Gary's new website

Showing posts with label nutrition-osteoporosis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nutrition-osteoporosis. Show all posts

Friday, July 10, 2015

The calcium Lie - why calcium can destroy your health, including your bones

Please take a few minutes to watch this video by Dr Robert Thompson then read some of the many articles I have written over the years about issues to do with calcium and diseases like osteoporosis.  

Here is the link to some of them:
http://blog.garymoller.com/search/label/osteoporosis%20nutrition

For about 80% of the people who consult me about chronic health problems, reducing dietary intake of calcium will improve their health!




Dr Thompson refers to mineral analysis HTMA).  I like him because he uses the very same laboratory as me for mineral analysis and has come to the conclusion I have about calcium and health.  It was this test that opened his eyes and what motivated him to write the book.  This is the test he refers to:
http://www.garymoller.com/Products/Products/H/Hair-Tissue-Mineral-Analysis-Profile-Two.aspx

I have a limited number of his book "The Calcium Lie" here for $30 (contact me directly if you want a copy).  I have these available for my clients because it helps explain the value of the HTMA for guiding the journey back to good health.



 About this website 
The advice in these articles is given freely without promise or obligation. Its all about giving you and your family the tools and information to take control of your health and fitness.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Building Bone: The Novel Role of Tocotrienols

Here is an interesting and informative interview with Professor Ima-Nirwana Soelaiman, an expert in the role of tocotrienols in the process of maintaining bone bone strength and healthy ageing (in case you are wondering, I do have tocotrienols available but not for over the counter sales).
Dr Ima-Nirwana Soelaiman




Please contact me if you are interested in learning more about tocotrienols and whether this may be beneficial for you.  If you have a health condition and on medication then you must arrange a consultation before making any changes or adding a supplement such as these:
http://www.garymoller.com/Consultation/Private-Consultation.aspx


About this website 
The advice in these articles is given freely without promise or obligation. Its all about giving you and your family the tools and information to take control of your health and fitness.
Candida and Fungal Infections? Gary Moller recommends you explore this programme: Click Here!

Thursday, December 27, 2012

The myth of osteoporosis exposed

About 15 years ago, when I was running a small rehabilitation clinic, a sales man tried to sell me a Dexa Scan machine which measures bone density.  His presentation was not about health promotion; but about the wonderful business model surrounding this highly expensive diagnostic machine.  It is a machine that strikes terror into the hearts of women.  It was guaranteed a money-printer according to the sales pitch!  Health was barely mentioned.

In my opinion, the osteoporosis business is deeply flawed.  It always has been.  I know what osteoporosis is.  Where is the epidemic?  Where are all the women snapping bone,s left right and center, due to weak bones?  Sure there are women out there with osteoporosis but there is nothing like the widespread epidemic being broadcast from on high. Is it real or is it a myth, manufactured by big business to terrorise women into undertaking highly expensive and therapies that actually destroy health?

I get very angry when a woman comes to me, in tears, after being told she has osteopaenia or osteoporosis.  In most cases, the diagnosis is wrong. It terrifies unnecessarily.  In my opinion.

Bilateral hip fracture associated with "bone-sparing"
medication use.
The xray-based bone density test that drives the osteoporosis industry is deeply and irreparably flawed.  It is irrelevant for the majority of women.  It is a poor predictor of fracture risk.  Better predictors are balance eyesight and the number of medications being taken.  Anti osteoporosis drugs increase fracture, heart failure, dementia and cancer risks - how about that for a kind of madness!  High bone density increases your breast cancer risk several fold!  This is no BS - this is based on published peer reviewed research.







"What is more concerning to women: breaking a bone (from which one can heal), or developing breast cancer? If it is the latter, a low BMD reading could be considered cause for celebration and not depression, fear and the continued ingestion of inappropriate medications or supplements, which is usually the case following a diagnosis of osteopenia or osteoporosis."
Sayer Ji

"How can you make such outrageous statements?  Where's your evidence, Moller?"

Here is the link to an excellent, carefully referenced, article that summarises the issues very nicely.  Please enjoy the read and make up your own mind:
http://www.greenmedinfo.com/blog/osteoporosis-myth-dangers-high-bone-mineral-density?utm_source=GreenMedInfo+Weekly&utm_campaign=f099fe5b3e-Greenmedinfo&utm_medium=email

And here is the link to the dozens of articles I have written previously on the subject of osteoporosis and "bone-sparing" drugs:
http://blog.garymoller.com/search/label/bisphosphonates

Please comment by using the "please comment" link below, thanks.
_______________________________________
About this website
The advice in these articles is given freely without promise or obligation.  Its all about giving you and your family the tools and information to take control of your health and fitness.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

The inconvenient truth about calcium and osteoporosis





Statement:
Osteoporosis is caused by a lack of calcium in the diet.

