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Author Topic: Vitamin C supplements may raise cataract risk.  (Read 1168 times)

ama

  • Jr. Member
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  • Posts: 1276
Vitamin C supplements may raise cataract risk.
« on: December 26, 2009, 11:17:58 AM »

[*QUOTE*]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Consumer Health Digest #09-52
December 24, 2009

Consumer Health Digest is a free weekly e-mail newsletter edited by
Stephen Barrett, M.D., with help from William M. London, Ed.D. It
summarizes scientific reports; legislative developments; enforcement
actions; news reports; Web site evaluations; recommended and
nonrecommended books; and other information relevant to consumer
protection and consumer decision-making.

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Quackwatch and Dr. Barrett need your help in maintaining and
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read http://www.ncahf.org/digest09/09-45.html and send a contribution.

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Vitamin C supplements may raise cataract risk.

A study of women who were followed over an 8-year period has found
that vitamin C supplementation, particularly in high dose and long
duration, may increase the risk of age-related cataracts. The study
included 24,593 women aged 49-83 years from the Swedish Mammography
Cohort (follow-up from September 1997 to October 2005). The
researchers used a self-administered questionnaire to collect
information on dietary supplement use and lifestyle factors.
[Rautiainen S and others. Vitamin C supplements and the risk of
age-related cataract: a population-based prospective cohort study in
women. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Nov 18, 2009. Epub
ahead of print]
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19923367

The study does not prove cause-and-effect, but because high-dose
vitamin C provides no proven benefit for the general population,
the findings provide further reason to avoid vitamin C megadosage.

###

Anti-homeopathy campaign coming.

Skeptics in the United Kingdom have announced their intention to
raise public awareness that homeopathy is quackery. The campaign will
launch early in 2010. People who wish to join or monitor the campaign
can register on http://www.1023.org.uk/

###

Dismissal of Heimlich associate's groundless libel suit upheld.

A U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld the dismissal of a libel
suit brought by Edward Patrick, M.D. against the Cleveland Scene
newspaper and Thomas Francis, a writer whose cover story, "Playing
Doctor," accused Patrick of lying about his professional experience.
http://medfraud.info/PlayingDoctor_10-27-04.pdf  

Patrick is board-certified in emergency medicine, based on a one-year
residency program followed by credit for practice. However, critics
believe he did not complete residency training. The newspaper article
also questioned the veracity of data from Patrick that were used to
establish the Heimlich maneuver as a method for treating choking. The
appellate court agreed with the lower court judge that Patrick had
misrepresented the extent of his medical training and failed to
present credible information to rebut other accusations made in the
article. To access the court documents, see
http://www.casewatch.org/civil/patrick/dismissal.shtml

###

"Bookmarklet" makes Web pages easier to read.

Readability can speed up Internet investigations by making articles
easier to read and print. After selecting three preferences and
dragging the Readability button to your browser's toolbar, clicking
the button makes the active Web page more readable. The installation
page is located at http://lab.arc90.com/experiments/readability/

###

Other issues of the Digest are accessible through
http://www.ncahf.org/digest09/index.html

If you enjoy this newsletter, please recommend it to your friends.

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Stephen Barrett, M.D.
Consumer Advocate
Chatham Crossing, Suite 107/208
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Donations to help support Quackwatch can be made through PayPal or by mail.
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[*/QUOTE*]

.
Logged
Kinderklinik Gelsenkirchen verstößt gegen die Leitlinien

Der Skandal in Gelsenkirchen
Hamer-Anhänger in der Kinderklinik
http://www.klinikskandal.com

http://www.reimbibel.de/GBV-Kinderklinik-Gelsenkirchen.htm
http://www.kinderklinik-gelsenkirchen-kritik.de

Julian

  • Boltbender
  • Jr. Member
  • *
  • Posts: 2214
Re: Vitamin C supplements may raise cataract risk.
« Reply #1 on: January 14, 2020, 09:30:12 PM »

We have to look at and archive 2 pieces.

The first one:

[*quote*]
Dismissal of Heimlich associate's groundless libel suit upheld.

A U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld the dismissal of a libel
suit brought by Edward Patrick, M.D. against the Cleveland Scene
newspaper and Thomas Francis, a writer whose cover story, "Playing
Doctor," accused Patrick of lying about his professional experience.
http://medfraud.info/PlayingDoctor_10-27-04.pdf 

Patrick is board-certified in emergency medicine, based on a one-year
residency program followed by credit for practice. However, critics
believe he did not complete residency training. The newspaper article
also questioned the veracity of data from Patrick that were used to
establish the Heimlich maneuver as a method for treating choking. The
appellate court agreed with the lower court judge that Patrick had
misrepresented the extent of his medical training and failed to
present credible information to rebut other accusations made in the
article. To access the court documents, see
http://www.casewatch.org/civil/patrick/dismissal.shtml
[*/quote*]



http://medfraud.info/PlayingDoctor_10-27-04.pdf 

[*quote*]
From clevescene.com
Originally published by Cleveland Scene 2004-10-27
©2005 New Times, Inc. All rights reserved.

