WESAK 2008 - New Age Festival of Spiritual Unity and Blessings
Lectures, Teaching & Meditation On 17th,18th May 2008,9:30 am to 5:30 pm
venue: The auditoriam of the Indian Society of International Law, opposite the supreme Court 9, Bhagwan Dass Road, New Delhi.
Moon Light Meditation
19th May 2008, 6:30pm to 9:30pm Venue:97-A Eastern Avenue, Sainik Farm,New Delhi. For Reg:Poonam Sharma: 919313034752,Snigdha Nanda: 919818291375. More Detail>>
When we pursue happiness, it eludes you. However, when you recognise that happiness is the natural state of the soul, all you need is to eliminate all that comes between your happiness and you.
By
Suma Varughese
Dr Rathna Alwa brings to India the controversial ozone therapy, which
has even been used in treating AIDS and cancer, as well as other systems
from the cutting edge of medical science and stirs a hornets' nest It's one of the crowning ironies of the 20th century that in our vaulting
aspiration for a higher quality of life, we have systematically destroyed the
basics of survival. There's a global shortage of water, and what little there
is, is polluted. Our ravaged and despoiled earth is a straw away from annihilation.
As for air, well, hear Bangalore-based Dr. Rathna Alwa, MD, MRCP (Edin) etc, on
the subject: "When we started out as oxygen-breathing organisms, the atmosphere
contained 30 per cent oxygen. Today, the oxygen content is only 14 to 15 per cent.
And a recent newspaper report put the oxygen level in Indian metros at 11 per
cent. We are being continuously poisoned!"
So
there we are. No water, no earth, no air. Mobile in one hand, laptop in the other,
wired to the webis mankind gaily prancing into the sunset of life?
Possibly. But when it comes to air, Dr. Alwa has a solution. Ozone therapy. "Ozone
is the treatment of the 21st century," she says presciently. The concept is virtually
unknown in India. Even doctors smirk at its mention. "There's a hole in the treatment,"
quipped one, referring to the protective ozone layer in the earth's atmosphere
which is developing a hole, thanks to global pollution, and is letting in ultraviolet
rays harmful to humans. Certainly ozone therapy has the outlandish air of a California
fad. But extreme situations call for extreme solutions. We may be better off ascertaining
its efficacy rather than questioning its conventionality.
Responses are
mixed. Ozone therapy has a respectable lineage dating back to a century. In 1885,
the Florida Medical Association published Ozone, by one Dr Charles J. Kenworthy,
MD, detailing the use of ozone for therapeutic purposes. After nearly a century
of usage, ozone therapy is a recognized modality in 16 countries. Over 3,000 municipalities
the world over use ozone to clean their water and sewage. The Net is overflowing
with sites singing praises for this miracle cure. Cuba is a leading user of the
therapy, followed by Germany. Ozone therapy is practiced in Russia as well.
All of Dr Alwa's assistants are required to have the treatment they administer.
Dr Alwa herself has an ozone bath every alternate day and pronounces herself to
be in perfect health. "I can still do shoulder stands," she says.
On
the other hand, conventional medicine has set its face firmly against it. In the
USA, the Federal Drug Administration (FDA) and the American Medical Association
(AMA) are opposed to the therapy, so much so that practitioners such as Dr Alwa
have been virtually driven out.
"Ozone generators, which produce a toxic
form of oxygen gas, have been touted as being able to cure AIDS. This is still
unproven, and FDA considers ozone to be an unapproved drug and these generators
to be unapproved medical devices," says a statement from the FDA.
Adds
Dr Tarun Sahni, senior consultant in internal medicine at Indraprastha Apollo
Hospital, Delhi, India, which canceled a plan to introduce an ozone therapy chamber
because of its unrecognized status: "Ozone is an element which neither exists
in nature in that form, nor is it a component of the body. Thus most scientists
believe that it has no business being in the body. It may help in treating diseases
caused by proliferation of anaerobic bacteria and heal wounds. Beyond this, I
don't believe that ozone has any beneficial effect, and I would not prescribe
it for any patient."
