Millions of people around the world suffer from weak immune systems, unhealthy inflammatory response, cardiovascular issues, digestive complaints, and hormone imbalance. These challenges may result from age or environmental factors such as stress, diet, and even the air we breathe. In fact, current research shows that some lifestyle choices can actually turn off genes, affecting all systems of the body.
Global wellness trends in five broad areas of health reflect this cellular breakdown.
Immune System
As many as 50 million Americans suffer from autoimmune disease. Symptoms can affect all organs.
Hormone Modulation
Hormone imbalances, affecting the production of key sex hormones, account for billions of dollars in healthcare costs.
Inflammatory Response
Chronic inflammation, often triggered by stress, is linked to almost all major causes of disease death in the United States.
Digestive Function
Digestive diseases are the second leading cause of disability due to illness in the United States.
Cardiovascular System
One in every three deaths in the United States has cardiovascular disease listed as the underlying cause.
With over three decades of experience as a Doctor of Chiropractic and a certified applied kinesiologist, Dr. Malmed is the past director of chiropractic education at Comfortfit Labs Orthotics. He practiced for five and a half years in a New York Hospital, one of a select number of chiropractors in the country to have done so. His B.A. is from Syracuse University in New York, and his doctor of chiropractic degree is from Palmer College of Chiropractic in Davenport, Iowa. He has been a member of the American Chiropractic Association, the International Chiropractic Association, and the New York State Chiropractic Association. Dr. Malmed is a diplomate of the Chiropractic Board of Examiners, and he is now an integral part of a multi-disciplinary team of healthcare practitioners in physical medicine, rehab, and wellness center. He is thrilled to be a member of the ASEA Medical Professionals Board so that much of his focus in the future will be helping to share the message of ASEA’s redox signaling technology.