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Dispensing a World’s Worth of Medicine : Research: A Sherman Oaks foundation hosts a conference for disease treatments, including alternative ones.

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<i> Reilly is a regular contributor to Valley View</i>

The Sherman Oaks-based World Research Foundation--founded six years ago by a San Fernando Valley couple who said they wanted to offer people information on traditional and non-traditional medical research worldwide--is sponsoring a conference on “New Directions for Medicine,” Friday through Sunday at the Warner Center Marriott Hotel.

More than 500 health professionals and members of the public are expected to pay as much as $350 to attend the conclave that, according to Steven Ross, founder and president of the foundation, will present researchers from around the globe, who will discuss breakthrough treatments for a variety of diseases and conditions.

The program is one way in which Ross and his wife and partner in the foundation, LaVerne, say they help educate the international medical community and the public on health issues. Many of those planning to attend are physicians eager to expand available treatment programs, according to Steven Ross. Others are among the 30,000 individuals or group members who annually use the foundation library.

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The library--an extension of the Rosses’ interest and personal experience with non-traditional therapies--is located on the fourth floor of an office building at Ventura and Sepulveda boulevards. It houses volumes of books on holistic and other kinds of alternative medicine as well as a computer system that can access, Ross said, 500 computer databases providing information from 5,000 medical journals in more than 100 countries.

The foundation has also established offices in Stuttgart, West Germany, and Hangzhou, China, whose staffs monitor medical findings in their areas of the world, and are available to assist in researching specific searches.

Additionally, according to Ross, the foundation has established an advisory board with members in Africa, Australia, Belgium, Chile, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

For $43, any person or organization may request information on anything from homeopathic reversals for AIDS to microwave resonance therapy in the cure of cancer or alcohol addiction, Ross said.

“The important thing for people to remember about the foundation is that we have no medical position to espouse. All we do is furnish people with research information so that they can be better informed,” LaVerne Ross said.

“Because we have information available on what is called ‘alternative medicine,’ some people think we are promoting that. We are not in the promoting business. We gather and disseminate information from legitimate medical sources,” she said.

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The Rosses don’t deny that they are open to alternative treatments. LaVerne Ross said that she and her husband have had experiences in which physicians prescribed intrusive programs to treat problems that the Rosses eventually found satisfactory non-intrusive ways to alleviate.

“The United States is far behind other countries in some promising research and treatment,” she said. “We try to provide people with a broad scope of research.”

Steven Ross said, “We have individuals come in or call for information searches on a very personal and specific medical mission, usually hoping to get information that might save a loved one’s life.”

Individuals searching for hope are not the foundation’s only clients, Ross said. “As we become better established and our credibility is known, we have attracted some major corporations that are trying to keep abreast of worldwide medical advances,” he said.

One of those major companies is Mutual Benefit Life, an insurance carrier headquartered in Newark, N.J. It is a subscribing member of the foundation and uses the services on an ongoing basis.

“We are interested in anything that will provide better health care for our subscribers in a cost-efficient manner,” said Dr. Anthony Tarasenko, Mutual Benefit’s medical director.

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He said that the foundation’s newsletter and conference materials disseminated by the foundation help keep him up to date on what’s going on internationally. He added that the foundation has helped set up personal conferences with researchers working on breakthrough projects.

“We consider the foundation an unique and invaluable resource,” Tarasenko said, adding that, “Even though some of the information you can request and get from World Research Foundation is available from the National Institutes of Health library, the foundation is able to respond in a timely and economical manner.”

The foundation’s library was also used as a resource for material for recent City Council hearings on malathion spraying, according to Ross. City Councilman Joel Wachs asked the library to conduct a data search of the international medical literature on the toxic effects of the pesticide on humans. Much of the resulting material was entered into the official record of the hearings.

This weekend’s conference, expected to draw health care personnel and researchers from North and South America as well as several European countries, will feature a pair of Soviet medical scientists talking about microwave resonance therapy, a team of Belgian physicians reporting on their studies using non-synthetic medicines in the treatment of acquired immune deficiency syndrome, a French physician discussing acupuncture point stimulation, an Indian physician talking about the treatment of physical disabilities by peripheral nerve stimulation, and an West German engineer presenting a microscope called Ergonom 400 that has been instrumental in discovering three new AIDS viruses.

But the subject that is possibly drawing the most interest is the Diapulse machine that uses pulsed electromagnetic frequencies to accelerate healing. This therapy, after years of foot-dragging, according to Ross, has finally been approved for use in the United States by the Food and Drug Administration.

The Diapulse machine, Ross said, has been in use in other countries for almost 30 years. “It was developed by Dr. Abraham Ginsberg, an associate of Albert Einstein, and physicist Arthur Milinowski in 1932, and was in study at Columbia University in 1940,” Ross said.

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Subsequent independent studies, according to the foundation’s newsletter, were conducted at the University of Montreal, Baylor University School of Medicine in Waco, Tex., the Royal College of Surgeons in London, University of Toronto and Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., validated the Diapulse’s ability to heal at twice the normal rate, as well as its use in relieving pain, its healing properties in spinal injuries, stroke and coma, and in bone formation problems.

The international Olympic Organizing Committee has made the machine available to its athletes since 1967, and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has used it with astronauts in the space program since the early 1960s for treatment of calcium loss and related bone-formation problems, according to research accumulated by the foundation.

Ross said that the Diapulse has received such good notices in international medical journals that physicians and other health practitioners in the United States are eager to learn its use now that it finally has been approved.

According to Irma Sierra, a chiropractor from Costa Rica who will be attending the conference with her husband, Jorge Jarrot, a homeopathic practitioner, “The conference will help us learn what new resources we may have available to us in the near future.”

Sierra, in a telephone interview from San Juan before the conference, said that her husband had heard about the conference while attending another medical meeting in Denver.

“We are both anxious to be aware of current treatments, and we know this group has a good reputation, and one of being up on breakthroughs worldwide,” she said.

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According to the Rosses, the confirmed attendance for the conference, and the thousands of people who use the library every year, more than compensates for the 15-hour days and seven-day weeks it took to get the library under way.

“People have good ideas all the time,” Steven Ross said, “but they don’t do anything about them. We really wanted to try. We wanted to build something that would make a contribution.”

“Sometimes people look for a hidden agenda in our going out and trying to do something that would benefit the world,” LaVerne Ross said. “But we didn’t have a hidden agenda. We had a dream.”

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