Estelle Goldstein

MD

Free

Mind/Body Medicine and Alte ative Treatment Research Expert

Estelle Goldstein

Estelle Goldstein Quick Facts

Main Areas
Psychiatry, Psychopharmacology, Natural Alte ative Treatments, Emotional Freedom Technique
Best Sellers
I have a line of books all called "Plain and Simple" where I explain natural substances and other neat things.
Career Focus
Researcher, speaker, healer
Affiliation
The Better Brains Institute

Greetings fun-seekers and brain lovers! I am a board-certified psychiatrist in Califo ia with a background (past lives?) in neurosurgery, neurology, and psychopharmacology. Because I'm so far out of the mainstream, I'm known as "The Renegade Doctor!"

I've been a professor in two state university medical schools and done tons of research on pharmaceuticals in FDA-approved clinical trials.

After leaving academia and practicing in the private sector (in EVERY imaginable setting -- hospitals, US Army, VA clinics, Kaiser Permanente, Community Mental Health clinics, and my own private solo practice) I became increasingly disenchanted with what I saw happening when I gave drugs to patients. Mind you, I did a fellowship in psychopharm and was a true believe at one time. But once away from the academic and industry influence and treating MY OWN patients in MY OWN practice, I found that I could help them just as well -- or better -- with fewer (or no) side effects when I used natural substances.

I'm still a scientist. I read all the research literature from all over the world thanks to the internet. I have an arsenal of vitamins, minerals, amino acids and some other tricks that have come together into my own style. I use the Biological-Psychological-Social paradigm on my patients. I also give a LOT of time to each patient and often find overlooked medical problems and missed diagnoses.

I'm a cash-only doctor now -- no insurance will pay for the level of treatment I give. I love my patients and want only the best for them.

I don't do a lot of psychotherapy -- I refer to the experts on that. But I am a strong proponent of Emotional Freedom Technique (www.emofree.com). I combine it with some of the other therapy modes I've studied and have my own hybrid type of therapy that brings me good results.

My passion now is contributing to research on alte ative treatments. The establishment won't give any validity to any therapy unless there is hard scientific data. I'm pleased to be working with the University of Calgary as the only site in the USA conducting a double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial on a natural compound in treating bipolar disorder. I have chartered The Better Brains Institute as a 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation in Califo ia to conduct my research.

Here's what I'm looking forward to in 2008:

A clinical trial of pain patients treated with a cox-2 inhibitor (similar to Viox and Celebrex) made entirely of cherry extract.

A government funded program to reduce prison violence by introducing high-quality nutritional supplements to inmates AND custodial staff.

A privately funded program to see if nutritional supplements can help the impoverished and disadvantaged strive for upward mobility in work, education and life in general.

My goals are lofty, but then (as the song says) if you never have a dream, how can you have a dream come true?

I LOVE to network. I am sorry to be slow to respond in some cases, but I will answer every request.

Take care and be happy!

Estelle Toby Goldstein, MD

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I was in my specialty training when I read Peter D.Kramer’s “Listening to Prozac.” I remember thinking he was articulate and observant and all kinds of wonderful things, riding the cusp of a great change in psychiatry, doubting him to be a “real” scientist who would hang out at a meeting of the Society for Biological Psychiatry as I once did. I was wondering what to do with the result of his observation that certain character traits, such as “rejection sensitivity,” could be somehow changed for the better with psycho-pharmacology.

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Humans are … well, strange. A fixed problem can become unfixed. First, let’s take it on good authority this problem really has been fixed. It has been fixed with vaccination. Nobody wants problems. So why? Why is the number of measles cases suddenly rising? People seem to propelled by beliefs. They are the hardest thing in the world to change. Nobody will go for a spontaneous “makeover.” Few people understand the danger of anything well enough to make marketing prevention easy, but let’s start with this single outstanding example.

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I remember a supervisor from the past whom I never thought had the right personality to be a psychiatrist. I mean, he was a little angry and domineering for my taste. But heck — I gave him a “bye” since he worked in a prison context. I was never attacked by a prison patient through my tours-of-duty through four (all-male) Califo ia state penal institutions. I had a couple who ended up on their knees, crying, stroking my hands, or even asking permission to kiss me (denied, of course).

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I love men. I mean, I actually went and married one, and I am delighted. I understand their senses of “maleness” are sometimes a bit more fragile with women challenging them on absolutely every front imaginable. But they still do quite well. I absolutely love them. I may have simply seen more male patients than a lot of psychiatrists. When I started my psychiatric residency, it was estimated that 70% of all psychiatric patients were female. The obvious exception was where I spent a fair amount, of my career to date, in the Department of Veterans Affairs medical system.

