Calling all super-duper weight losers!






Have you lost at least 1/2 your weight, e.g., 300 lbs down to 150 lbs? If you have, I have a major national magazine editor looking to talk to you.

If you have gone wheat-free and/or followed the dietary advice offered here in The Heart Scan Blog or through the Track Your Plaque program and would be willing to share your story, please let me know by commenting below. While losing half your body weight is not necessarily a requirement for health, it makes an incredibly inspiring story for others.

If we use your story, I will set aside a copy of my soon-to-be-released book, Wheat Belly.

Lp(a): Be patient with fish oil

High-dose omega-3 fatty acids from fish oil has become the number one strategy for reduction of lipoprotein(a), Lp(a), in the Track Your Plaque program for gaining control over coronary plaque and heart disease risk.

The original observations made in Tanzanian Bantus in the Lugalawa Study by Marcovina et al first suggested that higher dietary exposure to fish and perhaps omega-3 fatty acids from fish were associated with 40% lower levels of Lp(a). Interestingly, higher omega-3 exposure was also associated with having the longer apo(a) "tails" on Lp(a) molecules, a characteristic associated with more benign, less aggressive plaque-causing behavior.

Of course, the 600+ fish- consuming Bantus in the study consumed fish over a lifetime, from infancy on up through adulthood. So what is the time course of response if us non-Bantus take higher doses of fish oil to reduce Lp(a)?

We have been applying this approach in the Track Your Plaque program and in my office practice for the past few years. To my surprise, the majority of people taking 6000 mg per day of omega-3 fatty acids, EPA and DHA, will drop Lp(a) after one year.  Some have required two years.  Therefore checking Lp(a) after, say, 3 or 6 months, is nearly useless. (An early response does, however, appear to predict a very vigorous 1-2 year response.)

I'm sure that there is an insightful lesson to be learned from the incredibly slow response, but I don't currently know what it is.  But this strategy has become so powerful, despite its slow nature, that it has allowed many people to back down on niacin.

Baby your pancreas

There it is, sitting quietly tucked under your diaphragm, nestled beneath layers of stomach and intestines, doing its job of monitoring blood sugar, producing insulin, and secreting the digestive enzymes that allow you to convert a fried egg, tomato, or dill pickle into the components that compose you.

But, if you've lived the life of most Americans, your pancreas has had a hard life. Starting as a child, it was forced into the equivalent of hard labor by your eating carbohydrate-rich foods like Lucky Charms, Cocoa Puffs, Hoho's, Ding Dongs, Scooter Pies, and macaroni and cheese. Into adolescent years and college, it was whipped into subservient labor with pizza, beer, pretzels, and ramen noodles. As an adult, the USDA, Surgeon General's office and other assorted purveyors of nutritional advice urged us to cut our fat, cholesterol, and eat more "healthy whole grains"; you complied, exposing your overworked pancreas to keep up its relentless work pace, spewing out insulin to accommodate the endless flow of carbohydrate-rich foods.

So here we are, middle aged or so, with pancreases that are beaten, worn, hobbling around with a walker, heaving and gasping due to having lost 50% or more of its insulin-producing beta cells. If continued to be forced to work overtime, it will fail, breathing its last breath as you and your doctor come to its rescue with metformin, Actos, Januvia, shots of Byetta, and eventually insulin, all aimed at corralling the blood sugar that your failed pancreas was meant to contain.

What if you don't want to rescue your flagging pancreas with drugs? What if you want to salvage your poor, wrinkled, exhausted pancreas, eaking out whatever is left out of the few beta cells you have left?

Well, then, baby your pancreas. If this were a car with 90,000 miles on it, but you want it to last 100,000, then change the oil frequently, keep it tuned, and otherwise baby your car, not subjecting it to extremes and neglect to accelerate its demise. Same with your pancreas: Allow it to rest, not subjecting it to the extremes of insulin production required by carbohydrate consumption. Don't expose it to foods like wheat flour, cornstarch, oats, rice starch, potatoes, and sucrose that demand overtime and hard labor out of your poor pancreas. Go after the foods that allow your pancreas to sleep through a meal like eggs, spinach, cucumbers, olive oil, and walnuts. Give your pancreas a nice back massage and steer clear of "healthy whole grains," the nutritional equivalent of a 26-mile marathon. Pay your pancreas a compliment or two and allow it to have occasional vacations with a brief fast.

