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{{Short description|American physician and author (born 1942)}} | |||
{{dablink|This article is about the alternative medicine proponent. There are famous (unrelated) mathematicians named ] and ].}} | |||
{{distinguish|text=French mathematician ], or with American writer ]}} | |||
]; ], ]]] | |||
{{Lead rewrite|date=November 2021}} | |||
'''Andrew Weil''' (born ], ] in ]) is an ] proponent] physician. He is one of the leading proponents of ]. He founded '''Weil Lifestyle LLC'''. He has been criticised by the former editor of the New England Journal of Medicine, Dr Arnold S. Relman . | |||
{{Infobox person | |||
|image=Andrew Weil 01.jpg | |||
|image_caption=Weil in 2015 | |||
|birth_name = Andrew Thomas Weil | |||
|birth_date = {{birth date and age|1942|6|8}} | |||
|birth_place = ], Pennsylvania, U.S. | |||
|occupation = Medical Doctor, author | |||
|alma_mater = ] | |||
|years_active = | |||
|known_for = | |||
|notable_works = | |||
}} | |||
'''Andrew Thomas Weil''' ({{IPAc-en|w|aɪ|l}}, born June 8, 1942) is an American ] who advocates for ].<ref name=LAT2010>{{cite news|last1=Jameson|first1=Marni|title=The cult of celebrity doctors|url=https://www.latimes.com/style/la-xpm-2010-jun-14-la-he-celeb-docs-20100614-story.html|work=]|date=14 June 2010}}</ref><ref name=CSPItrustintocash/><ref name=GumpertBloom06/> | |||
==Introduction== | |||
==Early life and education== | |||
He received both his undergraduate degree in ] (with a focus on ]) and his medical degree from ]. Weil has written or co-written nine books. His early works explored his theory that altered states of consciousness come from within and can be triggered by experiences and practices other than drugs. He has since expanded his scope to encompass healthy lifestyles and health care in general. As Weil entered his 60s, he began shifting his focus to the health concerns of older Americans. His most recent book, "Healthy Aging," looks at growing older from a physical, social and cross-cultural perspective, and emphasizes that aging cannot be reversed, but can be accompanied by good health, "serenity, wisdom, and its own kind of power and grace." | |||
Weil was born in ], on June 8, 1942,<ref name="EB15">The editors of EB (2015). "Andrew Weil, American Physician", In ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' (online, 18 November), see , accessed 18 November 2015.</ref> the only child of parents who operated a ] store,<ref name=EB15/> in a family that was ].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/library/books/970824weil.html|title=Andrew Weil, Shaman, M.D.|website=]}}</ref> He graduated from high school in 1959, and was awarded a scholarship from the ],<ref name=EB15/> giving him the opportunity to go abroad for a year, during which he lived with families in ], ], and ].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Collins|first=Judy|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=F2EhDAAAQBAJ&pg=PT92|title=Cravings: How I Conquered Food|date=2017-02-28|publisher=Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group|isbn=978-0-385-54132-9|pages=92ff|language=en|chapter=15 - Lives of the diet gurus; Dr. Andrew Weil}}</ref> From this experience, he became convinced that American culture and science was insular and unaware of non-American practices. He began hearing that ] enhanced creativity and produced visionary experiences, and finding little information on the subject, he read '']'' by ].{{when|date=November 2015}}<ref name=lattin/>{{rp|24f}} | |||
In 1960, Weil entered ], where he majored in ] with a concentration in ].<ref name=EB15/> At Harvard, he developed curiosity about ]s. He met Harvard psychologists ] and ], and separately engaged in organized experimentation with mescaline.<ref name = GarnerLattinRev10>{{cite journal | author = Garner, Dwight | date = January 7, 2010 | title = Books of the ''Times'': Tune In, Turn On, Turn Page | journal = The New York Times | url = https://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/08/books/08book.html?_r=0 | access-date = 17 November 2015 }}</ref> Weil wrote for '']''.