Posts Tagged ‘Mental Health’

Lead Poisoning

Friday, December 11th, 2009

Lead has no known function in the human body.  It’s an insidious toxin with a very broad range of symptoms, and even people who appear healthy can have dangerous levels of it in their blood.  The problem of lead contamination is entirely a result of civilization, since levels in pre-industrial people (in the range of 0.01 micrograms/deciliter (mcg/dl)) were around 100 to 1,000 times lower than blood levels typically found in people today.  (Lead Toxicity, A Review of the Literature. Part I: Exposure, Evaluation, and Treatment Lyn Patrick, ND)  

One of the major players in this disaster was the Ethyl Corporation.  In its pursuit of profits it criminally exposed workers to lead in its factories, and lied about it while they were dying.  Its lead-based-no-nock-gasoline-additive eventually put about seven million tons of lead out through the tailpipes of cars into the atmosphere. (1) (The Ethyl-Poisoned Earth by Alan Bellows)

The main cause of lead’s toxicity is its ability to interfere with many enzymes by binding to their sulfhydryl groups.  Short term measurable effects of lead poisoning begin at 25 mcg/dl.  Obvious symptoms begin to occur at levels above 40mcg/dl in adults, and above 60 mcg/dl in children. 

The list of potential health problems related to lead is a very long one:  Lead can damage hearing, vision, muscle coordination, the blood, kidneys, heart, and reproductive system.  Symptoms can include abdominal pain, anemia, loss of appetite, constipation, delayed growth, depression, diarrhea, fatigue, headaches, irritability, decreased libido, memory loss, muscle pain, nausea, personality changes, problems with sleep, an unusual taste in the mouth, weakness, tingling in the extremities, vomiting, and weight loss.  In one recent study those people with blood lead levels in the top 20% (over 2.11 mcg/dl) of the subjects had 2.3 times the odds of suffering from a major depressive disorder, and almost 5 times to odds of having a panic disorder as those in the lowest 20% (under 0.7 mcg/dl).  (The average blood lead level of the group was 1.61 mcg/dl.)  (Young Adults’ Blood Lead Levels Linked to Depression, Panic Disorder)

Exposure to even low levels might cause irreversible learning difficulties and mental retardation in children.  One study found that the IQ scores of children dropped about 7 points across the sample as children’s blood lead levels varied from 1 mcg/dl to 10 mcg/dl. (2) (Very Low Lead Levels Linked With IQ Deficits)  

The current consensus is that there is no safe level of lead exposure.  Lead accumulates in the blood, soft tissues and bone; and its half-life is weeks in blood, months in soft tissues, and years in bone. 

In the past lead was used commonly in house paint, as an additive to gasoline, and as a pesticide.  One piece of good news in all this is that the Clean Air Act has helped reduce air emissions of lead nearly 90 percent during the last 20 years.

If you have a problem with lead contamination there are a number of things you can do to deal with it: 

Make sure your child’s blood is tested for lead before age 2, and regularly to age 6, if there is the possibility of lead in the child’s environment.  The major treatments are removal of the source of lead and possibly chelation therapy (administration of agents that bind lead so it can be excreted). (Chelation therapy – Wikipedia)

Around the home anything that has paint or a finish made before 1978 in the U.S. could be a source of lead.  (It was banned in France and many other countries before 1920.)  So you shouldn’t use cribs, bassinets, highchairs, painted toys, or toy chests made before that date.  Lead paint is still sometimes found in toys and toy jewelry made today, so you should keep up on toy recalls by checking the lead recall lists. (Toy Hazard Recalls – CPSC)  Unfortunately, 75% of the nation’s housing has lead paint.  Broken down by time period, 90% of pre-1940 buildings have it, 80% of pre-1960 ones have it, and 62% of pre-1978 buildings have it. 

Keep children away from paint chips (which they might eat) by closing and locking doors.  You should create barriers between living and play areas, and the sources of lead.  Apply temporary barriers such as contact paper or duct tape to cover lead sources. 

Lead contaminated dust can be created by the friction of opening windows and doors, it might be blown in - coming from distant contaminated soils, or it can be generated during home renovation on a pre-1978 house.  Lead dust is invisible and will pass through most masks and filters, so, if you have to sand or strip old paint that may contain lead, be sure to use a high quality mask to prevent inhalation of lead particles.  Regularly wash children’s hands, pacifiers, toys, and any other items that might go in the mouth.  Feed children nutritious low-fat meals high in calcium and iron, since this will reduce the amount of lead absorbed into the body.  Wet-mop and wipe floors, window components, and other horizontal surfaces (counters, tables or floors) frequently.  If possible, windows should be kept shut to prevent abrasion of painted surfaces, or only opened from the top sash.  Don’t vacuum with a regular vacuum because it just lets lead dust fly around, but instead use a vacuum cleaner that utilizes a HEPA (High-Efficiency Particulate Air) filter.  Pregnant women and children shouldn’t be present during a pre-1978 house renovation. 

Lead was often in exterior oil-based paint prior to 1950, and as it ages it often contaminates soil about a house where children play.  Stop children from playing in bare soil and close to the sides of the house.  Instead, provide them with a sandbox more than 3 feet away from it.  (If your do have a sandbox, parents should cover the box when it’s not in use to prevent cats from using it as a litter box.)  Plant grass on areas of bare soil, or cover the soil with mulch or wood chips.  Take off your shoes when you go inside, and, if you walk barefoot outside, wash your feet when you go indoors.   Also, give your pet’s feet, legs, and undersides a rubdown with a towel after taking them outdoors. 

Lead solder can contaminate house pipes, so, unless you know your pipes are uncontaminated, you should only use cold water from the tap for drinking or cooking.  Also, if water sits in a pipe for several hours flush it from the tap for two minutes before drinking.  You can also use a water filter to reduce the lead in the water you cook and drink with.  For example, a simple Brita water filter will remove around 9o% of the lead found in tap water.  

Replace inexpensive, horizontal, plastic blinds that have been made in Asia or Mexico, since these types of blinds often contain lead.  Pregnant women and children should not be exposed to burning candles that could contain lead in their wicks.  Don’t drink out of crystal glass.  Soft vinyl lunch boxes can have dangerous levels of lead.  Avoid using any personal care products that contain significant amounts of lead. 

Hobbies that often involve working with lead are making stained glass windows, working with pewter and other collectible figurines, the glazing and firing of pottery and ceramics, making lead weights, reloading and making ammunition, making lead shot, target practice, making lead fishing weights or lures, refinishing furniture, and remolding.  You should never sand, burn, or scrape paint unless you either know it doesn’t contain lead, or take the proper precautions.  You should shower and change clothes after finishing a task that involves working with lead-based products.

Sites where lead might be a problem are hazardous waste sites, an area where cars are abandoned or repaired, ballast on a ship, a heavily traveled major highway or roadway, and an older house with peeling exterior paint.  Also artificial turf playing fields have recently been found to produce a potentially hazardous amount of lead dust.

