User:Apers0n/Natural hygiene

Natural hygiene or orthopathy is an alternative to medicine that claims that the human body can and will heal itself if the causes of disease are removed. However, it does acknowledge that this concept is not helpful for some conditions, such as diabetes and others. For chronic conditions and serious diseases, it recommends being under the supervision of a professional practitioner.

Theories of natural hygiene
It is characterized by several Theories as follows:
 * The human body contains the power to heal itself (without  medicine).
 * Disease exists when the body is prevented from healing itself.
 * The primary causes of disease are stress,  toxemia, over working, over eating, taking unhealthy substances, etc.
 * Germs, bacteria, and viruses are not the primary cause of disease.
 * Medicines are poisons to the human body and are harmful.
 * Vaccinations are not effective, not safe and damage the immune system.

Hygiene in the late 16th century and early 17th century

Natural hygiene claims to enable people to get well by removing the causes of  disease, rather than by treatment with  medicines and other foreign substances. As in all therapeutic systems, determining the true cause of a disease is a vital part of Natural Hygiene. Proponents claim that other health systems begin treatment without knowing the cause, or falsely stating that the cause is unknown, or describing as the cause what is merely a description of the disease, e.g. the cause of arthritis is claimed to be a stiffening of the  joints.

History of natural hygiene
While natural hygiene is promoted as a new discovery, it in fact has roots in a number of alternative therapies that go back to the early nineteenth century. Dr. John H. Scheel, a German-born homeopath, coined the word  naturopathy in  1895 for a system of dietary restrictions and  herbal  nostrums that conspicuously included fasting as a treatment, all founded on a sort of  vitalism that was in vogue at the time, and was promoted as a  philosophy by  Henri Bergson, among others. Scheel's "naturopathy" itself stemmed back to the thought of the Rev. Sylvester Graham, a Presbyterian  clergyman and inventor of the  Graham cracker, who believed that diet and  morality were related and who taught that  vegetarianism helped keep the  libido in check. Some such as James Redfield even claimed a pure diet is a key step on the path to spiritual awareness and enlightenment.

The role of fasting
Natural hygiene holds that the true cause of disease is toxemia, or  poisoning, in the  blood. Natural Hygiene claims that these toxins are a normal product of  metabolism or living. Advocates claim that enervating habits, or nerve energy destroying personal habits, such as worry,  stimulants, or vaccinations; builds up toxins in your blood. Enervation (i.e., wasted nerve-energy ) is claimed to stop toxins from being eliminated from your blood. Natural hygiene theories rely on fasting as treatment for toxemia.

Natural hygiene practitioners often operate fasting clinics and fasting retreat centers patients undergo fasts and then they may be placed on a  raw-food diet for a length of time equal to the number of days of their fast. They claim that, as a result of fasting, people often recover from cancer,  arthritis,  asthma, digestive problems, high blood pressure,  heart problems, and many other diseases.

For the purposes of natural hygiene, fasting means eating nothing, drinking only  distilled water and getting lots of rest.

According to natural hygiene advocate Dr. Herbert Shelton the body enters a state of  Autolysis or self-digestion in about the fourth day of a fast in which the body can break down even cancerous tissues and eliminate them.

Advocates say that attempting to do a long fast (more than 14 days) without the supervision of a natural hygiene practitioner is not recommended. Furthermore, they do not recommend fasting for the treatment of  diabetes, cancer of the  kidneys, cancer of the  liver and severe  anemia.

Natural hygiene vs medical science
Natural hygiene claims to be contrary to medical science and that the two systems are directly opposed to each other in philosophy and practice.

In "Natural Hygiene, Man's Pristine Way Of Life", Dr. Herbert Shelton, the founder of the American Natural Hygiene Society (now known as the International Natural Hygiene Society  wrote about the conflicting ideas between Natural Hygiene and Medical Science.  Others have also shared these views including Harvey Diamond who co-wrote the Fit for Life book series in the 1980's.

Natural hygiene claims that drugs and medicines are poisons to the human body and have no healing properties. Natural Hygiene maintains that drugs have the effect of masking symptoms or changing symptoms, but not for the better.

Natural hygiene practitioners acknowledge that in cases of emergency, such as stroke, heart attack or automobile accident, emergency  medical science plays an important role.

Natural Hygiene vs naturopathy
The beliefs of natural hygiene and naturopathy are quite similar. Naturopathy developed from the water and nature cure in Europe during the 19th century. Natural hygiene developed from the water cure in America during the 19th century. Natural hygiene talks about blood toxemia while naturopathy talks about the accumulation of morbid matter.

However, Natural hygiene prohibits all use of drugs including herbal and homeopathic medicines. Natural hygiene's primary treatment method is fasting, and does not use any manipulative therapy, while Naturopathy uses both herbal and homeopathic medicines as well as the manipulative therapies of body work or massage therapy,  osteopathy, and  chiropractic.