Dr Rathna Alwa, however, affirms that: "Ozone can
help in any conditionfrom abscess to cancer." Indeed, there are documented
instances of ozone being used to combat diseases like AIDS, cancer, hepatitis,
sickle cell anemia, multiple sclerosis and other conditions caused by malfunctional
cells.
In 1911, Dr Noble Eberhart, MD, head of the department of physiologic
therapeutics in Loyola University, Chicago, USA, used ozone to treat tuberculosis,
anemia, chlorosis, tinnitus, whooping cough, asthma, bronchitis, hay fever, pneumonia,
diabetes, gout and syphilis. During World War I ozone was used to treat wounds,
trench foot, gangrene and the effects of poison gas. Dr Albert Wolff of Berlin,
Germany, also used ozone for colon cancer, cervical cancer and decubitis ulcers
in 1915.
As if to corroborate its validity, Dr Otto Warburg of the Kaiser
Institute in Berlin, Germany, announced that the cause of cancer is lack of oxygen
at the cellular level. For his research on the subject, he won two Nobel prizes
in 1931 and in 1944.
Indeed,
agrees Dr Jayant Doshi, a liver specialist based in Mumbai, India- disease itself
can be said to be caused by the lack of oxygen in the bloodstream. It seems only
logical, then, that an infusion of oxygen should restore the balance of health.
So what is ozone and how does it work?
Ozone is an activated, unstable,
trivalent (three atoms) form of oxygen. Oxygen is O2; ozone is O3.
Over a period of 20-30 minutes, ozone breaks down into two atoms of regular oxygen
by giving up one atom of singlet oxygen (O). This singlet oxygen is a powerful
oxidizing agent. When ozone enters the bloodstream and separates into O2
and O, the healthy cells, armed with antioxidants, absorb the O2 and
repel the O, which zeroes in on the diseased cells and neutralizes them. At one
shot then, ozone nourishes healthy cells and destroys malfunctioning ones. Ozone
therapy, thus, provides all the benefits of oxygen therapywhich is believed
to have anti-aging properties, improves body functioning and promotes longevity
by preventing cell death.
Ozone is also gradually but silently finding
non-medical applications in India. An ozonized water bottle brand ICE was launched
in 1994 by Renee Brar, a Delhi-based, Indian businesswoman, with Canadian collaboration.
Water is passed through an ozonator to ozonize it. ICE sells 500 cases (12 bottles
each) a day, mostly in Delhi and other neighboring Indian states. Its retail price
is Rs 14. Brar, who drinks only ICE, believes that it purifies blood and keeps
the blood pressure down. Some enterprising beauty parlors have also started using
ozone in facials and other beauty and rejuvenation treatments.
Dr Alwa is
possibly the only doctor in India offering ozone treatment. A gentle,
agile 70-year-old, Dr Alwa was a practicing allopath in the USA with a
virtual alphabet soup of degrees behind herMD, NMD, MRCP, DTMH,
FRSH, FICAN, FACIP, DipChel,when she became interested in alternative
therapies. Earlier she had specialized in obstetrics, gynecology and plastic
surgery. "I had a severe irregular heartbeat. Being a doctor, I decided
against going to a cardiologist, because I knew I would become a cardiac
cripple. At a seminar on nutritional
therapy, I saw a doctor attempting acupuncture of the ear. I asked
him if he could treat irregular heartbeat. That night, for the first time
in a long while, I slept without fear." Since then Dr Alwa has added many
more strings to her. One of these is ozone treatment.
Dr
Alwa's house-cum-clinic, Bio-Oxydative Research Group, is a spacious two-storeyed
structure at Kalyan Nagar, Bangalore, India, where she moved in from the USA some
time ago. Her treatments have already attracted attention, thanks to a couple
of articles in a local magazine.
