Update on Dr. Cady's presentation on transition from conventional allopathic to functional and integrated practice. Current state of medicine, socio-economic variables, and demographics reviewed. Mental posture toward how you want to practice reviewed. Presented 8/17/2012 in Salt Lake City for CME lecture of World Link Medical
Transition from allopathic to integrated medical practiceLouis Cady, MD
This is the keynote lecture of the series of three lectures that Dr. Cady presented to the World Link Medical seminar in Salt Lake City, Utah on June 1, 2012.
Transition from allopathic to integrated modelLouis Cady, MD
Dr. Cady presented this presentation at the World Link Medical seminar in Salt Lake City, UT on January 27 for the 2012 Medical Seminar Series - Mastering the Protocols for Optimization of Hormone Replacement Therapy, Part 1. It will be presented twice more for World Link Medical in 2012.
Michael Samuelson, Keynote,Wellness at Work Conference, June 14, 2010Delaware State Chamber
This document discusses wellness and primary prevention as the keystone to transforming healthcare. It outlines that the current healthcare system focuses more on sickness and disease management rather than prevention. A shift needs to occur towards prioritizing health promotion and preventing disease to lower costs. A five step strategic approach is proposed: 1) Organize the population by risk level, 2) Conduct a corporate health audit, 3) Adjust corporate culture, 4) Implement programs to keep low risk low and move high risk lower, 5) Evaluate, update and maintain programs. The document argues that wellness is not just an individual responsibility but a shared social contract between society and individuals with both rewards and penalties.
Medicine: A State of Crisis, A State of ChangeLouis Cady, MD
This is the third of three lectures given by Dr. Cady in San Diego at the 2015 IMMH Conference. In this presentation, Dr. Cady reviews the stresses on medical care in contemporary society - including pressures on both patients and providers. The impact of poorly conceived government insurance/interference in medical care on our patients (as their co-pays and deductibles skyrocket). A move toward a new paradigm for physicians and other providers is reviewed.
Presentation at the Physician's of Ontario Neurodevelopmental Advocacy (PONDA) Annual Meeting, summarizing the principles and challenges of the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) in Australia and how it might be applied in Canada.
This document provides biographical information about Chris Calkins, the Director of Outreach Health Initiatives at Penn State, including his educational background, professional experience, and roles at Penn State. It also includes diagrams outlining the key components and consumers of the US healthcare system, and depicts the typical life cycle of a health condition.
Neurodevelopmental Disabilities and the Ethics of Diagnostic LabelsOlaf Kraus de Camargo
Keynote presented at the 29. Turkish National Congress for Special Education in Izmir on November 7th 2019 - It describes the discriminatory aspect of organizing service delivery by diagnostic labels and proposes using a functional approach based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) as an ethical alternative.
The document discusses definitions of health, healthcare, and the healthcare system. It defines health as a state of complete well-being, not just the absence of disease. The healthcare system involves providers like hospitals and physicians, as well as prevention efforts to maintain health. Public health aims to protect, promote, and restore community health through policies, education, and ensuring access to services. Historically, causes of death have shifted from infectious diseases to chronic conditions as life expectancy has increased.
Transition from allopathic to integrated medical practiceLouis Cady, MD
This is the keynote lecture of the series of three lectures that Dr. Cady presented to the World Link Medical seminar in Salt Lake City, Utah on June 1, 2012.
Transition from allopathic to integrated modelLouis Cady, MD
Dr. Cady presented this presentation at the World Link Medical seminar in Salt Lake City, UT on January 27 for the 2012 Medical Seminar Series - Mastering the Protocols for Optimization of Hormone Replacement Therapy, Part 1. It will be presented twice more for World Link Medical in 2012.
Michael Samuelson, Keynote,Wellness at Work Conference, June 14, 2010Delaware State Chamber
This document discusses wellness and primary prevention as the keystone to transforming healthcare. It outlines that the current healthcare system focuses more on sickness and disease management rather than prevention. A shift needs to occur towards prioritizing health promotion and preventing disease to lower costs. A five step strategic approach is proposed: 1) Organize the population by risk level, 2) Conduct a corporate health audit, 3) Adjust corporate culture, 4) Implement programs to keep low risk low and move high risk lower, 5) Evaluate, update and maintain programs. The document argues that wellness is not just an individual responsibility but a shared social contract between society and individuals with both rewards and penalties.
Medicine: A State of Crisis, A State of ChangeLouis Cady, MD
This is the third of three lectures given by Dr. Cady in San Diego at the 2015 IMMH Conference. In this presentation, Dr. Cady reviews the stresses on medical care in contemporary society - including pressures on both patients and providers. The impact of poorly conceived government insurance/interference in medical care on our patients (as their co-pays and deductibles skyrocket). A move toward a new paradigm for physicians and other providers is reviewed.
Presentation at the Physician's of Ontario Neurodevelopmental Advocacy (PONDA) Annual Meeting, summarizing the principles and challenges of the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) in Australia and how it might be applied in Canada.
This document provides biographical information about Chris Calkins, the Director of Outreach Health Initiatives at Penn State, including his educational background, professional experience, and roles at Penn State. It also includes diagrams outlining the key components and consumers of the US healthcare system, and depicts the typical life cycle of a health condition.
Neurodevelopmental Disabilities and the Ethics of Diagnostic LabelsOlaf Kraus de Camargo
Keynote presented at the 29. Turkish National Congress for Special Education in Izmir on November 7th 2019 - It describes the discriminatory aspect of organizing service delivery by diagnostic labels and proposes using a functional approach based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) as an ethical alternative.
The document discusses definitions of health, healthcare, and the healthcare system. It defines health as a state of complete well-being, not just the absence of disease. The healthcare system involves providers like hospitals and physicians, as well as prevention efforts to maintain health. Public health aims to protect, promote, and restore community health through policies, education, and ensuring access to services. Historically, causes of death have shifted from infectious diseases to chronic conditions as life expectancy has increased.
The U.S. healthcare system is complex and inefficient, with 20% of GDP spent on healthcare but without better health outcomes than other countries. The document discusses different models for who pays for healthcare and notes that the U.S. uses a combination of models. Startups are increasingly targeting unmet needs in healthcare by helping patients navigate the system, connecting patients with care, and focusing on high-cost individuals. However, startups face challenges from the entrenched existing providers, insurers, and patient mindsets. While most startups work within the existing structure, some aim to disrupt it, and success is possible if they can incrementally improve the system.
Kristi Haley, the author's preceptor at Hummel Physical Therapy, exemplifies professionalism through her interactions with patients. Even when busy, she takes time to speak with each patient about their condition, family, or hobbies. In one instance, Kristi examined a patient complaining of knee pain, discovered an issue, and ensured the patient received proper treatment, demonstrating her commitment to providing quality care. The author learned the importance of prioritizing patients and taking time to address their needs, even in brief conversations, from observing Kristi's example of professionalism.
Employers are missing opportunities with wellness programs by focusing too much on general health improvement for all employees rather than targeting those driving the highest costs. Effective wellness requires analyzing data to understand health risks and targeting interventions at populations with conditions linked to increased costs and poor outcomes. A total health management approach integrating programs across the health continuum can help shift culture and incentivize behaviors to reduce costs and improve productivity.
The document discusses the growing interest in coordinated and integrated healthcare delivery through models like patient-centered medical homes (PCMHs) and accountable care organizations (ACOs). It notes the potential benefits of these models, including improved quality of care and reduced costs. Specifically, it cites evidence that Geisinger Health System achieved a 9% reduction in total healthcare costs and lower hospital admission and readmission rates through implementing a PCMH-based accountable care model. The long-term goal is for PCMHs and ACOs to transform healthcare delivery in the US to a more coordinated, high-value system focused on primary care.
Here are the key steps I would take to prepare to start post-secondary training:
1. Research programs and requirements - Learn the admission requirements, prerequisite courses, and overall curriculum structure for the programs I'm interested in. Make sure I understand all necessary steps to apply and be accepted.
2. Improve academic record - Retake any prerequisite courses I did not do well in previously. Maintain strong grades in current coursework to improve my overall GPA.
3. Study for entrance exams - If required for my program(s) of interest, register for and study diligently for exams like the SAT, ACT, or GRE.
4. Gather application materials - Compile transcripts, letters of recommendation, personal statement
1. Some chiropractors have adopted a "chiropractic wellness" model to build lucrative practices, combining chiropractic with wellness services and products.
2. They rebrand themselves as "wellness doctors" and redefine chiropractic concepts like subluxations to appeal to a broader range of health conditions.
3. Critics argue this approach uses dubious marketing and screenings to identify customers for future chiropractic services, rather than focusing on patients' health.
Advancing from activated patient to autonomous patient in chronic illness careMark Sullivan
In this presentation, I examine the “activated patient”, which is one of the foundations for Wagner’s Chronic Care Model. I argue that this concept is not an adequate description of the role of the patient in chronic illness care. We need to advance to the autonomous patient who defines and pursues her own vital goals if we are to achieve sustained improvements in health behavior.
This document lists the board of directors, medical staff, and administration of East Tennessee Children's Hospital. It then provides a short biography of Dr. Carmen Tapiador, a new pediatric endocrinologist at the hospital, describing her background, interests in diabetes care, and approach to balancing work and family. The rest of the document is the quarterly newsletter of East Tennessee Children's Hospital, including stories about a patient named Elijah who receives care from multiple departments, as well as letters of thanks from families who received care.
This document provides guidelines for preventive services for children and adolescents. It is divided into six levels:
1) Level I services that must be assessed and offered, like childhood immunizations and chlamydia screening.
