Author Topic: Santa Monica Health Center  (Read 2130 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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« on: January 31, 2006, 09:11:00 PM »
Mexican doctors: King was beyond treatment, suffering from paralysis and cancer

By Elliot Spagat
ASSOCIATED PRESS

3:36 p.m. January 31, 2006

ROSARITO, Mexico ? Coretta Scott King was partially paralyzed and suffering from advanced ovarian cancer when she arrived last week at the alternative medicine clinic where she died early Tuesday, clinic doctors said.

They gave the cause of death as respiratory failure, related both to a serious stroke she suffered about three months ago and the cancer they said was diagnosed last year.

King, 78, checked into the Santa Monica Health Institute in the Mexican beach resort of Rosarito, 16 miles south of San Diego, on Thursday under another name. The doctors said they did not know who she was until her medical records arrived on Friday, and they never began any treatment because of her condition.

?She came here with half her body paralyzed,? Dr. Rafael Cedeno, the doctor who was overseeing her case, said at a news conference. ?She was in really bad condition.?

Bishop T.D. Jakes of the Potter's House church in Dallas, who said he helped King get to Mexico, said he did not know what kind of treatment she sought. But he said he was not surprised that the ?very health-conscious? King ?would explore every possible way.?

The Santa Monica Health Institute says on its Web site that it uses an eclectic approach to diseases that are often believed to be incurable. Most of the patients have cancer, the clinic says.

The clinic's founder and director, Kurt W. Donsbach, has a criminal record and has been accused of offering dubious treatments to desperately ill patients, according to court records and a watchdog group.

In 1997, Donsbach was sentenced in San Diego federal court to a year in prison for smuggling more than $250,000 worth of unapproved drugs into the United States from Mexico, according to court records.

?There's nobody worse,? said Dr. Stephen Barrett of Allentown, Pa., who runs http://www.quackwatch.org, a Web site that tracks health frauds.

In 1988, the U.S. Postal Service ordered Donsbach and his nephew to stop claiming that a solution of hydrogen peroxide that they sold could prevent cancer and ease arthritis pain, according to records.

When asked about the clinic's past on Tuesday, Dr. Humberto Seimandi, its medical director, said only that U.S. medical standards are very high. He did not elaborate, and Donsbach was not available for comment.

According to Barrett, criminal prosecutions drove Donsbach into bankruptcy in 1987 and forced him to shift operations to Mexico.

King's body was embalmed ? a legal requirement in Mexico ? and her death certificate prepared at a Tijuana funeral home before the body was sent to the border to be handed over to family members, said funeral director Hector Gonzalez.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. consulate in Tijuana, Liza Davis, said King's body crossed the border at a specially cleared lane at the San Ysidro crossing.

King's death certificate said her body would be driven to Riverside, then flown to Atlanta.


Associated Press writer Ioan Grillo contributed to this story from Mexico City.

On the Net:
http://www.hospitalsantamonica.com
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #1 on: February 01, 2006, 11:39:00 AM »
I don't think King was stupid enough to realize she had a disease that was incurable. Is it that surprising she would seek alternative treatment, no matter how unlikely it is to work? You got to let people have hope... otherwise, what is life but simply waiting to die?

Rosarito is a beautiful place.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #2 on: February 01, 2006, 11:40:00 AM »
Quote
I don't think King was stupid enough to realize she had a disease that was incurable.


Let me put that better... I think King was smart enough to realize she was dying and probably would not be cured. If someone knows this and accepts it, is it really a scam?
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #3 on: February 02, 2006, 10:20:00 AM »
Quote
On 2006-02-01 08:40:00, Anonymous wrote:

"
Quote
I don't think King was stupid enough to realize she had a disease that was incurable.



Let me put that better... I think King was smart enough to realize she was dying and probably would not be cured. If someone knows this and accepts it, is it really a scam?"


You are right, we all should be allowed to do what we want at all times.

I am just hoping that she, and her family, was cognizant of the owner, and the clinics past.
The continuing stories about this clinic ripping off Americans on dubious treatments that don't work.

If that is how she wanted to spend her last days, void of family, no knowing the language of her caretakers. So be it.

I just don't think she was in any condition to derive any benefits of being in Rosarito Beach.

The article stated that she was in no condition for additional treatments of their type.

To me, it just sounds like a tragic, not well coordinated end of a very dignified persons life.