Other sources of lead are kohl (a South Asian cosmetic), sindoor (a cosmetic used by traditional Hindu and Sikh married women), herbal remedies (Ayurvedic preparations (Ghasard, Bala Goli, and Kandu), surma, and those of Chinese origin), and folk remedies (azarcon (also called Maria Luisa, Liga, Alarzon, Alkohl, Greta, Coral and Rueda), farouk, bint al zahab, and pay-loo-ah).  Additional sources are solder which was used in the past to seal cans of food, ceramic glazes, lead curtain weights, lead bullets from hunted animals, bullets lodged in a person’s joints (since they deteriorate over time), imported candies that contain tamarind or chili, contaminated pottery, containers, cookware, or tableware.  Older Christmas tree ornaments might be decorated with lead paint, and lead is in some tree light wires.  Old newspapers, paper bags, magazines, and comic books could have been made with lead based inks.  You should never burn treated lumber, since there will be heavy metals in the smoke.  Industrial facilities, urban runoff, and atmospheric deposition are all sources of lead in the aquatic environment.  Even your keys can often contain small amounts of lead.

Types of work that is typically associated with the risk of lead contamination include house construction and repair, shipbuilding, painting (especially marine related painting), iron processing, brass or copper foundry valve and pipe fitting, bronze work, welding, resurfacing, bridge, tunnel, and elevated highway construction; the demolition of bridges, towers, and other steel structures; lead battery manufacturing and recycling, radiator manufacturing and repair, scrap metal recycling, the electronics industry, the manufacture of some plastics, automotive repair, fishing weight production, leaded glass manufacturing, lead ore production, milling, and smelting; and municipal solid waste incinerators. 

If your workplace poses a risk of lead contamination there are a number of safety precautions you should take:  You should work with your employer to reduce lead and lead exposure in the workplace, perhaps by providing special ventilation equipment and/or fitted respirators.  Wash your hands and face before eating, drinking, or smoking.  Eat, drink, and smoke only in areas free of lead dust and fumes.  Wet clean and HEPA vacuum lead-contaminated dust.  Use separate work clothes and shoes while at work, and keep your street clothes in a clean place.  Shower at work before going home, and launder your work clothes at work.  If you take your work clothes home, wash and dry them separately.

For more information there are a number of sources you can contact.  Here are some numbers: 

EPA’s Safe Drinking Water Hotline 1-800-426-4791.  

National Lead Information Center 1-800-LEAD-FYI, or 1-800-424-LEAD (5323). 

Lead Surveillance and Reporting, Office of Epidemiology, 1-360-236-4252. 

For information about lead in the workplace call the Department of Labor and Industries, 1-360-902-5663. 

For a list of qualified testing laboratories for analysis of lead in paint, soil, or dust call 1-800-424-LEAD. Please specify that you are requesting the NLLAP/ELPAT list of laboratories.  

HUD’s Lead Reduction Office, see: http://www.hud.gov/lea/leahome

For a home test, see: http://leadtestkit.com/kits1.html

You can also talk to your state or local health department about testing paint and dust from your home for lead.

To permanently remove lead hazards, you have to hire a lead “abatement” contractor.  Call your local paint stores to find out if the contractor you’re considering has a good history with the store.  Find a contractor who has been in business for several years, and can offer references. The longer they’ve been in business, the more they will likely know about lead.  Find a contractor with whom you feel comfortable, and who can answer your questions and explain their work.   

(1) Only one of the many consequences of this might have been a nationwide crime wave.  A number of recent studies have shown a strong correlation between atmospheric lead levels and crime rates.  The sharp decline in US crime rates, which began in the early 1990s, correlates perfectly with the reduction of leaded gasoline in the early 1970s.  Other countries have seen similar declines, also delayed by twenty years. (The Ethyl-Poisoned Earth by Alan Bellows)

(2)  Throughout this entire discussion there exists the common problem of inferring causation from correlation.  Since direct experiments with humans would be unethical, many results require an assumption that lead is actually the cause of a health problem.  At higher levels of contamination this assumption is unproblematic, but at lower levels this can be a source of uncertainty.  Looking at the national lead standards for blood toxicity through the years, in the space of about 50 years, they have changed six-fold from 60 mcg/dl to 10mcg/dl.  One reason to be skeptical of a 7 point IQ drop because of such low lead levels is that this suggests that people who grew up in the 1950’s and 1960’s would have had greatly reduced IQ’s, and this doesn’t seem to have been the case. 

In 1960, 60 mcg/dl
In 1970, 40 mcg/dl
In 1975, 35 mcg/dl
In 1985, 25 mcg/dl
In 1991, 10 mcg/dl

It is certainly possible that raising a child’s blood lead level from 1 mcg/dl to 10 mcg/dl directly causes an average 7 point drop in IQ.  The problem here is that there are potentially hundreds of confounding variables that could be creating the observed correlation.  It’s possible that children with lower IQ’s have a greater tendency to chew on paint chips, be less well-nourished, or attend poorer schools.  Also, parents with lower IQ’s might have a greater likelihood of living in lower quality housing and in more contaminated neighborhoods, be less aware of the dangers of lead poisoning, or be less competent when taking precautions, etc.  So, the connection between lead at low levels and IQ could be one of children inheriting genes from relatively lower IQ parents, which predispose them to also have lower IQ’s.  

In short, while it is entirely reasonable to take no unnecessary chances with lead poisoning (personally I would prefer my blood level to be literally zero), it’s only careful to remember that researchers haven’t actually established an airtight connection between the low blood lead levels and the observed health effects they are currently concerned about.  (From: Toxic Lead Levels by Valerie)

(Lead – CDC) (Lead – Prevention Tips – CDC) (Lead – Sources of Lead – CDC)  (Lead Poisoning Fact Sheet) (The Basics about Lead Paint – Home Safe Environment) (Lead Poisoning – Wikipedia) (How to Lower The Risk of Your Child Getting Lead Poisoning – eHow) (Simple ways to help prevent childhood lead poisoning - iVillage) (Helping Parents Prevent Lead Poisoning. ERIC Digest. by Binns, Helen J. – Ricks, Omar Benton) (Lead Poisoning: Prevention – MayoClinic) (Ways To Prevent Lead Poisoning by Dr. Ben Kim) (How to Prevent Lead Poisoning) (Prevention of Lead Poisoning – Cure Research) (Campaign for Lead Safety Awareness – Angie’s List) (Lead Poisoning Prevention – KeepKidsHealthy)

Freud’s Fellow Kooks

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

Following up on Freudian Psychology is Horsesh*t - Lost Wanderer, I ran across this Discover Magazine article, The Borderline Whack-Jobs Who Pioneered Psychoanalysis  by Dean Christopher, who reviewed the book, Revolution in Mind: The Creation of Psychoanalysis by George Makari. 

As I might have expected, considering what a charlatan Freud was, many of Freud’s followers were also fairly unusual.  Felix Salten, who wrote Bambi, also wrote pornography.  Otto Weininger recommended completely giving up sex for all purposes, and then shortly afterwards killed himself.  Some followers believed that masturbation caused madness, while others believed it cured it.  One got the label the “Pied Piper of carnality.”  Another had to flee his homeland partly as a result of repeated accusations of child molestation, and still another died in jail.  We learn from these deep thinkers that blacks are inherently uncivilizable, syphilis is the co-traveler of Christianity, women are destined for hysteria, Jews are disproportionately degenerate, and the solution for the Jew’s problem was to practice gymnastics. 

In the end, Freudianism serves as a reminder of how insane ideas can foster a cult of fashionable nonsense given the right circumstances.

Migraine Headaches

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

I’ve had migraines all my life. (Migraine – Wikipedia, Migraine)  Because of this, I’m interested in new treatments and theories as they come along, and the most interesting idea I’ve run across regarding migraines is that they are an allergic phenomenon.