2) Level II services that should be assessed and offered, like breastfeeding counseling and depression screening.
3) Level III services where evidence is incomplete and clinical judgment should be used, like nutritional counseling.
4) Level IV services not recommended due to lack of evidence, like blood chemistry screening.
5) Implementation recommendations to improve delivery of services.
6) Evidence and references supporting the guidelines.
The document provides tables listing the specific services for each level and
Euro rscg-prosumer-report-health-wellness-lo-resEuroRSCGMoscow
1) The document discusses changing attitudes toward health and wellness in modern times. It analyzes data from a global study of over 7,000 people in 19 countries on topics like control over health, the relationship with medical professionals, and proactive approaches to wellness.
2) It finds the emergence of "Prosumers," health-empowered consumers who take responsibility for their own health through informed advocacy, social networks, and alternative therapies. Prosumers believe in mind-body connections and their ability to influence health outcomes.
3) The study reveals differences between Prosumers and mainstream consumers in health attitudes and behaviors. Prosumers see themselves as more informed advocates for their own and family's
Engines of Success for U.S. Health Reform?
Eric B. Larson, MD, MPHVice President for Research, Group Health Executive Director, Group Health Research Institute
The document discusses the costs of chronic disease and poor health in the United States. Some key points:
- Chronic disease accounts for 75% of national health expenditures and $1.3 trillion in direct health costs in 2006.
- People with chronic conditions have healthcare costs that are on average $6,032 per year, five times higher than people without chronic conditions.
- Obesity alone costs the US $147 billion annually in healthcare costs.
The document promotes measuring population well-being across six domains to help improve health outcomes and lower costs. National, state, and local rankings are provided based on well-being surveys. Improving well-being is presented as a way to increase economic value by
The goal of this webinar is to help hospice and healthcare professionals understand the history, philosophy, and practice of hospice and palliative care, including common misconceptions, typical diagnoses for hospice referrals, identification of hospice-eligible patients, reimbursement for hospice services, and the
benefits of advance care planning and early referrals.
Geriatric physical therapy focuses on promoting health and treating diseases and disabilities in older adults. Nationally, around 6-7% of physical therapist assistants work in long-term care or skilled nursing facilities, though in Minnesota it is around 23%. The average salary for a PTA working in a nursing home is around $48,000. PTAs treating older adults commonly see patients with conditions like arthritis, osteoporosis, hip fractures, and balance disorders.
Recent advances in the evidence base for technology-based behavioral health applications have provided clinicians a better understanding and guidance on the integration of these tools into clinical care. Participants will learn about research findings on current technologies in use in clinical practice, such as audio conferencing, video conferencing, and virtual reality, in addition to tools available for use between patients, such as the use of websites and mobile applications and wearable sensors.
The document discusses legal issues and liability concerns for physical therapists who provide fitness services to older adults. It outlines key considerations for physical therapists, including appropriately screening participants, disclosing that the relationship is not a traditional patient-therapist one, ensuring proper payment for services, and complying with individual state licensure regulations. This is to reduce the risk of legal and fiduciary liability from negligence or malpractice claims, given the higher risks of injury for older adults and the need to distinguish fitness advice from physical therapy advice.
The document provides an introduction to a course on bioethics. It discusses several topics related to bioethics including principles of bioethics, history of bioethics focusing on unethical Nazi experiments, ethical issues related to human reproductive technologies and genetic engineering. The key principles of bioethics discussed are autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence and justice. Arguments for and against surrogacy are also presented focusing on best interests of the child. Ethical issues related to new genetic technologies like gene testing, prenatal screening and genetic engineering are outlined.
This article examines how private prayer used as a coping strategy affects short-term quality of life in 294 cardiac patients undergoing open-heart surgery. The study tested a theoretical model using structural equation modeling with three interviews conducted pre- and post-operatively. The results showed an indirect influence of prayer coping on short-term postoperative quality of life, mediated through cognitive coping strategies and perceived social support. However, this mediation was not observed for behavioral, anger, or avoidant coping strategies. The findings suggest psychosocial factors may help explain the role of prayer coping in improving short-term quality of life outcomes after cardiac surgery.
O documento discute os desafios da educação brasileira em estimular o interesse pela leitura e escrita. Aponta que as concepções de texto e leitura nas escolas desmotivam os alunos e que é necessário mostrar diferentes gêneros textuais para tornar a leitura mais interessante. Também destaca a importância de esclarecer a diferença entre compreensão e interpretação de textos para os alunos e de valorizar tanto a correção gramatical quanto a organização das ideias na produção textual.
The U.S. healthcare system is complex and inefficient, with 20% of GDP spent on healthcare but without better health outcomes than other countries. The document discusses different models for who pays for healthcare and notes that the U.S. uses a combination of models. Startups are increasingly targeting unmet needs in healthcare by helping patients navigate the system, connecting patients with care, and focusing on high-cost individuals. However, startups face challenges from the entrenched existing providers, insurers, and patient mindsets. While most startups work within the existing structure, some aim to disrupt it, and success is possible if they can incrementally improve the system.
Kristi Haley, the author's preceptor at Hummel Physical Therapy, exemplifies professionalism through her interactions with patients. Even when busy, she takes time to speak with each patient about their condition, family, or hobbies. In one instance, Kristi examined a patient complaining of knee pain, discovered an issue, and ensured the patient received proper treatment, demonstrating her commitment to providing quality care. The author learned the importance of prioritizing patients and taking time to address their needs, even in brief conversations, from observing Kristi's example of professionalism.
Employers are missing opportunities with wellness programs by focusing too much on general health improvement for all employees rather than targeting those driving the highest costs. Effective wellness requires analyzing data to understand health risks and targeting interventions at populations with conditions linked to increased costs and poor outcomes. A total health management approach integrating programs across the health continuum can help shift culture and incentivize behaviors to reduce costs and improve productivity.
The document discusses the growing interest in coordinated and integrated healthcare delivery through models like patient-centered medical homes (PCMHs) and accountable care organizations (ACOs). It notes the potential benefits of these models, including improved quality of care and reduced costs. Specifically, it cites evidence that Geisinger Health System achieved a 9% reduction in total healthcare costs and lower hospital admission and readmission rates through implementing a PCMH-based accountable care model. The long-term goal is for PCMHs and ACOs to transform healthcare delivery in the US to a more coordinated, high-value system focused on primary care.
Here are the key steps I would take to prepare to start post-secondary training:
1. Research programs and requirements - Learn the admission requirements, prerequisite courses, and overall curriculum structure for the programs I'm interested in. Make sure I understand all necessary steps to apply and be accepted.
2. Improve academic record - Retake any prerequisite courses I did not do well in previously. Maintain strong grades in current coursework to improve my overall GPA.
3. Study for entrance exams - If required for my program(s) of interest, register for and study diligently for exams like the SAT, ACT, or GRE.
4. Gather application materials - Compile transcripts, letters of recommendation, personal statement
1. Some chiropractors have adopted a "chiropractic wellness" model to build lucrative practices, combining chiropractic with wellness services and products.
2. They rebrand themselves as "wellness doctors" and redefine chiropractic concepts like subluxations to appeal to a broader range of health conditions.
3. Critics argue this approach uses dubious marketing and screenings to identify customers for future chiropractic services, rather than focusing on patients' health.
Advancing from activated patient to autonomous patient in chronic illness careMark Sullivan
In this presentation, I examine the “activated patient”, which is one of the foundations for Wagner’s Chronic Care Model. I argue that this concept is not an adequate description of the role of the patient in chronic illness care. We need to advance to the autonomous patient who defines and pursues her own vital goals if we are to achieve sustained improvements in health behavior.
This document lists the board of directors, medical staff, and administration of East Tennessee Children's Hospital. It then provides a short biography of Dr. Carmen Tapiador, a new pediatric endocrinologist at the hospital, describing her background, interests in diabetes care, and approach to balancing work and family. The rest of the document is the quarterly newsletter of East Tennessee Children's Hospital, including stories about a patient named Elijah who receives care from multiple departments, as well as letters of thanks from families who received care.
This document provides guidelines for preventive services for children and adolescents. It is divided into six levels:
1) Level I services that must be assessed and offered, like childhood immunizations and chlamydia screening.
2) Level II services that should be assessed and offered, like breastfeeding counseling and depression screening.
3) Level III services where evidence is incomplete and clinical judgment should be used, like nutritional counseling.
4) Level IV services not recommended due to lack of evidence, like blood chemistry screening.
5) Implementation recommendations to improve delivery of services.
6) Evidence and references supporting the guidelines.
The document provides tables listing the specific services for each level and
Euro rscg-prosumer-report-health-wellness-lo-resEuroRSCGMoscow
1) The document discusses changing attitudes toward health and wellness in modern times. It analyzes data from a global study of over 7,000 people in 19 countries on topics like control over health, the relationship with medical professionals, and proactive approaches to wellness.
2) It finds the emergence of "Prosumers," health-empowered consumers who take responsibility for their own health through informed advocacy, social networks, and alternative therapies. Prosumers believe in mind-body connections and their ability to influence health outcomes.
3) The study reveals differences between Prosumers and mainstream consumers in health attitudes and behaviors. Prosumers see themselves as more informed advocates for their own and family's
Engines of Success for U.S. Health Reform?
Eric B. Larson, MD, MPHVice President for Research, Group Health Executive Director, Group Health Research Institute
The document discusses the costs of chronic disease and poor health in the United States. Some key points:
- Chronic disease accounts for 75% of national health expenditures and $1.3 trillion in direct health costs in 2006.
