intestine, which can be compared to a 40-inch-long hollow tube. Its principal functions are to transport food wastes from the small intestine to the rectum for elimination and to absorb minerals and water. Careful observations have shown that the bowel habits of healthy individuals can vary greatly. Although most people have a movement daily, some have several movements each day, while others can go several days or even longer with no adverse effects.
The popular diet book Fit for Life (1986) is based on the notion that when certain foods are eaten together, they "rot," poison the system, and make the person fat. To avoid this, the authors recommend that fats, carbohydrates and protein foods be eaten at separate meals, emphasizing fruits and vegetables because foods high in water content can "wash the toxic waste from the inside of the body" instead of "clogging" the body. These ideas are utter nonsense [5].
Some chiropractors, naturopaths, and assorted food faddists claim that "death begins in the colon" and that "90 percent of all diseases are caused by improperly working bowels." The practices they recommend include fasting, periodic "cleansing" of the intestines, and colonic irrigation.
Fasting is said to "rejuvenate" the digestive organs, increase elimination of "toxins, and "purify" the body."
Cleansing" can be accomplished with a variety of "natural" laxative products.
Colonic irrigation is performed by passing a rubber tube through the rectum. Some proponents have advocated that the tube be inserted as much as 30 inches. Warm water—often 20 gallons or more—is pumped in and out through the tube, a few pints at a time, to wash out the contents of the large intestine. (An ordinary enema uses about a quart of fluid.) Some practitioners add herbs, coffee, enzymes, wheat or grass extract, or other substances to the enema solution.
The Total Health Connection and Canadian Natural Health and Healing Center Web sites provide more details of proponents' claims. The latter states that "there is only one cause of disease—toxemia" and offers "the most comprehensive in-depth colon therapy on the continent." The course costs $985 for 5 days of in-clinic training or $295 by correspondence.
Some "alternative" practitioners make bogus diagnoses of "parasites," for which they recommend "intestinal cleansers," plant enzymes, homeopathic remedies. Health-food stores sell products of this type with claims that they can "rejuvenate" the body and kill the alleged invaders.
The danger of these practices depends upon how much they are used and whether they are substituted for necessary medical care. Whereas a 1-day fast is likely to be harmless (though useless), prolonged fasting can be fatal. "Cleansing" with products composed of herbs and dietary fiber is unlikely to be physically harmful, but the products involved can be expensive. Some people have reported expelling large amounts of what they claim to be feces that have accumulated on he intestinal wall. However, experts believe these are simply "casts" formed by the fiber contained in the "cleansing" products.
Although laxative ads warn against "irregularity," constipation should be defined not by the frequency of movements but by the hardness of the stool. Ordinary constipation usually can be remedied by increasing the fiber content of the diet, drinking adequate amounts of water, and engaging in regular exercise.
If the bowel is basically normal, dietary fiber increases the bulk of the stool, softens it, and speeds transit time. Defecating soon after the urge is felt also can be helpful because if urges are ignored, the rectum may eventually stop signaling when defecation is needed. Stimulant laxatives (such as cascara or castor oil) can damage the nerve cells in the colon wall, decreasing the force of contractions and increasing the tendency toward constipation. Thus, people who take strong laxatives whenever they "miss a movement" may wind up unable to move their bowels without them. Frequent enemas can also lead to dependence [6].
A doctor should be consulted if constipation persists or represents a significant change in bowel pattern.
Colonic irrigation, which also can be expensive, has considerable potential for harm.
The process can be very uncomfortable, since the presence of the tube can induce severe cramps and pain.
If the equipment is not adequately sterilized between treatments, disease germs from one person's large intestine can be transmitted to others. Several outbreaks of serious infections have been reported, including one in which contaminated equipment caused amebiasis in 36 people, 6 of whom died following bowel perforation [7-9].
Cases of heart failure (from excessive fluid absorption into the bloodstream) and electrolyte imbalance have also been reported [10].
Direct rectal perforation has also been reported [11].
Yet no license or training is required to operate a colonic-irrigation device.