<ref name=lattin/>{{rp|86}}<ref name = CrimsonIndex>{{cite journal | author = Anon. | year = 1962 | title = Writer: Andrew T. Weil | journal = The Harvard Crimson | url = http://www.thecrimson.com/writer/5801/Andrew_T._Weil/page/2/ | access-date = 17 November 2015 }}</ref> One published account of the period describes a falling out of Weil from the group that included the faculty—among whom the experimentation with drugs was contentious, and with regard to undergraduates, proscribed;<ref name = SmithCrimson62>{{cite journal | author = Smith, Robert E. | date=March 15, 1962 | title = Psychologists Disagree On Psilocybin Research | journal = The Harvard Crimson | url = http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1962/3/15/psychologists-disagree-on-psilocybin-research-pmembers/ | access-date = 17 November 2015 }}</ref><ref name = FinneganFreedCrimson13>{{cite journal |author1=Finnegan, John P. |author2=Freed, David | date=May 27, 2013 | title = In Early 1960s, Experiments With Hallucinogenics Caused Major Uproar, Minor Shake-up | journal = The Harvard Crimson | url = http://www.thecrimson.com/article/2013/5/27/freedo_lsd_lucyinthesky_1963/?page=1 | access-date = 17 November 2015 }}</ref> the falling out involved an exposé on drug-use and supply that Weil wrote for the ''Crimson''.<ref name = GarnerLattinRev10/> Weil wrote of faculty experimentation with drugs in a series of ''Crimson'' pieces:<ref name=Doblin00>{{cite thesis |last= Doblin |first= Richard Elliot | year = 2000 |title= Regulation of the Medical Use of Psychedelics and Marijuana (June 2000) | pages = 5–69, esp. 36 | type= PhD |chapter= The Evolution of the Regulation of the Medical Uses of Psychedelic Drugs and Marijuana (Chapter 1) | location = Cambridge, MA | publisher= Harvard University |chapter-url= https://www.psychologytoday.com/files/attachments/90761/doblinharvard2000regulation-the-medical-use-psychedelics-and-marijuana.pdf |access-date= 18 November 2015 }}</ref> | |||
He is currently employed as a professor of internal medicine at the ] in Tucson, where he is the director and founder of the ] (PIM). Weil's general view is that patients do best utilizing both mainstream and alternative medicine. In general, he believes that mainstream medicine is well-suited to crisis intervention, and alternative medicine is best utilized for prevention and health maintenance. Nutrition, exercise, and stress reduction are emphasized in almost all of Weil's health works. | |||
* "Better Than a Damn", (February 20, 1962), his apparent first ''Crimson'' piece;<ref name = CrimsonIndex/><ref name = WeilCrimson62>{{cite journal | author = Weil, Andrew T. | date = February 20, 1962 | title = Better Than a Damn | journal = The Harvard Crimson | page = 2 | url = http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1962/2/20/better-than-a-damn-pwhen-aldous/ | access-date = 17 November 2015 | quote = Subtitle: From the Bottle. }}</ref> | |||
==Medical philosophy== | |||
* "Alpert Defends Drugs on 'Open End,{{'}}" (May 27, 1963);<ref name = WeilCrimson63a>{{cite journal | author = Weil, Andrew T. | date = May 27, 1963 | title = Alpert Defends Drugs on 'Open End' | journal = The Harvard Crimson | pages = 1, 6 }}</ref> and | |||
Weil is open about his past use of illegal substances, claiming, "I think I've tried about every drug," in ''From Chocolate to Morphine''. He is equally open with his views on ending the ], citing the benefits of many banned plants. In fact, the opening paragraph of ''From Chocolate to Morphine'' reads: "Drugs are here to stay. History teaches that it is vain to hope that drugs will ever disappear and that any effort to eliminate them from society is doomed to failure." | |||
* "Investigation Unlikely in Dismissal of Alpert", (May 29, 1963).<ref name = WeilCrimson63b>{{cite journal | author = Weil, Andrew T. | date = May 29, 1963 | title = Investigation Unlikely in Dismissal of Alpert | journal = The Harvard Crimson | page = 1 | url = http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1963/5/29/investigation-unlikely-in-dismissal-of-alpert/ | access-date = 17 November 2015 | quote = Faculty Members Regret Lack of Details, But See No Issue of Academic Freedom. }}</ref> | |||
and that this reporting included the claim that "undergraduates had indeed been able to obtain access to psilocybin from members" of the Harvard faculty research team that was involved in such research.<ref name=Doblin00/> As late as 1973, Weil's name appears in conjunction with an editorial regarding the 1963 firing of Alpert, which stated the view that it would be "unfortunate if the firing of Richard Alpert led to the suppression of legitimate research into the effects of hallucinogenic compounds", distancing himself and the ''Crimson'' from the "shoddiness of their work as scientists ... less of incompetence than of a conscious rejection of scientific ways of looking at things."<ref name = WeilRussinCrimson73>{{cite journal |author1=Russin, Joseph M. |author2=Weil, Andrew T. | date = January 24, 1973 | title = The Crimson Takes Leary, Alpert to Task | journal = The Harvard Crimson | url = http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1973/1/24/the-crimson-takes-leary-alpert-to/ | access-date = 17 November 2015 | quote = 'Roles' & 'Games' In William James. }}</ref> | |||
