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Step 2 -
Introduction to Functional Balance in Health & Healing
Our
good health is a function of many background processes that occur
without our awareness. These background processes are essential to well
being and optimum function in life. When we are ill the correction of
background processes that are imbalanced will help restore health. I
refer to these processes as the Functional Basis of Health and Healing.
The areas of interest include:
-
Gastrointestinal
Function
-
Hepatic
Function
-
Reduction
of Toxic Load
-
Glucose
Insulin Metabolism
-
Hormonal
Balance
-
Single
Carbon Metabolism
-
Immunologic
Balance
-
Control
of Oxidative Stress
-
Control
of Inflammation
Click on the topic at the right
to learn more. (NOTE: All of the topics noted
here are not yet complete. We are continually adding
more information. Please check back soon!)
The
concept that background processes can affect health is not new. The
difference between background events such as the Functional Processes we
will discuss and foreground Symptoms, Signs and Diseases creates a
dynamic that energizes the debate between Conventional Medicine and
Complementary/Alternative Medicine. Conventional Medicine has focused on
the problem of Disease Diagnosis and Management.
Complementary/Alternative Medicine, at its best, focuses on the
background processes, that when disrupted, result in the development of
signs, symptoms and diseases.
Functional
medicine is a scientifically based field of health care that employs
assessment and intervention to improve physiological,
emotional/cognitive, and physical function. It is a systematic and
patient centered approach to understanding and improving health.
While functional medicine emphasizes the principles of molecular
medicine and modern nutritional biochemistry, it acknowledges and
integrates all fields of health care.
This includes regular medical practice as well as
alternative/complementary fields of health care.
Functional
Medicine has the following characteristics:
Biochemical
individuality is a fact that requires us to recognize the uniqueness
of each person as they present themselves with concerns about their
health.
Patient Centered
Diagnosis and Treatment is the natural outcome of the fact of
biochemical individuality. This
concept places the patient at the center of our diagnostic and
therapeutic recommendations. We
recognize that we are treating a person and not a disease. This makes
the patients experience paramount in the therapeutic process.
Dynamic Balance
is the process we continuously undergo as we adapt to our environment.
The ability to maintain biochemical, physical and psychological
flexibility provides resistance to disease and allows us to maintain
robust health.
Web-like
Connections is a concept that recognizes the interconnectedness of
the mind/body experience. While
we recognize diagnostic categories we attempt to understand the
functional cause of the symptoms. We seek to identify how the entirety
of an individuals experience contributes to their state of health.
Health as a
Positive Vitality is a state that is unique to each person. The
absence of a diagnosed disease or discomfort does not denote the
presence of health. The goal of the Functional Medicine Practitioner is to
support vitality and wellness throughout life.
Achieving Balance
is our goal. The process
will be unique for each patient. Each patient will have an integral role
in defining and redefining the experience of Balance.
In
the ensuing discussions we will examine the functional approach to
health care. This information is designed to empower the reader to
reflect on the relationship between underlying functional processes and
their experience of health or illness. Examples of symptoms and signs
that may reflect functional imbalance will be provided. The specific
diagnostic testing or probes that we use at RiverHill Wellness Center
will be discussed from the point of view of accuracy as reliability.
Finally, therapeutic options will be discussed. This is not done in an
attempt to create a self-help manual but rather to create a
synchronicity or common language between the individual and the
practitioners at RiverHill Wellness Center. A common language and a
shared process will optimize the chance that you will benefit from your
experience at RiverHill Wellness Center.
A
community of health care practitioners developed these concepts. I would
be remiss if I did not mention some of the key contributors to this
field. Drs. Jeffrey Bland, Leo Galland, and Sydney Baker have worked in
this field for more than two decades. Their efforts have provided a
foundation upon which many others have built.
-- Warren Ross, M.D.
Go back
to Step
1 - Foundations of Health and Healing
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