These could be resources for you to get your health properly checked out   *

relating to chemical poisoning:

Dr. Walter Crinnion

(425) 821-8118   Message:  206-444-4275  (11-01)

Healing Naturally,   

11811 N.E. 128th Street,   Kirkland, WA 98034

 

Dr. Walter Crinnion, former naturopathic doctor out of Kirkland, WA:   He specializes now in training medical doctors how to check for chemical poisoning.  Have your doctor call him.  He will tell the doctor what kind of blood sample is needed.  Where to send the sample for an accurate and reliable analysis and when the results come back what to do to "flush" the residual chemicals out of your system and stop the damage to your health.

Dr. Walter Crinnion has been a guest speaker on KCHU's coffee hour.  You could probably get copies of some of them for $10 contribution per tape. However, they only keep copies for about 30 days.  

(PO Box 467, Valdez, AK 99686 or call 907-835-4665)

or request that I make you a copy

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 Try to locate a doctor who is 

 willing to consult with experts in chemical exposures.

  Or ask if they could refer you to a doctor licensed in occupational health.

 

I am hoping Dr. Ben Carson, the brain surgeon, will become part of the 'care team' for the chemically overexposed.  

He would work with proper nutrition, less chemicals, less surgery whenever possible per the interview he gave November, 2002.  *

I believe this is the best approach

8-15-03 - other resources of this type... keep checking back

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Dr. William Rea  *
Environmental Health Center
8345 Walnut Hill Lane, Suite 220
Dallas, Texas 75231
Tel: (214) 368-4132

Web site is:  www.ehcd.com

Considered an expert by some; has a detoxification center.   

(Need 2 weeks time,  approx $2000 for 2 wks/max.  $10,000 for 6 - 8 weeks)

 

Reports one of his admirers who has met him and been to the clinic, "The insurance companies don't approve of Dr. Rea because they are tied in with the chemical industry. Several insurance companies have refused to cover his clients. "Most insurance companies do pay, however." states Dr. Rea.  

He has healed literally thousands of people. His clinic is like a small UN with people volunteering from around the world. He is a kind, gentle, caring person with an incredible focus on helping chemically injured people.  His court testimonies have helped win more cases than have been lost. He is an incredible human being.

Dr. Rea also founded the nonprofit American Environmental Health Foundation which has as one of its goals to provide information on environmental medicine.  WWW.AEHF.COM has free downloadable articles on various aspects of environmental illness -  http://www.aehf.com/chemsens.html.

 

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You should also get the book CHEMICAL EXPOSURES:  Low levels and High Stakes, second edition 

by Nicholas Ashford and Claudia Miller.
Published by John Wiley & Sons, 1998. 

It will put a lot of this into perspective for you. 

Rea's historic role and the role of the medical community to bash/ignore chemical exposure problems, 

the government's role in covering this up (Gulf War, etc.) It's excellent!

 

Maybe it is not the US Government, 

but EPA & Exxon that we should be looking at?

 

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Others will say that a fat biopsy is the best source of determining chemicals in one's system 

as they are stored in the fatty tissues of the body.  

However, if a blood sample will work, should be less involved for you.  Input?

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Laboratories:

These are laboratories which can help the chemically sensitive and his/her doctor.

This lab is renown for its accuracy.

 

More:  valdezlink.com/inquiry.htm#accu-chem

 

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Ask your doctor: 

" What is the test to determine if a low red blood cell anemia is  

immune or non-immune hemolytic anemia  * caused from solvents

for sure it's acquired hemolytic anemia which according to Walter Reid Hospital - 

is most uncommon

 

  2-butoxyethanol.   C6H14O2/CH3(CH2)2CH2OCH2CH2OH ?"

A very prominent, knowledgeable physician for one bioremediation worker was unable to determine the source of his low red blood cell anemia in 2002; however, at the time, he wasn't given the extra information about his patient's overexposure to inipol EAP 22, nor the hazard sheet for 2-butoxyethanol...its poisonous ingredient. *

 

Keep in mind, children of someone who has been chemically over-exposed are now more at risk for chemical overload, than had their parent not been chemically poisoned.  

Learn a family lifestyle of 

'avoiding chemicals.' *

 

MSDS Note:  Inipol EAP 22 contains 2-Butoxyethanol which may cause red blood cell damage based on animal data: hemolysis

 

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One person interested in the EVOS worker cause comments: 
"You recommend several naturopathic doctors.  I am always leery of naturopathic medicine because there is so much fakery going on.  We see that in this area in cancer cure treatments across the border in Mexico.  Naturopathic medicine seems like the little girl with a curl, when she is good, she is very good, and when she is bad, she is very bad.
      I couldn't help but think of "chelation" treatments reading your web page.  If you don't know, chelation is done to remove foreign chemicals from the blood.  It was first used after WW I to treat soldiers exposed to mustard gas.  It was very popular in Anchorage around 1990" - such as for mercury in the system from teeth fillings.

How helpful are the detox vitamin packets that can be purchased from health food stores?

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Says a doctor specializing in blood:

Check the blood for the type of hemolytic anemia with a blood specialist- in hematology

2002

8-16-03 add ons                                           

Suspect acquired compensated autoimmune hemolytic anemia

With CFS Fatigue - Blood work looks 'normal'

Are there helps with glyconutrients?  *

12-16-05