In a small room sits a short-haired
dynamic-looking woman, in what appears to be a plastic canopy that obscures all
of her person save her face.
This is the Pegasus Aerobic Bath, invented
by Dr Alwa's son and his partner, for which she holds the world rights.
Leelavati (46), a businesswoman, is in the midst of her seventh ozone bath, and
shows the zeal of a convert. Having suffered for 35 years from a very severe case
of psoriasis that covered her with lesions and hard white scales, she is today,
barring a few faint scars, as smooth-skinned as a newborn.
"I would like
all psoriasis patients to know about this treatment," she says earnestly. "I had
earlier tried every available therapy."
Her sister Soudamini has found
relief from her eosinophilia after two ozone baths. "I no longer wake up breathless,"
she affirms.
All of Dr Alwa's assistants are required to have the treatment
they administer. Dr Alwa herself has an ozone bath every alternate day and pronounces
herself to be in perfect health. "I can still do shoulder stands," she says.
HOW
IT'S GIVEN
Methods
for administering ozone vary according to the disease and its severity.
Major Autohaemotherapy Mixed with blood and introduced into the body
intravenously.
Minor Autohaemotherapy Mixed with the patient's
blood and injected intramuscularly.
Ozonated Water Mixed
with water (ozone is 10 times more water soluble than oxygen) it is either used
topically, as in a dentist's office, or drunk.
Hyperbaric Therapy The patient is placed in a chamber full of ozone.
Rectal Insufflation Ozone is administered through the rectum.
Ozone Gel
Ozone in olive oil used to cure burns and wounds.
Ozone Bath Taken for a specific period.
Says Dr A.B. Rao, a retired Air Force medical officer who is now assisting her
at the center: "She came to the Institute of Aerospace Medicine for a lecture
. When I retired, I helped her out because the treatment interests me."
He himself has had some six baths and extols the treatment which creates well-being.
A nagging groin strain also disappeared like magic after three baths. "A miracle,"
he exclaims. "Since it is a new field, it will take time to become popular, but
it has a great future."
Most of Dr Alwa's patients voice a similar refrain.
Young Srinivas Nakul's congenital bronchial nasal congestion has been considerably
eased by the use of ozone baths and other therapies used by Dr Alwa such as detoxifying
an individual of his allergies. "About six weeks into the treatment, for the first
time my son stopped coughing," says his visibly relieved mother.
Twenty-six
year-old Samantha Phillip, an air hostess with Lufthansa, was treated for inflammation
of the kidneys with strong allopathic drugs including steroids. As a result, her
skin started peeling and became covered with suppurating sores. Now, under Dr
Alwa's treatment, she says: "The boils have vanished. My skin has not only stopped
peeling but the texture is also better than it ever was." Her treatment included
autohaemotherapy.
Back in the USA, Dr Alwa successfully treated a wide
range of maladies, including the mother of all ailments: AIDS. Here is a case
study from her logs there:
"W.W., a 40-year-old, was brought in a moribund
state, in the full grip of AIDS. His skin was deep yellow, indicating liver failure,
the arms and legs were covered with Kaposi's Sarcoma, his breathing was shallow
and he was all skin and bones. Without much ado, I started ozone. Direct infusions
as well as autohemotherapy. After the first day, the skin started to grow pink
again. On the third day he was able to walk. By the end of his treatment, his
Kaposi's had disappeared, his lungs had cleared. Today, he is living a normal
life."
Dr Alwa treats AIDS patients in Bangalore too, though she is reluctant
to take critically ill patients as she feels the need to concentrate more on healthy
patients and help them stay that way. "Until you reach the point of no return,
there is every possibility of attaining and maintaining perfect health," she says.
AIDS and cancer patients, she maintains, have gone beyond the point of no return
and must be careful all their lives, even if they have been cured. She adds: "I
don't claim to cure anything. The body is born with a self- healing capacity."