In one study, Jean Monro, MD, of Hereforshire, England, reports that 100% of a group of 282 patients were found to have food allergies related to migraine headaches.  Over 200 of her subjects turned out to be allergic to wheat or dairy products, or both.  The other most common triggers were tea, oranges, apples, onions, pork, and beef.  Monro, et al., found that the usual suspects, cheeses, alcohol, and chocolate weren’t that important; while perfume, gasoline, cigarette smoke, and other such fume sources could be significant triggers.  Reducing the patient’s total allergic load was usually sufficient to control the migraines, although vaccinations were sometime also used.  (To head off an attack Monro also recommends taking oxygen, alkaline salts (1), and buffered vitamin C.) (Migraine Headaches and Food)

In another study supporting this idea, 2/3 of severe migrainers were found to be allergic to some foods.  (Food allergy in migraine.  Study of dietary exclusion and RAST by Monro, et al.)  And in yet another, 36 of 45 children had some response to dietary modifications. (Oligoantigenic diet treatment of children with epilepsy and migraine by Egger J. et al.) (2)  (Studies Bolster Link of Food and Migraines by Sandra Blakeslee)

(Given the food-migraine connection, I have to put in another plug for the Paleolithic Diet.  Even though some of the foods in it are listed above, wheat and dairy products aren’t, and I suspect it might do a lot of migrainers quite a bit of good to try it.)

If I take a quick look at what might explain at least part of the connection between migraines and allergies, a major candidate that stands out is histamine.  Histamine is a biogenic amine, which is involved in allergic reactions, and increased levels of histamine correlate with migraine headaches in vulnerable patients.  (Histamine – Wikipedia, Migraine Headaches – The role of antihistamine therapy in vascular headaches by MansfieldA correlation between migraine , histamine and immunoglobulin e. by Gazereni P, et al.)  Further evidence for this connection comes from the fact that migraine headache sufferers are especially prone to motion sickness, and Antivert, an antihistamine, is often prescribed for motion sickness.  And in another study daily doses of three antioxidants reduced migraines. (And antioxidants are useful in both treating the allergic phenomenon of asthma, and in reducing histamine levels.)  (Important Antioxidants for Asthma Relief by Rudy Silva)  Dr. Sirichai Chayasirisobhon gave patients pine bark extract, and vitamin C and E for three months, with a resulting 50.6% improvement in their MIDAS scores.  (Use of a Pine Bark Extract and Antioxidant Vitamin Combination Product as Therapy for Migraine in Patients Refractory to Pharmacologic Medication, Enzogenol)  Also, Butterbur is a natural antihistamine, which is used to treat both migraines and asthma.  (ButterburResearch.org)

Migraines also overlap with a host of immune related disorders, including fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, multiple chemical sensitivity, restless leg syndrome, irritable bowl syndrome.  (Overlaps with Fibromyalgia, Irritable Bowl Increases Risk of Other Conditions, High Risk of Migraine, Depression and Chronic Pain for IBS Sufferers, Large Study Shows.

(As a side note, it seems that there is some evidence that food allergies are not only connected to migraines, but could also be partly responsible for the obesity epidemic.  Study Confirms: Your Hidden Food Allergies are Making you Fat)

The connection between migraines and allergies also provides evidence that disorders that are comorbid with migraines might be partly allergic in origin.  Examples of these would include a number of mood related disorders, including depression, anxiety, panic attack, substance abuse disorders, and phobias.  (Mood Disorders, Migraines Might be Connected)  Migraines are associated with skin sensitivity and pain. (Migraine Increase Risk of Severe Skin Sensitivity and Pain)   Women with endometriosis are twice as likely to get migraines. (Common fertility condition linked to migraines)  Migraines are linked to blood clots in veins.  (Migraines Linked to Blood Clots in Veins)  Migraines might cause brain damage, and pose a stroke risk for women on the pill. (Do Migraines Cause Brain Damage? and Migraines and stroke risk, especially for women on the pill)  They are associated with retinopathy, and heart disease. (History of Migraines Associated with Increased Risk of Retinopathy and Migraines Associated with Increased Risk of Cardiovascular Disease)  Migraines are linked to sleep disorders in children. (Link Between Migraines and Sleep Disorders in Children)  In addition, migraines might explain the phenomenon of children who experience cyclic vomiting.  The theory is that instead of having the headache pain the children express the underlying disorder by vomiting repeatedly. (Cyclic Vomiting – Gabe Mirkin)

For anyone who has been following this blog, the connection of migraines with allergies obviously and strongly argues for using helminths (hookworms and whipworms) as a treatment.  (autoimmunetherapies.com)  With this in mind, I was treated with 50 hookworms some 18 months ago.  As a result my migraines have been reduced by about 50% in frequency, and 25% in intensity.  I also can now read in a moving car, which before the treatment would have made me nauseous.

Any explanation for migraine headaches is overwhelmingly likely to involve a network of interlinked causal pathways consisting of nonexclusive mitigating and aggravating factors, which will vary somewhat between individuals.  So it isn’t surprising that there are a number of other theories out there about migraine’s origin: 

One theory is that some migraines are triggered when opposite surfaces of nasal cavities rub against one another.  In a study based on this idea, after sinus surgery both the rate and intensity of migraines were significantly reduced.  (Nasal surgery hope for migraine

Another theory is that some cases of migraines are the result of a comparatively minor heart defect.  When a child is born the heart has to change its flow of blood circulation to include the lungs.  This change of blood flow requires closing off of a hole, the patent forum ova, between the two upper chambers of the heart.  In some people this doesn’t fully close, and surgery that closes it ends migraines in 80% of patients who have had the operation. (Plugging hole in heart slashes migraines)

For what it’s worth, migraine attacks are also associated with the weather. (Higher Temperatures, Lower Barometric Pressures Associated with…)

Here are three lists of the current standard treatments for migraines from WebMD, CureResearch.com, and Wrong Diagnosis. (Migraine Headache Treatment, Treatments for Migraine, Treatments for Migraine)

In addition to the above, other treatments which might give relief include:  

Researchers are experimenting with a Transcranial Magnetic Stimulator (TMS) used to fire magnetic pulses into a person’s head.  (Magnetic gun has cure for headaches in its sites by Michael Fox and Jonathan Leake)  From Gut Buddies, gumEase is a cryoanesthesia mouthpiece originally developed for dental anesthesia.  It fits over the teeth and cools them to -7 degrees C, which numbs the nerves, allowing dental procedures to be performed.  It turns out that it also stops migraine and tension headaches.  (CryoDevices, Olympic Dental and Medical Devices, Study to Determine Efficiency of gumEase…migraine)  Also from Gut Buddies, meditation has been found to be helpful for a wide variety of conditions, including migraines.  (foodsmatter.com – Meditation by John Scott, Lost_Wanderer – Meditation)  Exercise has been shown to reduce migraines. (Exercise Reduces Migraine Suffering, Study Finds)  A new drug, Levadex seems like a promising treatment. (Novel, Orally Inhaled Migraine Therapy is Effective, Study Shows)  The herbal medication Migrowin has been successfully used for migraines.  (Herbal Medication Relieves Painful Migraine Headaches)  Paradoxically folic acid (folate) has been recommended as a treatment for migraines, even though it can raise histamine levels. (Folic acid may offer relief for migraine sufferers, Rhyme of the Ancient Wanderer – Minerals and Vitamins…a breakdown)  Magnesium supplementation has been shown to reduce migraines. (Magnesium & Migraine by Christina Peterson)  Botox has been used with some success in treating migraines. (Chronic Migraine Patients may find Relief in Botox Therapy)  Having a forehead lift has been shown to be effective with some migraine patients. (New Hope for Migraine Sufferers: Forehead Lifts can Ease Years and Headaches)  

(Although it is not directly related to migraines, out of a concern for being thorough in my discussion of headaches, I feel the need to mention the idea that some people have been advocating of the use of magic mushrooms as a treatment for cluster headaches. (Lost_Wanderer – Magic Mushrooms))

Finally, to end on a few positive notes, one study indicated that an actual benefit of migraines might be increased libido.  In it migrainers averaged 20% higher libido, which, in turn, was related to their reduced serotonin levels.  (Of course, this might help explain the migraine-depression connection noted earlier.)  (Yes, tonight darling, I have a headache by Karla Gale)  Migraine might protect your memory. (Does Migraine Protect Your Memory?)  And women who have migraines appear to have a lower risk of breast cancer. (Link Between Migraines and Reduced Breast Cancer Confirmed in Follow-up Study)

(1)  Alka-Seltzer Gold without aspirin, or two tablespoons of milk of magnesia, or 2 tablespoons of baking soda with one tablespoon of potassium bicarbonate in a pint of water.

