LivingwithFibro
Lily
- Messages
- 296
http://www.naturaltherapycenter.com/
Is anyone familiar with Dr George Georgiou's work or has worked with him?
Is anyone familiar with Dr George Georgiou's work or has worked with him?
So I suppose I have to say it doesn't look like rubbish to me.......it depends on what you're looking for, someone I talk to on Facebook occasionally has Lyme,she spent 2 months at the clinic last year and improved, she went back in March, not sure how she's going on now. I do believe in cleaning up the body to help fight sickness.
I would say if you want to try some detox/cleansing etc try it and look upon it as an expensive holiday, if your symptoms improve, you've won one.
Most of his "degrees" are from unaccredited businesses, at least one looks like it's from a diploma mill, and another is from an institution which only seems to exist in connection to his own name.http://www.naturaltherapycenter.com/
Is anyone familiar with Dr George Georgiou's work or has worked with him?
It gets better. His "ND" comes from a church group, and the "pastoral" aspect of that looks like it's for curing people by laying on hands. There's no apparent curriculum, and I can't imagine it's accredited in any manner.
Maybe so, but then the honest individual stands by his or her self-education. He doesn't get phony degrees and make up degrees/programs for the purpose of appearing more formally educated than he is. That's just dishonest to my mind and makes the individual untrustworthy.To be fair, there are plenty of doctors out there with sterling qualifications from hallowed institutions that are absolute rubbish and have caused many patients great harm in the name of "standard of care". Degrees are not the be all end all.
And I do believe it is absolutely possible to be self taught if the drive and determination to learn are present.
At least this guy lays it all out there for the world to see...if it doesn't appeal to you, there's no reason to pursue it any further. Or vice versa!
The problem is that the degrees, diplomas, and institutions look superficially valid. I'd have no problem if he stuck with his two real degrees from real British universities, and simply put his theories forth without using those certifications as a source of authority and legitimacy.At least this guy lays it all out there for the world to see...if it doesn't appeal to you, there's no reason to pursue it any further. Or vice versa!
Some quacks are quite good at self-promotionHmm, shouldn't he be arrested for that? He is quite famous in Cyprus, Greece and even in the UK. Been interviewed on the telly too.
But the "degrees" which label him as a medical doctor (ND) and should be the ones which allow him to treat patients in any medical context, are a total sham.
Yes, and it's still used to refer to physicians who practice medicine, typically with licensing or at least educational requirements. Adding "Doctor" to someone's qualifications when they haven't done anything remotely resembling an actual medical or naturopathic degree is pretty deceitful. But apparently that is tolerated in much of the world.ND stands for naturopathic doctor.