Dr
Alwa is currently experimenting with ozone gel, made by passing ozone through
olive oil. "I had severe gum pain which disappeared after massaging it with ozone
gel," she reveals. Then she straightens up and turns serious: "Ozone has no side-effects
and no toxic effects. I can guarantee this."
Why then was she hounded
out of the USA and why is ozone treatment so controversial?
For those
outside the circle of conventional medicine, the answer is obvious. "The drug
companies are dead against it," says Dr Alwa, "because it cannot be bottled or
made into a pill. Ozone therapy is effective. It is easy. It is quick. But most
importantly it is cheap. What are they going to do with all that AZT if people
like me can treat AIDS patients for a fraction of the cost?"
The Internet
is ablaze with reports indicting the FDA and AMA for their prejudiced stand. One
site asserts: "In 1933, the AMA headed by Dr Simmons, set out to destroy all medical
treatments that were competitive to drug therapy. The suppression of ozone therapy
began then, and it continues to this day."
Others accuse the FDA of sabotaging
AIDS clinical tests involving ozone, or of turning an indifferent eye to its many
proven successes in treating AIDS. Dr John Pittman of North Carolina had his offices
closed down in the middle of the treatments for not having FDA approval. When
he presented evidence of two HIV+ patients who turned negative after undergoing
ozone treatment, government officials allegedly said: "We see no reason to pursue
this."
The medical community's retort to this, as seen by Dr Sahni of
Apollo Hospital, Delhi, India, is: "Since ozone doesn't come cheap, its promotion
has fallen into the hands of commercially motivated companies who paint a rosy
picture of the benefits without going into the side-effects and contraindications.
Without knowing these, the therapy will not gain popularity, let alone acceptance
by the masses or the doctors."
Pro-ozone advocates have a reply to this.
They quote an FDA report that stated that 1.5 million people in the USA were hospitalized
due to the side-effects of allopathic drugs (prescribed and over-the-counter medications).
In contrast, in a German study involving 1,044 ozone therapists and 3,84,775 patients,
side-effects were noted at .000005 per application-much of which was caused by
error in operation.
Accusations and counter-accusations rage on. Where you stand in the matter perhaps
depends on your stand on alternatives as opposed to conventional medicine in general.
Not that ozone is totally free of harm. "Ozone has one fault," reveals Dr
Alwa, "it is highly irritant to the mucous membrane, hence it cannot be breathed
in." However, she dismisses fears of infection through baths patronized by AIDS
patients: "The water and then the ozone are recycled after running it through
ultraviolet rays."
So what's an ozone bath like? To get a firsthand
experience, I decide to take one. It is my fourth day in Bangalore and I am dead
beat. Also, I have a bout of diarrhea and have been feeling enormously weak. After
stripping, I enter the Pegasus bath. I pass the towel I am wrapped in to the attendant,
who hands me a small nozzle, and seals the edge of the bath with the towel to
keep the ozone from oozing out. The bath is switched on, and warm, nay hot, water
spurts out of the nozzle. The attendant tells me to train the nozzle on all parts
of the body, particularly the painful and troublesome spots. I have just been
treated for a cyst in my navel area, and I ask her if the shower will damage it.
I am instead told to train the nozzle on it for healing. For 20 minutes I spray
myself vigorously. It is hot in the bath, but a fan placed close by keeps me refreshingly
cool. I enjoy myself thoroughly and the exhaustion disappears like magic. The
attendant returns to release me, lifting the towel from the edges of the bath.
I get a whiff of the forbidden gas. But it smells, alas, of thunder and the seashore-ozone
is naturally released into the atmosphere during a thundershower. It is also abundant
at seashores.
Stepping out of the shower, I dry myself and dress. I am
then asked to lie down on a wooden slide, with my feet on the higher end. The
idea is to restore to the brain the blood supply that the bath has drained away.
With my cheeks a fiery red, I return to Dr Alwa, ready to take on the world.