In 1985, a California judge ruled that colonic irrigation is an invasive medical procedure that may not be performed by chiropractors and the California Health Department's Infectious Disease Branch stated: "The practice of colonic irrigation by chiropractors, physical therapists, or physicians should cease. Colonic irrigation can do no good, only harm." The National Council Against Health Fraud agrees [12].
In 2009, Dr. Edzard Ernst tabulated the therapeutic claims he found on the Web sites of six "professional organizations of colonic irrigations." The themes he found included detoxification, normailzation of intestinal function, treatment of inflammatory bowel disease, and weight loss. He also found claims elated to asthma, menstrual irregularities, circulatory disorders, skin problems, and improvements in energy levels. Searching Medline and Embase, he was unable to find a single controlled clinical trial that substantited any of these claims [13].
Legal Action
The FDA classifies colonic irrigation systems as Class III devices that cannot be legally marketed except for medically indicated colon cleansing (such as before a radiologic endoscopic examination). No system has been approved for "routine" colon cleansing to promote the general well being of a patient. Since 1997, the agency has issued at least seven warning letters related to colon therapy:
In 1997, Colon Therapeutics, of Groves, Texas, and its owner Jimmy John Girouard were warned about safety and quality control violations of the Jimmy John colon hydrotherapy unit and related devices [14].
In 1997, Tiller Mind & Body, of San Antonio, Texas and its owner Jeri C. Tiller, were ordered to stop claiming that their Libbe colonic irrigation device was effective against acne, allergies, asthma and low-grade chronic infections and improved liver function and capillary and lymphatic circulation [15].
In 1997, Colon Hygiene Services, of Austin, Texas and its owner Rocky Bruno was notified that their colonic irrigation system could not be legally marketed without FDA approval [16].
In 1999, Dotolo Research Corporation, of Pinellas Park, Florida, and its chief executive officer Raymond Dotolo were warned about quality control violations and lack of FDA approval for marketing its Toxygen BSC-UV colonic irrigation system [17].
In 2001, Clearwater Colon Hydrotherapy, of Ocala, Florida, and its vice president Stuart K. Baker were warned about quality control violations and lack of FDA approval for marketing their colonic irrigators [18].
In 2003. the International Colon Hydrotherapy Association, of San Antonio, Texas and its executive director Augustine R. Hoenninger, III, PhD, ND, were notified that it lacked FDA approval to sponsor "research" that had been proposed or actually begun on the devices of five companies [19].
In 2003, Girourd and Colon Therapeutics were notified that his devices require professional supervision and cannot be legally marketed directly to consumers. The letter noted that he had obtained marketing clearance only for use in medically indicated colon cleansing, such as before radiologic or sigmoidoscopic examinations [20].
In 2003, the Wood Hygienic Institute of Kissimmee, Florida, and its owner Helen Wood were warned about quality control violations and the use of unapproved therapeutic claims in marketing their devices [21].
Girouard, Colon Therapeutics, Tiller Mind & Body, operators of the Years to Your Life Health Centers, companies that manufactured several components of Girouard's colonic irrigation systems, and organizations that trained operators of the devices are being sued in connection with the death of a 72-year-old woman who perforated her large intestine while administering colonic irrigation. The suit alleges that the woman was unsupervised when she administered the "colonic," perforated her colon early in the procedure, required surgery the same day, and remained seriously ill for several months before she died from liver failure.
The complaint also alleges that Years to Your Life Health Center falsely advertised colonic irrigations as "painless" procedures which provided health benefits including an improved immune system and increased energy, as well as relief from indigestion, diarrhea, constipation, weight loss, body odor, candida, acne, mucus colitis, gas, food cravings, fatigue, obesity, diverticulosis, bad breath, parasitic infections, and premenstrual syndrome [22].
In response to the woman's death and reports of serious injuries to four other patients, the Texas Attorney General filed lawsuits against:
Girouard and Colon Therapeutics
Abundant Health and Wellness Institute, and its owner, Cordelia Beall
Gentle Colonics Inc. and its owner, Denson Ingram
Eternal Health Inc., doing business as Years to Your Life and Cynthia Pitre
Jennifer Jackson, doing business as Body Cleanse Spa
Tiller Mind Body Inc., doing business as Mind Body Naturopathic Institute and Jerri Tiller
International Association for Colon Hydrotherapy, Class 3 Study Group and Augustine R. Hoenninger III
Linda Gonzalez, doing business as El Paso Health Center.
