Cancer and acupuncture? Enter Dr. Angie Rademacher, a 2009 graduate of NCNM’s naturopathic doctoral program and its master’s in Oriental medicine program.
Chief Medical Officer, Regina Dehen, ND (’96), MAcOM, has delivered her talk at NCNM on tuberculosis, hepatitis and disinfection procedures probably a dozen times.
A condition that affects up to 20 percent of Americans and 40 percent of all gastrointestinal patients, according to Dr. Sandberg-Lewis, SIBO is an underlying cause of Irritable Bowel Syndrome.
NCNM will honor its first female graduate, Betty Jo Radelet, DC, ND, for her groundbreaking endeavors, resiliency, and loving service in the advancement of the naturopathic medicine profession.
Dr. Allison Siebecker has a personal reason for her interest in Small Intestine Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO). She had suffered digestive problems for years but tried to make the best of it while going through medical school at NCNM.
Tabatha Parker, ND ('04), played a prominent role in the historic launch of the new World Naturopathic Federation at the second annual International Congress of Naturopathic Medicine.
More than a third of the practitioners listed in the magazine’s Top Docs section on complementary medicine, including acupuncture, naturopathy and touch therapy, are NCNM faculty.