Brunswick County Chiropractic with Dr. Pamela Owens from At The Beach Chiropractic.

| Home | About Us | Patient Education | Directions | Practice Services | Practice Brochure | Near by Locations |

Pentagon Researches Acupuncture, Etc. for Service Members

Related Stories

The Pentagon is sinking about $5 million this year into studying the effect of acupuncture on relieving brain-damage headaches among soldiers caught in battlefield explosions, of animal therapy on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and of meditation and yoga on increasing emotional buoyancy. "This new theme is a big departure for our cautious culture," said Dr. S. Ward Casscells, the Defense Department's assistant secretary for health affairs. The department, he said, is "struggling with" PTSD, "as we are with suicide, and we are increasingly willing to take a hard look at even soft therapies." The Army had a record suicide rate of 115 in 2007, and 2008 is expected to exceed that.



The Pentagon's Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury sought out research proposals this year to investigate an array of alternative therapies such as art and dance, the ancient Chinese healing practice of qigong, and Reiki, in which the therapist uses his hands to impart beneficial energy to the patient.


Army Brig. Gen. Loree Sutton, head of this office, said, "It just makes sense to bring all potential therapies to bear," because many of them have been in constant use for centuries. Col. Charles Engel, an Army psychiatric epidemiologist, said preliminary research this summer on whether acupuncture relieved the PTSD symptoms of combat veterans and eased their pain and depression showed that "improvements were relatively rapid and clinically significant."


According to a 2007 survey on sailors and Marines, about one-third use alternative therapies, especially herbal remedies. Another study, this one by the Army, revealed that about a quarter of soldiers with combat-related PTSD used herbs, chiropractors, acupuncture or megavitamins to alleviate their symptoms.


Health Care Workers & Flu Risk

As the effects of the flu vaccine shortage sweep the nation, the Centers for Disease Control is warning that health care workers need to make every effort to get vaccinated. Healthcare workers are a liability in terms of the spread of the flu virus. Yet, many don’t get the flu vaccine. And this year, when the flu vaccine is in short supply, it's important to keep the virus from spreading as much as possible, which is why these healthcare workers need to get their shots.

(Read more)

Allure and Doubt Regarding Vitamin D

It's long been known that vitamin D is essential for calcium absorption and thus good for bone and teeth health. But research now also suggests a role for vitamin D in fending off such chronic diseases as diabetes, immune disorders and cancer. But federal scientists are cautious about suddenly touting the vitamin as a cure-all that should be taken in mega-doses by people of all ages and ethnicities. (Read more)

Elimination of Long Dying Process Could Alter Society

A group of still-hypothetical drugs that may serve to rejuvenate the body's cellular energy system and thus eliminate the diseases of aging could have the effect of removing a huge burden from the U.S. health care system and state and federal budgets. It could also promote closer, more intimately involved three-generational families that are free of the woes, tensions and anxieties revolving around chronic diseases of the aged.

(Read more)