Based on the works of Abram Hoffer, M.D., pioneer of nutritional psychiatry, as reported in Nutritional Influences on Mental Illness by Melvyn Werbach, M.D.
Our grateful acknowledgement to Dr. Hoffer for permission to use his work.
The following dietary and nutritional regimen is reported to have over a 90% success rate with patients who are ill for the first time or who are suffering their second or third episode with healthy periods in between. It is reported that after two years over 90% will be well, none will be worse, and none will have tardive dyskinesia (drug-induced involuntary muscular movements). They will have to remain on the regimen many years, perhaps their entire lives.
For chronic patients those who have failed to improve from previous treatment, including those mentally disturbed for years (although not the chronic patients seen in the back wards of mental hospitals) about 50% will improve after 10 years. However, not all will be working.
These results are based on:
Six prospective double-blind studies. 1
Personal observations of over
4000 patients.
Studies conducted by colleagues.
Letters received from
patients who were never personally seen but tried the treatment program.
DIET:
Elimination of all processed or prepared foods containing added refined sugars and probably 90% of other additives, as foods that contain added sugars usually contain other additives.
Elimination diets to remove all foods to which the patient is allergic or sensitive.
SUPPLEMENTS:
Vitamin
B3 (niacin or niacinamide) 0.5 2 grams 3 times daily.
Vitamin B6 (for
many) 250-500 mg daily.
A general B vitamin formula.
Vitamin C, 3 or more
grams daily.
Zinc (gluconate or citrate) 50 mg daily.
Manganese 15-30
mg daily (if there is danger of tardive dyskinesia).
I also use omega three
essential fatty acids rich in EPA and less rich in DHA. The best preparation contains
three times as much EPA as it does DHA. I use four large capsules twice daily
This product I use is Kirunal.
Footnotes:
1. Prospective applied to
double blind studies means that the study was planned in detail, that it was laid
out in advance and that it was analyzed after the study was completed. This is
in contrast to studies where the comparison was made only after the study been
completed and the results were known. I don't particularly like the term but use
it since it is recognized by double blind theorists. Under my direction between
1952 and 1960 we completed six of these experiments, the first in psychiatric
history. Probably in the whole field of medicine I know of only two studies done
by doctors for condition like arthritis before we completed ours. What is ironic
is that our critics have continued to misreport our work and claimed that we had
not done any controlled studies. Read my recent book "Vitamin B-3 and Schizophrenia."
-
Dr. Abram Hoffer, M.D.
Canadian Schizophrenia Foundation, Located in
Toronto Canada, web site.
Sells the video, "Mask of Madness, Science
of Healing" with Margot Kidder and Dr. Hoffer and has an enormous list of
resources. They support orthomolecular medicine.
The "Mask of
Madness, Science of Healing" video has people with schizophrenia, bi-polar
illness and chronic depression who have healed themselves with diet and orthomolecular
medicine.
International Society for Orthomolecular Medicine
Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine
Canadian Schizophrenia Foundation
16 Florence Avenue, Toronto
Ontario, Canada, M2N 1E9
Phone: (416) 733-2117 Fax:(416) 733-2352