Again, you are right, if it made her happy, good for her.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #4 on: February 03, 2006, 03:45:00 PM »
Clinic where King died being closed

UNION-TRIBUNE

February 3, 2006

TIJUANA ? U.S. consulate officials were notified by Mexican authorities yesterday morning that the alternative health clinic where Coretta Scott King died this week is being closed and the remaining U.S. patients are being ordered to leave.

?Mexican immigration authorities notified us . . . that they were planning on going there, and subsequently we had people at the scene who were told it was being closed,? said Liza Davis, a spokeswoman for the U.S. consulate in Tijuana.

Twenty U.S. citizens were at the clinic in Rosarito Beach, and the U.S. consulate has been told they have three days to help them leave.

Mexican health officials were unavailable last night. Mexicali newspaper La Cronica was reporting that Baja California health officials said Hospital Santa Monica was being closed because it did not have proper authorization to provide unconventional treatments.

King, the wife of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., died Tuesday at the clinic. She had ovarian cancer.
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #5 on: February 03, 2006, 05:21:00 PM »
White Anti-Gay Group to Protest King Funeral

Adding insult to injury, Westboro Baptist Church, led by anti-gay extremist Fred Phelps, is planning a protest at Coretta Scott King's funeral at New Birth Missionary Baptist Church on Tuesday, February 7 at 12 noon.

WBC said for more than 10 years that by endorsing the homosexual agenda she was brining down the wrath of God upon herself, her family and the black civil rights movement. She is an ingrate-unthankful and unholy.�

Click here to view flyer
http://www.godhatesfags.com/fliers/feb2 ... uneral.pdf

Ironically King�s funeral will take place at mega church pastor Bishop Eddie Long�s New Birth Baptist Missionary Church.  Long is an outspoken critic of gays and led a march to Dr. King�s grave denouncing gay rights in 2004 with King�s youngest daughter Bernice.


source - http://jasmynecannick.typepad.com/jasmy ... gay_g.html
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #6 on: February 03, 2006, 05:28:00 PM »
Quote
White Anti-Gay Group to Protest King Funeral


Holy crap, that freak just keeps coming back to stir up more and more shit.

He must be an overcompensating closeted fag!

His true fear? Knowing that if he came out,
no one would date him!

---

On a serious note, I wonder if his type of protesting will create some real trouble?
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #7 on: February 03, 2006, 05:52:00 PM »
Quote
He must be an overcompensating closeted fag!


You are not the only who thinks this. Check out this pic. :tup:


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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #8 on: February 03, 2006, 05:59:00 PM »
HA! LOL
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #9 on: February 04, 2006, 10:58:00 AM »
Clinics under the radar no longer

Unorthodox treatment facing new scrutiny

February 4, 2006

ROSARITO BEACH ? The death this week of Coretta Scott King at an alternative clinic has brought attention to the proliferation of unorthodox treatment programs in Baja California and is raising questions over how they are monitored.


Photo

DAVID MAUNG / Associated Press
A sign posted by Baja California officials on the door of the 30-bed Hospital Santa Monica in Rosarito Beach says the clinic's operations have been suspended.


Baja state health officials said yesterday that the clinic where she died ? Hospital Santa Monica ? evaded detection through misleading information, such as being registered under a different name. Such tactics are often used by clinics that market controversial treatments, said Dr. Francisco Vera González, Baja California's health secretary.

?They start out as a normal clinic and start to practice alternative medicine with promotions in the United States . . . and that's what brings us to this situation,? Vera said.

Baja California health officials are in the process of closing the clinic. They have ordered all patients to leave by Monday.

On its Web site, the 30-bed Hospital Santa Monica describes itself as ?the largest wholistic, alternative medicine hospital in North America.? Most patients, it states, ?have been told that there is no more hope, all traditional therapies having failed.?

King, the widow of civil-rights leader the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., had gone to the clinic to obtain alternative health treatment for advanced ovarian cancer, but she died Monday, apparently of complications, before treatment.

The facility's Web site lists Kurt Donsbach, a Bonita chiropractor, as its director. However, the health secretary said documents showed another man's name. ?Unfortunately, there are a lots of people who loan their names,? he said.

Donsbach was not at the clinic yesterday.

Irregularities listed by the health department at the clinic include:unknown substances under Donsbach's name; incomplete medical records; and practice of unconventional treatments.