Of course that's right?  It must be because that's what the experts have been telling us for the last 30 years.  Or is it?


Question:
Name one country that has one of the highest rates of osteoporosis on the planet?
Answer:
New Zealand

Question:
Physical labour, no sunscreen and a wonderful
wholefoods diet = Strong Samoan bones.
Name one country that has one of the highest dietary intakes of calcium?
Answer:
New Zealand - the land of the cow. A land that is awash with calcium but not much else in the way of nutrient minerals.

Question:
If flour is the main ingredient in your cake recipe, will you get a better cake by adding more flour?
Answer:
No - you will get a mess of a cake that nobody will eat.

Question:
If sand is the main ingredient of concrete, will adding more sand give you stronger concrete?
Answer:
No - you will get a crumbling structure and probably be prosecuted.

Question: 
My Samoan Brother-in-law, Ioasa, flexing his guns during
a break while cycling around Savaii and Upolo.
If calcium is the main ingredient of bone, will adding more calcium make for stronger bones?
Answer:
No - you will get weaker bones and other problems such as fatigue, low thyroid, fibromyalgia, arthritis, insomnia, dry skin, heart attack, dementia and stroke - to name a few.

Question:
Which race, it is said, has the highest bone density on the planet?
Answer:
The Polynesian - the Samoans and Tongans to be specific.

Question:
My favourite Samoan dish - Lu'au - taro leaves
soaked and baked in coconut oil - fatty acids galore!
Can you identify the calcium in the traditional Polynesian diet?
Answer:
Hmmm .... Where is the calcium? I can find lots and lots of the "dreadful" saturated fats (coconut oil), lots of phosphorus and protein (reef fish and other creatures) and lots of minerals from vegetables grown in rich volcanic soil - plus seaweed.  Is the calcium in the coconut?

Canned coconut cream has a good range of B vitamins except B12, with one cup providing only 3 mg of calcium, 1.5 mg. of iron, 50.3 mg of magnesium, 299 mg potassium, and 1.8 mg. of zinc. Figures for fresh coconut cream are presumably higher.  So, not much calcium but generous amounts of other trace minerals.

On a related matter, there's lots and lots and lots of sunshine (vitamin D) in the traditional Polynesian lifestyle.  No hats and no sunscreen.  And often no shirts.

Question:
If its not calcium, then what is the secret for keeping bones strong?
Answer:
A diet that is actually quite low in calcium and relatively much higher in trace minerals, including magnesium, potassium, sodium, phosphorus - over 80 minerals in total - plus small amounts of quality protein and fats 3-4 times a day, whole-foods that are rich in vitamins and plenty of exposure of the body to pure sunshine!

Oh - and a little daily exercise such as a brisk walk and some upper body exercise.  Or - doing the grocery shopping without a car, hanging the washing, mowing the lawns with a hand mower, gardening or wrestling the kids.

These, when combined in balance, are the perfect recipe for making very strong bones regardless of age.

On the subject of vitamin D
Please avoid megadoses of synthetic vitamin D that many Drs are enthusiastically dishing out nowadays.  This presents the same kind of problem as having too much calcium - Too much vitamin D and you get the opposite result, including skin rashes, fibromyalgia and fatigue.  It is best to dribble in nutrients rather than swamp the body with a monthly or weekly tsunami.  In the case of vitamin D, a daily dribble of 1-2,000iu is more than enough for most adults - and less for a child.

_______________________________________
About this website
The advice in these articles is given freely without promise or obligation.  Its all about giving you and your family the tools and information to take control of your health and fitness.

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

Stressed to Breaking Point - Stress fractures in elite female runners

Carrying a little extra weight during
training.

Stress fractures are common in runners, predominantly in females.  Running causes micro fractures in the bones of the legs.  This is of no concern in the healthy runner who is following a training programme that has a balance between workouts and recovery periods.  In fact, the micro damage that happens in training is what stimulates the process of bone renewal, remodeling strengthening, so a healthy runner will be able to tolerate more and more pounding as the years go by.