Playing Doctor
Lying on a résumé isn't a crime - except when a doctor does it.
Luckily for Edward Patrick, the Ohio Medical Board is
forgiving.
By Thomas Francis

There are no shortcuts to a career in medicine. First-year residents
at Jewish Hospital in Cincinnati accepted this. It consoled them
through 100-hour workweeks, each one more blurred by blood and
disease than the last. Residencies are as much a test of faith and
stamina as they are of skill.
To the class of 1975, Edward Patrick was an outsider. At 38, he
was older than most, a physical presence in the corridors but
rarely a voice. In his aloof, distracted way, Patrick tended to a
computer in the cardiac unit. A professor of electrical engineering
from Purdue, he was merely conducting a study, one that had
nothing to do with the hospital's patients or doctors.
Still, one couldn't help but notice that Patrick was a friend -- a
shadow, almost -- of Dr. Henry Heimlich, then head of the Jewish
Hospital surgery department. Word got around that Patrick helped
develop the Heimlich maneuver, a new invention at the time.
Most didn't know that Patrick had recently finished medical school
and that he wanted to abandon engineering for the emergency
room. Dr. Felix Canestri, the chief resident, supervised residents
when they performed surgeries. Most did about 100 surgeries that
year. Yet Canestri doesn't remember ever seeing Patrick at an
operating table. "I can tell you I'm 100 percent convinced he was
not a resident," Canestri says.
"He was there," says Dr. Ed Matern, a resident at the time, "but
he was not in the program."
Walter NovakPatrick's real job, in fact, was hours away. Employment
records indicate he was a full-time professor at Purdue University in West
Lafayette, Indiana. Indeed, a local newspaper from September 1,
1975, quotes Patrick as saying he would spend only one day per
week in Cincinnati -- not nearly enough time to tackle the
insomniac schedules that were the norm for surgery residents.
So Canestri is baffled to hear that Patrick lists a Jewish Hospital
residency on his résumé. "There are some strange things
happening here," he says.
The doctor asks what Patrick has done in the decades since. When
told that he's spent much of the last 28 years in emergency rooms
-- from Cleveland to Cape Fear, North Carolina -- it comes as a
shock. "Practicing surgery?" Canestri asks incredulously.
Yes, all based on what appears to be a phantom residency at
Jewish Hospital.
While this may be a stunning revelation to Patrick's patients, it's
old news to the Ohio Medical Board. Trusted to ensure the
qualifications of state doctors, the board has long known of
Patrick's questionable history, but has left his license intact. The
only mystery is why.
An emergency-room physician encounters human life in its most
fragile state -- so he'd better work well under pressure. That's
something you can't learn in a classroom. It's why residencies are
a crucial prerequisite.
To the med-school grad, however, residencies are filled with high
stress and sleeplessness, supervisors barking orders, and modest
paychecks quickly swallowed by student loans. It's a recipe for
burnout. Studies show that medical residents are often depressed,
prone to substance abuse and suicide. Only the strong -- and
dedicated -- survive.
There may be some incentive to circumvent this process. But
faking medical credentials is foolhardy -- nothing happens in
American medicine without a paper trail.
Few paper trails twist like Ed Patrick's.
There's no evidence that Patrick
has an emergency doctor's
training, so his presence in the ER
is worrisome.
Getty Images
Gag reflex: Heimlich refutes the
claim that Patrick helped develop
the famous maneuver.
Ed Patrick and Henry Heimlich are
doctors with credibility problems.When he applied for an Ohio medical license in 1976, Patrick
claimed to be a full professor at the Indiana School of Medicine. It
has record of him working only as an unpaid volunteer.
From there, his résumé gets weirder. On most he lists special
emergency medicine training under Heimlich from 1976-'78, but
Heimlich disavows this claim.
On his American Medical Association profile, Patrick claims that he
spent 1976-'78 as a resident at Cleveland's Deaconess Hospital.
This is surely false; the hospital never had a residency program.
In his board certification listing, Patrick cites an emergency
medicine residency at the University of Cincinnati hospital. An
internal memo leaked to Scene shows hospital executives
comparing notes and concluding that there's no record of Patrick
there. Executives also indicated he had no record at Jewish
Hospital.

When C. Everett Koop endorsed
the Heimlich maneuver, Patrick
claimed it as his personal victory.