Bread equals sugar

Bread, gluten-free or gluten-containing, in terms of carbohydrate content, is equivalent to sugar.

Two slices of store-bought whole grain bread, such as the gluten-free bread I discussed in my last post, equals 5- 6 teaspoons of table sugar:








 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Some breads can contain up to twice this quantity, i.e., 10-12 teaspoons equivalent readily-digestible carbohydrate.

Gluten-free carbohydrate mania

Here's a typical gluten-free product, a whole grain bread mix. "Whole grain," of course, suggests high-fiber, high nutrient composition, and health.



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

What's it made of? Here's the ingredient list:
Cornstarch, Tapioca Starch, Whole Grain Sorghum Flour, Whole Grain Teff Flour, Whole Grain Amaranth Flour, Soy Fiber, Xanthan Gum, Soy Protein, Natural Cocoa and Ascorbic Acid

In other words, carbohydrate, carbohydrate, carbohydrate, carbohydrate and some other stuff. It means that a sandwich with two slices of bread provides around 42 grams net carbohydrates, enough to send your blood sugar skyward, not to mention trigger visceral fat formation, glycation, small LDL particles and triglycerides.

Take a look at the ingredients and nutrition facts on the label of any number of gluten-free products and you will see the same thing. Many also have proud low-fat claims.

This is how far wrong the gluten-free world has drifted: Trade the lack of gluten for a host of unhealthy effects.

Gluten-free is going DOWN

The majority of gluten-free foods are junk foods.

People with celiac disease experience intestinal destruction and a multitude of other inflammatory conditions due to an immune response gone haywire. The disease  is debilitating and can be fatal unless all gliadin/gluten sources are eliminated, such as wheat, barley, and rye.

A gluten-free food industry to provide foods minus gliadin/gluten has emerged, now large enough to become an important economic force. Even some Big Food companies are getting into the act, like Kraft, that now lists foods they consider gluten-free.

So we have gluten-free breads, cupcakes, scones, pretzels, breakfast cereals, crackers, bagels, muffins, pancake mixes and on and on. All are made with ingredients like brown rice flour, cornstarch, tapioca starch, and potato starch. Occasionally, they are made with amaranth, teff, or quinoa, other less popular, but gluten-free, grains.

Problem: These gluten-free ingredients, while lacking gliadin and gluten, make you fat and diabetic. They increase visceral fat, cause blood sugar to skyrocket higher than nearly all other foods (even higher than wheat, which is already pretty bad), trigger formation of small LDL and triglycerides, and are responsible for exaggerated postprandial (after-eating) lipoprotein distortions. They cause heart disease, cataracts, arthritis, and a wide range of other conditions, all driven by the extreme levels of glycation they generate.

Eliminating all things wheat from the diet is one of the most powerful health strategies I have ever witnessed. But replacing lost wheat with manufactured gluten-free foods is little better than replacing your poppyseed muffin with a bowl of jelly beans.

Whenever we've relied on the food industry to supply a solution, they've managed to bungle it. Saturated fat was replaced with hydrogenated fat and polyunsaturates; sucrose replaced with high-fructose corn syrup. Now, they are replacing wheat gluten-containing foods with junk carbohydrates.

For this reason, I am bringing out a line of recipes and foods that will be wheat gliadin/gluten-free, do NOT contain the junk carbohydrates that gluten-free foods are made of, and are genuinely healthy. They are tasty, to boot.

The gluten-free industry needs to smarten up. Having a following that is free of cramps and diarrhea but are obese, diabetic, and hobbling on arthritic knees and hips is good for nobody.

Medicine ain't what it used to be

The practice of medicine ain't what it used to be.

For instance:

White coats are out-of-date--Not only do they serve as filthy reservoirs of microorganisms (since they hang unwashed after repeated use week after week), they only serve to distance the practitioner from the patient, an outdated notion that should join electroshock therapy to treat homosexuality and other "disorders" in the museum of outdated medical practices.

Normal cholesterol panel . . . no heart disease?

I often hear this comment: "I have a normal cholesterol panel. So I have low risk for heart disease, right?"

While there's a germ of truth in the statement, there are many exceptions. Having "normal" cholesterol values is far from a guarantee that you won't drop over at your daughter's wedding or find yourself lying on a gurney at your nearest profit-center-for-health, aka hospital, heading for the cath lab.