(2)  An Oligoantigenic diet is a diet with the least possible risk of allergic reactions.

Freudian Psychology is Horsesh*t

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

Freud was a charlatan, a liar, a manipulator, unscrupulous, callous, and unrepentant of having ruined the lives of desperate and vulnerable patients.  He was also a ruthlessly ambitious man, who was desperate for glory, and engaged in an endless quest of self-promotion.  The sum total of his ideas constitutes a pseudoscientific cargo cult, which might be compared to Scientology, but for the fact that this would be a bit unfair to L. Ron Hubbard.  His theories were popular with the literary crowd, (probably a group similar to those who practice deconstructionism) but largely not with the scientific community.  Early on in his career he set up his institutes outside mainstream scientific circles, which partially explains how his theories survived, since they can’t withstand any sort of close examination.  (The lack of openness to other investigators is a classic sign of quack science.)

Eysenck put it bluntly in his book, The Decline and Fall of the Freudian Empire, saying that (to the very limited extent that his theories are testable) anything Freud said that was true wasn’t original, and anything he said that was original wasn’t true.  In short, he didn’t make one single contribution to the advancement of psychology.  But, one thing he did do was to get credit for other’s ideas.  For example, he didn’t discover the concept of the unconscious, but merely appropriated the idea from others; also people had studied dreams before Freud.  When discussing those correct ideas he is currently given credit for, instead of talking about, “Freud’s theory of X,” we should be talking about, “John Doe’s theory of X,” and simply leaving Freud completely out of the story. 

Over the years scholars who have examined his clinical notes have concluded that he fabricated data, failed to consider counter examples, and dreamed up many of his theories out of thin air while he was sometimes bombed out on cocaine.  He came up with his Oedipus theory through a breathtaking overgeneralization by recalling, a possibly false memory of his, about once seeing his mother naked when he was two, and having sexual feelings for her.  He then concluded this was a universal experience of humanity, and that it was one key to the understanding of neurosis. 

In general, he postulated a number of crucial early childhood experiences, which in all likelihood for most people never took place, and then never gave any evidence of causation between these supposed early childhood experiences and the later problems his patients had.  (Also, his early ideas were influenced by numerology, and he slept with his wife’s sister, but perhaps it’s best not to get sidetracked by such details.)

Let’s move on, and focus in on the core problem with his theories.  The basic problem is that, for almost all practical purposes, they aren’t falsifiable.  (As I mentioned above, when they are falsifiable they are wrong.)  That is, they don’t produce specific predictions that are testable.  What this means is that absolutely any evidence, or for that matter its opposite, is consistent with whatever the analyst has to say.  Freud’s general methodology was to listen to a patient’s report of his/her dreams, pick and choose what he thought was important, and make a diagnosis.  Patients would often later incorporate his suggestions into their thinking, which would confirm his diagnosis.  In a circular fashion then, his theory created the facts, which in turn supported the theory. 

Once the diagnosis was made, the therapist’s job was to lead, or if necessary browbeat, the patient to see the truth.  If someone were to disagree with him, this was simply taken as evidence that the patient was resisting because of his/her psychological problems, and therefore constituted further evidence that the diagnosis was correct!  In short, whatever evidence existed would be twisted to fit the diagnosis.  Anyone who disagreed, “No, I’m quite sure that I didn’t have sex with any three legged dog when I was a child.” was dismissed as crazy.  The only “sane” patients were those who bought into Freud’s delusions, agreeing with him.  (The same sort of treatment could be used to dismiss critics, since they were no doubt in denial also.)

Even in cases that were obviously misdiagnosed, Freud could do no wrong.  One patient who complained of stomach pains was cured of hysteria by him.  She then proceeded to inconsiderately die of cancer 2 months later. Freud responded by saying that he had cured the hysteria that had been caused by the lymphoma! 

His theories are endlessly protean, and are built around confirmation bias, with practitioners only looking for supporting evidence of their truth.  They can be made to “explain” anything in a person’s life.  Freud once did a vast analysis supposedly explaining the genius of Leonardo da Vinci from a dream da Vinci had written about.  The only problem is that his entire analysis was based on a mistranslation of the original text, and therefore completely misguided.  His theories then constitute the equivalent of a Tinker Toy set that can be used, after the fact, to curve fit any results.  But, such theories can do no better than common sense in predicting facts ahead of time. (1)  The “science” he founded has never made any real progress, which is another of the hallmarks of a pseudoscience. 

Given Freud’s penchant for analyzing others in condescending and bizarre ways, it is tempting to turn the tools of his craft back on him in an attempt to understand what might have led him down the path he took.  Besides Freud’s vile personality, some have speculated that he might have harbored considerable animosity towards, what he would have seen as, the bigoted Viennese culture of his time.  He was Jewish, and would have no doubt suffered from discrimination.  One way of safely striking back would have been to accuse people of having shocking sexually perverse desires, but doing so under the protective cloak of what was purported to be neutral science.

If I were to do what Freud did, I would go out and get high on drugs.  While on them, I would make up some completely insane psychological theory that insulted a culture I resented.  To make sure I couldn’t be proven wrong, the theory would be largely non-falsifiable.  Next, I would set up a set of independent institutes practicing my bogus therapy, and thereby, being outside the university system, be somewhat insulated from academic criticisms.  If anyone did criticize me, I would, in an act of breathtaking chutzpah, project onto them what I was in fact guilty of, and label them as crazy.  (I feel the need to point out that this scenario strikes me as very reminiscent of how religious cults operate.)   

Freud got away with his quackery largely through wily public relations.  He claimed to have corroborating evidence for his theories that, in fact, didn’t exist.   He was an expert narrator and myth maker.  He was also a master of the rhetoric of science, which gave his theories the appearance of rigor.   His language was technical and difficult to decipher, making criticism difficult.  He presented himself as a searcher after truth, a humble empiricist, a man with incredible integrity, and one who was virtually incapable of self-deception.  Freud cast himself as a truth teller in a world of repressed hypocrites.  He would use striking but irrelevant examples, and when challenged, suggest that proofs were given somewhere else.  Finally, he also had helpers, since the early mystical roots of his thinking were kept hidden by his disciples for many years, and the fiction of a large number of clinical supporting cases was maintained by recycling a small number of actual cases.

In the end, Freud’s work is simply another case of imposter science, similar to Marxism, which is characterized by elaborate theorizing, which presents the appearance of being a science, but upon examination actually turns out to be a fantasy that either can’t be tested or is simply wrong in its predictions.

