Ayurveda doctor treating hundreds of 9/11 victims
http://content.msn.co.in/News/International/InternationalIANS_120907_1212.htm
Wednesday, September 12, 2007 12:13 IST
New York: While acknowledgment of the health toll of the 9/11 rescue workers and
volunteers has been slow in coming, a Mumbai-based ayurveda doctor has been
quietly providing herbal treatments to hundreds of victims affected by the toxic
air on the day of the terror attacks for the past six years. The unsung hero is
Pankaj Naram, who runs Ayushakti Ayurved Health Centre in Malad in Mumbai and
frequently visits New York as part of his US practice. Benefiting from his
treatment are 500 Ground Zero workers and volunteers including around 400
fire-fighters affected by prolonged exposure to toxicity in the aftermath of the
collapse of World Trade Centre towers on September 11, 2001.
Naram has devised four Ayurvedic formulas specifically to treat respiratory
problems and symptoms of metal toxicity. Naram, who is visiting New York in
mid-October, says he has distributed the formulas in New York through Serving
Those Who Serve, Inc (STWS). He was first approached to help treat the sufferers
within weeks of the 9/11 tragedy by an STWS cofounder. STWS was formed as a
non-profit body to provide Naram's herbal package free of charge to the rescue
and recovery workers and volunteers.
STWS Executive Director Jose Mestre told IANS: "The people on our programme
report amazing results including better respiratory function, ability to sleep,
energy, focus, memory and relief from anxiety.
"Dr Naram's herbal formulas clear up the lungs, flush the toxins naturally and
improve the compromised immune system." The doctor's detox and immune-boosting
herbs are listed as dietary supplements by Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
and can be safely integrated with a participant's current Western medicine
protocol. Mestre points out that in a survey by Jim Dahl, a leading medical
researcher of New York, STWS programme participants reported that Naram's herbs
were 32 per cent more effective than other treatment protocols they had tried.
Dahl's paper based on the survey has been accepted for publication in
'Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine', a reputed US journal. STWS has
also introduced in their programme meditation and breathwork inspired by
spiritual guru Sri Sri Ravi Shankar's Art of Living as well as energy healing.
Some of those who volunteer for STWS are 9/11 workers or volunteers. STWS
invites all those affected by exposure to Ground Zero to participate, free of
charge, in the programme. Residents who feel at risk due to their proximity to
the sites can also receive Naram's herbs at-cost.
Mestre says that while many medical experts and politicians have publicly
acknowledged the persisting debilitating health effects of those exposed to
9/11's environmental toxicity, city authorities are reluctant to do so. This is
mainly because of the pending class action suit against the city filed by couple
of thousand of victims. Naram is particularly known for his pulse diagnosis
expertise. When in the US, he runs through at least 100 patients in a single
day, feeling their pulse and prescribing medicines.
Ayurveda doctor treating hundreds of 9/11 victims http://content.msn.co.in/News/International/InternationalIANS_120907_1212.htm
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
12:13 IST
New York: While acknowledgment of the health toll of the 9/11 rescue workers and
volunteers has been slow in coming, a Mumbai-based ayurveda doctor has been
quietly providing herbal treatments to hundreds of victims affected by the toxic
air on the day of the terror attacks for the past six years.
The unsung hero is Pankaj Naram, who runs Ayushakti Ayurved Health Centre in
Malad in Mumbai and frequently visits New York as part of his US practice.
Benefiting from his treatment are 500 Ground Zero workers and volunteers
including around 400 fire-fighters affected by prolonged exposure to toxicity in
the aftermath of the collapse of World Trade Centre towers on September 11,
2001.
Naram has devised four Ayurvedic formulas specifically to treat respiratory
problems and symptoms of metal toxicity.
Naram, who is visiting New York in mid-October, says he has distributed the
formulas in New York through Serving Those Who Serve, Inc (STWS). He was first
approached to help treat the sufferers within weeks of the 9/11 tragedy by an
STWS cofounder.
STWS was formed as a non-profit body to provide Naram's herbal package free of
charge to the rescue and recovery workers and volunteers.
STWS Executive Director Jose Mestre told IANS: "The people on our programme
report amazing results including better respiratory function, ability to sleep,
energy, focus, memory and relief from anxiety.
"Dr Naram's herbal formulas clear up the lungs, flush the toxins naturally and
improve the compromised immune system."
The doctor's detox and immune-boosting herbs are listed as dietary supplements
by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and can be safely integrated with a
participant's current Western medicine protocol.
Mestre points out that in a survey by Jim Dahl, a leading medical researcher of
New York, STWS programme participants reported that Naram's herbs were 32 per
cent more effective than other treatment protocols they had tried.
Dahl's paper based on the survey has been accepted for publication in
'Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine', a reputed US journal.
STWS has also introduced in their programme meditation and breathwork inspired
by spiritual guru Sri Sri Ravi Shankar's Art of Living as well as energy
healing. Some of those who volunteer for STWS are 9/11 workers or volunteers.
STWS invites all those affected by exposure to Ground Zero to participate, free
of charge, in the programme. Residents who feel at risk due to their proximity
to the sites can also receive Naram's herbs at-cost.
Mestre says that while many medical experts and politicians have publicly
acknowledged the persisting debilitating health effects of those exposed to
9/11's environmental toxicity, city authorities are reluctant to do so. This is
mainly because of the pending class action suit against the city filed by couple
of thousand of victims.
Naram is particularly known for his pulse diagnosis expertise. When in the US,
he runs through at least 100 patients in a single day, feeling their pulse and
prescribing medicines.