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Nutritional Counseling
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Health is feeling vital mentally, emotionally,
and physically. It is not merely the absence of disease.
Naturopathic Medicine
Naturopathic practice treats the whole person, recognizing
that all aspects of the patient’s health—physical,
emotional, and mental—are inseparably related. The naturopathic
doctor, a primary care provider, uses therapeutic methods
which strengthen and act in harmony with the body’s
self-healing ability. Naturopathic medicine draws on the proven
medical experiences of various cultures and integrates these
with modern scientific research.
Naturopathic philosophy maintains that an underlying cause
exists behind all disease and manifestation of symptoms. Therefore,
the naturopathic physician seeks to:
- address the underlying cause of illness;
- restore the body back to health using effective, safe, and natural measures; and
- educate the patient on how to take an active role in his or
her own health and well being.
Most naturopathic physicians will spend significantly more
time with each patient than an allopathic doctor. The average
doctor visit in the U.S., for example, is about seven minutes.
Allopathic doctors will only stay in the room long enough
to get information on the most current problem. Naturopathic
physicians spend more time with patients because they need
to understand the whole person.
art—science—philosophy—practice
Key principles of naturopathic medicine
Six principles of healing form the foundation for naturopathic
medical practice:
- Healing power of nature
The body has an inherent ability to establish, maintain, and
restore health. The physician’s role is to facilitate
and help this process.
- Identify and treat the cause
For a person to recover from illness, the naturopathic physician
must determine and treat the underlying causes of disease,
rather than simply managing the symptoms.
- First do no harm
Therapeutic actions should be safe and effective, to increase
overall health and decrease harmful side effects of treatments.
- Treat the whole person
To treat and prevent disease, the physician does not look
at one isolated piece, but looks at the whole individual.
- Doctor as teacher
A cooperative doctor-patient relationship enables the physician
to help people understand health and illness and make healthful
decisions.
- Prevention
The emphasis of naturopathy is on building health rather than
fighting disease; the ultimate goal is building a strong foundation
to prevent disease.
Naturopathic Physician Training
After pre-medical training, Naturopathic physicians must
complete medical school at an accredited institution, where
they graduate with a doctoral degree, Doctor of Naturopathic
Medicine (ND). Naturopathic physicians are trained in basic
medical and clinical sciences, physical and clinical diagnosis,
and Naturopathic philosophy and therapeutics. Naturopathic
candidates must pass a board licensing examination, and then
they are licensed to practice primary care medicine in the
State of Oregon. See Dr. Brody's education and training.
Naturopathic Medical Training includes all of the same basic
course work as traditional medical schools, with a few exceptions.
Naturopathic students study only minor surgery, and their
pharmacology focus is on naturally-derived medicines, which
they can prescribe in most states.
| Basic and Clinical Sciences: |
| Anatomy |
Cell biology |
| Biochemistry |
Physiology |
| Histology |
Pathology |
| Pharmacology |
Lab diagnosis |
| Clinical Physical Diagnosis |
Genetics |
| Neurosciences |
Pharmacognosy |
| Bio-statistics |
Epidemiology |
| Public Health |
Ethics, History, Philosophy |
| Naturopathic Therapeutics: |
| Botanical Medicine |
Manipulative Therapy |
| Homeopathy |
Oriental Medicine |
| Hydrotherapy |
Clinical Nutrition |
| Naturopathic Case Analysis |
Naturopathic Philosophy |
| Physiotherapy |
Exercise Therapeutics |
| Health Education |
Counseling |
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