Weil claims that humans have an innate need to alter their consciousness, and that there is no such thing as good or bad drugs, merely that some individuals have good or bad relationships with certain substances. | |||
Weil's undergraduate thesis was titled "The Use of Nutmeg as a Psychotropic Agent",<ref name = GarnerLattinRev10/> specifically, on the ] properties of ],<ref name=AoA10>{{cite web|title= Andrew Weil Biography and Interview |website=www.achievement.org|publisher=]|url=https://www.achievement.org/achiever/andrew-weil-m-d/#interview}}</ref> inspired by a class with ],{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} chair of the Department of Social Relations, and a former director of Harvard's Center for Research in Personality.<ref name = FinneganFreedCrimson13/> In 1964, he graduated '']'' with a ] in biology.<ref name=EB15/> | |||
As with his writings on drug usage, Weil's views on general health are informed by his botanical training. He contends that because human beings co-evolved with plants, whole-plant compounds generally assimilate less problematically than novel chemical creations. Generally, he claims that the profit represented by patentable pharmaceutical compounds has diverted attention away from low-cost, safe, simple lifestyle interventions that usually lead to better outcomes. | |||
===Medical training=== | |||
Weil also contends that physicians have a responsibility to be models of healthy living. His Program in Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizona incorporates structured time for meditation, exercise and socializing among its fellows. | |||
Weil entered ], "not with the intention of becoming a physician but rather simply to obtain a medical education."<ref name=EB15/> He received a medical degree in 1968,<ref name="Baer03">Baer, H.A. (2003). "The Work of Andrew Weil and Deepak Chopra—Two Holistic Health/New Age Gurus: A Critique of the Holistic Health/New Age Movements", '']''. '''17''' (2, June): 233-250, esp. 233f, 236, see and and , accessed 20 November 2015.</ref><ref name="Baer04">{{Cite book|last1=Baer|first1=H. A.|title=Toward an Integrative Medicine: Merging Alternative Therapies with Biomedicine|journal=Medical Anthropology Quarterly|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield/AltaMira|year=2004|isbn=978-0759103023|volume=17|location=Walnut Creek, CA |pages=119–136, esp. 120, 132f, and ''passim''|chapter=Deconstructing Andrew Weil and Deepak Chopra (Chapter 5)|doi=10.1525/maq.2003.17.2.233|pmid=12846118|access-date=18 November 2015|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?isbn=075910302X|issue=2|s2cid=28219719}}</ref><ref name=people>{{cite journal|last1=Lasswell|first1=Mark|title=Mind Opener|journal=People|date=25 September 1995|volume=45|issue=13|url=http://www.people.com/people/archive/article/0,,20101670,00.html|access-date=23 November 2014}}</ref> although "the Harvard faculty ... threatened to withhold it because of a controversial marijuana study Weil had helped conduct" in his final year.<ref name=EB15/> Weil moved to ] and completed a one-year medical internship at ] in 1968–69.<ref name=Baer03/><ref name=Baer04/><ref name="Quackwatch10March2002">{{cite web|last1=Relman|first1=Arnold|author-link=Arnold Relman|title=A Trip to Stonesville: Some Notes on Andrew Weil, M.D.|url=http://www.quackwatch.org/11Ind/weil.html|website=Quackwatch|access-date=8 May 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170124012615/http://www.quackwatch.org/11Ind/weil.html|archive-date=24 January 2017|date=8 March 2002}}</ref> While there, he volunteered at the ].{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} Weil went on to complete one year of a two-year program at NIH, resigning due to "official opposition to his work with marijuana".<ref name=Quackwatch10March2002/> | |||
== |
==Career== | ||
Following his internship, Weil took a position with the ] (NIMH) that lasted approximately one year, to pursue his interests in research on marijuana and other drugs;<ref name=Baer03/><ref name=Baer04/> during this time he may have received formal institutional permission to acquire marijuana for the research.<ref name=lattin>{{cite book|last1=Lattin|first1=Don|title=The Harvard Psychedelic Club|url=https://archive.org/details/harvardpsychedel00latt|url-access=registration|date=2010|publisher=HarperCollins | location=New York, NY |isbn=9780061655944|edition=Paperback}}</ref>{{rp|145f}} | |||
As an internationally recognized expert on medicinal herbs, mind-body interactions, and integrative medicine, Weil appeared on the cover of ] in 1997 and 2005. ] also named him one of the 25 most influential Americans in 1997 and one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2005. He received the John P. McGovern Award in Behavioral Sciences from Smithsonian Associates in 2005. | |||