Stress fractures occur more often in female runners because the sport is particularly attractive to individuals with eating disorders of which, by far the majority, are female.  Women are also vulnerable because hormonal changes that happen with calorie deprivation may hasten bone loss (More about this later).

Disordered eating and long distance running make for common bed mates.  They reward each other.  This is because being extremely light confers a performance advantage, while running seriously long distances makes for an effective way to lose that last pound.  
Racing the big ones thin; but
not for long!

Running far while running on empty

This is self-destructive behaviour that can not continue indefinitely without the runner's health and structural integrity being seriously compromised.  The body has to consume itself in order to meet its most immediate needs. The consequences of running on empty include constantly getting infections, poor healing, joint and muscle problems, including stress fracture and even infertility.  Taken to its extreme the result is death.

For more about this: Please read my E-Book "Too Thin to Win" which is dedicated to the memory of NZ International Representative runner, Helen Moros.

Training Overweight
Lorraine Moller is remembered for her astonishing longevity (28 years) on the international running scene.  Her longevity was no accident; but the result of lessons learned from mistakes made during her early years as a middle and long distance runner.  One, which she explained to me many years ago, was not to run on skinny empty during the long months of cranking out the kilometers.  Instead, she learned to carry extra weight (fat) during those long months of training and relatively unimportant races and then she would carefully strip off any excess fat over the last few months leading up to the Big One, such as the Olympics, pull out a big performance, rest up, put on some weight and then commence another long build up.  This process was repeated, with success, time and time again.

The Female Athlete who is running on empty may present with an athletic history that is extremely impressive.  However; analysis of her running history may show a pattern of big weekly kilometers  in training, some wonderful performances; but these are often punctuated with frustrating injuries that are associated with overuse, including stress fractures. Or, she may present with a history of repeated injury , including stress fractures, despite running unusually low kilometers per week.  On presentation for treatment, she may be unable to run at all due to stress fractures.  Such fractures are usually found in the the feet, ankles and even the tibial plateau.  Stress fractures may be present in the thighs and even the pelvis of runners.  It is not unusual for there to be a history of recurrent stress fractures over ten or more years.

She may present with a long history of anorexia or bulemia that most often develops during adolescence.  Often there is denial of the presence of disordered eating.  Even where the eating disorder is long gone, the consequences of disturbances to her metabolism, including nutrient imbalances, may persist.  This will show up on a Hair Tissue Mineral Analysis.

Completion of Dr Wilson's Adrenal Fatigue Questionnaire may indicate the presence of moderate to severe adrenal fatigue.

Exercise recall may indicate very high levels of activity even when injured, such as many hours spent swimming, aqua-jogging or in the gym.  Diet recall may indicate calorie intake being highly in deficit when compared alongside her exercise patterns.

Case Study
A 19 year old female middle distance runner. After at least 12 months since symptoms began, she was diagnosed in March 2010 with a navicular stress fracture to her right foot. She had two other stress fractures in both feet a few years back. 

Indications of low thyroid with parathyroid dominance, plus adrenal
fatigue.  High copper is indicative of estrogen dominance.  High
copper, relative to zinc, may cause collagen disorders affecting
the skin, bones, ligaments, joints, tendons and blood vessels.
She was non-weight bearing for six weeks then spent a further 10 weeks in an aircast boot. After this she spent 2 months rebuilding strength in the foot via rehabilitation. Scans three months after the fracture was diagnosed showed that there had been a fracture but it was healed. She has been progressing a return to running VERY slowly, but is plagued with yet another injury in her left foot which is still preventing her from training.


She has had problems with bone spurs, tendons and ligaments in her feet.

She has a history of anorexia which she reports is now well under control.

Body composition indicates 20% body fat which is unusual for an elite runner.  This rather high body fat has nothing to do with "over-eating" - It is indicative of low thyroid function which is seen on the HTMA chart above as elevated Ca and Cu.  She is about to undergo surgery to remove a bone spur from one of her navicular bones.

She has been on an estrogen patch to promote regular periods and the timing of this medication appears to be uncannily close to her most recent episodes of stress fractures, bone spur, ligament and tendon injuries and failure to heal. An estrogen dominant contraceptive may cause copper levels to soar and zinc levels to plummet (Refer HTMA above); whereas a progesterone dominant one may cause zinc levels to soar and copper to plummet - both scenarios causing most unwanted complications (More about this later).