Under its registered name, Santo Tomás, the clinic was licensed to provide blood transfusions. However, the facility was found to be offering other, unauthorized services, including surgical procedures, X-rays, a clinical laboratory and a pharmacy, according to the Baja California Health Secretariat.

Cesar Castillejos, an assistant administrator at Santa Monica, said staff members had been in contact with Baja California health authorities about a week before King's death to update their records and address concerns.

?They had knowledge of everything,? Castillejos said. ?We don't have a permit for surgeries and other things, but we do have some permits that allowed us to work.?

Also this week, a man from the United States ? Jason Sears, 38, the singer in a punk-rock band ? died while receiving treatment for drug addiction at a Tijuana clinic that uses experimental procedures. Vera said that center wasn't licensed, and it has apparently been abandoned. Mexican authorities attributed his death to other health problems.

This is not the first time Hospital Santa Monica has been in the public eye in recent years. Eugenia Serebryakova, a 76-year-old woman diagnosed with early stages of colon cancer, died in 2001 after seeking treatment there ? and her two daughters blame the clinic for her death.

Donsbach told The San Diego Union-Tribune in 2002 that Serebryakova was very ill when she arrived ? an assertion the daughters denied. They filed a medical malpractice suit against Donsbach in San Diego Superior Court, but a judge threw it out in 2004.

It was unclear whether Mexican health authorities had taken measures against Santa Monica before this week.

Vera said, ?We can't intervene simply for questions of the press. . . . We can't act directly without a complaint.?

Baja California health authorities have previously made efforts to close unlicensed clinics, with mixed success.

?It is very easy for clinics to reopen. It is very difficult to close them down permanently,? said Dr. Alfredo Gruel Culebro, a former Baja California health official who led a sweep against unlicensed alternative clinics in 2001. ?Even if they are shut down, they can request a new permit altogether and start operating practically next door.?

Sometimes law enforcement officials on both sides of the border collaborate to shut down alternative clinics. U.S. and Mexican authorities worked together in May 2004 to close a Tijuana clinic, Hospital San Martín, also known as St. Joseph's Hospital, and its Bonita-based operator, American Metabolic Institute.

The two key figures, American Metabolic director William Fry and San Martín director Dr. Geronimo Rubio, have been charged with filing false tax returns and fraudulent billing of U.S. insurance companies. Each is free on $100,000 bond while awaiting trial, scheduled for April.

At Hospital Santa Monica, a modest white compound overlooking the ocean, patients and family members said they were frustrated to hear they would have to leave by Monday.

Susan Purkhiser, 38, whose mother was being treated for cancer, said she believes the closure is due to international pressure after King's death.

?I think our government put pressure on the Mexican government because I believe they are probably quite embarrassed that someone of her stature would think to go out of the U.S. for health care treatment,? Purkhiser said. ?But the U.S. health care system leaves us no alternatives, because most of these holistic places are usually shut down in the U.S.?
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #10 on: February 09, 2006, 11:56:00 AM »
http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-oly ... ck=tothtml
From the Los Angeles Times
WINTER OLYMPICS
A Ski Run for Border
Miller and Schlopy were treated for knee injuries in Ensenada by a doctor who was barred in the U.S. They have never failed a drug test.
By Chris Dufresne and Shari Roan
Times Staff Writers

February 9, 2006

SESTRIERE, Italy ? American skiers Bode Miller and Erik Schlopy, set to compete in Alpine events at the Turin Olympics, crossed into Mexico to receive alternative therapy for knee injuries from a controversial physician who was barred from practicing in the United States.

Miller reportedly was treated within the last year; it was not clear when Schlopy sought treatment.

Miller, 28, and Schlopy, 33, as well as other athletes, visited the Ensenada clinic of Milne Ongley, a New Zealand-born orthopedist, to receive injections of what has been dubbed "the Ongley solution."

Ongley's website says the solution consists of dextrose, glycerin, phenol and distilled water. Phenol is a manufactured antiseptic sometimes used in mouthwash and throat lozenges, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. None of the ingredients is included on the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency's banned list of substances, and neither skier has ever failed a drug test.

"We have no comment on it," Melinda Roalstad, the U.S. Ski and Snowboard Assn.'s medical director, said Wednesday when asked about Ongley's relationship with the skiers.

The treatments were first reported last week by ESPN the Magazine.

Miller, a two-time Olympic medalist, and Schlopy, the U.S. team's oldest skier, have credited Ongley with helping them rebound from knee injuries.

