February 04, 2008
Detox Body or Mind?
by Shiban Ganju
Dedicated to Jenny Mah, a 3QD reader, who blogged the following comment in my earlier post: “Would you consider doing one on other forms of "detox" such as "cleansing" diets and, the latest to hit my city - ionic footbaths!”
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I travel for my work; I fly forward across continents and backward across centuries. In twenty-four hours, I journey away from the worried–well, who scurry to ‘detox’ their bodies, to the scared sick, who fall prey to needless death; from twenty-first century neurosis to nineteenth century ignorance.
Currently, my work lands me in Uttar Pradesh, the most populous state in north India with 186 million people, which would make it the sixth largest country in the world, were it an independent nation. From Lucknow airport we drive - in a rented Toyota Qualis - deep into the state, where 783 persons stuff every square kilometer, all of who seem to crowd into the bazaars on the two-lane highway. The driver assiduously - and miraculously - avoids every sauntering pedestrian without a scratch, but he can’t avoid potholes, which outnumber people. Our Toyota drops and hops, rattling my vertebrae and shaking my innards.
After trundling for four hours we reach our destination - a small village of 150 houses. My jolted body slides out of the car and hobbles into a dusty patch in the center of the village, where I see a circle of women in bight colored saris, who greet me with restrained smiles and curiosity. I learn they have walked miles, from twenty surrounding villages, to become social health activists. My travel aches vanish. I sit among them on the tarp-covered ground.
My job: to strengthen health delivery systems. My aim: to eradicate ignorance. My method: to persuade and educate. And my success: not guaranteed.
Failure to persuade is not new to me; I remember having failed before, when I ‘imparted education’ in my faraway home country, where ‘body detox’ is big business. And where it sells in different packages.
Detox customers throng to ‘colonics’ where they learn that the colon holds body waste in its crevices for a lifetime and a medicated colon wash is curative. The caregiver inserts a tube into the rectum and flushes the client’s colon with a gallon or two of the washing fluid. They may also offer a strong purgative called the ‘oral colonic.’ I have tried – with limited success - to convince ‘colonic addicts’ that a normal colon does not hold any grouse and does not need catharsis. They listen, they ignore me and they go back for the colon scrub.
Then there are the ionic footbath parlors for stressed urbanites. Here, I am quoting a sales pitch I found on the net about ‘Ion footbath detoxification’:
“This is the most relaxing way to get rid of the toxins present in the body. You just have to sit on the chair, with your feet dipped into the water container. A flow of warm water will flow under your feet and the positive and negative ions in the water will attach themselves to the toxins present in the body. Toxins that are insoluble will also dissolve in this water.”
Look at the clever craft of words - toxins, positive and negative ions - to add credence. It helps to sell, if the pitch throws in a couple of mysterious words without context to create a scientific aura. Flowing water under the sole may be soothing but that probably is the only truth in the statement. Even a perfunctory knowledge about the working of the body is enough to arouse suspicion against this ludicrous claim preying on the gullible.
Ions are components of a salt in solution. Common salt, also called sodium chloride, floats as sodium and chloride ions in water. These ions - the commonest ions in the body - can cross through porous barriers by passive osmosis or active transport. Thick sole of a foot is not permeable and the ions in the container cannot penetrate into the feet, which hoard no special toxins to extrude.
Feet also become touch pads for ‘reflexologists’ who carry an unsubstantiated belief that feet possess a mirror ‘reflex’ representation of the whole body. These practitioners promise relief for migraine, hormonal imbalance, digestive, sinus, respiratory and many other ailments by rubbing areas - representing the sick organ - on the feet. Unfortunately for the sufferers of these ailments this relief is merely an expensive promise.
Similar to such practitioners are ‘energy field’ or ‘biofield’ healers, who claim to heal by transmitting energy from the healer to the patient in some mysterious way. They claim to ‘restore balance’ and release ‘congested energy.’ Spurious claims abound in this field and we have to be as much skeptical as we have to be receptive to healthy holistic tips.
Then there are cleansing diets, which may be harmless to the body but not to your wallet. These diets offer no extra benefit. If we just eat the calories and the nutrients we need, we cannot go wrong. Food has an either-or effect; we become what we eat: fat-slim, happy-sad, intoxicated-sober, energetic-mellow, sick-healthy – the choice is ours to make. Each nutrient - carbohydrate, fat, protein, vitamin, mineral or water – has a specific utility for normal functioning of the body and in special circumstances, we may have to increase or decrease the quantity of one or the other nutrient. Cleansing diets provide extra amounts of one or the other nutrient and claim an exaggerated benefit.