Some comments about bone loss
Excess calcium, relative to elements such as magnesium and sodium, indicates the ongoing loss of calcium from the bones and the deposition of calcium into the soft tissue, including the hair cells.  This is the process of osteoporosis, loss of resilience of the skin, tendons, ligaments and cartilage and the hardening of the blood vessels.  For more about this most undesirable process of calcification, please read this article.

Elements such as sodium, potassium, manganese, boron and molybdenum are as important as calcium for strong bones.  There must be a balance between copper and zinc.  And there must be a balance between all of the above for there to be strong, healthy bones, tendons, ligaments, skin and even the lining of the digestive tract (Symptoms of a weak digestive tract includes IBS, Crohn's and stomach ulcers).

This young athlete's HTMA indicates that there may be a lack of a number of vitamins, such as pyridoxine which are needed for effective use of many minerals, including magnesium, copper and zinc.

Excess copper and relative zinc deficiency are quite spectacular for this female athlete.  This may be the legacy of a severe viral infection such as hepatitis or mononucleosis, or due to the severe shut down of the thyroid and adrenals, along with abnormal liver function, following a prolonged episode of disordered eating and accompanying stress.  Even after the original causation may be long gone, the elevated copper may persist, causing ongoing ill health, such as chronic fatigue following a severe viral infection.

Protein and fat are essential for strong bones, as well as for strong tendons, ligaments, skin, blood vessels and other connective tissues.  Both are vital for the production of hormones and are involved in just about every cellular process taking place every second, of which there are thousands.  Fats and proteins need to be from a wide variety of sources, including plant and animal.  Including saturated fats.

Protein is not stored like fat and sugar.  If there is insufficient circulating in the blood to meet immediate needs, such as for hormone production and tissue repair, the body will take protein from itself - all structures and organs, including the bones and muscles.

Lack of Vitamin D is widespread nowadays, even among distance runners.  Vitamin D is essential for numerous functions in the body, including producing strong bones.  Vitamin D is manufactured from cholesterol residing in the skin which converts to cholecalciferol (vitamin D) when exposed to ultraviolet light. Low levels of serum cholesterol, low dietary intake of vitamin D rich foods and lack of sunlight, including use of sunscreens may contribute to vitamin D deficiency.  However: megadoses of vitamin D may cause fatigue, muscle pain, bone spurs and even osteoporosis.  Read this article and related ones to learn more.

Chronic stress is a powerful factor in bone loss due to the effect on adrenal function.  The adrenals produce over 90 different steroidal hormones and an excess, or lack of may affect bone health.  Excess adrenal cortisol, for example, may cause calcium loss from the bones.  Our young athlete indicates poor adrenal function with an underactive thyroid with parathyroid gland dominance - which add up to fatigue, fat gain, poor muscularity and bone loss. As mentioned earlier, the stress may have abated, the eating improved; but the abnormal liver and glandular functions may continue.

More about the relationship between copper, zinc, joint and ligament damage
Estrogen dominance due to copper retention is evident.  Giving this young woman an estrogen patch contraceptive may have been the last straw, causing copper levels to soar off the chart.

A balance between copper and zinc regulates the cross-linking of collagen.  If there is an imbalance, then there may be a reduction in this cross-linking.  This leads to connective tissue that stretches and may not return to its original length.  It also leads to cartilage that is unable to resist impact and shearing forces.  This explains why scoliosis, a devastating deformity of the spine, is almost exclusive to young women and first shows when the female hormones soar during puberty.  The lax ligaments of the spine are unable to maintain the spine's integrity leading to spinal collapse.  This also explains why double-jointedness is most common in females than males.

This ligament laxity may be exacerbated by the addition of a contraceptive, by further exacerbating a copper/zinc imbalance.

If there is ligament laxity due to reduced cross-linking of collagen, joints are vulnerable to injury and this may explain why women are particularly vulnerable to knee and ankle injuries.

Ligament laxity in the feet will lead to their flattening, causing abnormal stresses on the bones and joints of the foot and ankle.

Low thyroid function results in calcium deposition into soft tissues including the joint margins, as well as softening of the bones.  These related processes (ligament laxity and calcium deposition) help explain the torrent of lower leg ligament, bone and bone spurs that this female athlete has suffered and which appears to have gained momentum following administration of an estrogen patch.