In the same listing, Patrick claims an emergency medicine residency at Purdue University
hospital. Purdue doesn't have a medical school, much less a hospital.
In the early '80s, Patrick claims to have founded a family residency program at St. Luke's in
Solon. He was on faculty there, but did not establish any program, according to hospital
sources.
The rest of the decade sees Patrick crisscrossing Ohio, with emergency-room stops in Toledo,
Columbus, and Cincinnati, as well as in podunks like Georgetown, Circleville, and Hillsborough.
By the mid-1990s, he becomes even more nomadic, getting medical licenses in Kentucky, West
Virginia, Georgia, Alabama, and North Carolina. If that isn't strange enough, Patrick lists a
birthdate of 1947 on four of the licenses -- though his actual birthdate is 1937.
When interviewed in early August, Patrick refused to authorize the release of his work records.
Angry over his treatment in a previous Scene story -- "Heimlich's Maneuver," August 11 -- he
declined to be interviewed for this story. "I am not interested in talking to you until you show
some credibility in your reporting," he says.
Like any fortress, the medical profession protects itself from invaders by guiding all comers
though a series of checkpoints. If Patrick fabricated his residency, the natural question is how
he made it through each checkpoint, enabling him to practice medicine for 28 years.
Only a few people have answers -- and none of them makes sense.Dr. Gordon Margolin was the
head of Jewish Hospital's internal medicine department when
Patrick was there. First, he claims that Patrick was at Jewish for only one year. Three minutes
later, he's sure Patrick stayed for three years.
One moment he says there's no way Patrick did an "emergency medicine" residency there and
claims he would have never signed a residency certificate.
But after being told that his signature is on an affidavit saying Patrick practiced at Jewish
Hospital for 1.5 years, Margolin reverses course. Suddenly, he is certain Patrick was indeed a
resident.
Told that several hospital staffers don't remember Patrick working as a physician, Margolin
says, "He wasn't a very apparent resident." Indeed, Margolin could not name a single doctor or
former resident who would also remember Patrick practicing medicine -- except Heimlich.
While it was no secret among hospital staff that Margolin had a low opinion of Heimlich and had
even less regard for Patrick, his signature was an enormous favor to both. It allowed Heimlich's
protégé to get his Ohio medical license.
Before hiring a physician, a hospital checks the doctor's work record. At Jewish Hospital, Mike
Bowen handled verification requests relating to residencies, and he soon learned of Edward
Patrick.
By the mid-1990s, Bowen had accumulated a massive file of verification requests for Patrick,
who was circulating his bizarre résumé far and wide. It naturally raised eyebrows.
"In my business, if you see something time and time again, you start to wonder," says Bowen.
"It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out something was amiss. What was this guy up to?"
Good question, but Bowen ignored it. Over the next several years, he received requests from
hospitals around the nation, asking about Patrick's credentials. Bowen was aware that Patrick's
claim to an emergency residency was false -- no such program had ever existed at Jewish -- but
he verified the residency anyway.
"From my standpoint, I knew he was at Jewish for a year," says Bowen. Yet he admits he knew
nothing about what Patrick was actually doing there, and he never alerted hospitals that were
considering hiring Patrick about this fact. "I'm not a policeman," says Bowen. "That's not my
job."
Patrick, it seems, seized this opportunity, applying for licenses in four states during Bowen's
tenure. Each time, Bowen verified his residency.
Bowen says he once mentioned Patrick's name "in passing" to someone from the Ohio Medical
Board, but doesn't remember whom. He assumes the board looked into the matter. If those
officials never found cause to yank Patrick's license, that's good enough for him.The first meeting
between Patrick and Henry Heimlich has become a point of contention --
especially over the last year. Since then, Patrick has more forcefully asserted his role in
inventing the Heimlich maneuver.
Heimlich, now 84 and still living in Cincinnati, has stated that he met Patrick at Jewish Hospital
in 1975 -- one year after Heimlich published the first article on the maneuver. Through a
spokesman, he says that "Dr. Patrick had no role in the origin or development of the
maneuver."
Both doctors have histories of making questionable claims, so it's hard to know whom to
believe. What is certain is that, by the end of the 1970s, they were working in tandem to make
the Heimlich maneuver the first response to choking. They were also marketing it as a rescue
technique for drowning victims.
As Scene reported in August, Patrick claimed to have saved a two-year-old girl in Lima. She had
been submerged for 20 minutes, according to his estimate. During the 20-minute ride to the
hospital, CPR had failed to revive her. In a case report published in 1981, Patrick claimed to
have saved her by using the Heimlich maneuver.
Yet Patrick has refused to release work records proving he was working in the Lima ER at the
time. Moreover, other scientists found it impossible to believe that a young girl could be revived
after 40 minutes without breathing.
Most conspicuously absent from the report, however, was the fact that the girl was not saved at
all. She slipped into a vegetative state and died four months later. Patrick refused to provide
Scene a hospital report that would verify his version.
If the Lima case is a fake, it leads to a host of new questions about Patrick's work at Jewish
Hospital.
At an American Red Cross Conference in 1976, for instance, Patrick presented a case in which
he used the Heimlich maneuver to save a stroke victim from choking on pea soup. He never
explained what he -- an engineering professor -- was doing handling a stroke victim at Jewish
Hospital. Nor does he explain why the patient, who had no ability to swallow, was being fed pea
soup by spoon rather than through tubes.
Peter Heimlich, son of Dr. Henry Heimlich, remembers Edward Patrick as a regular visitor to the
family's Cincinnati home in the early 1970s. The last few years, as he researched his father's
career, he kept encountering Patrick's name.
The Lima case looked suspicious to him, as did Patrick's Jewish Hospital residency. So in June2002,
he filed a complaint against Patrick with the Ohio Medical Board.
The board is heralded as one of the nation's most stringent medical regulators, filing more
actions against doctors than the board of any other populous state. Peter Heimlich was
immediately put in touch with executive director Tom Dilling. "I thought, 'Okay, I've come to
the right place,'" he says.
He had several long conference calls with Dilling and Mark Michael, an attorney with the Ohio
Attorney General's office.
Dilling never questioned Peter Heimlich's doubts about the Lima case or the Jewish Hospital
residency. But according to Heimlich, Dilling said that "faking a residency was no big deal." The
board was more concerned with chasing doctors who wrote illegal prescriptions.
"I was astonished," says Peter Heimlich. "It seemed to me that the issue was whether an
untrained doctor had access to emergency rooms in seven states, including Ohio. That was no
big deal?"
In September 2002, Dilling cut off communication, failing to return e-mails and letters. Two
years later, Peter Heimlich still hasn't heard back.
Because medical-board complaints are confidential, Dilling won't discuss Patrick or even confirm
that an investigation occurred. But Dilling did say that, in 1976, the year that Patrick should
have completed his residency, post-graduate training was not a requirement for licensure.
Still, the board can pull the license of any physician who publishes false credentials. Given the
glaring inconsistencies of Patrick's résumé, it's amazing that it passed board scrutiny. Attorney
General Betty Montgomery and her successor, Jim Petro, were also informed of Patrick's
history, but neither pursued a case against him.
Patrick's career is made all the more flammable due to the time that's elapsed since his alleged
Jewish residency. If it's bogus, and if Jewish Hospital has nonetheless been verifying it all these
years -- even after suspicions were raised -- it may be liable for all that Patrick has done in 28
years of emergency-room work.
"In the case of an emergency-room doctor, the hospital is vouching to the public at large that it
is staffed by people who are adequately trained, and we as patients have to rely on that," says
Michael Djordjevic, a malpractice attorney in Akron. "What's at stake here is potentially life and
death."
And that could present legal consequences for Jewish Hospital -- the expensive kind.
It appears that Health Alliance, the corporate overseer of Jewish and five other Cincinnati
hospitals, understands this problem. In September 2002, Gary Harris, general counsel for the
Health Alliance, took the Patrick file. Today, Mike Bowen says that file is locked in Harris'soffice,
safe from the prying eyes of lawyers and reporters. Harris did not return phone calls.
At one point in his career, Patrick fancied himself something of a Horatio Alger. Born to a
humble family in Wheeling, West Virginia, he studied his way into M.I.T., then into the U.S.
Naval Academy, then into a tenured professorship at Purdue -- all before age 40. If Patrick is to
be believed, he single-handedly changed national choking and drowning rescue techniques.
Meeting Henry Heimlich may have seemed providential. It was through Heimlich that Patrick
met astronaut Neil Armstrong, with whom the two doctors teamed for a study of a new oxygen
delivery system that could be used as an artificial lung.
It was with Heimlich, too, that Patrick found himself lecturing the nation's scientific experts at
the American Red Cross, the National Academy of Sciences, and the Institute of Medicine. When
former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop announced his endorsement of the Heimlich maneuver
for choking in 1985, he cited Patrick's research on the dangers of backslaps, used to rescue
choking victims before the Heimlich maneuver. As a lecturing team, Heimlich and Patrick also
succeeded in convincing the American Heart Association to recommend the Heimlich maneuver
as a second response to drowning rescue -- in the event that CPR fails.
Today, the relationship stings of betrayal. Heimlich has undercut Patrick's claims to inventing
the maneuver and even denies Patrick had any effect on swaying Koop's opinion.
Recent years have also been hard on the Heimlich legacy. He's been widely denounced for his
campaign to make the Heimlich maneuver the first response to drowning. Most believe it's
counterproductive and possibly fatal. He's also campaigned for malariotherapy, contending that
AIDS and perhaps cancer can be cured by giving patients malaria. His attempts to conduct
human experiments have drawn condemnations from immunologists around the globe. Unfazed,
Heimlich will be giving a presentation at the Pan Africa AIDS conference in Nashville this week.
His appearance has caused several other presenters to boycott the event.
Heimlich always coveted fame. Today, he's notorious.