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People are not wired the same. Individual differences are the spice of life and medicine. I love people, their verbal discourses, because they are so delightfully individual. To me, the biggest problem with medicine is something I actually never heard anybody else discuss. I call it “norming.” Maybe there is no other way to get started on developing a new treatment that could help many people who have similar afflictions. But people are so different that what is life-saving for one may be poison for another.

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Most of the time I see a single piece of research related to psychiatry reported by multiple news services, I figure the institution that produced it has a prizewinning public relations person. I figure it is popular for some kind of unspoken agenda. Maybe it is consistent with some level of political correctness. Do you think that’s a cynical thought? Perhaps I should be a little more cautious. Even though I could not get to the original research paper, this article tells it right up front: “People with high levels of cynical distrust may be more likely to develop dementia.”

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Animal mummies from ancient Egypt are featured on banners flying from poles here in middle-to-upper class southern Califo ia and I realized something significant but not earth-shaking. I didn’t care. I was fascinated with Egyptology back in the 4th grade when I built a model pyramid out of cardboard and made little mummies out of clay. I knew back then that some people mummified pets, and that was fine, but I didn’t want to model little dogs or cats, just humans.

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I am not a particular fan of beer. My family certainly did not have it in the house. (Control freak that I am, I even had trouble with Passover wine. I never — and I mean never — managed to imagine how anybody made it through the allegedly requisite four glasses.) I really don’t remember tasting beer until I was working Mme.Mareschal’s Cafe “Les Arcades” in Amiens, France, — a quaint village where I attended medical school — where beer was a staple. In fact, it was pretty much a staple everywhere in Northern France.

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I have had a lot of trouble with the idea of criminalization of drug addiction for a very long time. I am only one of a lot of folks who say “addiction is a real disease.” People feel every bit as sick as people with other diseases, sometimes more. The patients are certainly able to die every bit as dead. Someone told me that the first correctional facility I worked at had the best “rock orchestra” of any such facility, because of a large number of incarcerated rock musicians. I was told they were almost always there on drug charges.

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I grew up with the Reader’s Digest, although I do not think that was what my parents had in mind. I was a very early reader. I had the activity pretty much nailed by the time I was three. I could even do phonetic “sounding out” of words, as well as the obsessional “dictionary searching” that I now do on line. I also had an obsessional interest in books intended for “bigs.”r

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When I first saw in a headline somewhere that the earth’s population of honeybees was diminishing, I actually thought it might be a good thing. Less bee stings. I cannot count the number of patients I have seen (particularly males young enough to harbor delusions of their own vulnerability) who list bee sting allergies as a problem. I always tell them to make sure they carry an EpiPen with them (in the pick-up truck which they invariably drive) so they can save their own life, dramatically extracting themselves from the jaws of death and have a really neat story to tell.

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I first learned that I was a “receptacle personality” in Baltimore, Maryland. I was serving our fine country in the US Army Medical Corps as psychiatrist to the 82nd Airbo e Division in Ft. Bragg. NC There was some sort of a training group there that all of the other active duty psychiatrists seemed to have attended. The Army – in its wisdom – had decided to take me – a trained neurosurgeon – and make me a psychiatrist. Our country needed me (in this position, at least) and I obeyed, like a good soldier.

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Favorite Quotes & Thoughts from Estelle Goldstein

Everything starts in the gut -- but everything happens in the brain.

Contacting Estelle Goldstein

Estelle Toby Goldstein, MD

2801 Camino Del Rio South, #201

San Diego, CA 92108

PHONE: 619-296-6563

FAX: 866-523-9169

docteurg@docteurg.com

http://www.docteurg.com

blog at http://www.betterbrainsonline.com

How to get started

I've let this site stand dormant for quite a while as I was building up my web presence and moving my life forward into more exciting areas. I'll be contributing articles now and will welcome intelligent discourse with other enlightened professionals.

I've pretty much poured my heart out and written my autobiography at my "Renegade Doctor" website. It is a work in progress and I'll keep adding links and other things as I go.

I am ashamed of the state of medical care in the USA and want to do as much as I can to help people. My best idea is to teach other doctors my methods and hope that eventually we can break the iron grip of the big pharmaceutical companies, insurance companies and the medical establishment that is in bed with them.

I look forward to being a productive and congenial member of this community!

Sincerely

Docteur G

Estelle Toby Goldstein, MD

The Renegade Doctor

Other highlights

If you would like to know how I lost over half of my body mass, click on the link! http://estelletobygoldstein.com/?page...