Statistically, large populations do indeed show fewer heart attacks at the lower end of the curve for low total and  LDL cholesterol and the higher end of HDL. But that's on a population basis. When applied to a specific individual, population observations can fall apart. Heart attack can occur at the low risk end of the curve; no heart attack can occur at the high risk end of the curve.

First of all, to me a "normal" lipid panel is not adhering to the lax notion of "normal" specified in the lab's "reference range" drawn from population observations. Most labs, for instance, specify that an HDL cholesterol of 40 mg/dl or more and triglycerides of 150 mg/dl or less are in the normal ranges. However, heart disease can readily occur with normal values of, say, an HDL of 48 mg/dl and triglycerides of 125 mg/dl, both of which allow substantial small oxidation-prone LDL particles to develop. So "normal" may not be ideal or desirable. Look at any study comparing people with heart disease vs. those without, for instance: Typical HDLs in people with heart attacks are around 46 mg/dl, while HDLs in people without heart attacks typically average 48 mg/dl--there is nearly perfect overlap in the distribution curves.

There are also causes for heart disease that are not revealed by the lipid values. Lipoprotein(a), or Lp(a), is among the most important exceptions: You can have a heart attack, stroke, three stents or bypass surgery at age 40 even with spectacular lipid values if you have this genetically-determined condition. And it's not rare, since 11% of the population express it. How about people with the apo E2 genetic variation? These people tend to have normal fasting cholesterol values (if they have only one copy of E2, not two) but have extravagant abnormalities after they eat that contribute to risk. You won't know this from a standard cholesterol panel.

Vitamin D deficiency can be suggested by low HDL and omega-3 fatty acid deficiency suggested by higher triglycerides, but deficiencies of both can exist in severe degrees even with reasonably favorable ranges for both lipid values. Despite the recent inane comments by the Institute of Medicine committee, from what I've witnessed from replacing vitamin D to achieve serum 25-hydroxy vitamin D levels of 60-70 ng/ml, vitamin D deficiency is among the most powerful and correctable causes of heart disease I've ever seen. And, while greater quantities of omega-3 fatty acids from fish oil are associated with lower triglycerides, they are even better at reducing postprandial phenomena, i.e., the after-eating flood of lipoproteins like VLDL and chylomicron remnants, that underlie formation of much atherosclerotic plaque--but not revealed by fasting lipids.

I view standard cholesterol panels as the 1963 version of heart disease prediction. We've come a long way since then and we now have far better tools for prediction of heart attack. Yet the majority of physicians and the public still follow the outdated notion that a cholesterol panel is sufficient to predict your heart's future. Nostalgic, quaint perhaps, but as outdated as transistor radios and prime time acts on the Ed Sullivan show.

 

Idiot farm

The notion of genetic modification of foods and livestock is a contentious issue. The purposeful insertion or deletion of a gene into a plant or animal's genome to yield specific traits, such as herbicide resistance, nutritional composition, or size, prompted the Codex Alimentarius Commission, an international effort to regulate the safety of foods, to issue guidelines concerning genetically-modified foods.

The committee is aware of the concept of unintended effects, i.e., effects that were not part of the original gene insertion or deletion design. In their report, last updated in 2009, they state that:

Unintended effects can result from the random insertion of DNA sequences into the plant genome, which may cause disruption or silencing of existing genes, activation of silent genes, or modifications in the expression of existing genes. Unintended effects may also result in the formation of new or changed patterns of metabolites. For example, the expression of enzymes at high levels may give rise to secondary biochemical effects or changes in the regulation of metabolic pathways and/or altered levels of metabolites.

They make the point that food crops generated using techniques without genetic modification are released into the food supply without safety testing:

New varieties of corn, soybean, potatoes and other common food plants are evaluated by breeders for agronomic and phenotypic characteristics, but generally, foods derived from such new plant varieties are not subjected to the rigorous and extensive food safety testing procedures, including studies in animals, that are typical of chemicals, such as food additives or pesticide residues, that may be present in food.