Patrick has achieved neither. Heimlich may have helped him get an Ohio medical license based
on questionable credentials, but if that gave Patrick a head start, it's been the bane of his
career since. His résumé makes it hard to get a good faculty job in a hospital.

Most doctors in their 60s are either retired or settled comfortably into their last years of
practice. Patrick, now 67, was last seen working at Cape Fear Valley Medical Center in
Fayetteville, North Carolina. He left in August for unknown reasons. Now living in northern
Kentucky and navigating his third divorce, he is looking for work.
[*/quote*]



Piece #2 sheds a fiery light at the scene. This is where the pdf, copied above, is stored. It is not "somehwere in the www", it is right in the center of it all: it is the homepage of Peter M. Heimlich. Greetings from Allaxys to Peter and Karen!

Like in most cases I did not copy the embedded urls. This is only an anchor. So, do go and read the original!

http://medfraud.info

[*quote*]
    Updated August 19, 2019

    Bio and contact info
    Media reports that resulted from our efforts
    The Sidebar (Peter's blog)
    Got a tip?

    What the experts say about Peter & Karen's work

    I've been investigating medical fraud and quackery for 25 years. Peter Heimlich and his wife Karen uncovered the biggest case I've ever seen -- Robert S. Baratz MD PhD, National Council Against Health Fraud

    Your crusade is a major plus for medicine and for the American public. So, as a member of both communities, I thank you -- Alan Steinman MD MPH, Rear Admiral (ret.) US Coast Guard, author, US Coast Guard water safety manual

    Peter Heimlich has worked tirelessly to uncover a fascinating, yet little known chapter of medical history, one with as much human intrigue as you would expect from a John LeCarre novel -- Charles W. Guildner MD (ret), former consultant, American Heart Association

    Peter Heimlich's relentless and successful effort to expose the truth has been an inspiration to lifesavers everywhere -- B. Chris Brewster, President, US Lifesaving Association

    You have the soul of an investigative reporter -- Rhonda Schwartz, ABC News Senior Investigative Producer, in a Spring 2007 phone call with Peter

    I applaud your commitment to continuing to clear up these issues -- Michelle Jantz, Manager, Operations and Program Administration, Preparedness and Health and Safety, American Red Cross, Washington DC

    Medical experts speak out against my father's history of misconduct

    My father's history of abusing colleagues


    Click the photo for Thomas Francis's landmark Heimlich expose in Radar Magazine about my father's bizarre career -- and how & why we exposed him as a remarkable and dangerous charlatan.


