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Medical Schools embrace Healing Arts – Reflexology

August 1, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

PHILADELPHIA – Once largely dismissed as a leftover fad from the Age of Aquarius, acupuncture, herbal remedies and other forms of alternative medicine are finding their way into curriculums at traditional medical schools — most recently the University of Pennsylvania.

Doctors at Penn are working with Tai Sophia Institute, an alternative medicine school in Maryland, on a program to teach medical students about herbal therapies, meditation and other approaches that are increasingly popular with the public but largely exist outside the realm of mainstream medicine. It will start in August 2005.

Cardiologists at Penn’s Presbyterian Medical Center are working with Tai Sophia to integrate alternative therapies into traditional care for heart patients. The idea is to teach the cardiology staff how to develop personalized therapy plans — including everything from meditation and massage to reflexology and aromatherapy — to decrease patient stress, pain and anxiety.

“We’re not going to turn great surgeons into acupuncturists or herbalists; that’s not the idea,” said Robert Duggan, co-founder of Tai Sophia. “The goal is that Penn medical school graduates will be highly able to speak with patients about how to guide these things into their overall care.”

More than a third of American adults have tried alternative therapies — including yoga, meditation, herbs and the Atkins diet — according to a 2002 government survey of 31,000 people, the largest study of its kind in the United States.

Universities nationwide, in response to the burgeoning numbers, are increasingly focusing on complementary medicine (used along with conventional treatment) and alternative medicine (used instead of conventional treatment). Some are creating their own programs and others are working with alternative medicine practitioners, said Aviad Haramati, a professor at Georgetown University’s medical school.

“More and more there’s a willingness by conventional schools to recognize the CAM (complementary and alternative medicine) schools as having this expertise,” Haramati said. “And there’s a recognition by the CAM disciplines that linking with conventional academic centers to foster research is a good thing.”

Georgetown students work with a massage therapy school, for example, and Tufts University students work with an acupuncture school, he said.
“It made perfect sense to us,” said Dr. Alfred P. Fishman of Penn’s medical school, co-director of the collaboration. “We thought, why start from scratch? This is a very respected organization with 30 years of hands-on experience.”

Maintaining wellness – More than 95 of the nation’s 125 medical schools require some kind of complementary and alternative medicine coursework, according to the Association of American Medical Colleges.
The new partnership will offer a master’s degree in complementary and alternative medicine. The degree, offered to the university’s medical and nursing students, will come from the Tai Sophia Institute; the schools will exchange faculty members and students.

“If you had raised this 10 years ago everyone would have sneered at it,” Fishman said. “Today, we’re moving away from being completely focused on preventing disease and toward looking at what it takes to (achieve and maintain) wellness. … I think patient care will improve enormously.”

“We get the benefit of their extraordinary research capabilities and educational facilities. They get the benefit of an institution that understands the world of (unconventional medicine),” Duggan said.
Fishman said the research possibilities are exciting as well. For example, new brain imaging technology will allow researchers to physically explore how things like herbs, acupuncture, even prayer, can make people feel better.

“In the days before we could image the brain it was very hard to know about how these things worked, why placebos work in some people,” he said. “We can image the brain now and see why they feel better. Nothing is off limits.”

The cure for stress could be in your feet

July 17, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

Barclay Simpson, who is providing wellness at his Practice of Reflexology, said modern day living is affecting everyone’s quality of life. Medical research has tracked the roots of 90 percent of ailments to stress. People need to access a safe, rejuvenating state mentally, physically, emotionally and spiritually.

That’s where reflexology comes in. Reflexology is the stimulation of reflexes to activate the body’s innate regenerative healing abilities.

If it sounds confusing, it’s really not.

Simpson said misperceptions, which are learned over time, cause stress in the body. A large bill in the mail gets our heart rate up. An angry boss activates the fight or flight reaction. All these harmful emotions take their toll on health.

By applying pressure to nerve endings in a person’s foot, Simpson can activate the body’s innate self-healing mechanisms to restore health and mental balance. The body can be like a self-cleaning oven; you just need to know where to push the button. Learning to participate with our natural healing abilities creates wellness.

“It’s like if you bought a car, drove it for years, and then realized it had heat and air conditioning,” Simpson said.

Although it may sound far-fetched, the idea of the mind affecting the body’s health has long been studied. As Simpson pointed out, it has been shown, heart patients who care for pets have a higher rate of survival.

How we think can affect how we feel. But thinking may be part of the problem too.

Simpson said people dwell in their heads. The static of our thoughts can keep us from hearing our true selves.

“Reflexology can help tune us in, into our true selves,” he said.

Simpson became involved with reflexology as a teenager. Later, when he married his wife, a massage therapist, he learned again of its healing properties.

With instructions and guidance, Simpson can teach patients to quiet their mind and slow their heart rate. But wellness requires a willingness to participate; it is a conscious decision.

