November 2025 Courses
Nov 14
This month, some new releases that will change the way you look at several conditions. Blood sugar regulation and immune defence are much more closely connected than previously thought; Getting patients to exercise requires careful planning (plans provided); And a very interesting interview on psychiatric care, specifically helping those people off their meds, when appropriate.
Lara covers the immune dysregulation induced by metabolic dysfunction, the critical gut-immune connection, the appropriate lab testing required to uncover the connecting processes, and shares her patient-centred protocols that she uses to achieve some outstanding results.
Greg does a great job covering the core training principles that determine exercise effectiveness. He then discusses the types of exercises we can recommend and provides several training plans that you can share with your patients. These are specifically designed to achieve the most gains from a reasonable amount of time exercising. He has also included a very interesting short section on how saunas boost the health effects of exercise. This may be equally valuable to you as your patients.
Featured This Month:
New science is revealing a very close relationship between your immune system and your metabolic health. The majority of your patients do not have metabolic control and a great number of them have inflammatory conditions. Dr Lara Zakaria, one of our favourite presenters, reveals that these are, in many ways, the same condition. This will give you a whole new understanding of the root cause of autoimmune disease, in fact, of most inflammatory diseases, and of insulin resistance and diabetes.
Lara covers the immune dysregulation induced by metabolic dysfunction, the critical gut-immune connection, the appropriate lab testing required to uncover the connecting processes, and shares her patient-centred protocols that she uses to achieve some outstanding results.
How are you going with getting your patients to exercise? It’s one of our big challenges in clinical care to get people to do what is universally recognised to be the most health-valuable thing we can recommend. Dr. Greg Potter takes us a very long way to being able to achieve this. Greg is an internationally recognised expert in exercise science and shares some very valuable ideas to reduce the friction of getting patients to exercise, and also, how to sharpen the exercises you recommend to be the most time-efficient and effective for their outcome.
Greg does a great job covering the core training principles that determine exercise effectiveness. He then discusses the types of exercises we can recommend and provides several training plans that you can share with your patients. These are specifically designed to achieve the most gains from a reasonable amount of time exercising. He has also included a very interesting short section on how saunas boost the health effects of exercise. This may be equally valuable to you as your patients.
Medication tapering in psychiatric care is a complex and nuanced process. This interview is designed to enhance your clinical decisions in this area, especially the tricky situation of withdrawal versus relapse distinction, and how to provide targeted, natural nervous system resilience for these patients.
Dr. Leslie Korn has a careful approach focused on safety and aims to effectively taper psychotropic medications using structured plans, natural supports, and patient/physician collaboration. We discuss the priority of stabilisation, looking for trauma as a root cause, careful assessment of patient readiness, and the critical principle of hyperbolic tapering. There is quite a bit in this discussion so it is a must-watch for your psych patient care, whether you’re tapering them or not.
Dr. Leslie Korn has a careful approach focused on safety and aims to effectively taper psychotropic medications using structured plans, natural supports, and patient/physician collaboration. We discuss the priority of stabilisation, looking for trauma as a root cause, careful assessment of patient readiness, and the critical principle of hyperbolic tapering. There is quite a bit in this discussion so it is a must-watch for your psych patient care, whether you’re tapering them or not.
We hope these new programs provide value to your practice and help you continue to give the best patient care that natural medicine can provide.
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