- People with chronic conditions have healthcare costs that are on average $6,032 per year, five times higher than people without chronic conditions.
- Obesity alone costs the US $147 billion annually in healthcare costs.
The document promotes measuring population well-being across six domains to help improve health outcomes and lower costs. National, state, and local rankings are provided based on well-being surveys. Improving well-being is presented as a way to increase economic value by
The goal of this webinar is to help hospice and healthcare professionals understand the history, philosophy, and practice of hospice and palliative care, including common misconceptions, typical diagnoses for hospice referrals, identification of hospice-eligible patients, reimbursement for hospice services, and the
benefits of advance care planning and early referrals.
Geriatric physical therapy focuses on promoting health and treating diseases and disabilities in older adults. Nationally, around 6-7% of physical therapist assistants work in long-term care or skilled nursing facilities, though in Minnesota it is around 23%. The average salary for a PTA working in a nursing home is around $48,000. PTAs treating older adults commonly see patients with conditions like arthritis, osteoporosis, hip fractures, and balance disorders.
Recent advances in the evidence base for technology-based behavioral health applications have provided clinicians a better understanding and guidance on the integration of these tools into clinical care. Participants will learn about research findings on current technologies in use in clinical practice, such as audio conferencing, video conferencing, and virtual reality, in addition to tools available for use between patients, such as the use of websites and mobile applications and wearable sensors.
The document discusses legal issues and liability concerns for physical therapists who provide fitness services to older adults. It outlines key considerations for physical therapists, including appropriately screening participants, disclosing that the relationship is not a traditional patient-therapist one, ensuring proper payment for services, and complying with individual state licensure regulations. This is to reduce the risk of legal and fiduciary liability from negligence or malpractice claims, given the higher risks of injury for older adults and the need to distinguish fitness advice from physical therapy advice.
The document provides an introduction to a course on bioethics. It discusses several topics related to bioethics including principles of bioethics, history of bioethics focusing on unethical Nazi experiments, ethical issues related to human reproductive technologies and genetic engineering. The key principles of bioethics discussed are autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence and justice. Arguments for and against surrogacy are also presented focusing on best interests of the child. Ethical issues related to new genetic technologies like gene testing, prenatal screening and genetic engineering are outlined.
This article examines how private prayer used as a coping strategy affects short-term quality of life in 294 cardiac patients undergoing open-heart surgery. The study tested a theoretical model using structural equation modeling with three interviews conducted pre- and post-operatively. The results showed an indirect influence of prayer coping on short-term postoperative quality of life, mediated through cognitive coping strategies and perceived social support. However, this mediation was not observed for behavioral, anger, or avoidant coping strategies. The findings suggest psychosocial factors may help explain the role of prayer coping in improving short-term quality of life outcomes after cardiac surgery.
O documento discute os desafios da educação brasileira em estimular o interesse pela leitura e escrita. Aponta que as concepções de texto e leitura nas escolas desmotivam os alunos e que é necessário mostrar diferentes gêneros textuais para tornar a leitura mais interessante. Também destaca a importância de esclarecer a diferença entre compreensão e interpretação de textos para os alunos e de valorizar tanto a correção gramatical quanto a organização das ideias na produção textual.
Assassino Drogas e do Salão da Fama do Suplemento - Brasil 2015Louis Cady, MD
O documento discute o uso de suplementos nutricionais e suas interações com medicamentos. Resume os principais pontos sobre:
1) Interações potencialmente fatais entre inibidores da monoamina oxidase e outros medicamentos que afetam a serotonina.
2) Evidências de que níveis baixos de antioxidantes como vitaminas A, C e E podem aumentar o risco de doenças crônicas e que suplementos podem ter benefícios modestos.
3) Estudos associando níveis mais altos de carotenoides no plasma
Integrating the Functional, Psychodynamic, and Immunologic Matrix: New Advent...Louis Cady, MD
In this presentation (here represented in English before translation) Dr. Cady deconstructs the curious and sometimes perplexing manifestations of delayed sensitivity food allergy testing, supporting it with citations from the peer-reviewed medical literature and extensive bibliographic references. The importance of understanding the potential immunologic contribution to a patient's mental state is reviewed.
"Killer Drugs & The Supplement Hall of Fame" - IMMH Brazil, 2015Louis Cady, MD
In this presentation, the third of three lectures Dr. Cady delivered in São Paulo, Brazil, Dr. Cady reviews the critical patterns of interactions with numerous frequently prescribed psychotropic medications (and others). Emphasis is given on how not to commit an obvious drug-drug interaction as well as avoiding more subtle ones. The focus then shifts to supplements: which ones are the best, which ones have mental health benefits, and how to avoid interactions between conventionally used supplements and psychiatric medications.
The document provides an overview of a benchmark study of various UK retail websites conducted by eDigitalResearch. Key findings from the study include:
- Top performing sites like JD Sports, M&S, and John Lewis scored highly across customer touchpoints like product pages, checkout processes, and customer contact.
- Areas that could be improved include email customer response times, with an average of 29% of emails responded to within 12 hours.
- Another mixed area was product detail pages, where top performers like Figleaves, JD Sports, and Asos provided clear pricing, benefits, and product recommendations.
Medicine: A State of CRISIS, a State of CHANGELouis Cady, MD
Dr. Cady returns this year to repeat and update one of the most talked about presentations of the 2015 IMMH conference. In this presentation, Dr. Cady deconstructs the pressures and challenges facing patients, physicians, and all health care practitioners in today's practice environment. The role of integrated practice and functional medicine as a "differentiating factor" in one's practice is reviewed. The need for patients to adapt a healthy life style and take responsibility for their health for their own economic self-preservation is also touched on.
The document appears to be a survey containing multiple choice and rating scale questions about online shopping habits and preferences for Christmas gifts. It includes questions about shopping earlier or reducing spending this year, factors influencing online purchases, websites visited and ratings of ease of use, product selection, information provided, and security. Demographic questions are also asked regarding gender, age, income region of residence and household size.
Integração Funcional, Psicodinâmica e Imunológicos Matrix: Novas Aventuras em...Louis Cady, MD
[1] O documento discute a abordagem triádica de pensar sobre diagnóstico e tratamento, considerando aspectos psicodinâmicos, funcionais e imunológicos.
[2] É apresentado o caso de "Billy", uma criança com diagnóstico de TDAH que apresentava sintomas variáveis e imprevisíveis. Testes mostraram sensibilidades alimentares do tipo IgG, mas a dieta não foi seguida consistentemente.
[3] Diferentes intervenções foram realizadas ao longo dos anos, inclu
The document discusses an integrative medicine presentation on hypothyroidism and the thyroid. It provides background on the speaker's commercial relationships and credentials. The presentation examines the limitations of conventional thyroid testing and treatment, exploring additional factors like selenium, iron, and cortisol that can impact thyroid function at the tissue level. It advocates for a more comprehensive evaluation and management of hypothyroidism that considers multiple nutritional and lifestyle factors.
Monografia del " Sistema Financiero Peruano"xxjhonnyxx
Este documento trata sobre el sistema financiero peruano. En las primeras oraciones se presenta una breve introducción sobre el bajo uso del sistema financiero por parte de la población peruana y las razones por las cuales esto ocurre. Luego, se detalla la estructura del documento, abordando cuatro temas relacionados con la actividad financiera en el Perú: la política monetaria, el sistema financiero peruano, la Bolsa de Valores y la promoción de la inversión extranjera. Finalmente, se presenta un índice con los diferentes cap
Transition from allopathic to integrated practiceLouis Cady, MD
This document provides an overview of transitioning from a traditional allopathic medical practice to a holistic and integrated medical model. It discusses the current state of allopathic medicine and opportunities presented by disruptive forces such as microchips. It also outlines two medical models - the traditional allopathic model focused on treating disease, and an integrated wellness model focused on prevention and optimizing health. The document proposes starting small with integrated approaches and provides resources for physicians seeking to make a transition.
Pharmanex HCP presentation, Provo, Utah 03 Louis Cady, MD
This is the slightly trimmed version of "The Gathering Storm, The Breaking Dawn" talk I previously gave in California, dealing with the failing financial and physical health of the American public (other than the much talked about "1%") as well as the medical care system which is in danger of imploding. The Pharmanex Biophotonic scanner, its validation, and the rationale behind the LifePak supplement line is reviewed.
How to Transition from Allopathic to Integrated Practice - IMM Brazil 2015Louis Cady, MD
In this lecture, Dr. Cady compares and contrasts the significance differences, both conceptually and practically, between the conventional practice of medicine and a more rational, functional, integrated approach. Tactical concepts and didactic tools to make the transition are reviewed.
This document discusses alternatives to the current healthcare system that focuses more on wellness and prevention of disease. It notes that 70-90% of diseases are preventable through lifestyle changes like diet, exercise, and stress management. Mind-body practices like tai chi, qigong, and yoga have been shown in research to effectively improve health outcomes related to heart disease, mental health, balance and falls prevention. Health coaching is presented as a way to empower individuals and maximize whole population wellbeing in a more cost effective manner compared to the current medical model. Web-based and group delivery methods are discussed to facilitate widespread implementation.
Mercedes Serrano - Guía metabólica: empowerment through health 2.0 tools in ...WTHS
Presentation of Workshop on Technology for Healthcare and Healthy Lifestyle 2011
Thursday 1st Dec 2011
Session III
http://www.tsb.upv.es/wths2011
También en:
http://es.scribd.com/doc/73819171/Presentacion-Dra-Mercedes-Serrano-Guia-Metabolica-conferencia-Ideagoras-2011
This document provides an overview of health, wellness, and community-based care. It defines health, wellness, and their components. It discusses the health-illness continuum and how illness can impact individuals and families. Key factors influencing health and illness behaviors are explored. The document outlines criteria for an ideal community-based health care system and integrated delivery models. It also discusses the role of community-based nursing.