    Outmaneuvered: How we busted the Heimlich medical frauds

    by Peter M. Heimlich (bio and contact info)


    Please do not understand me too quickly -- Andre Gide

    Better not to begin. Once you begin, better to finish it. (source)

    Perhaps the most challenging question raised by my story is one that confronts most people in one form or another: When we become aware of wrongdoing committed by a family member, how do we choose to respond? -- Peter

    (The Heimlich manoeuvre) has never been used in Australia. Despite the claims of the extremely charismatic Dr. Heimlich, Australian resuscitation experts believe that there isn't enough scientific evidence to support its use. So how does a medical procedure become so widely adopted without any serious scientific evidence? -- The Heimlich manoeuvre by Aviva Ziegler, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, July 27, 2009

    There was never any evidence here. Heimlich overpowered science all along the way with his slick tactics and intimidation, and everyone, including us at the (American Heart Association) caved in. -- Roger White MD, Mayo Clinic from A New Maneuver by Pamela Mills-Senn, Cincinnati Magazine, April 2007

    Those organizations that originally advocated adoption of the (Heimlich maneuver) on such shaky grounds, albeit with reservations, cannot be held entirely blameless for what followed. The wave of publicity given the measure by well intentioned, but uncritical, persons has been remarkable...The maneuver is so well fixed in the public mind as the only solution for foreign body airway obstruction that to correct the situation would be like trying to recover the contents of a feather pillow released from a church steeple. -- Joseph S. Redding MD, The choking controversy: critique of evidence on the Heimlich maneuver, Critical Care Medicine, October 1979

    The "malariotherapy" experiments in China, conducted for over a decade by Dr. (Xiaoping) Chen in conjunction with Cincinnati's Heimlich Institute, have been called "atrocities" by the World Health Organization. Medical experts have condemned the work as "charlatanism of the highest order." Research subjects included prisoners who were controlled by hired guards. In one case, a woman with full-blown AIDS, suffering from pneumonia and hooked up to oxygen, was infected with malaria. -- Peter quoted in St. Louis University Under Fire for Work with Doctor Who Infected AIDS Patients with Malaria by Sam Levin, Riverfront Times, September 9, 2013

    "(Dr. Heimlich's) ideas are insane," (Robert S. Baratz MD PhD of the National Council Against Health Fraud) said. "Some of his ideas are delusional. He has been experimenting on human beings for most of his career, and he's no different than the Nazi experimenters. There isn't one iota of scientific basis for this except that Heimlich said so." (Portland Tribune, April 13, 2007)

    If (Dr.) Heimlich is really doing this, he should be put in jail -- Mark Harrington, executive director of Treatment Action Group via Heimlich maneuvers into AIDS therapy, CNN/Reuters, April 14, 2003



    From Spring 2002 through 2007, my wife Karen M. Shulman and I deep-researched the career of my father, Dr. Henry J. Heimlich of Cincinnati, famous for the "Heimlich maneuver" choking rescue method. To our astonishment, we inadvertently uncovered a wide-ranging, unseen 50-year history of fraud.

    Since Spring 2003, our research and my outreach to journalists have been the basis for scores of mainstream print and broadcast media reports which exposed my father as a remarkable -- and dangerous -- charlatan.

    Via a November 2005 Radar Magazine article, here's what triggered our interest:

    For the first 48 years of his life Peter distanced himself from his father's career and celebrity. A year or two might slip by between calls from his parents. But in 2001, Peter says, he learned of serious health problems in his family. He refuses to say what those problems were, but he insists he was appalled to learn that his father was refusing to address them.

    "My father's the great Dr. Lifesaver," Peter says bitterly. "How could he have let this happen?" When he tried to get the facts, he says, his father hung up on him and his mother wouldn't respond to his letters.

    Peter and Karen began to wonder whether there were other family secrets worth looking into as well.

    Our research revealed my father to be a wolf in sheep's clothing - a spectacular con man, serial liar, and arguably one of the most successful medical humbugs of the late 20th century. Armed with considerable charm and an instinct for public relations, my father used the media to pass himself off as a medical genius/inventor and humanitarian, eventually being crowned "America's most famous doctor" (The New Republic).

    My father spent much of his career lying to journalists, many of whom failed to fact check his claims. Undoubtedly as a result, many if not most obituaries published after his death on December 17, 2016, contained factual errors. (As reported by the Washington Post, in response to my requests, corrections were published by the New York Times, Washington Post, Associated Press, Wall Street Journal, Reuters, Cincinnati Enquirer, and National Public Radio.)

    A thoracic surgeon by training, my father built the first half of his career on this lie that was reported on the front page of the Cincinnati Enquirer on March 16, 2003 -- the story was based on our research and outreach to the paper:





    In May 1977, after a series of problems, he was was fired from his last medical job as Chief of Surgery at Cincinnati's Jewish Hospital. A June 3, 1977 memo from my father to hospital president Warren C. Falberg confirms that: "You are well aware that my termination from the hospital was not initiated by me and that I did not resign." He never again practiced surgery because he couldn't obtain malpractice insurance.

    By then, as a result of my father's considerable skills at public relations -- as I told a reporter, "He could teach P.T. Barnum a few tricks" -- the Heimlich maneuver was taking off and he spent the rest of his career being a celebrity doctor and running the nonprofit Heimlich Institute. (Since 2005, the organization hasn't had any employees and has been nothing but a website. According to the Heimlich Institute's 2014 IRS return, it has $1080 in total assets.)

    Needless to say, legitimate scientists keep notes detailing the development of their ideas and inventions. However, to my knowledge my father has never produced a single document that would substantiate his claims to have invented what came to be called "the Heimlich maneuver" or any of the products he patented under his own name.

