Texas Doctor Target of
State Medical Board for 'Environmental Medicine'
March 20, 2008—
What
if you thought that the world around you was making you sick? If you feared
that the house you live in, the car that you drive and everyday activities such
as watching television and talking on a cell phone were making you ill?
Dr.
William Rea says he has treated more than 30,000 people, from all over the
world, who believe the world around them has made them sick. Very sick.
"Lots
of times they know what's wrong with them, but they haven't been able to get
any help," Rea said. "And they're looking for solutions to their
problems."
Watch the story tonight on "Nightline" at 11:35 p.m. ET
A
board certified surgeon, Rea has become one of the foremost practitioners of
"environmental medicine." At his clinic, the Environmental Health
Center-Dallas, no cell phones are allowed and the air is constantly filtered.
The walls and floors are made of porcelain -- "because there are no fumes
and particulates," Rea said -- and other non-reactive surfaces such as
unvarnished wood. The clinic has been open since 1974.
"We
had to de-grease all the exercise equipment," Rea said. "Because of
the fumes that were coming out of it."
'Chemically
Sensitive'
Lisa
Nagy, a patient of Rea and a medical doctor with a degree from Cornell
University, said she came to the clinic because "I knew I was dying. I
knew I had, like, a month left."
You
wouldn't know to look at her now but just a few years ago Nagy could hardly
move.
"I
knew I was sick, I thought I was depressed," she said. "I went to a
psychiatrist every day for a year. I went to an acupuncturist."
Nothing
worked, and Nagy became convinced that she was suffering from an
"environmental illness": that chemicals and electromagnetic energy in
the world around her were making her ill.
"I
was unable to drive into Los Angeles to see the psychiatrist because of the
diesel exhaust coming in the car," she said. "And I had no knowledge
that I was chemically sensitive."
Nagy
also says the mold in her former house was toxic.
"It's
possible that I had other exposures before this house and other situations,
which adds to my toxic load, so that this house tipped me over," she said.
"We all see car exhaust, smell car exhaust on the way to work in the
morning, and we all have dogs and cats at home, and we all have new carpeting
at work. We all have air fresheners at the airport that we get exposed to. It's
how you deal with those exposures. Do you get tired or do you get a headache?
That makes you environmentally ill."
Diesel
Fuel and Detox
The
first thing Rea did was test Nagy for "environmental allergies." He
injected a small amount of antigen -- which is a diluted amount of the very
thing she may be allergic to -- which triggers an immune system response. Rea
tests for a whole slew of allergens such as perfumes, fabric softeners, diesel
fuels, woods like oak and many others.
Then
Nagy, as with most of Rea's patients, began what is called the detoxification
program that he says cleanses the body of all pollutants. The patient gets
saunas to "sweat out" the toxins -- purified air, and certain
kinds of food in a controlled environment.
Nagy
became so ill during detox she was admitted to a nearby hospital and ended up
in the psychiatric ward.
"It
was excruciating," she recalled. "The only benefit was I did oxygen
every night and they had hard surface floors without carpeting. I didn't know
really the principals of environmental medicine yet. I just knew that I needed
to rest and oxygen seemed to help."
Nagy's
husband Wes Nagy said "the psychiatrist that had me commit her told me she
would never get well and that I should consider moving on." But after a
month of treatment at the clinic, Wes Nagy said that his wife "was like
somebody else. It was like somebody had flicked a switch. It was a different
person."
Public
Health Hazard?
If it
all sounds a little extreme to you, you're not alone. "We believe he is
posing a threat to the public health of the citizens of Texas," said Mari
Robinson, an attorney for the Texas Board of Medicine.
The
board is trying to stop Rea from practicing his brand of medicine, and may even
strip him of his license. The hearing is set for Dec. 1.
"The
treatments that he's giving, we believe, can be dangerous to the public health,
such as injecting jet fuel or natural gas," said Robinson, who added that
the treatments appear to have no clinical value.
Rea
says that he has never injected patients with jet fuel.
"I've
used antigens of it, and,of course, as you well know, that was one of the
accusations," he said. "I used an antigen, a provocation test, just
like we would a food or just like we would a mold."
We
asked Dr. David Khan of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center,
who, unlike Rea, is a board certified allergist and immunologist, if any of
this makes sense.
"Certainly
injecting jet fuel or any part of jet fuel into someone I think would be
potentially dangerous and certainly doesn't seem to have any value," he
said.
When
asked about the success stories of Rae's patients, Khan said, "They're
feeling better living in a closed room with aluminum foil, never leaving
without oxygen. Is that a cure? Absolutely not."
Countered
Rae: "I might say that in Japan now they have four environmental clinics
that are at university medical schools that are patterned after our methods in
our clinic." And he maintains that his methods have been peer reviewed in
the United States, just not in what most would consider mainstream medical
journals such as the New England Journal of Medicine, JAMA or Nature. And his
reaction to the actions of the Texas Medical Board is that it "seems like
somebody wants to limit the public's chance for freedom of choice in medical
care, doesn't it?"
But
Robinson, of the Texas Board of Medicine, said that "what's gotten him in
trouble is that he has yet, so far, refused to submit his treatments to the
double-blind sort of gold standard studies or to an institutional review board
to oversee it."
'He
Gave Me My Life Back'
But
none of that matters to Lisa Nagy.
"I
have a headset on every phone in the home because I can't really use [a
regular] phone," she said. "If I hold it up, in the piece here, it's
got a magnet and it gives me a headache."
Following
Rea's program, she injects herself daily with all sorts of allergy shots.
"This
one is terps, which is terpians from wood -- I was very sensitive to pine. Do
not have raw pine in your home. Oak is OK. This is chemicals and these are the
chemicals that are in this vial, whatever the chemicals are, I was sensitive to
some and not to others. So the ones I was sensitive to, they were put in here
with water," she said.
Nagy
says yes; water with a little bit of diesel, perfume, and even mercury.
"Yeah,
but we inject vaccinations with huge amounts of mercury; comparatively it's
probably one-one hundredth or one-one thousandth of the amount," she said,
although, in fact, most vaccines today don't contain any mercury.
To
trained immunologists such as Khan, there's another possible explanation for
Rea's success: His patients are ill, but from stress and other psychological
factors.
"You
can have people stressed out and they can break out in a rash or hives or all
sorts of things just from the nervous excitement," he said. "These
things are real events. But it's not because of the substance they just
ingested, it's because of their conditioned response and so when they smell
whatever the odor is, they have this conditioned response, they feel ill, their
pulse rate may go up, they have a headache, a variety of things."
Getting
away from it all was a matter of survival for Nagy. She moved to an island --
Martha's Vineyard -- and created a special pollutant-free home -- Rea style.
"Most
of these patients who have these ailments actually have an underlying psychiatric
problem, and one of the problems in this country is the under diagnosis and
under treatment of psychiatric diseases, and I think we are all guilty of
that," Khan said.
Nagy
said, "I tried to communicate with the psychiatrists who take care of me,
to invite him over to Bill Rea's clinic. To educate him how many of these
patients appear to be mentally deranged or have mental issues, but how in fact
when you treat their chemical sensitivity, then their mental situation gets
much better."
It is
a fact that Rea and his methods are controversial, scorned by many mainstream
medical researchers and institutions. But all that simply makes no sense to
those who say the world made them sick, and Dr. William Rea made them better.
"I
don't want to get all choked up," Nagy said, "but he gave me my
life."
http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=4489265&page=1
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