(1) Psychology might have a particular tendency to generate such nonsense.  Noam Chomsky made, in essence, the same charge against B. F. Skinner. (The Case Against B. F. Skinner)

(For a non-Freudian recent attempt that might explain a sub-class of delusions (and perhaps Freud’s), see: Delusions as Strategic Deception

(For further reading, see: The Psychoanalytic Movement: The Cunning of Unreason by Gellner, Freudian Fraud by Torrey,  Madness on the Couch by Dolnick, Unauthorized Freud by Crews, Why Freud was Wrong by Webster, Killing Freud by Dufresne, Against Freud by Dufresne, Freud and the Question of Pseudoscience by Cioffi, Freud Evaluated by Macmillan, House of Cards by Dawes, Seductive Mirage by Esterson, The Foundations of Psychoanalysis by  Grunbaum, Follies of the Wise by Crews, Psychoanalysis or the Freudian Philosophy by Robinson, Was Sigmund Freud a Quack – The Straight Dope, The Assault on Truth by Masson, The Memory Wars by Crews, Burying Freud by Tallis, The Assault on Freud- Gray, et al., Father Knows Best by Lakoff, Freud Bashers’ Greatest Hits by Prose)

Unusual Therapies

Friday, September 4th, 2009

I think therapies that at first sound strange, but turn out to have real merit, are very interesting.  This is no doubt part of the reason I first found helminthic therapy interesting.  (See also: Helminthic therapy – Wikipedia)  

I ran across this article, 9 Strange but True Medical Practices, which lists a number of therapies I had heard of, but a few are new to me.  It talks about bloodlettinghirudotherapy (bloodletting with leaches, sometimes used in amputation reattachment), maggot debridement therapy (for cleaning and disinfecting wounds), fire cupping, trepanation (which some people have suggested as a possible treatment for Alzheimer’s), laughter therapy, malaria therapy, seizure therapy, and insulin coma therapy. 

Laughter therapy was part of Norman Cousins’ self-treatment regime, which he wrote about in his famous book, Anatomy of an Illness as Perceived by the Patient.  Laughter boosts your immune system, increases energy, diminishes pain, and protects you from stress.  (The Health Benefits of Humor and Laughter, and Humor and Health)  And recently people have been engaging in ”Laughter Yoga,” and joining laughter clubs.  (Laughing matters, more than you think, American School of Laughter Yoga, Laughter Yoga International, World Laughter Tour, Humor and Health Association of Western New York, Association for Applied and Therapeutic Humor, The Humor Project

Malaria therapy was used to induce high fevers to treat syphilis, and then afterwards they would treat the malaria with quinine.  Some researchers are now trying it as a treatment for AIDS.  (Malaria therapy for AIDS)

Seizure therapy was used to treat schizophrenia.  Physicians would use camphor dissolved in oil to induce seizures, and through this method they were able to achieve remission rates of around 40%.  The problem was that there were side effects of memory loss and broken bones, so the treatment was eventually abandoned.  With modern muscle relaxants I would think they could avoid the broken bones, if not the memory loss. 

Insulin coma therapy was used on drug addicts, schizophrenics, and psychotics.  Physicians would use a large dose of insulin to send the patient’s blood sugar crashing, sending the person into a coma.  It had good success rates, up to 90% success with the schizophrenics.  Unfortunately it killed 1-2% of the patients, and was eventually abandoned.  If we could better monitor and control the patient’s physiological reaction, I wonder if the death risk could be minimized, and the therapy be brought back in some form.

Ergot Poisoning, the Likely Cause of the Salem Witch Trials

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

I find natural explanations for historical mysteries and legends fascinating.  I first heard about the ergot theory of the Salem witch trials about 20 years ago, and PBS did a nice review of it (Ergot Poisoning - the cause of the Salem Witch Trials) on a Secrets of the Dead episode (The Witches Curse) back in 2002.  When Linnda Caporael was a senior in college she was writing a paper on the play, The Crucible (which is about the trials).  While reading a book about the play, she noted that the author said he couldn’t explain the hallucinations of the people in Salem.  As a child, she had read about a possible case of mass ergot poisoning in France, and was able to make the connection. 

The most interesting thing about this theory is that seems to explain, not only the Salem case, but many of the instances of witch hysteria in European history.  What some scholars think happened is that an early case of mass ergot poisoning occurred, and it was diagnosed by authorities as witchcraft.  This became the paradigm, and so from then on everyone knew what witchcraft was, and how to recognize it.  If you look throughout European history, and correlate the incidences of witch hysteria with the weather, you find that those cases frequently occurred when the weather was ideal for the ergot infection of rye. 

In addition to its immediate effects, ergot also suppresses the immune system, making people more vulnerable to disease, and the symptoms of plague, a disease that was common at that time, are similar to those of ergot poisoning.  So, the sequence that might have frequently occurred is they first had good weather for an ergot blight.  Then people got poisoned, and therefore had hallucinations and weakened immune systems.  Finally they had a major plague outbreak.  No wonder they thought they were cursed.  (Rye Ergot and Witches, Ergot, See also Witch-hunt -Wikipedia for a sociological perspective on witch hunts.)

Pregnancy & Child Related Information

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

I’ve previously blogged about how geophagy (eating clay) has been practiced for thousands of years to prevent morning sickness.  Pregnant women become hyper-sensitive to environmental toxins, and morning sickness helps protect the developing fetus from deformities.  It now turns out that all that misery could pay off for yet another reason, because women who have a greater degree of morning sickness might have more intelligent babies.  (Morning Sickness may be Sign of a Bright Baby)  The researchers involved theorize that the hormones which cause it might also protect a baby’s brain.  

S. Boyde Eaton, et al., have written (Dietary Intake of Long-Chain Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids during the Paleolithic, p. 20) that our brains are somewhat smaller than our Paleolithic ancestor’s brains, and that one reason might be our modern dietary deficiency in DHA omega-3 fats.  Along with DHA, it seems that, for rats, enriching the environment of the mother long before she becomes pregnant can affect the learning of her offspring.  Researchers theorize that the mother’s learning affects the nature of the hormones she will release during her later pregnancies.  This will affect epigenetic chemical markers on her offspring’s genes, which will in turn affect these genes’ expression during brain development, finally causing changes in the brains of the pups.  (Can Experiences be Passed on to Offspring? and A Mother’s Experience can Alter her Offspring’s Memory Performance)  Meanwhile, stress during pregnancy very likely harms a baby’s brain, and might increase the risk of schizophrenia.  Researchers think the mechanism is likely related to the stress hormone cortisol crossing the placenta.  (Stress Harms Baby’s Brain While in Womb)  Another possible factor that could increase the risk of schizophrenia is having the flue during pregnancy. (Flue During Pregnancy may Increase Risk of Schizophrenia in Certain Offspring

There are some indications that vitamin D deficiency is a risk factor for preeclampsia.  (Vitamin D for the Prevention of Preeclampsia?  A Hypothesis.)  This is a condition that occurs in pregnancy, which causes the patient to develop hypertension, along with protein in their urine.  It’s widespread, affecting about 10% of pregnancies, and is currently only treatable through termination.  It is most common in first pregnancies, and some researchers think that it’s the result of the mother’s immune system inappropriately attacking fetal cells.  The theory is that they are being triggered by the foreign antigens that were introduced by the father.  So, besides vitamin D supplementation, another recommendation is to delay pregnancy for a while after beginning sexual relations, on the theory that this allows the mother’s immune system to become acquainted with the father’s sperm’s antigens.  (Introduction and Overview of Evolutionary Medicine (p.24) by Wenda R. Trevathan, et al.) 