“We don’t have to wait until we’re sick to become healthy. I can help families optimize a wellness lifestyle,” Simpson said. “If we’re just wise enough to realize stress is a killer.”

Source: The California Democrat. – 17th July 2007 – Daniel Klote

Indonesia – Jakarta to have Largest Reflexology Center

July 15, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

The National Monument Park (Monas) in Central Jakarta will have a 4,000-sq meter reflexology field, said to be the largest in the world.

ANTARA reported here Saturday that hundreds of people began walking barefoot on reflexology lines in the park, which also has a deer breeding ground.  They walked on the reflexology field, dotted with stones which when stepped upon could make the body healthy. (Jakarta, April 10 ANTARA)

Prince Charles, Camilla & Reflexology

July 2, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

The Prince of Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall have heard from cancer sufferers in Manchester about the benefits of complementary therapy treatments.The royal couple toured the city’s Christie Hospital, a specialist cancer hospital which won an award from the Prince’s Foundation of Integrated Health in 2003 for its growing complementary therapy service.The royal couple spent more than 20 minutes in the hospital’s Relaxation Room, talking to patients receiving therapies such as reflexology and acupuncture to help ease the nausea, pain, anxiety and insomnia associated with cancer.David Battersby, 39, who is battling leukaemia, told Camilla reflexology seemed to be having an impact on the liver problems associated with his cancer.

Mr Battersby, from Milnthorpe, Kendal, said: “From what she said to me, it seems both her and Charles have had complementary therapy treatments themselves, including reflexology. They’re big fans, I think. She said it had been benefited them.”

Charles spoke for several minutes to an aromatherapy specialist at the service who is investigating how certain essential oils can lower the risk of infections, including those from superbug MRSA.

Dr Jacqui Stringer, 44, clinical lead complementary therapist at the hospital, is working with Manchester University to develop a special mix of oils to put in a protective gel wash.

It is understood Charles asked her what oils she used but she could not reveal them as the research is still at trial stage.
Instead she gave him a piece of gauze impregnated with the secret formula to take home and smell, challenging him to guess the ingredients.

Ms Stringer said: “He was very interested in my work – genuinely so – and his questions were pertinent. He’s very knowledgeable and charming.”

Source: Manchester Evening News 07.02.07

As good for the body as it is for the sole

June 29, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

The ancient art of reflexology can make more than your tootsies feel better
CECILY ROSS – Globe & Mail – June 06

Sometimes a foot massage is just a foot massage. And sometimes it’s a complete physical examination. At the hands of Anne DeSouza, it’s both.

The Indian-born reflexologist knows that soft, sweet-smelling feet are important to our overall sense of well-being, especially now that sandal season has begun. She also knows that paying attention to your tootsies can be as good for the body as it is for the soles.

“They say that the feet never lie,” DeSouza says as she rubs some vanilla-coconut foot scrub into my heels and toes to soften the rough spots. Then she rinses and dries the foot and pulls it onto her lap.

“All the body’s organs and glands have reflex points in the hands and feet,” she explains. “By manipulating these points, I can bring about internal balance.”

Reflexology, once the realm of Eastern holistic medicine, is catching on with the foot-fetish set as spas and fashion trends begin to explore the health and beauty benefits of baring your tootsies.

DeSouza claims that a full 45-minute reflexology session will detoxify and de-stress your organs. She says, for instance, that she can detect imbalances in the liver or kidneys. A build-up of lactic acid in these areas feels like a grittiness under the skin. Sure enough, as her fingers massage Sabon’s lavender-eucalyptus foot cream into the ball of my foot, I feel a distinct crunching sensation.

“The energy gets blocked and the organ gets diseased,” DeSouza says. “My job is to break up the blockage and allow the energy to flow freely. Then the body can heal itself.”

As the mini-treatment continues, DeSouza detects stuffiness in my chest, stress and tension in my neck and tenderness in my knees. “Your throat,” she says, “is there something wrong with your throat?” At first, I can’t think of anything, and then I remember the borderline thyroid condition my doctor diagnosed a couple of years ago.

“Six treatments,” she tells me “will allow your body to rebalance. But you have to make lifestyle changes. You should eat a more alkaline diet, more vegetables, less red meat. And avoid tomatoes and eggplant; they’re bad for your arthritis.”

I slip my sandals on and glide outside onto the hot and busy street. Despite all the unbalance, I feel as if I’m walking on air.

Remote Reflexology – What will they think of next?

June 2, 2011 By Lauren Slade Leave a Comment

This spiny little contraption has the unique ability to simultaneously control your TV and your chronic kidney, uterus or testicle-related ailments. This is truly a magical medical breakthrough product.

The Cool.con universal remote employs reflexology to stimulate pressure points on the hand that are said to correspond to various areas of the body to promote better overall health. So the next time your partner nags you for watching too much TV, just tell them that you are engaged in a very serious medical procedure.

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