Soledad Herrera, doing business as Body Matters of El Paso
Lisa Ramoin, doing business as Alternative Health (Houston)
Janice Jackson, doing as InsideOut and Within (Houston)
The suits charged all of the defendants with engaging in the promotion, sale or unauthorized use of prescription devices for colonic hydrotherapy treatments without physician involvement. In 2004 and 2005, the cases involving Girouard, Ingram, Beall, the Jacksons, Herrera, Ramoin, and their companies were settled with consent agreements under which they would pay a total of $178,000 in civil penalties, fees, and costs to the state [23-25].
For Additional Information
How Clean Should Your Colon Be?
References.
Chen TS, Chen PS. Intestinal autointoxication: A gastrointestinal leitmotive. Journal Clinical Gastroenterology 11:343-441, 1989.
Ernst E. Colonic irrigation and the theory of autointoxication: A triumph of ignorance over science. Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology 24:196-198, 1997.
Alvarez WC. Origin of the so-called auto-intoxication symptoms. JAMA 72:8-13, 1919.
Donaldson AN. Relation of constipation to intestinal intoxication. JAMA 78:884-888, 1922.
Kenney JJ. Fit For Life: Some notes on the book and Its roots. Nutrition Forum, March 1986.
Use of enemas is limited. FDA Consumer 18(6):33, 1984.
Amebiasis associated with colonic irrigation - Colorado. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 30:101-102, 1981.
Istre GR and others. An outbreak of amebiasis spread by colonic irrigation at a chiropractic clinic. New England Journal of Medicine 307:339-342, 1982.
Benjamin R and others. The case against colonic irrigation. California Morbidity, Sept 27, 1985.
Eisele JW, Reay DT. Deaths related to coffee enemas. JAMA 244:1608-1609, 1980.
Handley DV and others. Rectal perforation from colonic irrigation administered by alternative practitioners. Medical Journal of Australia 181:575-576, 2004.
Jarvis WT. Colonic Irrigation. National Council Against Health Fraud, 1995.
Ernst E. Colonic irrigation: therapeutic claims by professional organizations, a review. International Journal of Clinical Practcie 64:429-431, 2010.
Baca JR. Warning letter to Colon Therapeutics, April 27, 1997.
Baca, JR. Warning letter to Tiller Mind & Body, June 2, 1997.
Baca JR. Warning letter to Colon Hygiene Services, June 20, 1997.
Tolen DD. Warning letter to Dotolo Research Corporation, July 21, 1999.
Singleton E. Warning letter to Clearwater Colon Hydrotherapy, Sept 13, 2001.
Marcarelli MM. Warning letter to International Colon Hydrotherapy Association, March 21, 2003.
Chappel MA. Warning letter to Colon Therapeutics, Oct 23, 2003.
Ormond E. Warning letter to Wood Hygienic Institute, Oct 23, 2003.
Barrett S. Colonic promoters facing legal actions. Quackwatch, Nov 11, 2003.
Attorney General Abbott sues ' colonic hydrotherapy ' providers for abuse of medical devices; one death reported: Suits allege unsafe use of devices without physician oversight is a public health issue. Texas Attorney General news release, Dec 1, 2003.
Barrett S. Texas Attorney General reaches settlement with three colonic hydrotherapy providers. Casewatch, July 16, 2004.
Attorney General Abbott wins court judgment with six colon hydrotherapy providers. News release, March 1, 2005.
Conclusions
Neither Kelley nor Gonzalez has identified proposed toxins in processed food.
Neither has evidence that abnormal protein molecules from necrosing tumors are toxins or that they poison organs.
Neither has evidence that the toxins poison oxidative metabolism.
Neither has evidence that cancers thrive in an anaerobic environment.
Neither has shown that coffee enemas, megavitamin doses, and their special diets inhibit the progress of cancer.
Neither has produced evidence that a deficiency of pancreatic digestive enzymes is related to the onset of cancer.