Some alternative medicine practitioners recommend a liver and gall bladder cleanser. The recipe contains Epson salt (magnesium sulfate), olive oil and ornithine. They offer no rationale about what it cleanses in the liver and how it works.
For people with a temperament of ‘faith’ in much abused clichés of ‘organic’, ‘natural’ and ‘holistic’, probably I sound foolish. It is nothing new to me. I am aware of my limitation to persuade people of seemingly simple things. My inability haunts me now, as I face these eager women in this remote Indian village, which still lives in the nineteenth century.
My mission is to devise ways to reduce maternal mortality, which is one of the highest in this part of the world. Over 500 women die out of 100,000 live deliveries. Compare that with the USA, where maternal mortality rate is under 9 per 100,000 live births. The solutions are so simple that we in the west are incredulous. If we treat anemia with extra iron, prevent excessive hemorrhage during birth, give one prophylactic antibiotic before delivery and encourage institutional delivery, we can decrease the mortality by almost 75 percent. It has been done before.
The women, sitting in a circle, introduce themselves; they tell me their name and the village they come from. I enquire about the deaths in their villages.
Shakila, a girlish woman, wearing black, recounts - in a flat voice - the story of her neighbor, who died in childbirth last month.
“How old was the mother?”
“Twenty one.”
Her emotions do not match the tragedy; death is not an occasional visitor – it is their next-door neighbor.
But it doesn’t have to be this way; ‘this death was preventable!’ My challenge is to penetrate this simple message into their brains - the most obstinate organ of the body.
Changing behavior is an uphill task – anywhere in the world. I have ranted against scams in health care; pleaded against colon cleansers, protested against refeloxolgy and energy healing without success. If I have failed in persuading educated twenty first century people against ionic footbaths, how will I convince these illiterate women about the benefits of iron in pregnancy?
I realize, it is all about ‘detoxing’ the mind and not the body.
Posted by Shiban Ganju at 12:00 AM | Permalink






















Comments
Dear Shiban,
A very lovely column! The contrast between the medical problems of the East and West is stark and breathtaking. This is your writing at its best; thoughtful, sobering, socially responsible and done with style and feeling. I found it to be deeply moving.
Keep up all of your good work across the continents, you are putting us to shame. And inspiring us to do more. Thank you.
Azra.
Posted by: Azra Raza | Feb 4, 2008 6:48:39 AM
Thisi is really a well written piece and the point is well made. It is so true that affluent educated minds are no guarantee that humans will not fall for attractive false claims. Our minds, even if the most difficult to penetrate organ as you said, seems to be vulnerable to any thing that promises eternity, or longer life, in other words to 'hope' even false hope.
You mentioned food. Here is an interesting fact: In America, we spend 9.7% of our income on food which is the least of any nation and we spend 16% of our income on health care which is the most of any nation! And we are a country which is obsessed with 'healthy eating.'
Thansk for your piece. I would love to travel with you to these villages of the centuries past, if I can be of some use in this educational effort.
Posted by: Tasnim | Feb 4, 2008 8:35:54 AM
I agree. Excellent column, Shiban! One thing: your resumé of the effects of food and nutriets oversimplifies the subject, which from my reading seems to have little clarity and agreement. But I hope you write more of these demystifying pieces, I think they're great and worthwhile: might I suggest one on the concepts of "chi" and "chakras"?
Posted by: Asad Raza | Feb 4, 2008 8:36:10 AM
Considering the origins of the human brain, it is a near miracle that we managed to develop science at all. Clearly, this organ evolved (how, we are not yet in a position to say) to make us more efficient food-gatherers and danger-avoiders, but it eventually developed science, art, and the other things we are so proud of.
Unfortunately, it still bears the qualities it had at its start, among which is the proclivity to create ideas with no basis at all in reality and cling passionately to them--in other words, imagination and belief. These are responsible for glorious works of art, but--if not disciplined by knowledge--also for the strangest superstitions and illusions. And this in any society, "advanced" or not.
Posted by: JonJ | Feb 4, 2008 10:46:19 AM
Lovely, Shiban! Thanks!!!
