Reorganizational Healing Provides Access to Greater Quality of Life, reduced stress Model provides way of integrating and sustaining positive change, increasing wellness

Reorganizational Healing Provides Access to Greater Quality of Life, reduced stress Model provides way of integrating and sustaining positive change, increasing wellness
 
Washington, D.C. – May 28, 2009
 
In today’s uncertain times, increased stress can wreak havoc on a body’s systems. Now, a new emerging wellness, growth and behavioral change paradigm helps individuals cultivate greater wellness, make healthier lifestyle choices and enjoy increased, sustainable quality of life in the face of challenges.
 
The approach, called Reorganizational Healing (ROH), helps people to better know how they create their life experiences and to find tools to redesign their health and life. The model, developed by Dr. Donald Epstein of the Association for Network Care Research, is featured in the May issue of the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine (JACM), a peer-reviewed journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. (www.liebertpub.com). The Reorganizational Healing articles are available free online for a limited time at www.liebertpub.com/acm. Co-authors are Drs. Simon Senzon and Daniel Lemberger.
 
“This model is not about finding new destinations on an existing map,” says Epstein. “It is about building a brand new map of possibilities and incorporating the elements of life with more ease and flexibility. Each individual has a strategy for change and growth. For most of us, it is unconscious and applied in a seemingly random fashion. Through Reorganizational Healing, we can understand our individual formula, refashion it, and choose a path through which our health and living can evolve.”
 
Dr. Kim A. Jobst, Editor-in-Chief of the JACM, says, “There can be no doubt that we are witnessing the birth of a powerful method of healing [in ROH], grounded in rigorous scientific fact, that will become integral to future systems of healthcare.”
 
Reorganizational Healing incorporates three key elements – the Triad of Change, the Seasons of Well Being, and five types of Energetic Intelligences.  “This work has the potential to revolutionize the way we think about our lives,” says Epstein. “We all want to make changes. ROH offers more than just a means to reduce symptoms of an illness or restore an individual to a prior state of existence. Instead, through the systematic understanding of our perceptions, actions, and structures, an individual and practitioner can seek a more conscious and integrated state of being.”
 
“The ROH model is about helping people be well and stay well,” says Robert H.I. Blanks, Ph.D. of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine in a JACM May issue editorial. Blanks calls Reorganizational Healing “a health change model whose time has come.”

 

(Republished from the Global Gateway Foundation)

Groundbreaking “Reorganizational Healing” Model Puts Emphasis on Self-Awareness and Personal Will To Change To Achieve Optimal Mental and Physical Health

For Immediate Release

Groundbreaking “Reorganizational Healing” Model Puts Emphasis on Self-Awareness and Personal Will To Change To Achieve Optimal Mental and Physical Health

New Rochelle, NY, May 21, 2009—Reorganizational Healing (ROH), an emerging concept for wellness, healing, and personal growth, is explored in depth in a seminal groundbreaking article and accompanying commentaries in the latest issue of The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, a peer-reviewed journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. (www.liebertpub.com). The Reorganizational Healing articles are available free online at www.liebertpub.com/acm

Reorganizational Healing gives people the tools to create a map “to self-assess and draw on strengths to create sustainable change,” explain Dr. Donald Epstein, DC, Dr. Simon Senzon, MA, DC, and Dr. Daniel Lemberger, DC, in the article entitled, “Reorganizational Healing: A Paradigm for the Advancement of Wellness, Behavior Change, Holistic Practice, and Healing.”
 
“Instead of being meaningless, people’s problems become diseases of meaning…helping them become stronger, to live more fully and with more understanding,” write the authors.  ROH incorporates three central elements: the Four Seasons of Well-Being, the Triad of Change, and the Five Energetic Intelligences.

“There can be no doubt that we are witnessing the birth of a powerful method of healing, grounded in rigorous scientific fact, that will become integral to future systems of healthcare. This is a manuscript that deserves study in all teaching and therapeutic institutions,” says Dr. Kim A. Jobst, Editor-in-Chief of The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine.

Describing ROH as “a health change model whose time has come,” Professor Robert H.I. Blanks, PhD, Affiliated Faculty at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine (Florida) asserts that ROH “presents a viable big-picture option for improving the health of individuals and addressing the current health care crisis in the United States and worldwide.”

One aspect of ROH, Network Spinal Analysis (NSA), uses electromyographic measurements of the central nervous system (CNS) to determine the organization and synchronization of electrical signals across the entire spine–whereas in neurologic disorders there is a lack of synchronization of these signals. However, with healing, the innate ability of the CNS to reorganize is harnessed so that the signals become less random and more predictable which is indicative of greater organization of the circuitry. “From this point of view, it is fair to assert that Network Spinal Analysis (NSA) provides some sort of ‘reorganization healing’,” writes Professor Edmond Jonckheere, PhD, from the University of Southern California, in a Letter to the Editor published in the same issue of the Journal.

“At a time when there is increasing global instability in financial, industrial, political, and social systems, healthcare is not exempt from the same apparent chaos. Such times are critical for evolution. They are Crises – moments of simultaneous danger and opportunity. At such times, the old dies to make way for new structures, new hierarchies of value and meaning if the opportunity can be seen and seized,” says Editor-in-Chief Jobst.  “In this context, when individuals understand the relationship between their disease symptoms and their lifestyle choices, and most importantly are willing to take the steps needed for sustainable behavior change, they can achieve healthier, more fulfilling and more meaningful lives.”
 

(Republished from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.)