Community Corner

Bastyr U. Looking for Participants in Naturopathic Cancer Treatment Study

The school on Finn Hill, a leader in integrative and complementary medicine, is recruiting those diagnosed with breast and prostate cancers. Here's the story of one breast cancer patient.

 

Editor's Note: The following is a Bastyr University press release.

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Kenmore, Wash. (October 23, 2012) In August 2011, Lisa Clinton was on vacation when she felt a lump in her breast. Upon returning home and visiting her doctor, tests confirmed what she feared: It was cancer. The 53-year-old former competitive figure skater was shocked, since she had always taken care of her health.

“The body changes after you hit age 50,” says Clinton, who lives in Bellevue. “I’d never had a mammogram done until last year, when the lump was found. But once it was discovered, I decided to fight it head-on, and make some wholesale changes in my life.”

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With the same spirit and determination found during her days of competing, Clinton changed her diet, exercised more, and harnessed the power of positive thinking. Additionally, she decided to visit Bastyr Integrative Oncology Research Center (BIORC) and its medical director, Leanna Standish, PhD, ND, LAc, FABNO. As a patient there, Lisa participated in the turkey tail mushroom clinical trial, in which she was prescribed a mushroom extract from Japan that has been shown to help fight cancer. The decisions have had a profound effect on her health.

“Dr. Standish recommended a treatment I call the 'combo platter,’ which consists of taking care of the body, mind and soul,” says Clinton. “Taking turkey tail mushrooms to fight the cancer, administering vitamin C intravenously to boost my immune system and focusing on mental imagery to lower stress have all helped immensely.”

“Lisa has kept an open mind and heart throughout her treatment,” says Dr. Standish. “I believe it is this kind of positive attitude, combined with our knowledge of integrative medicine that has helped her get better.”

Next month, Clinton will have a follow-up mammogram to see if the changes she’s made in her life, including visits to BIORC, have helped eliminate the cancer from her body. In the meantime, she has been so inspired by the natural steps she’s taking that the former skater is starting the Ice Angels Foundation to help pay for naturopathic doctor visits for cancer patients.

“I feel confident that I am taking the proper steps to fight breast cancer naturally, feel very healthy and want to help others who are fighting the same battle and are looking toward natural medicine,” says Clinton.

To learn more about the integrative cancer research being done at BIORC, and for women who have been diagnosed with breast cancer (or men who have prostate cancer) or to participate in our ground-breaking, innovative clinical trials done jointly with the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance (SCCA), please call (425) 602-3311.

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ABOUT BASTYR UNIVERSITY and its BIORC

Bastyr University is internationally recognized as a pioneer in natural medicine. As the largest accredited university for natural health arts and sciences in the U.S., Bastyr’s campus located in Kenmore. Its Integrative Oncology Research Center (BIORC) opened in 2009 to study integrative, complementary and alternative medicine for cancer patients.  It is currently recruiting participants for its Outcomes Studies that evaluate the effectiveness of integrative oncology care in our cancer patients. Future studies include turkey tail mushroom trials for breast and prostate cancers in conjunction with the Seattle Cancer Care Alliance (SCCA.) More information on BIORC and these trials can be found at www.bastyr.edu/research/BIORC


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