In this first lecture of 2013 at Cady Wellness Institute, Dr. Cady presented the facts and strategies in front of a live audience for rebroadcast on WNIN - our local public television station. These are the EXACT SLIDES used in the presentation. We would like to thank all of those in the live audience who attended. For questions or comments, please feel free to contact us at front desk@cadywellness.com or call the Institute at ()812) 429 - 0772.
This document discusses shifting healthcare paradigms from intervention to prevention through embracing wellness. It outlines key aspects of wellness like quality sleep, nutrition, and stress management. Integrative medicine is presented as combining conventional and alternative approaches for safer and more effective remedies. The wellness movement is gaining traction as baby boomers prioritize health and companies implement workplace wellness programs. Overall it advocates an increased focus on preventative healthcare through lifestyle changes and wellness practices.
Health equity is defined as the absence of unfair and avoidable health disparities between groups. Racial and ethnic healthcare disparities exist and are associated with worse health outcomes. These disparities are caused by deeper social and economic factors known as social determinants of health, such as where people live, work, and play. Achieving health equity requires addressing social inequities and ensuring all groups can attain their highest level of health.
Brief description of our live, interactive webinars and health coaching. Affordable - helping employees feel they have numerous health coaches, a support system for camaraderie, and a company that cares.
The document discusses Continua Health Alliance, an organization working to advance remote patient monitoring through open interoperability standards. It aims to address the growing costs of chronic diseases by enabling up to 60% of medications to be taken correctly through remote monitoring solutions. Continua brings the healthcare and technology industries together to develop guidelines and certify products, helping create an ecosystem to support the expanding connected health market, estimated to grow to $7.7 billion by 2012.
HOW TO SAVE MONEY ON YOUR HEALTHCARE: An Integrative Medicine ApproachLouis Cady, MD
In this webinar, the fourth in a series of five from Dr. Louis Cady and the Cady Wellness Institute, we focus on the actual dollars and cents of health care expenditures, and the societal and PERSONAL costs of poor health maintenance behavior. We examine the essentially passive US medical system, that would rather drug a symptom than fix the underlying problem.
Great attention is paid on not shaming the patient or the doctors as they exist in the current system. Both groups "do not know what they do not know." Confirmation bias is rampant.
This webinar points the way to living a more vital, energetic life, with a minimum of cost, grief, and misery.
The document discusses health, wellness, and the healthcare system. It defines health and wellness, noting they require balance across various areas of life. While healthcare aims to promote wellness, it is very costly and challenged to provide quality care. Self-care is presented as a more sustainable strategy for maintaining health than relying on the overwhelmed healthcare system. Relying solely on healthcare is too expensive and individuals must take responsibility for their own wellness through lifestyle choices.
MEDINFO 2013 Panel on Personalized Healthcare and Adherence: Issues and Chall...Pei-Yun Sabrina Hsueh
Venue: The 14th World Congress on Medical and Health Informatics will take place in Copenhagen, Denmark.
http://medinfo2013.dk
Moderator: Dr. Marion Ball (IBM Research/JHU); Panelists: Dr. Vimla Patel (NYAM), Dr. Bern Shen (Healthcrowd), Dr. Pei-Yun Sabrina Hsueh (IBM Research)
Organizer: Dr. Pei-Yun Sabrina Hsueh (phsueh@us.ibm.com)
Personalization is key to the delivery of wellness care including preventive measures and disease management regimes, where patients take on increased responsibility for
their own health. While personalized care has already taken a giant leap through genomics, it remains a challenge to understand how individual differences play a role in patient adherence and manage recommended changes accordingly.
Practical methods of creating and evaluating personalized
systems have not been fully established. In particular, the role of data-driven analytics in producing actionable insights for practitioners is unclear, and the use of behavioral data has created additional challenges to the understanding of patient adherence for effective care delivery.
The panel will discuss the challenges that face many countries around personalized care from various perspectives. These range from behavioral aspects such as maintaining good practices, cognitive aspects such as how do individuals make decisions in the lights of good evidence, social aspects such as how to engage patients in sustaining adherence behavior, to technological aspects such as how to evaluate individual applicability of data-driven analytics and personalized technological systems.
The panel is expected to contribute to the global community by presenting lessons learned from
existing pilot designs and a collective list of recommendations for pilot design of personalized services at the conclusion of this panel.
The Physician In Spite of Himself (returns!) -San Antonio 2014Louis Cady, MD
In this first of four lectures delivered at the IMMH Conference in San Antonio, Texas - September 19, 2014 - Dr. Cady touches on themes from last year's presentation and introduces fun and exciting new ways to look at function medicine. This year's talk heavily emphasizes the role of nutritional supplementation in supporting the structure and function of the human body. Updates from clinical cases encountered last year are also covered. General topics in this presentation include:
- the importance of evaluating and balancing the thyroid axis
- the importance of sex steroids and DHEA
- the importance of antioxidants, mineral, multivitamins, and essential fatty acids in optimal health
- the need to clearly identify, articulate, and treat the differences between something that is a pure "psychiatric" condition and the covert masqueraders which may actually represent undiagnosed and untreated physiological/medical conditions until addressed.
The document discusses obesity trends in the United States from 1989 to 2009 which show increasing rates of obesity over time. It also discusses the high costs of healthcare in the US driven largely by lifestyle choices and chronic diseases. Workplace wellness programs are discussed as a strategy to address these issues but need to be highly effective and supported by organizational leadership to successfully promote a culture of health.
Michael Samuelson, Keynote,Wellness at Work Conference, June 14, 2010Delaware State Chamber
This document discusses wellness and primary prevention as the keystone to transforming healthcare. It outlines that the current healthcare system focuses more on sickness and disease management rather than prevention. A shift needs to occur towards prioritizing health promotion and preventing disease. This will help lower costs by compressing morbidity. A social contract is proposed where society provides access to healthcare and supports prevention, while individuals make healthy choices and get recommended screenings. A five step strategic approach is presented for organizations to organize employees by health risk and implement wellness programs.
1820201Chapter 2Conducting Health ResearchHe.docxaulasnilda
1/8/2020
1
Chapter 2
Conducting Health Research
Health Psychology (PSYC 172)
Professor: Andrea Cook, PhD
January 9, 2020
1
Placebos
• Placebo - inactive substance or condition that
has the appearance of an active treatment
• A belief in the effectiveness of a treatment
boosts the treatment’s effectiveness
• Placebo effect may account for around 35%
of treatment effects
• Placebos have been shown to lead to positive
health outcomes for many health disorders and
symptoms
– Migraine headaches, pain, depression,
anxiety, insomnia, asthma, hypertension
Research and the Placebo
• Treatments are effective when the treatment is more
effective than the placebo
• To determine if treatments are effective
– Need to directly compare treatment versus the
placebo
– Use two groups of people: one group receives
treatment and one group receives placebo
What you think about the treatment will impact its
effectiveness.
Who should you believe to decide if a treatment is likely to
be effective?
1/8/2020
2
Correlation Studies
Correlation is not causation
4
Correlation Studies
5
Correlation Studiies
6
http://www.tylervigen.com/spurious-correlations
1/8/2020
3
Correlation Studies
7
http://www.tylervigen.com/spurious-correlations
Correlation Studies
• Example – cholesterol
– Consumed cholesterol raises blood cholesterol
– Dietary guidelines recommend low cholesterol diet
for last 50+ years without validation
– Today causal relationship completely invalidated
• The French Paradox (1991)
– Serge Renaud, French researcher
– Disconnect French high saturated fat consumption
and low rates of cardiovascular disease
– Attributed to large red wine consumption
8
Longitudinal Studies
9
1/8/2020
4
Longitudinal Studies
• Longitudinal studies draw conclusions about how
individuals change over time
– Follow the same set of participants over time
– Example - if a researcher wanted to know how
dietary choices affect health across the lifespan
• Annual diet survey over 20 years and analyze
major medical diagnoses
• Challenges – self report accuracy, other lifestyle
factors
Determining Causality
• Correlational, cross-sectional, and
longitudinal designs only examine
relationships between variables
– They do not determine causality - if one
variable directly causes another variable
Experimental Design
• Experimental designs — compare at least two
groups to be able to draw cause and effect
conclusions
– The experimental group receives treatment
– The control group does not receive treatment
• Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) — similar
to experimental studies
– Participants are randomly assigned to either a study
group or a control group
– RCTs are considered the “gold standard” of research
design
1/8/2020
5
The Hidden Side of Clinical Trials
13The hidden side of clinical trials | Sile Lane | TEDxMadrid (YouTube)
Research for Marketing Purposes
14
Research for M ...
"Medication Compliance" by Dan Bernstein (Chicago Health 2.0)Chirag Patel
Medic8 Manager LLC provides treatment management platforms and services for patients and caregivers. The document discusses the problem of poor medication adherence, which is defined as any deviation from a prescribed medical treatment. Poor adherence is a significant source of waste in healthcare. Approximately 33-50% of patients do not take their medications as prescribed, resulting in $290 billion annually spent on drug-related health issues in the US. Improving adherence requires addressing multiple behavioral barriers through reminders, education, counseling, automated refill functions, and social support systems. Software and mobile applications can provide reminder services, medication information, and adherence studies to help address this important healthcare issue.