Low levels of vitamin D are also associated with chronic pain and muscle weakness, which suggests this might be a possible factor in a painful difficult birth. (Lack of Vitamin D Linked to Pain, and Recent Developments in Vitamin D Deficiency and Muscle Weakness Among Elderly People)  Stephan Guyenet, of Whole Health Source, reports that pelvic inlet depth index was larger in our hunter-gatherer ancestors (97.7% versus 92.1% today), and that this might be still another reason why childbirth is difficult for modern people.  (Longevity & Health in Ancient Paleolithic vs. Neolithic peoples)  Because vitamin K2 deficiency narrows the bone structure of the face, it seems natural to speculate that this could also be part of the reason for our lower pelvic inlet depth index today. 

Difficult births lead to caesareans, and, using MRIs, researchers have been able to show that women who have had c-sections had lower response levels to their baby’s cries.  This might indicate weaker bonding with their infants.  Researchers suggested that this possibly occurred because these women missed out on the hormonal priming from oxytosin that takes place during a vaginal delivery.  (C-sections may Weaken Bonding with Baby)  

Home birthing is as safe as in the hospital.  Two studies, one from the Netherlands and the other from Canada, found no evidence of greater death rates among home births, for low risk pregnancies, in either the mothers or their babies.  In the Netherlands study nearly 1/3 of those who started at home did end up being transferred to the hospital, but the risk was no greater than those mothers who had started out in the hospital.  Researchers said that a good midwife was the key. (Home Births “as Safe as Hospital,” and Home Birth with Midwife as Safe as Hospital Birth, Study) (See also: The Natural Family Site, and Why Have Natural Childbirth?) 

Also, as I previously blogged, some people claim that placenta eating can prevent postpartum depression.  (Placenta Benefits.info)

The natural childrearing people argue against circumcision on a number of grounds, including that they believe there doesn’t seem to be much of a reason for it.  (Put Down that Knife!  11 Reasons not to Circumcise, Circumcision – Wikipedia, and Circumcision Rates)

Pacifiers reduce the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) by about 90%.  (Pacifier Greatly Reduces Risk of Sudden Infant Death)  They reduce the risk regardless whether or not the infant sleeps on his/her stomach, in soft bedding, or his/her mother smoked.  Problems such as thumb sucking, tooth development, and difficulties breast feeding can be avoided by waiting a few weeks before using one, and stopping when they become toddlers.  (However, there apparently is a trade-off, because, according to Gabe Mirkin, studies from Finland found that children who use pacifiers are more likely to have recurrent ear infections.)  Other people also recommend co-sleeping as protective.  (See below)  One more way of lowering the risk of SIDS is by using a fan to circulate the air in the room.  This reduces the risk by 72%. (Fan Use Linked to Lower Rate of Sudden Infant Death)  (See also: Sudden infant death syndrome – Wikipedia)

Coming to very similar conclusions as The Continuum Concept by Jean Liedloff, here is an article on Evolutionary Psychology: Natural Parenting - Back to Basics in Infant Care by Regine A. Schon.     Matt Metzgar wrote up this outline.  (I inserted some additional materials and links):  

Evolutionary Function of Crying (For a second opinion see: Should Infants be Allowed to Cry Themselves to Sleep?)

  • Crying signals genuine needs of the infant
  • Crying should be immediately attended to by the mother or caregiver
  • Crying takes significant physical effort on the part of the infant
  • The immediate response to crying should be to restore physical contact between the caregiver and the infant

Infants as Carried Young

  • Hunter-gatherer women carried their infants in slings close to the body
  • This increased beneficial skin-to-skin contact between the mother and the infant
  • The common leg positions of babies suggest they are adapted for carrying

Cosleeping  (Regarding co-sleeping: Mr. Metzgar cites this article (which argues in favor of it), Why Babies Should Never Sleep Alone: A Review of the Co-sleeping Controversy in Relation to SIDS, Bedsharing, and Breastfeeding, and this site, Mother-Baby Behavioral Sleep Laboratory.  See also: The Benefits of Co-Sleeping)       

  • Cosleeping for the infant and mother has been the universal norm throughout most of human history
  • Bedsharing is the environment to which the vulnerable newborn is best adapted
  • Cosleeping may reduce some forms of SIDS

Breastfeeding (See also: Breastfeeding Linked to Smarter Babies (Again)  This article points out that, as well as being correlated with 5.9 points of higher IQ, breastfeeding also apparently reduces the chances of a mother later developing rheumatoid arthritis, and lessons the child’s odds of later developing cardiovascular disease.  This article, Big Bad Cavities: Breastfeeding is not the Cause, states that more than three dozen studies have shown no link between breastfeeding and the disease of Early Childhood Carries (ECC).  Medical News Today reports that the concentration of volatile organic compound toxins in breast milk are much lower than indoor air, and also much lower than the safe levels for drinking water. (Concentrations of Certain Toxins in Breast Milk are Low, Study Finds))

  • No alternative to breast milk existed before the transition to a farming economy
  • Therefore, infants have been breastfed for 99% of all human existence
  • Artificial substitutes have been unable to replicate the complex structure of breast milk
  • There is mounting evidence about the many benefits of breastfeeding on child development

Extrogestation

  • Human infants are born in an exceptionally immature state
  • The conditions for the early part of infant life should attempt to mimic that of the womb
  • This includes close contact with the mother’s body in a tight, warm embrace
  • Heartbeat sounds are comforting to an infant; women tend to hold infants on the left side of their body, close to their hearts
  • Rocking an infant provides a calming effect since it mimics the movement stimulation the infant received from the mother’s normal daily movements
  • Swaddling replicates the feeling of the womb and has been proven effective in calming infants

Toilet Training  (What is Infant Potty Training, Benefits of Infant Potty Training, Infant Potty Training, The Controversy over Infant Potty Training, Shaping self-initiated toileting in infants)  (There are also major health benefits of squatting instead of sitting for defecation.  (The Squat Toilet)  The repeated refrain is to do things the way nature intended.)

  • Infants were historically toilet trained much earlier than in modern times
  • Natural toilet training depends on reading an infant’s signals and responding appropriately
  • Children trained in this way complete toilet training anywhere from 6 months to 2 years

Matt also reviewed this book, The 90-Minute Sleep Baby Program.  As he says, the basic idea behind the book is that humans have a 90 minute cycle of activity and rest.  This means that when a baby wakes up their next nap should be 90 minutes later.  (Older children might string several of these together.)  22 out of 27 reviews on Amazon gave the book 5 stars.  Matt speculates that many children today are sleep deprived, which is obviously troublesome.  It turns out that sleep deprived children have twice the risk of becoming obese.  (Sleep Deprivation Doubles the Risk of Obesity in Both Children and Adults

Matt also very favorably reviewed, The Happiest Baby on the Block.  The author argues that babies need a uterus like environment, and he suggests a number of tactics for mimicking it.  These include swaddling, shh sounds, side/stomach position, swinging, and sucking.  He claims that his program will calm almost all babies.  

Matt also pointed out Baby Sign Language, which allows the infant to communicate his/her needs at a much younger age.  I think it’s very surprising that this wasn’t stumbled upon thousands of years ago, yet it is a remarkably simple and wonderful advancement.  It apparently isn’t some sort of silly fad, but brings real benefits, which I think all parents would appreciate, including greatly reduced frustration on everyone’s part, and increased language skills. 

