Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 5 | Page 38

DOCTORS' Lounge SPEAK YOUR MIND If you would like to respond to an article in this issue, please submit an article or letter to the editor. Contributions may be sent to [email protected] or may be submitted online at www.glms.org. The GLMS Editorial Board reserves the right to choose what will be published. Please note that the views expressed in Doctors’ Lounge or any other article in this publication are not those of the Greater Louisville Medical Society or Louisville Medicine. Medical Conspiracies Mary G. Barry, MD Louisville Medicine Editor [email protected] (Just in case you’re wondering, I am in fact the non-anonymous author of this memo.) I am continually astounded at the amount of money people will spend on useless nutritional supplements, “cleansers” for “toxins,” and supposedly health-enhanc- ing devices. Most of the hunger for these things stems from not wanting to be sick and not trusting that regular food, exercise, addiction avoidance, luck and preventive medicines will be adequate. There is an overlay of paranoia. Are They (meaning we doctors and nurses) really telling us the truth? Are They aware that “eating clean” is better for you? Do They believe in antiox- idants and free radicals? Don’t They know that coconut oil and apple vinegar (but only those with specially bought organic/ artisanal/locally sourced ingredients) can prevent weight gain and illness? Don’t They know that wellness is not possible without kale and kombucha? Wellness is now a billion-dollar business, a word that means “in pursuit of something unattainable by spending a whole lot of money on what I can sell you.” That would be my interpretation. The consumers of these “wellness” products see it different- ly. With great enthusiasm, they are buying health and beauty. They are buying better sleep. They are buying weight loss, better sex and better-than-their-neighbor every- 36 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE thing, because these products say so. They are advertised to achieve these things. The proprietors and drivers of these programs strive minute-to-minute to seize a new angle, to promote a new elixir, to devise “personalized testing” for such things as “salivary toxins” that might require “radical cleansing,” or, in the case of Gwyneth Pal- trow and her company, Goop, vaginal eggs. Goop is a “lifestyle enhancing” business worth over $250 million. Just last week, the Associated Press reported that Goop agreed to a settlement with the state of California to the tune of $145,000, when an inves- tigative task force found that insertion of the specially designed Jade Egg and Rose Quartz Egg was not in fact able to “bal- ance hormones, regulate menstrual cycles or improve bladder control.” The company must also refund money, on request, to the women who bought these. Goop heavily advertises its “Eating Clean” program, pointing out its design by Dr. Alejandro Junger, a cardiologist who turned to this way of eating after enduring postgraduate training in New York City. Its products are free from gluten, meat and dairy, and are not genetically modified foods. The Goop website advises a nightly 12-hour window without any food or drink, “to send the signal we are going into deep detox mode – allowing eight hours for di- gestion and four hours for deep clean.” The initial 21-day program costs $475 and the maintenance monthly program is $138 (plus you can buy the special shaker bottle to use and you can buy the MOVE fiber shake for your bowels). You can consult their Health Coach. (If they recommend the vaginal eggs, ask for outcomes data up front.) You cannot buy Real Water on their website, but you can find out that Ms. Paltrow drinks it. Taffy Brodesser-Akner wrote a long pro- file piece about her in the July 25 New York Times magazine. Real Water is advertised to replace “the valuable electrons stripped from regular drinking water” thus rendering our Louisville Tap, for instance, “acidic and full of free radicals.” Free radicals “steal elec- trons from the body’s cells, causing serious health damage.” The company alkalinized their water to a pH of eight. This water by contrast has “E2 Electron Energized Tech- nology which adds trillions and trillions of electrons, producing stable negative ioniza- tion and with antioxidants, neutralizing free radicals.” Negative ions “are more accept- ed by the body’s aquaporins.” A case of 12 one-liter bottles is $28 and you can – deal! – get 24 for $36. Imagine those trillions of electrons coursing through your veins. Don’t you feel special now? The dangerous part of all of these “health enhancements” is not just the drain on the