Health psychology developed in the 1970s to address challenges in healthcare as life expectancy increased and chronic diseases became more prevalent. It aims to promote health and prevent illness by understanding how biological, psychological, and social factors influence health behaviors and outcomes. Key developments included the biopsychosocial model of health and illness, emergence of behavioral medicine, and establishment of the field of health psychology through APA Division 38 in 1978.
Similar to 1 a transition from allopathic to integrated medical practice (20)
SEND IN THE SHRINKS - 2009 Oliver CME seminarLouis Cady, MD
This one was fun.
I was invited by Dr. Randalll Oliver, MD, Founder of the Oliver Heachache and Pain Clinic in Evansville, to present to an audience of primary care practitioners about how to use pysychiatric mediations ("psychopharmacology") in clinical practice.
Along the way, I covered, ADHD and treatments, depression, anxiety, erectile dysfunction, hypoadrenia, and even touched on hypothyroidism. Although this presentation was in 2009, all of the drugs covered are stills in use, and, at times.... stupidly.
This presentation deconstructs the intricacies of selecting and antidepressant, particularly in the SSRI class.
What is the nature of QUALITY in medicine -for ASQ 11 14 2023.pptLouis Cady, MD
In this presentation, Dr. Cady deconstructs the tensions and stressors on both patients and health care providers in today's system.
This presentation reviews checklists foe liminating mistakes, the actual number of mistakes that are being made in medical practice, and what patients and their loved ones can do for self protection.
This isn't a "bash the doctor" presentation. It's a thoughtful, careful exploration of stresses and ramifications to the current US healthcare system.
This document provides information about a presentation given by Dr. Louis B. Cady on transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) as a treatment for depression. It begins with Dr. Cady's credentials and commercial disclosure stating he has received honoraria from several companies but that this presentation is not being underwritten by any company. The presentation then covers how TMS works, its safety and effectiveness compared to antidepressant medications and electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), and its inclusion in treatment guidelines for depression.
Hormones and Mental Health - Thyroid and Testosterone.pptxLouis Cady, MD
In this presentation for the Psychiatry Redefined program, Dr.
Cady breaks down and deconstructs the accepted, unthinking, "practice guideline based" notions of thyroid and tesotsterone, with there seemingly "normal" levels and dosing, versus what the actual peer reviewed medical literature says. In this presentation, do use of all forms of thyroid, and all forms of testosterone are reviewed. The idiocy of "T4 only treatment" is covered. The use of T4, T3, a combination of T4 and T3, and all of the porcine and compounded products is review.
In terms of testosterone, dr. Katie reviews the concept of "do you want to be optimal or do you want to be normal." He notes that it is "normal" for oil in cars to deteriorate and break down with age. It's also "normal" for men's and women's testosterone (as well as thyroid) to go down with age. The question is, "do we want to do anything about it?"
Logical ways of intervening in both the thyroid and female and male gonadal axes are covered. There is scrupulous attention paid to the thyroid hormone pathways, and the relevance of reverse T3 versus free T3. Similarly, in terms of women, the downstream effect of estradiol coming from testosterone is also reviewed.
The Moral Imperative of Integrative Medicine 2022.pptLouis Cady, MD
The document discusses the case of a 16-year-old teenager with a long history of treatment-resistant depression and anxiety. Previous medication trials with SSRIs, SNRIs, atypical antipsychotics, and lamotrigine had failed to provide sustained relief. Upon further evaluation, the doctor found potential contributing factors including an undiagnosed MTHFR gene mutation and hormonal imbalances. The doctor adjusted the teenager's supplements and medications, focusing on addressing the underlying functional issues. At follow-up several months later, the teenager reported significantly improved mood with only brief periods of low mood, though menstrual irregularities persisted.
CORONOFOBIA - Passos práticos para equilibrar as defesas do corpo e da menteLouis Cady, MD
Esta palestra, apresentada em 29 de maio de 2021 para o Congresso de Medicina Integrativa para a Saúde Mental 2020, promovido pelo Laboratório Great Plains no Brasil, enfocou coisas simples e de bom senso que os pacientes (e seus médicos) podem fazer para se manter seguros e viver durante o Pandemia do covid.
Os seguintes conceitos holísticos foram revisados:
- sono adequado e por que é tão importante;
- o uso de melatonina, cientificamente validada como tendo atividade antiviral (referências citadas);
- a importância de diminuir o estresse e técnicas para fazê-lo;
- a necessidade de "comer frutas e vegetais" como sua mãe e sua avó ensinaram devido à ingestão de carotenóides e antioxidantes ((referências citadas);
- o uso adequado de suplementos vitamínicos / nutricionais (referências citadas).
O foco desta apresentação não foram medidas heróicas para salvar vidas na unidade de terapia intensiva para pacientes gravemente enfermos com COVID, mas, sim, técnicas de bom senso, práticas, baratas e (em alguns casos) GRATUITAS para melhorar você e seus pacientes 'saúde e resistência às doenças.
THE MORAL IMPERATIVE OF INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE - O IMPERATIVO MORAL DA MEDICINA...Louis Cady, MD
Neste programa, o Dr. Cady baseia-se em uma série de casos clínicos para ilustrar a necessidade absoluta e moral do tratamento de precisão de nossos pacientes com todas as ferramentas disponíveis para uso por meio da medicina integrativa.
O uso de testes de polimorfismo MTHFR, testes convencionais e laboratoriais e testes farmacogenômicos foram revisados.
Os casos apresentados ilustram a trágica dificuldade de um menino com deficiência de MTHFR que estava prestes a desviar sua vida; um paciente esquizofrênico com vários problemas de medicina funcional que precisavam ser resolvidos (levedura, glúten, sensibilidade alimentar de IgG); uma estudante universitária a quem foi dito "não há nada de errado com você; seus laboratórios estão bem", embora ela tenha manifestado todos os sintomas relevantes de hipotireoidismo; e um CEO do sexo masculino de 42 anos que estava "tão cansado que parecia morrer" e que, na verdade, estava funcionalmente com pouco testosterona. O último caso revisado foi de um adorável garotinho que tinha autismo e foi recuperado por meio de uma abordagem focada e intensa de medicina integrativa.
Dr. Cady deconstructs some the medical literature about the use of nutrients - and the evidence of what happens in the presence of their insufficiency. Everything for decreased viral replication to decrease brain shrinkage is covered. The role of antioxidant and carotenoids, measured by the Pharmanex Biophotonic Scanner, is reviewed.
Please note - there is no representation that any nutrient or supplement can treat, prevent, mitigate, or cure any medical condition. It does seem, however, upon reflecting on the medical literature, that there seems to be a lot of evidence for therapeutic effect in the presence of good levels of nutrient, and harm to patients if they have insufficient levels.
Subtitle: The Moral Imperative of Integrative Medicine
This presentation, two hours in length, was delivered to the A4m MMI Audience in their Frontiers of Neurology - Module 3.
The following topics are reviewed:
- ADHD, Autism, Depression, Schizophrenia
- the impact of neuroinflammation on all of these.
- confounding factors and the ways to mitigate them: Omega6/Omega 3 imbalance in the Western diet, MTHFR polymorphism, the use of elemental lithium, the presence of intestinal dysbiosis and the role of gluten/dairy IgG Food allergies.
- pharmacogenomic testing
The Moral Imperative of Integrative Medicine - IMMH 2020Louis Cady, MD
IN this presentation, Dr. Cady reviews several of the handful of functional, integrative medicine techniques required for a holistic and comprehensive management of psychiatric issues. MTHFR, hormone balance, diagnosis and treating intestinal dysbiosis, need for trace elements, and hormones (including thyroid, testosterone and estradiol) are reviewed.
This brief webinar, a gift to the local Jewish community and Temple Adath B'Nai Israel here in Evansville, IN, reviews the tradition of mindfulness and the interdigitation of Buddhist practices with some Jewish traditions. Dr. Cady reviews the downstream effects of stress, how meditation and mindfulness are useful tools and techniques, and actually how to practice it. Multiple references without being complicated or overdone are provided.
Webinar 5: Designing Your Future: WHAT'S COMING NEXT?Louis Cady, MD
In this capstone webinar presentation, closing out Dr. Cady's series on dealing with COVID 19, he turns his attention to a nunmber of interesting thems:
- what's the REAL case fatality rate of COVID 19
- How is it likely that society will reopen?
- What's going to happen in education and medicine?
- What's going to happen when the robots and AI arrive?
- What's the future going to be out 500 years?
The Do It To Yourself Treatment of Depression - Webinar #3Louis Cady, MD
This is the third in a series of five webinars. The first was on staying alive by boosting your immunity during COVID 19. The second was on not screwing yourself up inside your head. This third one encompasses a romp through the peer reviewed medical literature looking for supplements and nutrients that you could use to self treat depression at home, CAREFULLY. Numerous cautions and warnings are included.
The driving impetus to this program is that many people - due to social isolation and their mental health care, or medical practitioners' offices being closed down - have not been able to get help or succeed in optimizing their treatment for depression. There are multiple useful nutrients for both depression and anxiety in nature's abundant pharmacopeia, and this webinar touches on just a few of them.
I hope you enjoy it.
HOW TO COPE WITH THE PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACT OF COVID 19 AND SOCIAL DISTANCINGis...Louis Cady, MD
In this presentation, Dr. Cady will review:
- What did Sparky learn about not being an emotional support animal?
- "Do it to yourself psychotherapy." Learn the following:
- What are the wrong - and the RIGHT ways of any sort of "behavioral therapy"?
- How to use a journal to think RATIONALLY and “get out of your head.”
- How to get out of your HEAD and into your LIFE.
