Chemical Sensitivity is the first major scientific book series on chemical sensitivity, an increasingly important worldwide health problem. This four-volume series features results from the study of more than 20,000 environmentally sensitive patients at the Environmental Health Center (EHC) in Dallas. Results from the study at EHC are supplemented by information accumulated from the treatment and study of an estimated 100,000 patients by other environmentally oriented physicians and scientists around the world.
Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS) is a controversial medical diagnosis characterizing individuals who experience intense and adverse responses as a result of exposure to chemicals, frequently at doses far below those...
Soft-spoken and quietly centered, Diane Hamilton, a former research chemist, has lived with MCS for nineteen years. She is now a teacher of Bible Study Fellowship leaders and the facilitator of a Human Ecology Action League (HEAL) MCS ...
The book contains additional testimony and reports from 37 sufferers, as well as listings of resources and related scientific articles.
This book, written from a patient's perspective, first defines chemical sensitivity, then describes its effects, and discusses strategies for dealing with it.
This volume, prepared in conjunction with Biologic Markers in Immunotoxicology, contains the authored papers of a workshop held to develop an agenda to study the phenomenon of multiple chemical sensitivity.
More and more people are disabled daily, despite the fact that the condition does not have to occur. In Part One of this work, experts review the research into the disease, along with treatment strategies.
This four-volume series features results from the study of more than 20,000 environmentally sensitive patients at the Environmental Health Center (EHC) in Dallas.
Rothman AL, Weintraub MI. The sick building syndrome and mass hysteria. Malingering and Conversion Reactions 13:405—412, 1995. . Brundage JF and others. Building-associated risk of febrile acute respiratory diseases in army trainees.
Sickmann, Rocky. Iranian Hostage: A Personal Diary. Topeka, KS: Crawford Press, 1982. Siegel, Bernie, M.D. Love, ... Watts, David L. “Auto-Immune Disease and Women.” Townsend Letter for Doctors & Patients 238, May 2003, pp. 64–69.
Like Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (M.E.) once was, it is not always accepted as a physical illness. The aim of this book is to inform and help sufferers and create awareness in those around them.