In other words, conventional plant breeding techniques, such as hybridization, backcrossing, and introgression, practices that include crossing parental plants with their progeny over and over again or crossing a plant with an unrelated plant, yield unique plants that are not subject to any regulation. This means that unintended effects that arise are often not identified or tested. Plant geneticists know that, when one plant is crossed with another, approximately 5% of the genes in the offspring are unique to that plant and not present in either parent. It means that offspring may express new characteristics, such as unique gliadin or gluten proteins in wheat, not expressed in either parent and with new immunological potential in consuming humans.

Dr. James Maryanski, the FDA's Biotechnology Coordinator, stated during Congressional testimony in 1999 that:

The new gene splicing techniques are being used to achieve many of the same goals and improvements that plant breeders have sought through conventional methods. Today's techniques are different from their predecessors in two significant ways. First, they can be used with greater precision and allow for more complete characterization and, therefore, greater predictability about the qualities of the new variety. These techniques give scientists the ability to isolate genes and to introduce new traits into foods without simultaneously introducing many other undesirable traits, as may occur with traditional breeding. [Emphasis mine.]

Efforts by the Codex Alimentarius and FDA are meant to control the introduction and specify safety testing procedures for genetically modified foods. But both organizations have publicly stated that there is another larger problem that has not been addressed that predates genetic modification. In other words, conventional methods like hybridization techniques, the crossing of different strains of a crop or crossing two dissimilar plants (e.g., wheat with a wild grass) have been practiced for decades before genetic modification became possible. And it is still going on.

In other words, the potential hazards of hybridization, often taken to extremes, have essentially been ignored. Hybridized plants are introduced into the food supply with no question of human safety. While hybridization can yield what appear to be benign foods, such as the tangelo, a hybrid of tangerines and grapefruit, it can also yield plants containing extensive unintended effects. It means that unique immunological sequences can be generated. It might be a unique gliadin sequence in wheat or a unique lectin sequence in beans. None are tested prior to selling to humans. So the world frets over the potential dangers of genetic modification while, all along, the much larger hazard of hybridization techniques have been--and still are--going on.

Imagine we applied the hybridization techniques applied by plant geneticists to humans, mating an uncle with his niece, then having the uncle mate again with the offspring, repeating it over and over until some trait was fully expressed. Such extensive inbreeding was practiced in the 19th century German village of Dilsberg, what Mark Twain described as "a thriving and diligent idiot factory."

Eat triglycerides

Dietary fats, from olive oil to cocoa butter to beef tallow, are made of triglycerides.

Triglycerides are simply three ("tri-") fatty acids attached to a glycerol backbone. Glycerol is a simple 3-carbon molecule that readily binds fatty acids. Fatty acids, of course, can be saturated, polyunsaturated, and monounsaturated.

Once ingested, the action of the pancreatic enzyme, pancreatic lipase, along with bile acids secreted by the gallbladder, remove triglycerides from glycerol. Triglycerides pass through the intestinal wall and are "repackaged" into large complex triglyceride-rich (about 90% triglycerides) molecules called chylomicrons, which then pass into the lymphatic system, then to the bloodstream. The liver takes up chylomicrons, removes triglycerides which are then repackaged into triglyceride-rich very low-density lipoproteins (VLDL).

So eating triglycerides increases blood levels of triglycerides, repackaged as chylomicrons and VLDL.

Many physicians are frightened of dietary triglycerides, i.e, fats, for fear it will increase blood levels of triglycerides. It's true: Consuming triglycerides does indeed increase blood levels of triglycerides--but only a little bit. Following a fat-rich meal of, say, a 3-egg omelet with 2 tablespoons of olive oil and 2 oz whole milk mozzarella cheese (total 55 grams triglycerides), blood triglycerides will increase modestly. A typical response would be an increase from 60 mg/dl to 80 mg/dl--an increase, but quite small.

Counterintuitively, it's the foods that convert to triglycerides in the liver that send triglycerides up, not 20 mg/dl, but 200, 400, or 1000 mg/dl or more. What foods convert to triglycerides in the liver? Carbohydrates.

After swallowing a piece of multigrain bread, for instance, carbohydrates are released by salivary and gastric amylase, yielding glucose molecules. Glucose is rapidly absorbed through the intestinal tract and into the liver. The liver is magnificently efficient at storing carbohydrate calories by converting them to the body's principal currency of energy, triglycerides, via the process of de novo lipogenesis, the alchemy of converting glucose into triglycerides for storage. The effect is not immediate; it may require many hours for the liver to do its thing, increasing blood triglycerides many hours after the carbohydrate meal.