There is a corollary to this. My diarrhea disappeared, but on returning home,
I found my navel filled with pus. Obviously, the cyst has reopened. My allopathic
doctor, whom I call from Bangalore, warns me not to do anything to it and return
to Mumbai. I do so, and am subjected to a stiff course of 12 injections, the alternative
being surgery. I give in, but write to Dr Alwa for advice. The ozone must have
released the pus trapped inside, she tells me, and a few more baths would have
healed me. Perhaps she was right. But would I have dared to take the risk? I recall
my cure from indigestion and my sense of rejuvenation with gratitude. Perhaps
if Dr Alwa had been in Mumbai, I might have taken those bathsand allopathy
be damned!
ALWA'S
FUTURISTIC TREASURE BOX
Ozone therapy is merely one in a large spectrum of therapies that Dr Alwa practices.
She says: "We offer the patient complete evaluation, detoxification, desensitization,
nutritional and diet counseling, and appropriate treatment which may include chelation,
ozone treatment, craniosacral therapy, orthomolecular therapy, acupuncture, hypnosis,
heavy doses of vitamins-all based on the patient's unique needs."
Here's
how Dr Alwa's treatment works:
When a new patient enters her clinic,
he is put through a thorough examination. This includes checking reflexes, heartbeat,
pulse rate, and noting down personal history. The patient is then put through
the biotron, a rectangular box with two cathodes, one of which is held by the
patient. Dr Alwa takes the other and gently uses its tips to probe various acupressure
points on hands and feet. This gives a good picture of the state of your organs,
and therefore, health.
The next step is to check out toxins within the
system. Tiny vials of mercury, lead, etc are placed on the biotron. Your body's
reaction to these substances is then registered via the cathode into a calibrated
meter.
The same technique is used to identify allergies within the system.
According to Dr Alwa, almost everyone is allergic to something or the other. These
allergies, when neglected, cause toxins to build up within the system, eventually
leading to ill-health.
Finally, a few drops of blood are analyzed on
a fiber optic neutron microscope. This is known as live cell analysis, for the
blood is analyzed while it is still 'alive,' rather than after being contaminated
through preservatives. The microscope is connected to a TV monitor which presents
a blown-up picture of the state of your blood. The sight is fascinating, as Dr
Alwa points out red blood corpuscles and white blood corpuscles. My RBCs were
slightly elongated, a sure sign of exhaustion, and clumped, which meant poor circulation.
Dr Alwa traces these shadowy images with an expert's ease, building up an accurate
and detailed picture of the patient's health. The treatment is outlined on this
basis.
An elderly couple were sitting in the main hall, with what seemed
to be a drip-like device attached to one arm each. This is the chelation-a treatment
that involves being fed intravenously with a solution of EDTA (a synthetically
produced amino acid), minerals, vitamin and longevity supplements. "Chelation
rids blood vessels of plaque and prevents aging," says Dr Alwa. "It also neutralizes
free radical damage."
The husband, M.V. Nath (62) is here seeking relief
from a 70 per cent blockage of arteries. On to his sixth chelation, Nath's nightly
chest pains have ceased and he feels more active. However, he hasn't as yet had
a medical test to determine any actual reduction in the blockages.
Nath's
wife Gita (52), an amateur singer, suffered from a damaged voice and ulcer after
taking an antibiotic. That she is at all audible is thanks to chelation treatments
and the simultaneous detoxification.
Other treatments that Dr Alwa specializes
in are oracular therapy, acupuncture on the ear, hypnosis, and cranio-vascular
therapy. This last involves manipulating bones of the cranium to treat autism
and attention-span disorders.
The crux of Dr Alwa's treatment, however,
lies in detoxifying and desensitizing: she administers drops to rid the body of
accumulated toxins as well as to desensitize it from allergies. Her recipe for
healthy living is: "Detoxification, nutrition, hydration, oxygenation and exercise."
Her idea of a nutritive diet is free of processed food, cola, pork and beef.