Neither has produced evidence that enzymes from animal or vegetable sources can replace enzymes in human organs.
There is no evidence that ingested pancreatic enzymes seek out and kill cancer cells.
Neither has produced evidence that their regimens are more effective than a placebo for cancer.
Gar Hildebrand, president of the Gerson Research Organization (GRO) in San Diego which promotes the irrational "Gerson Method" of cancer treatment. GRO runs a Tijuana cancer clinic at which patients have been charged $9000 for a two week course of unproven care while Mr. Hildebrand lectures them, emphasizing his ties to the NIH [25]. Mr. Hildebrand says that women with ovarian cancer should not receive chemotherapy but should instead "detoxify the body" with dietary measures including "oodles of plant chemicals." Once this is done, he says, "these patients' immune systems become intelligent again. They stop making excess stupid white cells, and create more lymphocytes interested in more types of challenges." [26] Hildebrand also promotes coffee enemas, hyperbaric oxygen and other nonsensical treatments for cancer.
Frank Wiewel, head of People Against Cancer (PAC), formerly the Immunoaugmentative Therapy Patients Association. PAC is a referral organization for cancer patients that promotes irrational treatments including the discredited "Immunoaugmentative Therapy" devised by zoologist Lawrence Burton, PhD. PAC also promotes the ideas of Hulda Clark and other notorious cancer quacks [27]. The organization's website states that "you are never told the truth about cancer," [28] a detestable falsehood designed to drive a wedge between frightened and desperate cancer victims and their doctors in order to exploit the sick.
Wayne Jonas MD assumed leadership at the OAM in July of 1995, almost a year after the departure of Dr. Jacobs. Dr. Jonas is a homeopath, a believer in a discredited 18th Century mystical prescientific theory of medicine that asserts the truth of preposterous "laws." One of these, "The Law of Similars," from which homeopathy takes its name, asserts that substances that cause certain symptoms are effective in treating those same symptoms. Another, "The Law of Infinitesimals," states that diluting a substance makes it more potent. Thus, homeopathic "medicine" consists of substances diluted to fantastic proportions, to the point where no molecules of the substance remain.
Dr. Jonas was enamored of homeopathy as a medical student at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine in North Carolina. After suggesting that a patient with severe pneumonia be treated with homeopathy, his supervisors asked him to repeat his rotation in medicine. But even as a medical student Dr. Jonas was impervious to reason. As OAM Director he told an interviewer that "Just as the discovery of infectious agents revolutionized our ability to care for many diseases at the turn of the century, the discovery of what happens when a homeopathic preparation is made and how it impacts the body might revolutionize our understanding of chemistry, biology and medicine." [29]
Dr Jonas co-authored a book on homeopathy in which he makes it clear that he is certain of its effectiveness but is only doubtful about its mechanism. The pattern of nonexistent molecules "must be stored in some way in the diluted water/alcohol mixture" he wrote, suggesting that all manner of occult energies, imaginary "biophotons" or New Age quantum effects could be involved [30]. Of late, Dr. Jonas has become frustrated with homeopathy research, perhaps because of the obvious truth in one medical scientist's observation that such research is nothing more than "a game of chance between two placebos." [31] Dr. Jonas has suggested that validating homeopathy "may require a theory that incorporates subjective variables," [32] which is to say, how the thoughts of patients, doctors, and perhaps their next-door neighbors might influence the effects of a homeopathic remedy. This is in line with mystical beliefs in "nonlocal effects" caused by "intentionality," or, in other words, psychic powers.
This is also entirely consistent with Dr. Jonas' new position on the Scientific Advisory Committee of the paranormalism-oriented Institute for Noetic Sciences (IONS). According to IONS, Dr. Jonas "envisions the development of protocols using gene-array procedures to examine possible genetic expression arising from CAM signals in distant healing." He considers it wrongheaded and obsolete that "the current view of the body is grounded in molecular biology." He prefers to think that "bodily parts [can] communicate over long distances almost instantaneously" by means of "nonlocal characteristics in the biological process, with widely separated parts interacting in ways that don't have obvious physical carriers." [33]