This explains why people who follow low-fat diets typically have high triglyceride levels--despite limited ingestion of triglycerides. When I cut my calories from fat to 10% or less--a very strict low-fat diet--my triglycerides are 350 mg/dl. When I slash my carbohydrates to 40-50 grams per day but ingest unlimited triglycerides like olive oil, raw nuts, whole milk cheese, fish oil and fish, etc., my triglycerides are 50 mg/dl.

Don't be afraid of triglycerides. But be very careful with the foods that convert to triglycerides: carbohydrates.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
Grasscutting, fertilizer, and healthcare

Grasscutting, fertilizer, and healthcare

A guy named Jeff, a 60-something, taciturn, "How 'bout dem Brewers?" kind of guy, cuts my grass.

Once a week, Jeff drives over his rust-rimmed 1994 Chevy pickup and trailer, unloads his ride mower, and cuts the grass. For his 40 minutes of work, I pay him $35.

For $35, all he does is cut the grass--no trimming, no picking up debris, no working in the garden, no fertilizing, no weeding. Just cutting the grass. Occasionally, Jeff has proven to be a useful resource for peculiar problems. Last year, I had a drainage problem that he helped solve and two years ago he helped diagnose a tree disease that was killing a tree in the backyard; it's now recovered.

To save money, and because I like to work in the yard, I do the rest. I trim the edges, I fertilize the grass, plant new flowers and trees, fix damaged areas, trim wild branches.

In my view, my relationship with Jeff, a limited, as-needed relationship, in which I ask him to help with specific issues but I manage the rest myself, is how I believe that healthcare should also be conducted.

Your doctor should be like Jeff: Perhaps not taciturn, but an as-needed resource available while you do much of the work.

My simple relationship with Jeff is, I believe, the healthcare model of the future. You manage your own cholesterol issues, your own basic thyroid issues, supplement and monitor your vitamin D levels, use diet to suit your needs, order blood tests when necessary, even obtain basic imaging tests like heart scans, carotid ultrasound, bone density testing. Your doctor is a resource, near by when and if you need him or her: guidance when needed, an occasional review of what you are doing, someone to consult when you fracture an ankle.

What your doctor is NOT is a paternal, "do what I say, I'm the doctor," or a "You need these tests whether you like it or not" holder of your health fate.

It is a model of healthcare that will evolve over the next 20-30 years, only in its infancy now.

While we started Track Your Plaque as just a resource for in-depth information on prevention and reversal of coronary heart disease, I now see it as something much greater: a prototype for the emerging concept of self-directed health.

Enough for now. I've got some tomatoes to pick.

Comments (23) -

  • StephenB

    8/25/2009 5:30:30 PM |

    And here's another "I agree wholeheartedly". It can be hard to find a doctor on the same page though. Anyone have suggestions?

  • William Trumbower

    8/25/2009 8:46:13 PM |

    Amen brother!    One of the big problems with self directed care is the lack of true knowledge for the public to help them make choices.  For example  The dietary advice given from our government and other health agencies (ADA,  AHA, food pyramid etc) to cut the fat and red meat, eat whole grains and lots of fruit.

  • Pythonic Avocado

    8/25/2009 11:17:40 PM |

    Agreed. I've thought something like this would be very nice. In my mind, I've been calling it 'distributed medicine', but 'self-directed health' sounds more empowering. Smile

  • billye

    8/26/2009 12:30:33 AM |

    Hi StephenB,

    This is the future of medicine!!

    I suggest Dr. Kenneth Tourgeman. He is definitely on the same page as Dr. Davis.  He is a nephrologist who preaches a hunter gatherer lifestyle and practices scientific nutritional medicine with high dose vitamin D3 and high dose omega 3 fish oil. His blog is nephropal.blogspot.com

  • HenryC

    8/26/2009 5:04:55 AM |

    This is one of the wisest suggestions I have heard in a long time. If other medical practitioners would accept this advice, it could revolutionize our healthcare system.

  • Anonymous

    8/26/2009 8:53:44 PM |

    Not that I disagree, but just how realistic is this.  Most people cannot even manage to keep their own computer running properly, how can they be expected to manage their health to the extent I suggest.