Recommended dietary actions to restore health
  • Restore a healthy balance between copper and zinc.  This is slowly by dietary supplementation of zinc, magnesium and various vitamins and avoidance of contraception that manipulates the female hormones.  Where there is a copper excess, not wearing copper jewelry..
  • Ensure a diet that is low in calcium and copper while ensuring the diet is high in just about every other nutrient.  Copper is found in shell fish, mushrooms and chocolate.
  • At the same time, take Reparen daily.  Reparen is a specialty bone, tissue, muscle repair and support complex. Reparen is a water soluble, rapidly absorbed and highly bioavailable source of ionic calcium phophate that can assist in the treatment and prevention of osteoporosis, tissue repair and sports injuries, maintains healthy heart function, nerve function and transmission, cellular energy, assist in hormone secretions and enzyme activity, supports better health and improved recovery.

    Reparen is made from a special high-grade preparation of monobasic calcium phosphate that improves vital calcium and phosphate balances in the body. This form of calcium is found at the sites of healing in all tissue, including bone and tendon.  It is not the form of dietary calcium that we want to reduce.
  • Increase dietary intake of sodium and potassium.  Avoid refined salt (pure sodium) and be liberal with the pink salt that contains over a hundred different mineral salts (principally sodium).  Himalayan Sea Salt is best.
  • Commence an adrenal fatigue recovery programme (Readers interested in this will need to contact me directly for a consultation).
  • Increase levels of vitamin D from judicious exposure to sunlight, vitamin D rich foods and supplementation (Vitamin D supplements here).
  • Ensure there is a small intake of protein about every 2-4 waking hours and fats daily (including saturated fats).  This may include a protein shake.  Douglas Ultra Protein is recommended for shakes because it is of the highest quality and packed with numerous nutritional cofactors.



_______________________________________
About this website
The advice in these articles is given freely without promise or obligation.  Its all about giving you and your family the tools and information to take control of your health and fitness.  Please give me your support by subscribing to my free email updates. Please shop at my Online Store. Please encourage your family and friends to do the same. While we may not always be able to compete with the big operators on price, we aim to more than compensate through personal service!











Your email address:

Powered by FeedBlitz
Do you have a question?  Email Gary: gary@myotec.co.nz. Include any relevant background information to your question.  Please be patient and be aware that I may not be able to answer every inquiry in detail, depending on workloads (My paying clients take precedence!). I will either reply by email or, most likely, by way of an article (Personal identifying details will be removed before publication).

Thursday, August 26, 2010

I don't wish to go under the knife anymore, rehab was very trying and painful

"I have had pain in both knees for about three years and have had needles injected with no relief . I recently had a left hip replacement and I'm in need of another one on my right side. 


This is all do to Osteo Arthritis I'm told due to aging and wear and tear. Also, I underwent an MRI on 8/04/10 for back pain and was told that I have bulging and herniated discs and again arthritis in my lower back at L4 & L5 and also a few others. I also suffer from Spinal Stenosis and I'm unable to stand for more than ten minutes without experiencing terrible lower back pain. XXX also has pain in both knees and lower back. 


XXX and I are seventy three and seventy years old respectively and would like to know your opinion on what would be best for us to try to relieve our pain problems. At present we are trying (this all appears on the label) Member's Mark All Day Extended Release, Glucosamine Chondroitin, Glucosamine HCI 1500 mg.* Chondroitin Sulfate Sodium 1200 mg per serving, and Supports Joint Comfort & Mobility. Instructions read that we are to take three caplets daily. We would very much appreciate any input of information you can supply to us as we don't want any more operations in these later years of our lives. 


Monday, August 02, 2010

Study finds link between calcium supplements and increased heart attack risk

500 mg calcium supplement tablets, with vitami...Image via Wikipedia

"While experts are not certain about the biological mechanism by which calcium supplements may damage the body, studies in the past have linked high levels of blood calcium to more heart attacks and damage to blood vessels", Reid said.




_____________________________________
Gary:
The findings of this study are not new news really and stopping taking calcium supplements, while being a beneficial action for most, will do little to improve the overall situation of population risk of heart attack, stroke, dementia and so on.  There is just far too much calcium in the modern diet.


Calcium from any source, when in excess, will damage health



High calcium, low magnesium = Calcification of soft
tissues, including arteries.  Plus osteoporosis.

When calcium is in excess relative to other nutrients in the body, such as magnesium, sodium, copper, protein and pyridoxine, then it will not go into the bones, but be deposited into the soft tissues including the arteries. Whether the imbalance is due to excess calcium intake, deficiency in others or increased need, the end result is the same: Hardening of the soft tissues.





