Surviving Your Local Hospital

Surviving the modern medical establishment isn’t as easy as you might think. Doctors and hospitals often end up inflicting more damage than the original disease or condition they are trying to cure. At least that’s the opinion of Dr. Harvey Bigelsen, a recent guest on the Holistic Survival Show. As a tireless promoter of homeopathy and biological medicine, Bigelsen has endured his share of persecution over the years, even going so far as relocating his practice to Tijuana, Mexico, for a period of time, primarily to avoid the Big Brother persecutorial urges of the FDA, Big Pharma, and the AMA.

We strongly suggest you give the podcast interview a listen here.

Here’s a quick background sketch of the good doctor’s life to date, taken from his website at www.drbigelsen.com.

As a tireless advocate for homeopathy and biological medicine, Dr. Harvey Bigelsen has courted controversy and endured legal persecution, while helping to change the public perception of healthcare. A true pioneer, Bigelsen co-authored the Arizona Homeopathic Medical Practice Act, and was appointed by then Governor Babbitt to establish a board, and while acting as president, to set the standards for holistic medicine. The law gives homeopathy equal legal status with allopathic and osteopathic medicine. For the first time holistic physicians attained true medical freedom within a peer reviewed board. To assure homeopathic physicians are well-trained, Dr. Bigelsen’s law requires that they must have an active, United States license as a medical doctor or an osteopathic physician.

Though he now counsels patients to avoid surgery whenever possible, Dr. Bigelsen began his medical career as an ophthalmologist. As a young doctor, he served his country in Vietnam, ranked as a commanding officer in charge of mass casualties, and performed hundreds of surgeries as a trauma surgeon. The war was a turning point in his life, igniting his lifelong distrust of authority. In 1971, after being honorably discharged, he began a successful practice in Princeton, New Jersey. The young doctor grew frustrated by his inability to cure his patients—he felt more like a mechanic, fixing problems but never addressing the underlying problems. He began looking for options. In 1976, after extensive exploration into other healing modalities and a life-changing appointment with Dr. John Diamond, a medical doctor who followed homeopathic philosophy, he moved his family to Arizona to work in a holistic clinic. There he began his path as one of the true medical trailblazers in the United States. In 1978, Dr. Bigelsen was elected as a member of the founding board of trustees of the American Holistic Medical Association, today the oldest holistic medical organization of its kind.

Bigelsen’s groundbreaking efforts drew detractors within the medical establishment and the American Medical Association. Subjected to three years of grand jury investigations, Medicare indicted him on 117 counts of fraud amounting to a total of $3,500. He was eventually convicted in 1994 for a grand total of $145. His own health in ruins, Bigelsen forfeited both his medical and homeopathic licenses and for a time set up a clinic in Tijuana, Mexico, where he gained invaluable clinical experience treating patients whose American doctors had failed. Undeterred by the harassment, Dr. Bigelsen continues to promote his pioneering beliefs in non-traditional healthcare, and currently consults in Nevada City, California.

In 1986, the Hans Nieper Foundation awarded Dr. Bigelsen the Person of the Year, recognizing his work as the most influential for the advancement of natural medicine in the U.S. Dr. Bigelsen has appeared as a guest on numerous health-focused radio programs and is the author of four books. He continues to lead the forefront of a much needed medical revolution, focusing his work on terrain-based philosophy and European biological medicine as he works primarily with people suffering from chronic disease, and those interested in anti-aging and regeneration. At the core of his medical philosophy is the conviction that germs do not cause disease. Counter to conventional medicine and Big Pharma, which promote treatments that merely attack and kill germs, Dr. Bigelsen believes that germs are not harmful, and actually live in a symbiotic relationship with the entire body. He treats the patient’s physical body in order to get it working at its highest performance, and has achieved high success rates through a combination of structural therapies, cranial-sacral adjustments, neural therapy, isopathic remedies, and European cell therapy.

Those of our reading audience with an intrinsic belief that surviving your local hospital or doctor should find Jason’s interview with Bigelsen interesting stuff, and come away with a newfound appreciation for the difference between “fixing” medical problems and actually curing a disease.

The Holistic Survival Team

HolisticSurvival.com

 

 

 

(Flickr / Waldo Jaquith)