Matt has blogged about Baby Led Weaning, which takes the position that children shouldn’t be fed pureed foods (Pureed Food “isn’t Natural for Babies’), but instead weaned directly onto solid foods.  The argument behind the idea is that this is much closer to the way our ancestors would have done it.  (It should be said that hunter-gatherers often did pre-chew the child’s food to help him/her along.)   

I have blogged before about going barefoot, and children who go barefoot as long as possible have about half the rate of flat footedness later on.  Having said that, being flat footed doesn’t appear to be as big a problem as people once thought.  There appears to be no relationship between the height of children’s arches and their ability to perform athletically, and it very well also might not affect their injury rates. (Flat Feet don’t Impair Kid’s Motor Skills)  

A study from Sweden concluded that risk factors for snoring as an adult include respiratory and ear infections as a child, being raised in a large family, and being exposed to a dog at home as a newborn. (Have A Dog? Your Child is More Likely to Snore as an Adult) 

Children who suffer from cyclic vomiting might actually be suffering from migraines. (Gabe Mirkin: Cyclic Vomiting

Low levels of carbon monoxide, 25 parts per million, might cause oxidative stress on the cochlear nerve, and permanently damage the hearing of children.  Such carbon monoxide can come from tobacco, cooking, and heating appliances.  (How Chronic Exposure to Tiny Levels of Carbon Monoxide Damages Hearing in Young Ears)  However, the main cause of hearing loss in modern world is loud noise.  The blast from a single gunshot, or the loud prolonged noise of a rock concert, can result in permanent hearing loss and tinnitus (ringing in the ears).

Many cases of bed-wetting might be caused by breathing problems.  63% of bed-wetting children stopped when they had surgery to remove their adenoids or tonsils, and the use of a plate to widen the palate of bed-wetters with narrow palates ended the condition in 70% of cases. (Breathing Troubles the Cause of Bed-wetting?)   Gabe Mirkin discusses another theory, that it’s the lack of antidiuretic hormone that causes the problem.  This hormone causes the kidneys to shut down at night.  (Bedwetting

The BBC reports that a 10 minute test for dyslexia has been developed that can be used starting at age 3 & 1/2.  (Early Warning Test for Dyslexia)  The test has children repeat sentences and re-tell a story while looking at how the child builds sounds up into words.  For parents of children who seem a little different there is the book, Quirky Kids: Understanding and Your Child Who Doesn’t Fit In- When To Worry And When Not To Worry.  One reviewer thought the book would be most helpful to parents who are just beginning to suspect something is unusual, but don’t know what might be the problem.  It also debunks a number of folk myths out there, and reportedly has a good section on the pros and cons of various medications.  Science Daily has this article, Specific Behaviors Seen in Infants Can Predict Autism, New Research Shows, which reports that Canadian researchers have discovered that there are behavioral signs that can accurately predict autism in children as young as one year old.  (See also: The Vitamin D Theory of Autism)

According to a study by the University of Rochester Medical Center, there is no detectable risk to children from the mercury in the seafood their mother’s ate, up to 12 servings a week.  The study period was before birth to age 9, and the children were tested for 21 different cognitive, neurological and behavioral functions.  These abilities included concentration, attention, problem-solving, and motor skills. (No Detectable Risk From Mercury in Seafood, Study Shows

Tonsils serve to trap germs and train the white blood cells when children are young, but as they grow older their importance lessons.  Doctors generally seem to say that their removal can be justified if they obstruct the throat, or the child suffers from frequent throat infections.  (Dr. Alan Green on Tonsil Removal)    

Not surprisingly, mother’s who talk about people’s mental states, such as beliefs, wants, and intentions, have children with a greater understanding of social interactions.  (This obviously does not establish causation, because mothers with greater social skills might pass on genes that also dispose their children to have those same skills.)  Researchers note that these greater social skills do not necessarily imply that these children will be better behaved. (The Secret to Building Children’s Social Skills)   The Incredible Years is an organization which hosts a variety of programs for teaching parents, teachers, and children social skills.  It turns out the ability of a mother to read her child’s emotions is more important than her social status for the child’s development. (Why Mind-Reading Mums are Best

Not surprisingly, children are happier who have a sense of spirituality, that is meaning in life, and they think that their lives have value.  Good interpersonal relationships also helped, and accounted for 27% of the happiness variation between children.  Being more sociable was also a happiness predictor.  (Spirituality is key to kids’ happiness

Researchers want to know why some children are resilient in spite of bad upbringings.  They have found that resilient children tend to share a number of characteristics:  They have at least one supportive person in their life, have a positive outlook, a pleasant altruistic personality, they are eager to learn, and have problem-solving skills.  They take responsibility for their mistakes, and move on.  They also have an interest or friend they can turn to when they need to.  (This description to me sounds somewhat like the characteristics of lucky people.)  (Raising Resilient Children Foundation, their book, Psychosocial Characteristics of Resilient Children, and The Resilient Child)

Sara Bennett and Nancy Kalish, in The Case Against Homework: How Homework is Hurting our Children and What We Can Do About It, argue that there’s almost no evidence that homework helps kid’s academic success.  They point out that the amount of homework has skyrocketed in recent years, which is contributing to an epidemic of obesity, and robs kids of the time they need to be kids.  They also give advice on how to separate useful assignments from the time wasters.  Richard Louv, author of, Last Child in the Woods, argues that children suffer from a nature-deficit disorder. 

For preventing myopia, besides a low glycemic diet/ Paleolithic Diet, it seems that playing outside is also protective.  Researchers in Australia have found that kids who spend a lot of time outside have lower myopia rates. (Kid’s eyes need the great outdoors)   

I have previously blogged about The Freedom to Learn site.  Peter Gray has a series of articles which argue that play is essential for healthy human life, and maintaining a band’s existence.  John Holt takes a similar approach in his books, How Children Learn and How Children Fail, that children are natural learners, and the process of forcing them to learn in school changes their personalities for the worse.  David Elkind’s book, The Power of Play: How Spontaneous Imaginative Activities Lead to Happier Healthier Children, argues that play is changing from teaching children social roles, vocations, and academic skills to teaching them brand loyalty, fashion consciousness, and group think.  Matt Metzgar reviewed Susan Linn’s book, The Case for Make-Believe: Saving Play in a Commercialized World, which argues that many of today’s toys are scripted, and that they don’t foster the development of social and critical skills.  Matt also discussed this article, Sucker-Me Elmo, which questions the merits of electronic toys.  Meanwhile, New York City is developing the next generation playground, which is designed to foster the imagination of kids. (New York developing a next-generation playground)  Here is a site that features educational products for children We Make Stories, which allows the child to write and print their own stories.

It turns out that pedophiles don’t randomly search through MySpace sites searching for kids.  Instead they go for those kids in chat rooms who are presenting themselves in sexually suggestive ways. (Welcome to Crimes Against Children Research Center, and Salon – Stop Worrying about your Children)  This information is from the same woman who runs Free Range Kids, which I have written about before.  Boing Boing favorably reviewed this book, If Your Kid Eats this Book Everything will Still be Okay: How to Know if Your Child’s Injury or Illness is Really an Emergency by Lara Zibners.  Zibners is an emergency room pediatrician who says that 75% of late night emergency room visits are unnecessary, and this book is a guide to all the things you don’t have to worry about.

