Define "nutrition training."
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Basically, state licensure of naturopathy doesn't protect patients from quackery because naturopathy is, at its core, based on quackery, and even the seemingly normal interventions are often infused with pseudoscience.https://respectfulinsolence.com/2017/04/25/the-death-of-jade-erick-why-state-licensure-doesnt-protect-patients-from-naturopathic-quackery/ …
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Just re-read that, picked up some things I'd missed/forgotten. All a "treatment" needs to be to be considered a valid naturopathic treatment is for is to be used by two or more Naturopaths? Seriously? You just have to convince 1 person to do the thing you totally made up??? SMDH
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This is what I have a major problem with. And as a result, it’s cheaper, lower quality care disguised and marketed as high quality care. It’s profit driven, so they try to attack conventional medicine as a result to get more pts. And that’s where the word “quack” comes from.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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I'm hopeful that anyone performing a turmeric IV or similar would be prosecuted under criminal law. But if you want to trade anecdotal examples, what is your opinion about a licensed MD who advocates for a 100% meat diet? There are incompetent practitioners in every profession.
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In any medical practice, there has to be a clear scientific rationale for any type of treatment that is more likely to benefit vs harm a pt. I’m not a dietician nor am I health law expert. I can’t comment on all meat diets. Dr Gorksi may have thoughts
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