    As I told a reporter, "I don't think my father invented anything but his own mythology." Nevertheless, because he was a medical "brand name," for decades the media - especially in Cincinnati where he was a local celebrity - gave him endless opportunities to relentlessly circulate a string of crackpot medical treatments and weird self-serving lies. For example, on May 26, 2016, the Cincinnati Enquirer published an article entitled At 96, Dr. Heimlich finally uses his life-saving technique. The story reported that a few days before, my father performed the Heimlich maneuver on a choking woman named Patty Ris who was sitting next to him at a table in the dining room of Cincinnati's Deupree House, the upscale retirement home where my father and Ris live.

    My father told the Enquirer, the New York Times, and WCPO-TV News that it was the first time he had ever performed his namesake treatment to revive a choking victim.   However, as I informed the Enquirer in a May 27, 2016 corrections request, from 2001-2006 my father had told reporters at publications including the BBC, the Chicago Sun-Times, and the New Yorker that in 2001 he claimed to have performed the treatment on a choking victim at Cincinnati's Banker's Club restaurant.

    A few hours after I sent my request, the Enquirer published a major re-write exposing his lie.

    Via reporter Christine Hauser's May 27, 2016 New York Times story:

    A BBC article in 2003 quoted (Dr. Heimlich), then 83, describing a similar encounter where he tried the maneuver on a fellow diner, a man, although the story lacked details such as a precise date, location and name. A New Yorker article in 2006 made reference to a similar incident, also without details. But a son, Phil Heimlich, said his father had never mentioned any previous incidents to him. The doctor himself did not return a follow-up call.

    Subsequent reports published in McKnight's and Slate and questioned whether the retirement home incident was a publicity stunt. My June 14, 2016 blog item raised further questions about the veracity of the tale.





    Perhaps dad's most bizarre medical claim was "malariotherapy," a quack cure for AIDS, cancer, and Lyme Disease that consists of infecting patients with malaria. For decades Cincinnati's nonprofit Heimlich Institute funded and oversaw a series of illicit offshore experiments on U.S. citizens and foreign nationals which were the subject of investigations by three federal agencies (CDC, FDA, Justice Dept.) and UCLA.

    In the 1990s, according to How Dr. Heimlich Maneuvered Hollywood Into Backing His Dangerous AIDS "Cure" by Seth Abramovitch, The Hollywood Reporter, August 14, 2014, my father persuaded dozens of well-meaning, but gullible celebrities -- including Jack Nicholson, Ron Howard, Bette Midler, and Muhammad Ali -- to contribute hundreds of thousands of dollars in order to infect AIDS patients with malaria.




    Via the February 16, 2003 Cincinnati Enquirer:

    (Dr. Heimlich's) experiments - which seek to destroy HIV, the AIDS-causing virus, by inducing high malarial fevers- have been criticized by the Centers for Disease Control and the Food and Drug Administration and condemned by other health professionals and human rights advocates as a medical "atrocity.''

    Per this ABC7 Chicago I-Team report (in which my father refused to be interviewed and literally hid behind my mother), since 2005 the Heimlich Institute has been nothing but a website which, until recently, aggressively promoted the Heimlich maneuver as a cure-all for drowning, asthma, cystic fibrosis, even heart attacks:





    All of these treatments have been thoroughly discredited by medical experts as useless and potentially lethal. For example, the use of the Heimlich maneuver to resuscitate drowning victims has been warned against as useless and potentially lethal by the National Academy of Sciences, the American Heart Association, the American Red Cross, the US Department of Health and Human Services, and other organizations. Nevertheless, for decades the Heimlich Institute put the public at risk by promoting this and my father's other dangerous medical recommendations.

    As we came to understand, my father simply dreamed up these claims, then promoted them in journals and the popular media using evidence that ranged from shabby to fraudulent. For example, we researched a string of case reports in which he claimed drowning victims had been miraculously revived by the Heimlich maneuver. They're all phony. The results? Dozens of serious injuries and deaths, including children.

    We also learned that, because of his delusional claims and unethical conduct, my father had long been an outcast in the medical profession. Nevertheless, for decades the popular press continued to portray him as a medical icon and provided him with a media platform to promote his unfounded, dangerous claims.

    I was long aware that my father suffered from some sort of extreme narcissism that manifested itself as an unquenchable need for adulation and endlessly talking about his accomplishments. Reporter Jason Zengerle, who in 2005 conducted multiple interviews with my father, told me he thought my father suffered from Narcissistic Personality Disorder.

    long those lines, here's a bizarre 1999 infomercial-style biography in which my father "holds court" as my mother (the late Jane Murray Heimlich), my sisters Janet Heimlich and Elisabeth Heimlich, my aunt Cecilia Rosenthal (his sister), and others "pay tribute" to him:



    I also knew that behind a public mask that exuded sincerity and enthusiasm, my father had extreme mood swings and an explosive temper. He lied easily and was a serial adulterer throughout the decades of marriage to my mother, an heiress who financially supported him through most of his career. (My mother described some of my father's philandering in her 2010 memoir.) But I'd never paid any attention to my father's work. I'd always assumed he was a "medical genius" as he was portrayed for decades in hundreds of media reports.

    Then at age 48, as a result of our research I came to realize everything I knew was wrong and that my father's thinking was seriously disordered, a condition that made him a danger to others and to himself.

