Dr. Julie Briley, co-founder of NCNM’s Food as Medicine Institute, is interviewed about the institute’s Food as Medicine Everyday (FAME) classes and teaching at Coffee Creek women’s prison.
FAMI is helping inmates at the Coffee Creek Correctional Facility, a women’s prison in Wilsonville, Oregon, with a cooking, gardening, planting and harvesting program.
NCNM’s newest clinic in Beaverton not only expands the college’s footprint outside of Portland for the first time, it is also a much needed resource for low-cost healthcare services for uninsured, underserved and other patients seeking natural medicine.
He calls himself the Naturopathic Pilgrim. Node Smith, a student in the naturopathic medicine program, is riding his bicycle from near the Canadian border in Washington state to Austin, Texas.
The newest building on campus has been there since 1886. NCNM recently purchased and renovated “the white house” just east of the Administration building.
Mambo! Insects humming over elephant and lion dung provide the soundtrack for this letter. If you were sitting beside me, you’d seen the long open expanse of the Serengeti plains.
Hamjambo from Tanzania! I’m back in Africa, although it feels strange to say ‘back’ in Africa. From the moment I arrived, it felt in my heart like I’d never left.
As bee populations have increasingly become an issue throughout the United States, it has become important to support their survival by providing safe homes for them.
Benedict Lust, the Father of Naturopathic Medicine, to be honored along with John Weeks, a renowned author and staunch advocate for integrative medicine and health care.
The new grants will provide funding for studies involving mindfulness-based stress reduction for people with multiple sclerosis; and clinical research training for naturopathic doctors and Chinese medicine practitioners.