Excess calcium will cause osteoporosis, not prevent it. When a nutrient is in excess the body is unable to incorporate the nutrient and may, in fact go into excretory mode


Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Hip Fractures


The earlier posting about falls and hip fractures received a very good response from readers. The most recent communication was a call last night from an overseas reader whose mother (In her late 70’s and suffering Alzheimer’s) had suffered a hip fracture from a fall earlier in the day and was now dosed up on morphine recovering from surgery. He feared that this might be the last straw for her: He wanted to do everything he could to help her recovery.
First of all, it must be emphasised that it is not the fall that kills the frail elderly; it is the complications that follow as sure as night follows day, including infections and blood clots that do the killing. If the elderly person survives the initial injury, they tend not to fully regain their past independence and quality of life due to incomplete recovery, poor mobility and worsening of existing ailments, like heart disease. The need for additional medication can complicate recovery and may further dull senses that are already at low ebb, including balance. Several days of complete bed rest alone can knock the stuffing out of an elderly person – let alone the stress of the initial physical trauma, drugs, surgery, medications and any complications!
So; survival, let alone recovery from a hip fracture is a complex challenge that may be further complicated by conditions like Alzheimer’s. Here is the advice that I have for him to consider over the first few weeks in rough order of priority:
  • Appoint an assertive Guardian Angel to hover over her to ensure that she gets the best care available. In this case, the Angel is you.
  • Reduce the risk of infection. This frail woman is vulnerable to infection because she has a deep wound and her immune system is weak. Anybody with a cold or sniffle should be asked to stay away until fully recovered. Start by washing your own hands and insist that everybody who enters her space does the same before touching her. This should include medical staff (even if they are using disposable gloves) and their equipment (namely, the stethoscope) should be sterilised with alcohol. Research has shown that hospital staff is more diligent with hygiene if a patient’s family ask for such care.
  • Prevent blood clots. Express your concern of this risk to her specialist and ask what measures are in place to reduce the risk. Get a physiotherapist appointed within 24 hours to commence passive and active mobilisations at the earliest possible time. This should be at least twice daily to minimise physical wasting from bed rest and to keep the blood in the limbs flowing. Daily flax seed oil and fish oil with vitamin E help keep blood thinned; but talk to her specialist about this first, because any prescription anti-clotting medicines may need to be modified in dose.
  • Make sure that she has a proper treatment plan. Every hospitalised patient should have a detailed written treatment plan that shows how all the various resources and services are brought together in a coordinated way to smoothly progress her recovery and bring about her eventual discharge. If there is not one, then ask why. As the treatment plan is updated, planning should commence early to include her post-discharge care.
  • Get her onto a Super Smoothie within 2-3 days. The Smoothie should include whey protein and anti-oxidant packed red berries. This should be given twice or more times a day and can be regarded as being her primary nutrition source. Make it up at home and bring it in a thermos and get her to consume it while it is fresh (You can drink any that is left over).
  • Include a multivitamin (Nutra-Life Women’s Multi in this case) that contains Vitamin D. (Give 2-4 per day during this period of stress). If necessary, pulverise and add to the Smoothie. If a raw egg is added to the Smoothie (recommended), then administer B Vitamins an hour or so either side because raw egg protein inhibits some of the B uptake.
  • Give a joint and cartilage repair formulation as a refreshing drink (Nutra-Life Joint and Cartilage Repair is best because it contains creatine that assists restoring muscle strength and energy levels as well. Although designed for joint repair, these also assist bone healing. Add to a Red Seal effervescent drink and you are covering most bases as well as getting fluids into her.
  • Give 1-2 grams per day of additional Calcium to assist bone healing and to reduce further bone loss during bed rest. Again, the tablet can be pulverised and added to the Smoothie. Nutra-Life Phyto Calcium or Calcium Complete will do the job.
  • Prepare the home. Ask that an Occupational Therapist be appointed to her case early and arrange for a visit to your home. Plan in advance for caring for her at home. Some modifications may have to be made to the home to improve access and extra help may be required with tasks like bathing. Some financial assistance may be available from agencies like ACC for these modifications and ongoing assistance.
  • Look after yourself. In rehabilitation, it is the caregiver who is usually the most neglected person: alcoholism, depression, social isolation, financial hardship and sheer physical and emotional exhaustion are common. Talk to the hospital and social services support services about what can be done to assist you during this period of stress and over the long term. Ask for help and do so often.
Note: All of the nutritional products that are recommended in this article are available from http://www.myotec.co.nz/ and can be delivered just about anywhere on the planet.