    Karen and I didn't want anyone else to be harmed -- especially kids who might be future "Heimlich for drowning" statistics -- so in 2002 we decided to bring the facts to public attention via the Internet and the media in order to expose the "poison ideas" circulated by my father and the Heimlich Institute (which, at the time, intended to promote his dangerous claims "in perpetuity").

    Since then, scores of print and broadcast media stories based on our research have been reported, including this June 2007 ABC 20/20 report by Brian Ross, Is Dr. Heimlich really a savior? which resulted from my outreach to Rhonda Schwartz, Senior Producer at ABC's investigative unit. The story includes interviews with AIDS expert Anthony Fauci MD from the National Institutes of Health, emergency medicine expert Peter Rosen MD, animal rights activist Neil Barnard MD, my brother Phil Heimlich, my sister Janet Heimlich, and me (they shot some footage of Karen, but didn't use it) -- my father refused to be interviewed:





    As the critical stories began appearing, for the most part my father hid, refusing to defend his work to inquiring physicians (for example, here and here) or to reporters. Instead, he enlisted Phil and Janet to fight his battles.  Without ever attempting to contact me or my wife, Phil and Janet joined forces and began making false and defamatory personal attacks against me which, per this Cincinnati newspaper article, resulted in me taking legal action.

    Phil is a former elected official in Cincinnati who used to make headlines for his hard-right political stances: handing over public assets to private interests, working to deny civil rights to gay citizens, trying to shut down adult bookstores, gun rights, and so forth. (Phil reportedly became a "born again Christian" in 1981 after experiencing a religious epiphany in a Big Boy hamburger restaurant.)

    Janet -- a freelance writer who rails against male circumcision -- wrote a book about relgious child abuse which neglected to mention that Phil is associated with millionaire evangelist Bill Gothard, whose ministry has been the subject of media reports about alleged child abuse. In March 2014, Gothard resigned in the wake of allegations of sexual misconduct.

    Why were Phil and Janet willing to put their reputations on the line to defend our father's dangerous medical claims and to go on the warpath against me without ever trying to contact me or my wife and discuss the situation?

    For one thing, both live off of our parents' money, most of which was inherited from my late mother's father, dance studio mogul Arthur Murray. Also, for decades my brother has been the vice president of the Heimlich Institute -- and my father's errand boy/hatchet man.

    In addition to protecting their source of income, presumably they were also worried about me bringing to light serious family medical problems as well as my father's history of associating with doctors who lost their medical licenses and went to jail for the excessive prescribing of narcotics, one of whom is a longtime, close friend of my brother's.

    Also, a dominant rule in my parents' family was to hide problems in the interest of maintaining an appearance of distinction and success. My mother's inherited fortune helped facilitate that objective and her money could buy enablers within and outside the family.

    For example, Christopher Finney -- my father's attorney and my brother Phil's political mentor and business partner -- employed a private detective to snoop on me, and my father hired a Cincinnati PR flak named Robert Kraft to trash me in news stories.

    Now-disgraced "super lawyer" Stan Chesley even got into the act, sending Karen and me a couple of lame proffer letters. (We didn't respond.) There were also some dodgy reporters. For example, a political writer named Jason Zengerle set out to write a smear article about me for The New Yorker, but editor Amy Davidson smelled a rat and spiked his story. Later I learned why Zengerle, who works for The New Republic magazine, targeted me. Click here for more details. 

    Despite those bumps along the way, with the invaluable help of medical experts, journalists, and others, Karen and I persevered and accomplished much of what we set out to do.

    For example, as reported by the Houston Press, on about May 15, 2012, about ten years after we began researching my father's career:

    (Peter Heimlich says the Heimlich Institute's web site) "deleted its main pages recommending the Heimlich maneuver as an effective treatment for drowning rescue, to stop asthma attacks and to treat cystic fibrosis."

    ..."(My father's) claims were based on nothing but a handful of skimpy cases in which near-dead drowning victims were 'miraculously revived' by the maneuver," he says. "Despite such thin evidence, for decades The New York Times, CBS News, Inside Edition and scores of other media outlets gave him a platform to urge the public to perform the Heimlich on people who were drowning."

    Why was the information finally scrubbed from the website? As reported by the University of South Florida's campus newspaper, I made it clear that I planned to go after the organization's nonprofit status:

    (Peter Heimlich said the removal of the information) happened shortly after he sent an email to (Heimlich Institute executive director Patrick) Ward and the U.S. Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration.

    Another surprise came in 2005. After we uncovered that in 1985 my father had defrauded US first aid organizations in order to convince them to promote the Heimlich maneuver over other choking rescue methods, the American Red Cross (ARC) "downgraded" the Heimlich maneuver, making it a secondary treatment response for choking. Click here for a compilation of related media reports. Further, the ARC, the American Heart Association, and ILCOR now call the treatment an "abdominal thrust."

    In this American Red Cross video, emergency medicine expert David Markenson MD explains that abdominal thrusts, chest thrusts, and back blows are considered equally effective treatments for responding to a choking emergency and that a combination of these treatments may be more effective:




    And per a 2009 Australian Broadcasting Corporation documentary by Aviva Ziegler:

    (The Heimlich manoeuvre) has never been used in Australia. Despite the claims of the extremely charismatic Dr Heimlich, Australian resuscitation experts believe that there isn't enough scientific evidence to support its use. So how does a medical procedure become so widely adopted without any serious scientific evidence?

    Along the way, we ended up uncovering and bringing to public attention some other jaw-dropping scams and scammers.