- We'll cover all 10 of David Burns’ cognitive distortions, customized and gift-wrapped for dealing with COVID 19.
- We will cover actionable examples of how to reprogram yourself.
We will review What are the 3 P's of Positive Psychology and Learned Optimism?
The Cady 5 "5P’s” and “How to shrink yourself."
Can we find the GOOD in COVID?
This presentation is meant to be provocative and to challenge you mentally, intellectually, and emotionally. Some of the great thinkers and exemplars of human performance and possibility are featured.
BOOSTING YOUR IMMUNITY During the COVID 19 PandemicLouis Cady, MD
In this presentation, presented as a live webinar on Monday, April 27th, Dr. Louis Cady of the Cady Wellness Institute reviewed practical, common-sense things that can be done to boost your immunity, with documentation from the peer-reviewed medical literature. Dr. Cady also reviews supplements and nutrients that are established in the peer-reviewed medical literature as having antiviral capabilities. These include Vitamins C,D, and E, Zinc, carotenoids and antioxidants, probiotics, the reishi mushroom, elderberry, cannabidiol (CBD - not marijuana or weed!).
Points presented are scrupulously documented from the medical literature. This presentation does not guarantee or represent that using ANY of these nutrients will "keep you from getting infected or dying" from COVID 19. They are presented for your thoughtful consideration.
Tratamento holistica de ezschizophrenia - São Paulo, Brazil April 20, 2019Louis Cady, MD
Esta é a versão em inglês da apresentação do Dr. Cady feita na UNIP (Campus Paraiso - São Paulo, SP Brasil) para o Congresso de Saúde Mental de 2019 (Conferência sobre Saúde Mental). Foi entregue em 20 de abril de 2019.
Nesta apresentação, o Dr. Cady analisa brevemente a história da esquizofrenia, a falha do bloqueio do receptor de dopamina D2 como uma cura universal na esquizofrenia, e várias intervenções holísticas que podem impactar forte e positivamente os sintomas da esquizofrenia. Incluídos na pesquisa do Dr. Cady estavam o papel dos ácidos graxos essenciais, deficiências nutricionais (particularmente vitaminas do complexo B), o perigo de supercrescimento da cândida, testes farmacogenômicos, polimorfismos da MTHFR e muito mais.
Foi uma honra e um privilégio entregar esta apresentação em
São Paulo.
Para mais informações no Brasil sobre este tema, ou para solicitar uma gravação em vídeo / áudio da conferência, entre em contato com Luiz Dias do Laboratório Grandes Planícies no Brasil.
Slides, até o apêndice, são traduzidos por Luiz Dias.
The integrative treatment of schizophrenia brazil 2019Louis Cady, MD
This is the English language version of Dr. Cady's presentation given at UNIP (Campus Paraiso - Sao Paulo, SP Brazil) for the 2019 Congresso de Saude Mental (Conference on Mental Health). It was delivered April 20, 2019.
This presentation also includes extra slides in the appendix that were not presented, and, unfortunately, these slides of the appendix have not been translated in the Portuguse version of this presentation.
In this presentation (Portuguese presentation will also be posted next), Dr. Cady briefly reviews the history of schizophrenia, the failure of the dopamine D2 receptor blockage as a universal cure-all in schizophrenia, and various holistic interventions which can strongly and positively impact symptoms of schizophrenia. Included in Dr. Cady's survey were the role of essential fatty acids, nutrient deficiencies (particularly B vitamins), the danger of overgrowth of candida , pharmacogenomic testing, MTHFR polymorphisms, and more.
It was an honor and a privilege to deliver this presentation in
São Paulo,.
For further information in Brazil on this topic, or to order a video/audio recording of the conference (in Portuguese),contact Luiz Dias of Laboratorio Great Plains in Brazil.
Natural Treatments for ADHD (TADH) in Sao Paulo, Brazil, for Laboratorio Grea...Louis Cady, MD
In this presentation, given at UNIP (Campus Paraiso - Sao Paulo, SP Brazo) for the 2019 Congresso de Saude Mental (Conference on Mental Health), Dr. Cady reviewed the prevalence, inheritability, and social ramifications of ADHD (TADH in Brazil). He specifically reviewed multiple holistic interventions, including limiting "electric screen time,"good quality diet with adequate amounts of essential fatty acids and critically important trace elements, and the use of pharmacogenomic testing as well as functional, integrative medicine testing, all to better characterize logical and reeasonmable points for holistic intervention.
This presentation was simultaneously translated into Portugue for the attendees, but unfortunately the slides were not available in translated form.
For further information in Brazil on this topic, or to order a video/audio recording of the conference (in Portuguese),contact Luiz Dias of Laboratorio Great Plains in Brazil.
Thyroid, Adrenals, and Sex Steroids - A Balancing ActLouis Cady, MD
This was the second presentation gibven on MZarch 29, 2019 at the Manlove Psychiagtric Group and Brain Injury Institute spring conference in Rapid City, SD.
In this presentation, Dr. Cady carefully goes over the necessity of integrating and overview and awareness of hormones and their levels in the elucidation of what truly is going on with the patient.
This was an overview lecture only. Dr. Cady will be presenting a 16 hour CME program in Austin Texas on June 22 and 23 for the National Procedures Institute, and will explore all aspects of all relevant hormones and what can be done to manage and optimize them.
This lecture was presented on March 29, 2019 in Rapid Citry, South Dakota, for the conference co-sponsored by the Manlove Psychiatric Group and the Brain Injury Center.
It reviews the uptick in diagnosis of ADHD, the raiontale for its concern, causative factors, and how it can be worked up holistically and in a balanced, not necessarily medication-oriented way.
Use of high dose fish oil, iron supplementation, and how to overrcome nutritional deficiencies are discussed.
Are you looking for a long-lasting solution to your missing tooth?
Dental implants are the most common type of method for replacing the missing tooth. Unlike dentures or bridges, implants are surgically placed in the jawbone. In layman’s terms, a dental implant is similar to the natural root of the tooth. It offers a stable foundation for the artificial tooth giving it the look, feel, and function similar to the natural tooth.
- Video recording of this lecture in English language: https://youtu.be/Pt1nA32sdHQ
- Video recording of this lecture in Arabic language: https://youtu.be/uFdc9F0rlP0
- Link to download the book free: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/nephrotube-nephrology-books.html
- Link to NephroTube website: www.NephroTube.com
- Link to NephroTube social media accounts: https://nephrotube.blogspot.com/p/join-nephrotube-on-social-media.html
The skin is the largest organ and its health plays a vital role among the other sense organs. The skin concerns like acne breakout, psoriasis, or anything similar along the lines, finding a qualified and experienced dermatologist becomes paramount.
Giloy in Ayurveda - Classical Categorization and SynonymsPlanet Ayurveda
Giloy, also known as Guduchi or Amrita in classical Ayurvedic texts, is a revered herb renowned for its myriad health benefits. It is categorized as a Rasayana, meaning it has rejuvenating properties that enhance vitality and longevity. Giloy is celebrated for its ability to boost the immune system, detoxify the body, and promote overall wellness. Its anti-inflammatory, antipyretic, and antioxidant properties make it a staple in managing conditions like fever, diabetes, and stress. The versatility and efficacy of Giloy in supporting health naturally highlight its importance in Ayurveda. At Planet Ayurveda, we provide a comprehensive range of health services and 100% herbal supplements that harness the power of natural ingredients like Giloy. Our products are globally available and affordable, ensuring that everyone can benefit from the ancient wisdom of Ayurveda. If you or your loved ones are dealing with health issues, contact Planet Ayurveda at 01725214040 to book an online video consultation with our professional doctors. Let us help you achieve optimal health and wellness naturally.
Know the difference between Endodontics and Orthodontics.Gokuldas Hospital
Your smile is beautiful.
Let’s be honest. Maintaining that beautiful smile is not an easy task. It is more than brushing and flossing. Sometimes, you might encounter dental issues that need special dental care. These issues can range anywhere from misalignment of the jaw to pain in the root of teeth.
Summer is a time for fun in the sun, but the heat and humidity can also wreak havoc on your skin. From itchy rashes to unwanted pigmentation, several skin conditions become more prevalent during these warmer months.
Travel vaccination in Manchester offers comprehensive immunization services for individuals planning international trips. Expert healthcare providers administer vaccines tailored to your destination, ensuring you stay protected against various diseases. Conveniently located clinics and flexible appointment options make it easy to get the necessary shots before your journey. Stay healthy and travel with confidence by getting vaccinated in Manchester. Visit us: www.nxhealthcare.co.uk
3. Louis B. Cady, M.D. – historical statement of
support, conflict of interests… [>/=2 years]
• Abbott Laboratories
• Bristol-Myers Squibb (Serzone)
• Celltech (Metadate CD)
• Cephalon (Provigil)
• Elli Lilly (Prozac)
• Forest Pharmaceuticals
(Celexa, Lexapro, Namenda, Viibryd)
• Glaxo-SmithKline (Wellbutrin, Paxil)
• Janssen (Concerta, [Reminyl]/ Razadyne)
• McNeil (Concerta)
• Pfizer-Roerig (Zoloft, Pristiq)
• Sanofi~aventis (Ambien)
• Sepracor (Lunesta)
• Searle Pharmaceutical (Ambien)
• Shire Pharmaceuticals
(Adderall, Daytrana, Vyvanse, Intuniv)
• Shionogi & Co., Ltd. (Kapvay)
• Takeda Pharmaceuticals (Rozerem)
• Wyeth-Ayerst (Effexor, Pristiq) Note: Today’s presentations are CME
and are sponsored by World Link
Medical.
