Re: Dr. Ritchie Shoemaker
Posted by A Griffith on 12/23/05
While I will admit that he is kind of arrogant, Dr. Shoemaker has also changed my life. On 12/23/05, TMV wrote: > Mr. Wintercorn, who are you to make judgement on Dr, Shoemaker. I take it , You > are a defence lawyer, tring to discredit Dr. Shoemaker for your own gain? our > history is filled with many "quacks" that have changed our world for the better. > what have you done to help anyone? mabye your just on the wrong side of the fence. > does running someone down, make you feel less > guilt? > > On 12/20/05, Kurt D. Winterkorn wrote: >> I was his undergraduate college roommate at Duke, and he was a quack even back >> then. For fun and amusement, he used to drink whole bottles of Robitussin A-C >> (with codeine) at a time, and it's all been downhill since then. Some of his >> issues may have had to do with his competition for his mother's attention with >> his older brother Wells (who is also a physician, but I am told, not a quack). >> >> While doing his residency at Williamsport Hospital and Medical Center in Lycoming >> County, Pennsylvania, he once introduced me on a visit to his workplace as a >> medical colleague and a researcher (I am in fact an attorney). Some patients >> with prescriptions for controlled substances written by Dr. Shoemaker found it >> difficult to get them filled at many pharmacies within a 50-mile radius of >> Williamsport - why that might have been, who knows? >> >> He then moved on to the DelMarVa peninsula to begin his private practice. One of >> his former medical school associates, Dr. Tom Brennan, was in practice with him >> for a time, unless it all got to be too much for him and he cleared out for a >> saner locale, and apparently has never looked back. >> >> For an "interesting" read, check out his self-published book on pfisteria, which >> comes complete with wacky theories and inappropriate medical advice (I might call >> it a novel, since much of it is fiction). After its publication, the CDC in >> Atlanta found it appropriate to issue a statement to the effect that "there is no >> such syndrome as human pfisteria illness." >> >> The FDA warning letter can be found at: >> http://www.fda.gov/foi/warning_letters/g4710d.htm >> >> Persons needing medical attention are urged to seek medical advice and treatment >> from large, reputable hospitals and reputable physicians in their local >> communities, and leave off searching the Internet, lest they find themselves in >> the care of some physician similar to Dr. Shoemaker. >> >> KDW, Alexandria, Virginia >> >> -------------Earlier thread-------------- >>>>>> >>>>>>> Dear Mr. Greg Weatherman, I have been following Shoemaker for quit >>>>>>> some time now and know several people he's treated. The bottom line is >>>>>>> that this doctor is dangerous. Don't believe me? He just recently >>>>>>> received a warning letter from the FDA about his prescribing the >>>>>>> veterinary drug Staphage Lysate to human beings. Need further >>>>>>> evidence? He treats Lymes Disease with Actos, a diabetic medication >>>>>>> and does not understand how it works. That's because, in all >>>>>>> likelyhood, it is voodoo medicine. To make matters worse, the >>>>>>> cholesterol medication CSM that binds bilesalts to stools is treated >>>>>>> for a neurotoxin that he's NEVER isolated, for mold related disorders >>>>>>> he can't proove. The reason Dr. Shoemaker is dangerous is because he >>>>>>> prescribes medication based soley on theory and not scientific fact. >>>>>>> He is a mad quack. This is a physican who believes that because he >>>>>>> treated a woman with CSM and her headaches and lethargy went away that >>>>>>> it MUST BE related to a toxin; which is all theory and quackery, which >>>>>>> is something he can't proove. In all likelyhood, the reason the first >>>>>>> woman's symptoms went away after he treated her with CSM is because >>>>>>> she was no longer DEHYDRATED from diarrhea and thus felt better. But >>>>>>> this is going to seem too simple to you. You're going to scoff at >>>>>>> this. Fine. Dr. Shoemaker needs to proove it. The bottom line is, he >>>>>>> can't. And in all patients, placebo-affect is known to transcend >>>>>>> thirty percent of patients who think and want to feel better and most >>>>>>> importantly, HEAR it from a doctor. He may very well have isolated a >>>>>>> Pfisteria outbreak in Pockomoke. Good for him. But the idea that he >>>>>>> has a thriving business now based upon the idea that most CFS is >>>>>>> caused by neurtoxins is ridiculous. There is no proof. He treats >>>>>>> patients as if they were lab animals at his beck and call, under the >>>>>>> guise that he is doing them a favor. The tone in your text, suggesting >>>>>>> that the cockroaches will run for cover makes me think that you are a >>>>>>> fan of his; that's fine if you wish, but remember something, he may >>>>>>> very well be wrong. >>> >>> Adding an "a" to the end of my name is childish. And I suggest to you that >>> you've taken too personally my criticisms of Dr. Shoemaker. And so you say >>> that writing is taught, eh? Well I've got news for you. First, I'm a >>> Registered Nurse with over 10 years hospital experience; the last five of >>> which are in Critical Care. And I've saved hundreds of lives, sir; many dying >>> from toxic related shock and septicemia. Secondly, I've brought people back >>> from the dead, have you? I've brought people back from the dead from my >>> running the codes and directing and giving orders without the help of >>> fumbiling doctors. Second, I'm in school for my master's degree and third, I'm >>> a published writer. Now that the educational discrepencies are out of the way >>> I'll say this. Dr. Shoemaker may very well be on to something, he may very >>> well be right. And I agree with you, that there are plenty of warning signs >>> out right now to suggest that mold causes human illness. I'm open to that. And >>> I'm also chronically aware that lest then two hundred years ago people new >>> nothing of Bacteria, let alone viruses and prions. The problem I have with Dr. >>> Shoemaker is that his treatment modalities are unproven. Every study I've read >>> on Choelystriamine conflict. I've even talked to a colleague of mine whose >>> Brother-In-Law helped design and pioneer Choleystiramine. Even he doesn't >>> know. And my wife is diagnosed by Dr. Shoemaker as having a neurotoxin >>> mediated illness from Aspirgillus. And the bottom line is this, I've >>> instructed my wife to stop Choleystiramine and drink water and eat healthier >>> and excericise on a daily basis; you know what? She feels even better than >>> before she started the drug. Here is another bottom line. Medicine is evidence >>> based, not theory based. Shoemaker treats without proof and ABOVE ALL, he >>> should not only be open to criticism, as should you, especially with unrpooven >>> modalities, but he should even welcome it. As any pioneering reasercher would. >>> It is not Shoemaker vs. the Establishment. His priorities should be isolating >>> the neruotoxin and then, with double blind, placebo-controlled groups, finding >>> a way to measure for the toxin level drop in blood, while detecting an >>> increase in feces. We can do that with Cholstridium. And so you don't know >>> anything about Dr. Shoemaker's warning letter, huh? Then do this, unless >>> you're afraid to. Bring up the Google web browser and type, in this order: >>> Shoemaker, Ritchie C. And there, in pretty blue letters, right at the tipy-top >>> of the page, will be his FDA warning letter about using the doggie medicine >>> Staphage Lysate on Humans. Woof-Woof!
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