Schlopy calls Ongley "the wonder doctor" and boasts on Ongley's website of having "the youngest knees on the ski team."

Some ski team officials are concerned because of the U.S. ban on Ongley and because the treatments are unregulated.

Men's Alpine Coach Phil McNichol told ESPN the Magazine, "I'm assuming [Ongley is] in Mexico for a reason, other than a suntan."

He added, "We're really not comfortable with the guys doing it."

McNichol said Wednesday that he was not backing off those comments but referred all questions about Ongley to the USSA medical staff.

"That's not my field of play," he said.

U.S. ski team spokesman Tom Kelly also declined to comment, adding that Miller had asked not to do any more print interviews. Schlopy was supposed to appear Wednesday with other U.S. skiers at an Alpine news conference in Turin, but that event was canceled.

Schlopy, a bronze-medal winner at the 2003 World Championships, will ski in the giant slalom here. Miller will compete in all five Alpine disciplines.

Dwight Stones, a two-time Olympic bronze medalist in high jump, has been critical of Ongley's methods and, in 1987, filed a malpractice suit over treatment of a hamstring injury.

Stones told the Chicago Tribune last week, "I know he hurt a lot of athletes in my sport. If he helps one person and hurts a lot more, that is potentially a problem."

Contacted at his Ensenada office, Ongley said through a spokeswoman that he would have no comment.

According to his website, http://www.ongleyonline.com , Ongley obtained a medical degree in Ireland. He claims on the site to be the "foremost authority and leading developer of the techniques used in Reconstructive Therapy ? "

He has been practicing in Ensenada since encountering legal troubles in the United States in the 1990s.

In 1992, he pleaded no contest in Orange County to misdemeanor counts of conspiracy to practice medicine without a license and failing to get a patient's consent to participate in a medical experiment.

Because Ongley is not licensed as a medical doctor in the United States, he was not authorized to inject people with solutions that might have included drugs, according to the charges.

The treatment promulgated by Ongley has hovered on the fringes of medicine since the 1950s and is known by several names: reconstructive therapy, sclerotherapy, proliferative therapy or prolotherapy, the term preferred by most doctors, said Jeffrey Patterson, an osteopath and professor in the department of family medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine.

Interest in prolotherapy is growing, said Patterson, part of a research team at Wisconsin that in 2004 received government funding to study the therapy.

"There are more patients receiving this and more doctors doing this, and they are finding it's valuable," he said. "It's a simple, elegant therapy that works."

The U.S. skiers who underwent prolotherapy probably had medically sound reasons for doing so, he said, adding that it was unfortunate they sought treatment in Mexico by a practitioner with a controversial past when efforts are underway in the United States to study and legitimize the treatment.

Prolotherapy consists of a series of injections of a solution, usually a salt- or sugar-water solution, into painful or injured joints. The theory is that the solution will act as a natural irritant that can stimulate healing by prompting blood vessels to dilate and cells known as fibroblasts to converge on the damaged tissue. This process, theoretically, can lead to the growth of new collagen and promote the formation of connective tissues.

Most doctors use mild solutions, such as sugar water, for their initial treatments, Patterson said. But if that fails, other ingredients can be added to the mix, such as sodium morrhuate, refined cod-liver oil.

Prolotherapy is most commonly used for back or knee pain and among people who have arthritis, bursitis, tendinitis and carpal tunnel syndrome.

The therapy has drawn particular enthusiasm in the area of back pain, according to a report issued last fall by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, a branch of the National Institutes of Health. But studies have not verified its effectiveness, according to the publication.

Prolotherapy is not widely practiced by doctors who specialize in bone and joint problems, such as orthopedists and rheumatologists, Patterson acknowledged. He said the field had been stymied by a lack of high-quality research.

Medicare views prolotherapy as experimental, and insurers do not cover it. John DiFiori, team physician at UCLA and chief of UCLA's division of sports medicine, says prolotherapy has been around a long time and is gaining interest for conditions that are chronic or hard to treat, such as tennis elbow.

"The problem is that there is not a lot of good scientific data that really clarifies its use," he added.

The appeal of the therapy is that it is non-invasive and can be tried before drugs or surgery, according to Maelu Fleck, executive director of the American Assn. of Orthopaedic Medicine, a nonprofit group in Buena Vista, Colo.

Dufresne reported from Sestriere, Roan from Los Angeles.
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