On the other hand, there are real risks out there, and Dreambaby makes safety products to help reduce these.  Science Daily has a story, Homes Need More Protection Against Falls, which points out that falls are the second leading cause of death among children, and that this is because many homes have inadequate protection against them.  Such homes are lacking such commonsense things as banisters, grab bars, anti-slip bathtub strips, and child safety gates.  Eco Child’s Play has a similar outlook, and advocates ”Green Parenting for Non-Toxic Healthy Homes.”  This site focuses on alternative medicine, and sources of toxins from such things as plastics, medicines, and cleaners.  (See, for example: 12 Warnings for Parents and Kids in 2008, 10 Ways to Avoid Toxic Plastic - BPA (Bisphenol A), Synthetic Estrogens and Your Child, Smart Medicine for a Healthier Child, 9 Best Articles for Natural and Home Remedies on Echo Child’s Play in 2008, Another Reason We Can’t Trust the FDA, Melamine…, New Study Suggests Link Between Hairspray Exposure and Genital Birth Defect, How Safe is Your Child’s Playground?, Balloons Cause More Deaths than Marbles, and Finding Safer Products for our Children)  They also discuss products to make parent’s lives easier. (Postpartum Bamboo Belly Wrap Helps Shrink Your Belly and Prevent Stretch Marks, and Why Tilty is a Better Sippy

In recent years people have been taking bullying far more seriously, and researchers have found that, at least with rats, bullying might scar the brain for life.  When rats were bullied new brain nerve cells would form, but then die, and they acted depressed.  (Bullying May Scar Brain for Life

Psychologist Randall Flanery has this advice for being a great dad:  Run a benevolent dictatorship.  Be friendly, but not a friend.  Admit when you’re wrong.  Remain firmly flexible.  Stick around even when they don’t want you to.  Ask questions.  Don’t take it personally if they express unhappiness.  Know that parenting is 24/7, and then some.  Keep in mind that who you are is more important than what you buy them.  Laugh.  Of course, there is also the book, Supernanny: How to Get the Best from your Children by Jo Frost.  For the sport parent, there is Who’s Game is it Anyway: A Guide to Helping Your Child Get the Most From Sports, Organized by Age and Stage by Amy Baltzell.

Toxoplasmosis Controls our Minds

Thursday, August 27th, 2009

Toxplasma gondii is a parasitic protozoa that completes its normal full reproductive life cycle via members of the cat family.  However, it is also carried by many other mammals and birds; in these non-feline species the parasite forms cysts in the host’s muscle and brain cells.   

It infects humans, and about 40% of the world’s population has it, while in the United States the infection rate is about 16%.  People typically get it when they eat raw or undercooked meat, or ingest its eggs excreted by an infected cat.  If a woman contracts it while pregnant the effects can be disastrous for the fetus.  Also, it can kill people whose immune systems are severely weakened.  Additionally, it can alter sex ratios, because women who have high levels of antibodies to it have 260 boys born for every 100 girls. 

In addition to all this, another interesting and problematic aspect of the disease is that it can change the psychology of the animal it infects.  For example, rats infected with it seek out cats, causing them to be eaten, which helps the disease complete its life cycle.  Disturbingly, it also affects the behavior of people.  Infected people have slower reaction times, and have an increased rate of traffic accidents (from 2 to 6 times).  People with it generally are more neurotic, and women infected with it are more outgoing, friendly, and promiscuous.  Infected men have lower IQs, shorter attention spans, are more anti-social, risk taking, independent, suspicious, jealous, and morose.  It might even contribute to schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.  Researchers point out that so many people are affected worldwide that it might be altering the norms and politics of nations.

Until now, when the parasites were in their latent stage they couldn’t be treated, because medications can’t penetrate the cysts.  The good news is that this might soon change because researchers have discovered a method that might make it possible to deliver medication through the cyst’s walls.  One hopeful fact is that when rodents are treated for the disease their behavior patterns revert back to normal.  So, perhaps ours will too.

(For further reading, see: Mind-Control Microbe, Parasite “turns women into sex kittens, Toxoplasmosis during pregnancy, Discovery shows promise as a new treatment for toxoplasmosis, Toxplasma gondii Infection in the United States, 1999-2000, Toxoplasmosis – CDC, and Toxoplasmosis Parasite May Trigger Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder)

Rejection Creates Resentment

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

The phenomenon of school shootings has led researchers to investigate what role interpersonal rejection might play in violence.  (See: If You Can’t Join Them Beat Them, and Link Between Social Rejection and Aggressive Behavior Explained)  Several studies have been done involving college students that show rejection changes people’s perceptions, by making it more likely that a person will interpret another’s actions as hostile.  This outcome apparently isn’t a result of an emotional change of mood, but instead bypasses mood and directly affects cognitive understandings.  Also, the effect isn’t simply a result of simply any type of bad news, but is the specific result occurring because of social rejection.  As a result of this transformation in subject’s perceptions of other’s motivations, rejected people are more likely to act in antisocial ways, such as being aggressive, less willing to be social, and less willing to be cooperative.  

The problem is that this phenomenon could have a tendency to lead to a downward spiral, since this sort of reaction makes it even less likely that others will accept the person.  In the United States the number of people living alone increased from 13% in 1960 to 25% in 1997, and researchers are concerned that such increasing social isolation might lead, or have led, to an increase in the overall rate of antisocial behaviors.

Is Everyone a Little Bit Crazy? & Dishonoring the Family Name

Wednesday, August 19th, 2009

I found this story on-line, and it might explain a few things about some of the people I have known:  Newsweek 1/26/98 story Lifestyle/Special Report: Is Everybody Crazy?

With the development of brain scanning technology and genetic analysis, some researchers are arguing that mental disorders are not discrete, but are actually on a continuum.  When doctors scan first order close relatives of patients, they find that their scans often look halfway between their relatives with the full blown diagnosis, and nonrelatives.  Such people also often manifest symptoms that suggest that they are about halfway to a diagnosis.  The idea is that it might take say any 7 of a set of 10 genes combined to create a given condition, and if a person turns out to have 4 genes that dispose them to the condition they might be considered only a bit odd.  For example, someone half way to schizophrenia might have an unusually high interest in paranormal phenomenon.  Perhaps a sibling of an autism patient might be socially clumsy, but is also a very successful computer programmer; partly because his very mild autism means that he can concentrate for long periods of time. 

When I grew up I was taught that we shouldn’t judge people by their family, but only by their own actions.  In light of the above findings, I realize that judging people partly by their close relatives makes some sense.  Many things we might worry about concerning a person, especially if they involve predictions about future behaviors, are hard to judge when we have to make a decision, and any valid additional source of information is helpful.  If John’s father abandoned his children, then John might carry genes that could dispose him toward the same behavior.  This is useful information to any girlfriend when deciding whether or not to marry him. 

The old idea of someone dishonoring the family name makes a good deal of sense when seen in this light.  If a sibling does something wrong, the rest of his family members will be correctly judged as being at higher risk for similar behaviors.  So, what you do isn’t just your private business, because your actions do reflect well or badly on closely related others.     

For further reading, these books both argue for this thesis, Shadow Syndromes: The Mild Forms of Major Mental Disorders That Sabotage Us by John J. Ratey; and Living with Our Genes: Why they Matter More than You Think by Dean H. Hamer and Peter Copland.  On the other side of the debate is, Making Us Crazy: DSM: The Psychiatric Bible and the Creation of Mental Disorders by Herby Kutchins and Stuart A. Kirk.