“Can Macular Degeneration Be Reversed” – An Article in The Lion

This is an article written about Grace in the publication The Lion, which is part of the Lions Club International. Melvin Jones in 1917 asked a simple and world-changing question – what if people put their talents to work improving their communities? Almost 100 years later, Lions Clubs International is the world’s largest service club organization, with 1.35 million members in more than 46,000 clubs and countless stories of Lions acting on the same simple idea: let’s improve our communities.


NOTE: Click on the image of the article to open it in another window where you can read it online. Some files may not be available for download for copyright reasons. 


“Help When Blindness Falls on Deaf Ears” Chicago Tribune article on Grace’s work with Usher Syndrome

If you have Usher syndrome, you will find this article interesting. Usher syndrome is a rare disease that affects both the vision and the hearing. The visual challenges are very similar to retinitis pigments, and Grace was asked to see if her program would help people with Usher. I have met some of the local people she helped, and they did have improvements in both their vision
and their hearing. The program was a bit more complex than the program for helping the eyes only, but it was helpful.
 
Some people at the Illinois School for the Deaf heard about Grace’s work, and invited her to come and work with some of their students. This article from the Chicago Tribune describes her initial visit to the school. Grace did work with the staff there about how to do some of her program with their students, and the feedback they gave her was that the students who did the program improved.

NOTE: Click on the image of the article to open it in another window where you can read it online. Some files may not be available for download for copyright reasons. 


Bioelectrical Stimulation in An Integrated Treatment for Macular Degeneration, Retinitis Pigmentosa, Glaucoma, CMV-Retinitis & Diabetic Retinopathy

This study is a follow-up to the previous study published by Grace from the late 1980s. In this study she partnered with an ophthalmologist in San Francisco and over two years they studied people with a variety of diagnoses, showing significant improvements in vision for all diagnoses and in about 85% of the people they worked with.
 
This was a tightly run study, but was refused by the peer-reviewed journals because one of the investigators (Grace Halloran PhD) was not a physician. Grace did present this study at a number of respected scientific conferences. It was her presentation at a conference sponsored by the Department of Electrical Engineering at Mankato State University in Minneapolis where I met Grace.
 
Doctor Jarding also presented his work treating people with graces protocol at this conference. It is important to put the success that Grace had been improving vision in people with diseases that mainstream medicine considers untreatable in perspective. The peer-reviewed literature is full of studies looking at all manner of treatments and interventions that have attempted to help people with untreatable problems like macular degeneration, retinitis pigmentosa and Stargardt.
 
From the hundreds of thousands of people who’ve been studied, clear understanding has emerged of the natural history of these diseases. Namely, the natural history of these diseases is that people progressively see loss of vision. Some studies involving supplements alone have shown an ability to slow the pace of decline. Only the integrative approaches utilizing electrical stimulation, supplementation, oriental medicine and color therapy have brought real improvements to people’s vision.
 
A therapy that made even one person better would warrant further study. The work pioneered by Grace Halloran PhD has now helped thousands of people. If you would like to learn the Better Eye Health Program can help you, please contact us.

NOTE: Click on the image of the article to open it in another window where you can read it online. Some files may not be available for download for copyright reasons. 


Alternative Medicine Article: Saving Sight by Grace Halloran, PhD

Alternative Medicine Magazine featured a couple of articles on Grace Halloran, PhD and her pioneering work with reversing eye disease. If you need some hope that there is hope for diseases like macular degeneration, retinitis pigmentosa and Stargardt disease then read these articles.
 
Alternative Medicine Magazine was not a peer-reviewed journal, but its owner and editor, Burton Goldberg was a master at identifying the most promising and useful integrative therapies when they appeared. Living in Northern California, he was surrounded by people pushing the boundaries of what was possible in medicine, and he saw the positive results first hand. He only
reported on things that he could personally verify, and his was the premier publication on Alternative Medicine when it was in print.

NOTE: Click on the image of the article to open it in another window where you can read it online. Some files may not be available for download for copyright reasons. 


Alternative Medicine Article: A Second Chance at Sight by Rob Waters

Alternative Medicine Magazine featured a couple of articles on Grace Halloran, PhD and her pioneering work with reversing eye disease. If you need some hope that there is hope for diseases like macular degeneration, retinitis pigmentosa and Stargardt disease then read these articles.
 
Alternative Medicine Magazine was not a peer-reviewed journal, but its owner and editor, Burton Goldberg was a master at identifying the most promising and useful integrative therapies when they appeared. Living in Northern California, he was surrounded by people pushing the boundaries of what was possible in medicine, and he saw the positive results first hand. He only
reported on things that he could personally verify, and his was the premier publication on Alternative Medicine when it was in print.

NOTE: Click on the image of the article to open it in another window where you can read it online. Some files may not be available for download for copyright reasons. 


ScyFIX work regarding MCS and treatment of Macular Degeneration

The following summary of the research on the use of microcurrent stimulation in the treatment of retinal disease is from the company ScyFIX, and was part of their submission to the FDA in an attempt to gain approval for a clinical trial that would allow them to market a unit for eye treatment.
 
They refer to studies done as part of this submission to the FDA, but these were never published. ScyFIX became Acuity Medical, and was eventually sold to a company named “The Eye Machine”. As of 2016, they have still not been able to gain FDA approval to proceed with any clinical trials. ScyFIX did have a unit approved for use in Europe, but it seems to be currently out of production.

NOTE: Click on the image of the article to open it in another window where you can read it online. Some files may not be available for download for copyright reasons.


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