    For example, there was my father's 30-year protege, the late Dr. Edward A. Patrick, who, per his singular full-page obituary in the British Medical Journal, claimed to be the uncredited co-developer of the Heimlich maneuver -- which, according to his ex-wife, he called "the Patrick maneuver."

    An outlandish character who sported an unkempt Elvis-style wig, for decades Patrick worked in scores of hospitals on seven state medical licenses he obtained using bogus credentials supplied by my father.

    In a strange twist of fate, Patrick died just days after he lost a high-profile lawsuit against a Cleveland newspaper that published a cover story expose about him, Playing Doctor. He's buried in Wheeling, West Virginia, where he was born and raised.

    Then there's the Save-A-Life Foundation scandal. My father was "medical adviser" to SALF, a high-profile, politically-connected Chicago nonprofit that since November 2006 has been the subject of dozens of media exposes about the organization and its founder/president, Carol J. Spizzirri.

    As I reported, FEMA dumped Spizzirri's organization shortly before it folded in September 2009. According to the June 26, 2013 Duluth Telegraph Herald, SALF is under investigation by the Illinois Attorney General for the "possible misappropriation" of $9 million in federal and state tax dollars. And Spizzirri reportedly now lives in a mobile home park in San Marcos, California.

    In 2010, I started doing original reporting via my blog, The Sidebar, which serves as an outlet for newsworthy information I turn up and as a platform for me to develop stories to pass along to mainstream journalists. For example, a story I first blogged -- about Saint Louis University partnering with the Chinese doctor who oversaw the Heimlich Institute's notorious "malariotherapy" experiments on AIDS patients -- subsequently bounced into the Associated Press and the Riverfront Times. (A January 19, 2017 New Jersey newspaper article -- about a successful public records lawsuit in which I was the plaintiff -- called me an "investigative blogger.")

    There are still important unreported and under-reported stories about my father's unusual career that we plan to bring to public attention, including an alleged $9 million payment to the Heimlich Institute by gold mining companies to fund the Heimlich Institute's "malariotherapy" experiments in Africa.

    There's also this biggie: Per an August 21, 2005 Boston Herald report: Did my father really invent "the Heimlich maneuver"?

    Finally, we hope our improbable odyssey encourages other rebels, whistleblowers, citizen journalists, and those who are confronted with family misconduct and abuse to speak out.

    Questions? Just ask.


    Inquiries are always welcome as is information re: the subjects listed below (in no particular order) and related matters. Click here for our contact information. Anonymous e-mails may be sent via Anonymouse.

    Henry J. Heimlich MD; Jane Heimlich; Elisabeth Heimlich; the Heimlichs and prescription drug abuse; Phil Heimlich; Jon Goodwin; narco doctors Gerson Carr, Ryan Krebs, Milton Uhley; Edward A. Patrick MD PhD & family; Heimlich Institute at Xavier University & Deaconess Associations; E. Anthony Woods, Patrick Ward, Barbara Lohr; Carolyn Pence Siemers; Michele Ashby, the Denver Gold Group, and the "malariotherapy" experiments in Africa; John L. Fahey MD, Xiaoping Chen, and the "malariotherapy" experiments in China; Victoria Wulsin MD, PhD; Rotary International; Ronald Sacher MD; Charles Pierce MD; Victor Esch MD; Ron Watson, Terry Watkins, Denise Schmidt RN, Billy Lindner, Natasha Stuckey, Tyronne Stuckey, Todd Schebor, Jack Baker, etc; Jeff Ellis & Associates, Larry Newell; National Aquatic Safety Company (NASCO), John Hunsucker PhD; Jewish Hospital; Heimlich Valve & other inventions associated with my father; ventriloquist Paul Winchell, Joanne Carson, other California associates; Kathy Mansoor: Dan Gavriliu and the Reversed Gastric Tube Operation (RGT); James M. Fattu MD, Harry Gibbons MD, Glen Griffin MD, Rustum Roy PhD, other associates; "the Heimlich" for asthma, Hilary Hagan, Stephanie Hagan; Isaac Piha, Irene Bogachus; Save-A-Life Foundation (SALF), Carol J. Spizzirri, Rita Mullins, Ciprina Spizzirri, Douglas R. Browne, John Donleavy; Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM), Neal Barnard MD, John J. Pippin MD; the Heimlich Group (NY); 1986 University of FL drowning study; 1982 Richard Day study (Yale); Jason Zengerle, Claire Farel MD; Robert Kraft, Joe Dehner, Stan Chesley, Jon Goodwin, Chris Finney, the late Bishop Herbert Thompson Jr., and other Cincinnati players; sexual misconduct, etc.



    "The Heimlich Manoeuvre" (audio & transcript) 30 min. audio documentary by Aviva Ziegler Australian Broadcasting Corporation, July 27, 2009

    Click here for Dr. Joe's interview with Peter

    From the June 1, 2011 Writer's Almanac, Garrison Keillor's popular poetry reading feature on public radio

    From Report on the Advanced Study Weekend with Dr. Heimlich, The McDougall Newsletter, February 2005:

    Many people attending the weekend considered the experience to be almost mystical - an experience never to be forgotten - the experience of being in the presence of and listening to the inspiring words of Dr. Henry Heimlich - the man who has saved more lives than anyone else in human history....To preserve the memory of this event, all interested participants had an opportunity to have their pictures taken with Dr. Hemlich [sic] performing the maneuver on them.

    Copyright @ 2008 Peter M. Heimlich, all rights reserved
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