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In My Own Words: Julian Whitaker, MD
As a long-time
practitioner of alternative medicine, I am often asked why I took
the "road less traveled" in medicine.
I certainly
didn't set out to be unconventional. I graduated from Dartmouth
College in 1966, earned my medical degree at Emory University Medical
School in Atlanta in 1970, and completed my internship at Grady
Memorial Hospital, also in Atlanta. Good formal medical education
is important, and I'm grateful for this foundation in basic medicine,
but there was something to come that was far more important to my
career as a physician.
Sparkling
Eyes Got Me Started
It took place one evening when I was working in the emergency room
during my orthopedic surgery residency at the University of California
in San Francisco. A young woman came in with a sprained ankle. As
I tended to her injury, I was struck by how healthy she was
so healthy, in fact, that her eyes actually sparkled. It suddenly
dawned on me that physicians never study health, and certainly never
advise their patients how to achieve it.
I learned that
this woman sold vitamins and took them herself and, as a result
of this encounter, I personally began taking vitamins. More importantly,
I began learning all I could about nutrition and natural therapies,
subjects virtually ignored by medical schools. I soon became convinced
that these approaches, which drew upon the body's own healing powers,
held far more potential for preventing disease and restoring health
than traditional medicine's blunt tools of prescription drugs and
surgery.
Continuing
My Education
In 1974, I met with four other doctors in the modest conference
room of a Motel 6 to form the California Orthomolecular Medical
Society. To my surprise and delight, one of my medical heroes, two-time
Nobel Prize winner Linus Pauling Ph.D., showed up to lend support
to our fledgling organization. Dr. Pauling himself had coined the
term orthomolecular medicine in 1968, which he defined as "the preservation
of good health and the treatment of disease by varying the concentrations
in the human body of substances that are normally present in the
body and are required for health." More than any other label
alternative, nutritional, natural, holistic or complementary medicine
orthomolecular medicine comes closest to describing what
I have believed in and practiced for the last 25 years.
In 1976, I went
to work at the Pritikin Longevity Center under the direction of
Nathan Pritikin. Until then, in spite of my years of training in
medical school, internship and residency, I couldn't recall ever
having seen patients get well. True, many got better, but virtually
all stayed on "follow-up" prescription medications. Now, for the
first time in my medical career, I saw patients get well
not as a result of dangerous drugs or risky surgical procedures,
but through the powerful effects of a low-fat, high complex carbohydrate
diet and exercise. And not only did these patients drop their medications,
they dropped their diseases.
Charting
New Territory
While my training at the Pritikin Longevity Center convinced me
of the therapeutic power of diet and exercise, I believed that there
was more that could be done to reverse disease and achieve optimal
health. I continued my education in earnest, with the goal of identifying
safe and effective solutions to some of the most common health problems
of modern life heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes,
arthritis, and more. And in 1979, I launched the Whitaker Wellness
Institute Medical Clinic, to share my knowledge with patients who
had been failed by conventional medicine and had nowhere else to
turn. Since its inception, over 25,000 patients have flocked to
the Whitaker Wellness Institute to participate in an intensive program
of diet, exercise, nutritional and herbal supplementation, and lifestyle
changes. They've benefited from alternative therapies such as chelation,
acupuncture, and EECP. To learn more about these therapies click
here. And they've proven the medical establishment wrong
countless times by reversing their "incurable" diseases and achieving
a newfound vitality no matter what their age.
Reaching
a Wider Audience
In August 1991, the first issue of my monthly newsletter, Health
& Healing, rolled off the presses. Since then I've covered just
about every treatment option offered at the Whitaker Wellness Institute
vitamin and mineral supplementation, herbal therapies, natural
hormone replacement, acupuncture, chiropractic, EECP and more. Today
over half a million subscribers, disenchanted with the failures
of conventional medicine, rely on Health
& Healing for news about safe and effective alternatives.
Countless others have turned to my books in search of the crucial
health information they can't get from their own doctor: Reversing
Diabetes, Reversing Heart Disease, Shed 10 Years in 10 Weeks, A
Guide to Natural Healing, Is Heart Surgery Necessary?, and The
Pain Relief Breakthrough. To keep up with ongoing developments
in my field, I belong to the American College for Advancement in
Medicine, a professional organization of physicians dedicated to
nutritional and alternative therapies. I am a founder of the American
Preventive Medicine Association, a physician advocacy group for
freedom of choice in medical treatment, and am board certified in
anti-aging medicine. Through my clinic, newsletter, books, lectures
and now this web site, I continue to preach the healing powers of
diet, exercise, lifestyle changes, and the principles of orthomolecular
medicine to an ever-growing audience.
Julian Whitaker,
MD
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Julian Whitaker, MD
Dr. Whitaker
is Director of the Whitaker Wellness Institute and Editor
of Health and Healing newsletter that provides important
health advice for more than 500,000 people nationwide. Dr.
Whitaker graduated from Dartmouth College in 1966 and received
his MD in 1970 from Emory University Medical School.
He completed his surgical internship at Grady Memorial Hospital
in 1971, and continued at the University of California in
San Francisco in orthopedic surgery. In 1974, Dr. Whitaker
founded the California Orthomolecular Medical Society, along
with four other physicians and the Nobel prize-winning scientist
Dr. Linus Pauling. Dr. Whitaker is the author of several books
including the best-selling Shed 10 Years in 10 Weeks.
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