4. “The mind, once
expanded to the
dimensions of larger
ideas, never returns
to its original size.”
- Oliver Wendell Holmes
5. Ethics and financial/logistical
practicalities of these lectures
• Nothing is more important than taking care of the
patient.
• “The needs of the patient come first.” (Dr. Will
Mayo, MD)
• The current “medical model” is at variance with
what is ethical, moral, and factual.
• If the physician is not stable and financially secure,
the system implodes.
– “No margin, no mission.” - Steven R. Covey
• If the system implodes, the patient suffers.
6. Background
• Listen for IDEAS
• MINDSET is important.
• WHY to make the change is more difficult
than HOW to make the change. (Strategy
vs. tactics).
• Listen for personal relevance – if it’s
important to you, it’s important to your
patients.
• Relax for use of COLOR.
• Relax for data – you’re getting access.
9. Tech Rules…. Please turn
your phones ON (just
silenced).
• Shoot photos!
• Tweet! ( @LouisCadyMD )
10. “But my patients don’t know about
this and aren’t asking for it….”
“It’s not the
consumers’
job to know
what they
want.”
- Steve Jobs
11. “Wellness
[integrated]
No Disease = Health
Medicine”
Forestall and
Diagnose and PREVENT Disease –
Treat Disease Optimize
Function
New Drugs Hormone
New Surgical Modulation
Techniques
Diet, Exercise
Nutritional Supplementation
12. Health is a state of
complete physical, mental
and social well-being, and
not merely the absence of
disease or infirmity.
- World Health Organization
13. American Journal of Health Promotion;
November/December, 2002
18.8% 66% 19% of those
“Incompletely healthy” surveyed were
completely
completely
unhealthy, d
healthy with
efined as
high levels of
having low
both physical
levels of health
and mental
with high Two-thirds of the adults health and a
levels of reported some degree low level of
illness. of mental or
illness.
physical illness that
kept them from being
completely healthy.
“Incompletely healthy.”
OPTIMAL
DEAD
HEALTH continuum
14. Outline
• Overview of concepts
• My bias – a practice model
• Current state of allopathic medicine
• Microchip as disruptor and disintermediator
– (“Change or die”)
• Current state of patients and society
• What’s your model? Chloraseptic or PCN?
• How to start changing….
15. The evolution of my practice
• Sidetracked in high school, two degrees in music (’77 and
’79) and learned piano tuning
• 1976 – 1989 – piano tuning (through pre-med and med
school). “fee for service”(Med School finished 1989)
• 1989-1993 – conventional allopathic psychiatry residency
at Mayo Clinic
• 1993 – start practice. 1995 – l-tyrosine and EFA’s
• 2002 – first IFM conference
• 2003 – Cenegenics training
• 2005 – founded Cady Wellness Institute
• 2010 – 2011 – Neil Rouzier, MD & WorldLink
• 2012 – rTMS (Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation)
21. Cady Wellness Institute – July 2005
The Reasons:
• Conventional medical practice had failed me twice.
• A lot of “psychiatric cases” WEREN’T “psychiatric.”
• Nobody was integrated.
• Nobody was looking at ALL of the peer-reviewed
literature.
22.
23. Current socioeconomic state and
allopathic (“conventional”) medicine –
DISRUPTIVE NOTIONS
• CONVENTIONAL Allopathic medicine = symptom
focused, reactive, “taught,” unthinking, uncreative,
PRACTICALLY non-informed by peer-reviewed
medical literature.
– Commoditized. No variability. “Providers.”
• Wellness medicine: individualized. Can’t get it
elsewhere. Not a commodity. Scientific. Informed
by peer-reviewed literature.
– Concept of “information brokering” (example:
THYROID)
24. Healthcare “Reform” Today
•Today: Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (P.L. 111-148) – includes amendments from
the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (H.R. 4872)
Slide courtesy of John Adams, MBA – CEO, Cenegenics
Available at http://voices.washingtonpost.com/capitol-briefing/2009/07/gop_accuses_democrats_of_censo.html
25. What the feds see & their lust for “cost control”
Example: salaries for Family Medicine
Average
Sweden
Finland
Australia
France
Canada
Switzerland
United Kingdom
United States
$0 $50 $100 $150 $200
US $1000
Adapted from http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/15/how-much-do-doctors-in-other-countries-make/. Accessed April 3, 2010.
Slide courtesy of John Adams, MBA – CEO, Cenegenics
26. Medicare–Workers per Beneficiary
Millions
Year
SOURCE: Kaiser Family Foundation based on the 2009 Annual Report of the Boards of Trustees of the Federal Hospital
Insurance and Federal Supplementary Medical Insurance http://facts.kff.org/chart.aspx?ch=383. Accessed April 3, 2010.
Trust Funds.
Slide courtesy of John Adams, MBA – CEO, Cenegenics
27. The Future of Medicare
“Medicare is going
bankrupt. The Medicare
Trustees estimate that
the program will run
short of money starting
in 2017.”
•Rep. Bobby Scott,
Senators Jim Webb and Mark Warner
http://www.congress.org/congressorg/bio/userletter/?id=3181&letter_id=47
47883751. Accessed April 3, 2010.
Slide courtesy of John Adams, MBA – CEO, Cenegenics
29. SOURCE: Mary Meeker, Partner – Kleiner, Perkins Caulfield &
Byers – “Internet Trends” Slide deck – D10 conference, released
30. SOURCE: Mary Meeker, Partner – Kleiner, Perkins Caulfield &
Byers – “Internet Trends” Slide deck – D10 conference, released
31. Healthcare Reform–Physicians Perception of
Medicine Over the Next Few Years
http://www.athenahealth.com/index.php?open=26. Accessed April 3, 2010.
Slide courtesy of John Adams, MBA – CEO, Cenegenics
32. Are the Best and Brightest
Staying in Medicine?
“60% of physicians
would not recommend
medicine as a career
to their children.”
http://www.mayorswellnesscampaign.org/wp-
content/uploads/2009/05/merritt-hawkins-survey.pdf.
• – The Physicians’
Accessed April 3, 2010.
Foundation
Slide courtesy of John Adams, MBA – CEO, Cenegenics
33. “Although American doctors feel stressed, overworked, and
uncertain about the future, they’re generally happy with their
career choices and the state of their lives (???), despite
practicing during one of the greatest periods of tumult in the
modern history of US healthcare.”
“The results also suggest strongly that
physicians wish they had more control of their
http://marketing- careers… and time.”
images.ubmmedica.com/Insights/2011/2011_GAP_Survey.pdf
Accessed 01 21 2012
34. Current US Physicians’ Attitudes
• Mean respondent – 51 yoa
– 43% primary care; 57%
specialty
• 31% owners of private
practice
• 96% - at least somewhat
happy to be docs
• 65% - plan to remain in
practice at least 5 years
• Note – no “n” cited.
Great American Physician Survey – July 31, 2011 – UBM Medica – cf:
http://marketing-images.ubmmedica.com/Insights/2011/2011_GAP_Survey.pdf
referenced 01 21 2012
45. CURRENT PRACTICE OF MEDICINE:
What a patient had to say about her “specialists”:
“They just monitor my
degeneration.”
46.
47. Consultations with “complementary
and alternative” practitioners
• US, 2004. 36% of US adult >18 yoa
– National Center for Complementary and Alternative
Medicine survey, 2004.
• http://altmedicine.about.com/od/alternativemedicinebasics/a/CA
Muse.htm
• Canada – 1.2 million adults, or 13% of the
population of Ontario. N = 32,598 surveyed.
– Williams, Kitchen, e al. Alternative health care consultations in Ontario,
Canada. BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2011, 11:47
48.
49. What causes oxidative stress?
• Environmental Toxins
– Heavy metals – including Mercury (fillings!)
– Pesticides/herbicides
– Preservatives
– PCB’s, Dioxins, Phthalates
• Toxins produced in the body
– Yeast and bacteria
– Products of cellular metabolism
• Emotional Stress
– Anxiety/Tension
– Fear
– Anger
50.
51.
52.
53. Today’s Medical Practice
Challenges
• Obesity, diabetes, auto-immune, inflammatory and
chronic diseases increasing
• Inflammatory triggers increasing
• Novel viruses and infective organisms
• Unresponsive/resistant infections
• Weakened immune systems
• GI decline/inflammation
• Poor quality /foods/nutritionals
55. Socioeconomic/disruptive forces
with two models
Allopathic Wellness/ fxnl med
• Disease and CHANGE
• Integrated and whole
sickness focused AGENTS
person model
• Short appointments • Microchip/inter • Bill for time
• Commoditized net • Non-commoditized
• Compartmentalized • Increase in • Collaborative
• Doctor as priest chronic disease • Informed patients
• Uninformed patient • “boomers” willing to “pay for
• Sicker patients • Job/socio- expertise”
• Either practice economic • Practice per peer-
ignorantly or with reviewed literature;
pressures No crises (pl) of
guilty conscience
• Worry/poor conscience
satisfaction • INTENSE satisfaction
56. Divergence of focus of two models
Wellness/ fxnl med;
“complementary/alternative”
Allopathic
• Relief of symptoms • CAUSE of symptoms, prevention
• Organ specific • SYSTEMS focused
• Aggressive. “magic bullet” • Gentle, methodical.
• Rules, practice guidelines • Creative. What works?
• Patient as uninformed • Patient as integral part of team.
protoplasm. Questions/participation
encouraged.
• Tied to medico-pharmaco- • Focused on health and optimization
industrial complex with natural, bio-identical methods
• Use of synthetic, patented, • Use of PROVEN botanicals and
not-from-nature substances natural hormones (as well as
conventional RX).