    Not that I approve of paternalistic "do as I say" doctors, but I don't see a system such as yours work for the majority of people.  I'd like to see a system that encourages patients to take charge of their health care, instead of considering them trouble maker when when they do.  But that will always be a minority.  Most people want to be told what to do.

  • Heather

    8/26/2009 10:24:56 PM |

    This is amazing. I was just thinking the same thing about one hour ago after doing some reading on my own health issues.

    Thank you for putting this forward, this idea will indeed revolutionize the health care "industry" for the better, when people start taking it upon themselves to manage their own tests, results, medications, supplements, etc. outcomes will improve dramatically.

    Mark my words. Smile

  • moblogs

    8/27/2009 9:29:56 AM |

    I know a handful of doctors who are like this, and they seem to make a psychological difference as well as a physical one.
    However, most might be worried that you'll think for yourself - in the wrong or right direction. They can't be having that.

    Dr. David Grimes (who once proposed that statins work by somehow activating the vitamin D receptor) published a book on the vitamin D/cholesterol connection this April.
    http://www.vitamin-d-deficiency.co.uk/
    A very nice man as well. I've had an email conversation with him.

  • Anonymous

    8/27/2009 12:52:02 PM |

    I agree that healthcare should be largely self-directed, and I absolutely agree that the public should be allowed to make more informed decisions about their own health. However, I think that to assume that all Americans have the discipline and intelligence to truly take charge of their own care is very misguided.  Our health problems go far beyond the misinformation from the ADA and AHA.

  • Joanne at Open Mind Required

    8/27/2009 2:54:21 PM |

    This change can't come too soon. I recently went to the VA hospital to get bloodwork done. I wanted any sort of test to give me a baseline on which I could monitor improvements from changes in my diet.

    The nurse refused several tests because they cost money, said with mild scorn, "You apparently don't want anything from the VA other than testing" and later chastised me for refusing a mammogram and pap smear. (Aren't those costly, too?)

    This is my body. I call the shots. Please, just answer my questions and help me help myself.

  • Tom

    8/27/2009 4:00:22 PM |

    StephenB

    >It can be hard to find a doctor on the same page though.

    Absolutely. And in the UK, with its large General Practice centres, it is hard to see the same doctor twice. 'First consult you doctor' is written everywhere these days, but one doesn't have *a* doctor, so there can't be a relationship established on trust. It is also getting harder to buy simple non-prescription drugs like aspirin over here, due to nannying by pharmacists.

  • Helena

    8/27/2009 5:24:10 PM |

    Hello Dr Davis,

    I just found this article about Type-1 Diabetes and wheat; thought you would like it, unless you already red it.

    http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org/content/58/8/1789.abstract

  • Dr. William Davis

    8/27/2009 10:06:27 PM |

    Let me post a hypothetical question: What if your health were tracked, if online interactions were truly interactive, and you could be prompted/reminded/coached to consider various strategies for health using your individual health data?

    That is what we are working on here using Track Your Plaque as the prototype.

  • Thedailyreviewer

    8/28/2009 2:20:36 AM |

    Congratulations! Our selection committee compiled an exclusive list of the Top 100 heart disease Blogs, and yours was included! Check it out at http://thedailyreviewer.com/top/heart-disease

    You can claim your Top 100 Blogs Award Badge at http://thedailyreviewer.com/blog/9076

    Cheers!

    Angelina...

  • Nick

    8/28/2009 3:48:04 AM |

    billye

    Sorry to be off topic -- I love the nephropal blog but wonder if anyone else is having problems with it?  Everytime I log on it knocks out my wireless connection.

  • Anonymous

    8/28/2009 4:04:28 AM |

    Dont know where else to put this but I voted on your thyroid question. I answered "questioned why but ordered the tests"

    But the rest of the story is he said the results were fine although my TSH was High "normal" and my T4 was OUT of range low.

    Went to see a new doc this week.

  • billye

    8/28/2009 6:31:47 PM |

    Nick,

    I have not heard anything about connection problems from anyone.  Leave a comment for Dr T at nephropal.blogspot.com and I am sure that he will look into it.

