Cured The life-changing science of spontaneous healing

Jeffrey Rediger

Book - 2020

"When it comes to disease, who beats the odds - and why? When it comes to spontaneous healing, skepticism abounds. Doctors are taught that "miraculous" recoveries are flukes, and as a result they don't study those cases or take them into account when treating patients. Enter Dr. Jeff Rediger, who has spent over 15 years studying spontaneous healing, pioneering the use of scientific tools to investigate recoveries from incurable illnesses. Dr. Rediger's research has taken him from America's top hospitals to healing centers around the world-and along the way he's uncovered insights into why some people beat the odds. In Cured, Dr. Rediger digs down to the root causes of illness, showing how to create an envi...ronment that sets the stage for healing. He reveals the patterns behind healing and lays out the physical and mental principles associated with recovery: first, we need to physically heal our diet and our immune systems. Next, we need to mentally heal our stress response and our identities. Through rigorous research, Dr. Rediger shows that much of our physical reality is created in our minds. Our perception changes our experience, even to the point of changing our physical bodies-and thus the healing of our identity may be our greatest tool to recovery. Ultimately, miracles only contradict what we know of nature at this point in time. Cured leads the way in explaining the science behind these miracles, and provides a first-of-its-kind guidebook to both healing and preventing disease"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Flatiron Books 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Jeffrey Rediger (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
386 pages: illustration ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [373]-386).
ISBN
9781250193193
  • Introduction: Unpacking the Black Box of Medical Miracles
  • Part 1. Incredible Immunity
  • 1. Into the Impossible
  • 2. Natural-Born Killers
  • 3. Eat to Heal
  • 4. Shut Down the Disease Superhighway
  • 5. Activate Healing Mode
  • 6. The Healing Heart
  • Part 2. The Miraculous Mind
  • 7. Faith Healing and Healing Faith
  • 8. The Power of Placebo
  • 9. Healing Your Identity
  • 10. You Are Not Your Illness
  • 11. Healing Death
  • 12. Burn Your Boat
  • Conclusion: A Medicine of Hope and Possibility
  • Author's Note
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
Review by Library Journal Review

Spontaneous remission, or what appears to be miraculous healing from terminal illness, is not studied as often or closely as it should be, according to Rediger (behavioral medicine, Harvard Med Sch.). Clinicians currently treat patients based on symptoms, the author maintains, and overlook overall health including diet, stress, and personal identity. Rediger makes a compelling argument by highlighting research on connSECTIONs between the mind and body, previously explored in Kelly Turner's Radical Remission. Here, Rediger adds to spontaneous healing research by presenting case studies of terminal patients, and includes engaging lessons about pathophysiology and the history of medicine. By using analogies that enhance understanding for non-clinicians, readers learn about more than just patients experiencing illness. As a leading voice challenging current healthcare systems and treatment models, Rediger makes a convincing case to study spontaneous remissions. By doing so, we may become closer to learning why some survive, despite their odds. VERDICT Readers with an interest in holistic medicine as well as open-minded health care providers who are willing to adopt new treatment models that focus on treating the root causes of illness will benefit most from Rediger's call to treat more than just symptoms.--Rich McIntyre Jr., UConn Health Sciences Lib.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Fascinating bioscience on the phenomenon of spontaneous healing.Board-certified psychiatrist Rediger, who is on the faculty at Harvard Medical School, first began exploring the mystery of patients with incurable illnesses and their miraculous regenerations early in his medical career. Raised with traditional Amish principles, the author was astonished by what he learned and now shares in this book, which also doubles as a pragmatic guide to improving general health. Rediger spent nearly two decades interviewing and studying survivors of irremediable diseases and conditions, and his expert analysis drives much of this intriguing volume. He first examines immune system "prodding" and hyperactivation and how factors like diet, stress, and emotion directly affect itthough, as the author notes, these factors are "often passed over in routine medical care." He chronicles his visit to spiritual healing centers in Brazil, where the ill astonishingly recovered from dire diagnoses. He probes the complex and hotly debated mind-body connection and how one's sense of identity and healing capacity are interconnected. Rediger, who also has a seminarian background, acknowledges that these episodes are exceptional, and while his research suggests that their instances have "slowly increased in both number and frequency," they are relatively unexplainable by medical science. He stresses that since there are no clinical trials or double-blind studies to substantiate these incidences or ways of replicating their results, physicians "have to be anthropologists, detectives, and medical investigators." Science aside, ultimately, it's the dramatic survivors' profiles and their moving stories of miraculous second chances that have the most profound impact. These patients illuminate how medicine, identity, diet, the mind, and human biology intersect to possibly trigger curative spontaneous remission. Arrestingly written and chockablock with practical, empowering medical information, this thought-provoking and convincing chronicle of disease avoidance and "remarkable recovery" will give even skeptics something to ponder. Though the text offers no ready answers or explanations, Rediger instills a glimmer of hope and possibility for those who may believe they have none.Though certainly not the last word, this is an engaging "investigative journey into the phenomenon of spontaneous remission." Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.