Adatped from “Alternative Medicine: Why so popular? By Hans R. Larsen, MSc
ChE. International Health News, Sept 1999, issue 93
http://www.yourhealthbase.com/alternative_medicine.htm accessed 1 21 2012
57. “Slumber not in
the tents of your
fathers.
The world is
advancing.
Advance with it.”
- Giuseppe Mazzine
58. Some interesting thoughts:
• “The war situation has developed not
necessarily to Japan’s advantage..” - Japanese
Emperor Hirohito after the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
announcing Japan’s surrender to the Allies
• “A naïve analysis of stability is derived from the
absence of past variations” (or “The Turkey
Problem”)
– Nicholas Taleb, author of The Black Swan
60. % U.S. Women with inadequate quantities of nutrients
Arab L, Carriquiry A, Steck-Scott S, Gaudet MM. Ethnic differences in the
nutrient intake adequacy of premenopausal US women: results from the
Third National Health Examination Survey. J Am Diet Assoc 2003;
103:1008-14.
61. = 2 apples (fruits) & 3 - 4
vegetables – per CDC
62. 4 – 13 servings of fruits and
vegetables per day, depending
on energy needs
63.
64. % Mineral depletion from the soil
during the past 100 years, by continent
North America 85%
South America 76%
Asia 76%
Africa 74%
Europe 72%
Australia 55%
Source: UN Earth Summit Report 1992
68. 16,103 people – 1994 – 1996.
ZERO got 100% of all required vitamins and
nutrients
- Highest – B12 =- 82.8% got enough
- 66.8% - had adequate folate
- Lowest – Zinc – only 26.6% got enough.
69.
70. Factors trapping physicians
• “Doing it, doing it, doing it.” (Michael Gerber, The
E-Myth)
• Already time-pressured –
– Minimal time to think or plan
– PROBABLY ADRENALLY DEPLETED ALREADY,
perhaps with suboptimal thyroid and sex hormones
– Tip – GET YOUR LABS CHECKED!!
• Must “make overhead.”
• Can’t “take chances.”
• Trapped by “provider panel” arrangements,
including cut rate fees. (Alcoa story)
71. The Baby Boomers & Their Expectations
The first time the entire
Baby Boom generation
is impacting a single market
ALL at the same time!
72.
73. Let’s look at the logic.
How would you take care of a classic?
“Chronic diseases
affect at least 125
million Americans
& cost more than
$500 billion last
year.”
Centers for DiseaseControl – Dec 2003
74. “Age management” “Conventional
practice”fuel additives
There are No fuel additives should
we can use to keep our be used. They are
cars burning cleaner and unnatural. Gas is all that
preserve engines. is required.
We should use optimal The quality of the gas is
quality of gas. Cheap gas irrelevant. Anything that
causes “pinging” which is the motor will burn is
hard on the engine. adequate.
We should take our car in Preventive maintenance? This
for preventive is silly! Wait until something
breaks, then have the car
maintenance before
towed in so the mechanic can
anything breaks.
really tell what is wrong.
75. Modern Medicine’s Paradigm:
Two Standard Deviations – “if you are not
sick, then you must be well.”
“NORMAL”
OPTIMAL?
OPTIMAL
76. Definition of “normal labs”:
“When your lab
values are as
crappy as
everyone else’s.”
- Neil Rouzier, MD
(World Link Medical Seminar II –
Spring 2011)
77. MAKING THE TRANSITION
• Must DECIDE
– Must have INFO (e.g., this weekend)
– Must INTROSPECT
• Must have something LEGITIMATE to offer
• Start SMALL – both with interventions and
logistics/financial
– E.g, ¼ grain Armour, or Cytomel 5 MICROgrams, or Cortef 5 mg
twice daily, or FDA approved testosterone for guys
– E.g. – ½ day per week – “hormones”
• Get EDUCATION
– Teachers – Rouzier, World Link Medical
– AAMG, A4M
• Find a mentor (s) – start here
78.
79. Marketing & Practice Development
• Maintain excellence in allopathy or (traditional
osteopathy)
– (knowledge base, prescribing, surgery)
– (“Be able to debate the great issues.” – Jim Rohn)
• Know your [new] stuff!
• Do not badmouth the competition. (Chris Lord
example).
• Give CME talks and paper over their objecting
mouths with references. (examples follow next)
• Spiritual and ethical clarity.
80. Quick examples of powering
through objections and
overwhelming with literature
Note – don’t get bogged down.
Get the idea of HOW TO
PRESENT the data.
81. A Scientific (& FUN!!!) Review of Vitamin
Supplementation & Essential Nutrients
Louis B. Cady, MD – CEO & Founder – Cady Wellness Institute
Adjunct Professor – University of Southern Indiana
Adjunct Clinical Lecturer – Indiana University School of Medicine
Department of Psychiatry
Child, Adolescent, Adult & Forensic Psychiatry – Evansville, Indiana
Presented 2 27 2010 – Oliver Headache and Pain
Clinic CME seminar – Evansville, IN
83. • Mitochondrial diseases are due to impairment of
chemical reactions.
• A reasonable theory is oxidative stress.
• Few studies have actually been done on this.
• Glutathione deficiency is known in mitochondrial
disease.
• Biosynthesis of glutathione depends on cysteine
availability.
• “Our findings reinforce the notions that in
mitochondrial disease, oxidative stress is
important and can be reduced by
administration of a cysteine donor.”
84. Zoned, Stoned and Blown: The Emotional
Tsunami of Psychiatric Disorders Coupled
with Pain Disorders & Chemical Dependency
Louis B. Cady, MD – CEO & Founder – Cady Wellness Institute
Adjunct Professor – University of Southern Indiana
Adjunct Clinical Lecturer – Indiana University School of Medicine
Department of Psychiatry
Child, Adolescent, Adult & Forensic Psychiatry – Evansville, Indiana
Also Presented 2 27 2010 – Oliver Headache and
Pain Clinic CME seminar – Evansville, IN
85.
86. Pharmacotherapy Significantly
Reduces Substance Abuse in Adults
with ADHD
40
32
3- P<0.001
% of study population
30
fold!
20
12 10
10
0
Unmedicated Medicated Control
ADHD ADHD (N=137)
(N=19) (N=56)
Biederman J, et al. Pediatrics. 1999;104:e20-e25.
88. “You can have everything in life
you want, if you just help
enough other people get what
they want.”
- Zig Ziglar
What do patients want?
• To be treated with
respect
• To not have to wait!
• To FEEL BETTER
• To HAVE HOPE.
• To not be doped up.
• To NOT have their
money wasted.
89. $5,000 worth of wisdom on one page
– from Jay Abraham
• Risk reversal
• “USP” – unique selling Focus: “Be able
proposition
to treat your
• Defining the buying
clients (or
criteria
patients) as dear
• Three ways for more
and valued
profit:
– Higher price
friends.”
- Jay Abraham
– More frequency
– Additional items
(supplements, etc.)
90. Evansville Courier & Press: May 29,
2006
References: www.pharmanexmd.com ;
www.slideshare.net/lcadymd;
Dr. Oz show on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rX4oxxGWi_8
91. My position on supplements
• “The needs of the patient come first.” – W
Mayo
• Unique and patented. (Otherwise GNC is
fine).
• Guaranteed (risk reversal).
• Measurable changes
• Be a doctor and not a stock boy or inventory
clerk.
93. Building CWI - what has worked
• Being nice to patients
– (on time, polite, compliment on questions, don’t be a
jerk or abrasive, put yourself into their shoes, etc.)
• Be good and get results. BE THE BEST!
• Be TRANSPARENT – give’em their labs.
– Write on them. Draw pictures. Take time (and BILL
FOR IT).
– Cenegenics model
• Be appropriately self-protective of your time and
talents. “If they show up, bill’em.” – Dan
Kennedy.
95. MARKETING – what has and hasn’t
worked
Worked Hasn’t worked
• Word of mouth • Paid advertising (TV,
• Public seminars print, magazines)
• Web site
• Going to MD’s/DO’s • What I HAVEN’T tried:
– Marketing consultants
offices PERSONALLY
– Radio ads
• Free stuff – PR
opportunities New initiatives:
• Going to places and •Proprietary, paid websites
NETWORKING •“SEO” – search engine
optimization (Willie Sutton
principle)
96.
97. Additional resources – handouts
down front at end of lecture
• “The 10 Commandments of Marketing a
Medical Practice” – Cady (handout, free)
• Additional resources handout sheet
• Practice Transformation Seminar – to be
scheduled 2013 - at Cady Wellness
Institute
98. Contact information:
Louis B. Cady, M.D.
www.cadywellness.com
www.indianaTMS-
cadywellness.com
Office: 812-429-0772
E-mail: lcady@cadywellness.com
4727 Rosebud Lane – Suite F
Interstate Office Park
Newburgh, IN 47630 (USA)
Download from
iTunes or Android App store
now!
101. Success and Failure (Jim Rohn)
What about you? You’ve only got one body.
• “Errors in judgement” - High glycemic eating,
no exercise, poor nutrition, lousy/no
supplementation, high stress practice.
- “Good disciplines” – appropriate diet,
supplementation, exercise, hormones. Stress
management. Decent practice and lifestyle.
102. Perhaps the ability not only to acquire
the confidence of the patient, but to
deserve it, to see what the patient
desires and needs, comes through the
sixth sense we call intuition, which in
turn comes from wide experience and
deep sympathy for and devotion to
the patient, giving to the possessor
remarkable ability to achieve results.
...William J. Mayo, 1935