Posted by: Abbas Raza | Feb 4, 2008 11:03:29 AM
Asad Raza commented:
> One thing: your resumé of the effects of food
> and nutrie[n]ts oversimplifies the subject...
Not bad for a summary in dozen words or less, I'd say: the brevity of "...just eat the calories and the nutrients we need..." has rarely been improved on. Though Michael Pollan managed it, I think:
"Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants."
When people are resolutely doing the wrong thing in droves, to the point where an "oversimplification" is a big step in the right direction (statistically speaking, just as in the maternal mortality case)... well, probably best to start with the simple version. Bandwidth is limited. Add footnotes later.
Posted by: DaveG | Feb 4, 2008 12:05:19 PM
Dave,
If I understand him correctly, I think Asad's comment is more of a gripe against the conflicting (and fast changing) nutritional advice one gets from purportedly "scientific" sources than a complaint against Shiban.
I have heard rumors that Michael Pollan may have some serious competition in the form of a book sometime soon, but I am not saying anything more at this time.
All best,
Abbas
Posted by: Abbas Raza | Feb 4, 2008 12:19:14 PM
Shiban,
Thanks for writing! Your comment was very enlightening. The extremes, sad and very touching.
Your list of detox measures brought me back to the time when someone took me to a spa in the Catskills. I thought I could go to the slopes and brought my skis. Instead, I was trapped at a clinic, where I was put on a cleansing diet and listened to women talk about which treatment to schedule next. I found it very disturbing.
Posted by: Beth Ann | Feb 4, 2008 6:25:03 PM
I have a very specific comment regarding cleansing diets and a gall bladder clean, intended to respond to your question about the rationale for such a process.
Three times I've done the "Master Cleanse" - a ten-day regimen of lemon juice, cayenne pepper, maple syrup, and warm water. (The maple syrup is to provide the body with simple sugar for brain function. The cayenne is a mild irritant to the GI tract. The lemon juice is magic.) On the tenth day, I take some Epsom salt, which is a mild relaxant that loosens the bile ducts that connect the gall bladder to the top of the small intestine. An hour later, a cup of olive oil, and BAM! The stomach gets the signal that a whole bunch of fat needs to be metabolized. Gall bladder -- release the bile you've been collecting for ten days! The gall bladder lets loose, and the ducts, ordinarily narrow but now loosened by the Epsom salts, freely pass the contents of the gall bladder into the GI tract.
An hour later, a close inspection of the toilet bowl shows what looks like kitty litter -- small (1-3mm) pebbles of calcified bile. Given a few years, these could turn into bona fide gallstones. (My wife had a few samples that were as big as 1cm.) It was a validation that our days of suffering and denial were worth it (and, maybe, that "deprivation" was the bigger benefit).
Moral of this story: Your body is a physical object and it can be maintained as such, with simple techniques. Just sayin'.
(And ionic footbed detoxification is a crock, as are magnets, most diets, etc.)
Posted by: madjoey | Feb 4, 2008 8:45:25 PM
On a desperate hunt for the most effective detox system to rid myself of mysterious symptoms from unidentifiable causes, I didn't take long to exclude those footbaths as pure hokum. The water muddies from the electrodes, not from evils exiting your body. I settled on a more expensive route - IV drip - EDTA chelation, since it can get rid of aluminum, which proved to be high in me. I did not solve my original problem, and still am on the hunt for that, however, my arteries became less stiff with the removal of arterial plaque and my organs function better (less frequent urination) due to elimination of whatever substances were clogging my insides. I would recommend it to anyone. Don't wait until you have your first heart attack or stroke. If you can tolerate the cost, it is well worth it. Now back to the hunt for mysterious ailments - i am commencing a urine therapy program, as that holds promise.
Posted by: A Key | May 3, 2008 11:52:43 AM
have been using the Acai Berry Detox for about 3 weeks and have seen some wonderful results. I have to be careful, though, not to take it too far past noon or I have trouble getting to sleep at night. My only negative comment is toward the “free trial” merchants who charged my account for the full amount before I even received my product. So much for a trial. I would suggest purchasing the acai berry products from a reputable store rather than online. Whole Foods or other stores of that type have the product at about one third the price. I like the product. I just don’t like feeling like I have been taken.
Thanks to your good job.
Johnmclrn
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the lemonade diet detox
Posted by: John | Feb 19, 2010 4:14:53 AM
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