  • kris

    8/28/2009 7:29:40 PM |

    Dr. Davis, i agree with you what you just said. but, there is even bigger issue to deal with here. the FDA. for example: FDA is going after natural thyroid hormons. which have been selling safely in the market for 100 years now. talk about pure money muscle power. FDA have no problem approving dangrous drugs for cholstrol. it confuses the issue further for the people who are trying to learn about their own health.
    http://thyroid.about.com/b/2009/08/26/end-natural-thyroid.htm?nl=1#commentform

  • Anonymous

    8/29/2009 4:10:00 AM |

    Dr. Davis said: Let me post a hypothetical question: What if your health were tracked, if online interactions were truly interactive, and you could be prompted/reminded/coached to consider various strategies for health using your individual health data?

    Well that would be just great, IF one didn't have to worry some about an insurance company accessing such data and using it against one to deny coverage or prevent one from obtaining future coverage. Such info would have to be COMPLETELY private.

    Until there are no "pre-existing condition" exclusions in health insurance, and it doesn't matter if such information could possibly be accessed by insurance, I will just "do it myself".

    Technology can be a two-edged sword.  I had a heart scan and my insurance wouldn't pay for it... but they apparently were interested enough in the results to make it damn near impossible to obtain life insurance, health insurance, and long term care insurance on the open market, due to my "pre-existing condition".

    Luckily we will have "lifetime medical insurance" through an employer's generous retirement plan and eventually Medicare.  Not so lucky about the long tern care coverage, though.

    Until technology can guarantee complete privacy, and no possible controverted use of information, I have great reservations, no matter how well intentioned and valuable the information.

    madcook

  • Dr. William Davis

    8/29/2009 1:56:40 PM |

    Hi, Mad--

    Yes, indeed.

    I believe that, while imperfect, online security is the solution. Only you (or those you designate) can access your info. This is how Google Health, Microsoft Health Vault, and Revolution Health's health archiving services work.

    It's happening. And it will change healthcare for the better by putting more information and control into the hands of the consumer. This is a GOOD thing.


    Kris--

    Yes, this is very worrisome.

    The FDA is threatening to "clamp down" on thyroid preparations and "bioidentical hormones," two areas in which most of us agree no action is required and in fact will be destructive.

    I've written my letters to the FDA expressing my objection to their policies. Everyone else should, too.

  • Anonymous

    8/31/2009 7:50:19 PM |

    Just saw my doc for annual physical (I'm 49).  Mentioned the heart scan blog and he said calcium score tests are "bogus".  "insurance companies don't pay for them so they must not mean much, plus if the plaque doesn't reduce flow, it's not a problem".  And he's young (early 40's).  Kept quiet after that; no use trying to convince him to open his mind.

  • epistemocrat

    9/2/2009 2:28:51 PM |

    Hi Dr. Davis (and readers),

    I have conceptualized this movement to the 'Patient of One' healthcare system in a few essays:

    http://epistemocrat.blogspot.com/2008/12/health-care-sans-primary-care.html

    and then, more recently, through many of my recent blog postings:

    http://epistemocrat.blogspot.com/

    (feedback welcomed)

    Cheers to fostering an inviting and respectable community of self-directed self-experimenters.

    Thanks,

    Brent

  • trinkwasser

    9/10/2009 3:30:42 PM |

    To a degree I've had something like that for a while now. Our local surgery uses nurses, prescribing nurses etc. for routine stuff, which frees up the doctors' time for serious stuff. For example when mother is ill I can always get a doctor to call (or paramedics/ambulance) or take her to the surgery where she is seen by a triage nurse and a GP is called immediately if required.

    My GP (In fact all the GPs) are comparatively clueful BUT limited by accountants as to what they are and are not permitted to do - and here's the problem, when the doctor is cut out of the loop then even the receptionist is permitted to refuse tests or refuse to give out the results and otherwise hinder my looking after myself. The not-doctors are even more limited as to what they are and are not permitted to do and it still needs a real doctor to override these restrictions, for example to get a full lipid panel rather than TChol, and then be given the actual numbers.

    If these relatively recent financial restrictions were lifted again (some hope!) it'd be an ideal system, I get the tests I need and the prescriptions I need and as much or as little support as I require to work on the results. Reversing this back to a patronising  "eat up your carbs yum yum and we'll weigh you again in six months and check for statin deficiency once a year" may "save" money but only in the short term.

    The doctors themselves aren't happy about Big Brother - but they realise that opposing it will lead to loss of their employment Frown

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