Weil is reported to have experienced opposition to this line of inquiry at the NIMH, to have departed to his rural northern Virginia home (1971-1972), and to have begun his practices of vegetarianism, yoga, and meditation, and work on writing ''The Natural Mind'' (1972).<ref name=Baer03/><ref name=Baer04/> At the same time, Weil began an affiliation with the Harvard Botanical Museum that would span from 1971 to 1984, where his work included duties as a research associate investigating "the properties of medicinal and psychoactive plants".<ref name=Baer03/><ref name=Baer04/> His interests led him to explore the healing systems of indigenous people, and with this aim, Weil traveled throughout South America and other parts of the world, "collecting information about medicinal plants and healing", from 1971 to 1975, as a fellow for the ].<ref name=Baer03/><ref name=Baer04/><ref>{{cite web| author = ICWA | year = 2015 | title = Past Fellows: Andrew T. Weil, Years: 1971-1975, Topic: Altered States of Consciousness, Area: Mexico, Guatemala, Panama, Colombia, United States | location = Washington, DC, US | publisher = ] | url=http://www.icwa.org/past-fellows/?as=Weil | access-date=21 November 2015}}</ref> | |||
Mycologists Dr. Gustan Guzman, Fidel Tapia, and Paul Stamets honored Weil by naming a newly discovered mushroom, ''Psylocibe weilii'', in 1995. Weil has written about the healing properties of certain mushrooms in several of his books, and is an admitted mycophile. | |||
In 1994, Weil founded the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine at the ] in ].<ref name=OUPbio>{{cite book|url=https://global.oup.com/academic/product/integrative-oncology-9780199329724?lang=en&cc=us#|title=Integrative Oncology|date=2014-09-03|work=oup.com|access-date=21 November 2015|isbn=9780199329724|publisher=Oxford University Press|series=Weil Integrative Medicine Library}}</ref><ref name=UofA>{{cite web| title=Andrew Weil Center for Integrative Medicine, Leadership Team| url=https://integrativemedicine.arizona.edu/about/leadership.html}}</ref> | |||
Weil was honored by the Institute for Health and Healing in San Francisco as their 2006 Pioneer in Integrative Medicine. | |||
Andrew Weil is the founder of True Food Kitchen, a restaurant chain serving meals on the premise that food should make one feel better. There are currently 44 restaurants in the chain. | |||
==Program in Integrative Medicine== | |||
In 1994, Weil founded the Program in Integrative Medicine (PIM) at ] and the University of Arizona in Tucson. It offers residential and research fellowship programs and operates an outpatient clinic according to Weil's principles; emphasizing prevention over treatment and focusing on nutrition, botanical medicines and mind-body interventions to complement conventional synthetic drug and surgery protocols. It also operates an annual Nutrition and Health Conference and a Botanical Medicine conference. As of 2005, more than 250 physicians, physician assistants and nurse practitioners had completed the program. Weil says the expense associated with running PIM, reportedly $3 million annually, led him to agree to lend his name to commercial products to provide steady revenue for this and other research efforts in line with his philosophy. | |||
==View of conventional medicine== | |||
Since the founding of the University of Arizona program, academic instruction in integrative medicine has grown rapidly. There are now 31 academic medical centers that offer integrative medicine programs, including the Mayo Clinic, Harvard Medical School and Georgetown, Duke and Columbia Universities. | |||
] is a stated central component of the higher-order "system of systems" Weil envisions ] to be.<ref name=BellWeil02/> It is clear that in both scholarly/academic and popular settings, Weil's statements suggest practices from ] as being something to add to conventional medical treatment plans.<ref name=BellWeil02/><ref name="publishersweekly1"/> However, Weil is also on record speaking disparagingly of conventional, evidence-based medicine, both in academic and popular contexts. For instance, he is quoted as having said to a group commencing after a month-long training program in integrative medicine at the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine that "that ], at its worst, 'is exactly analogous to religious fundamentalism'" (though the source leaves unclear whether any specific aspect of evidence-based medicine was given).<ref name="Econ15">{{cite news|author=Anon|date=April 14, 2012|title=Medicine and its rivals: The believers|newspaper=The Economist|url=http://www.economist.com/node/21552554|access-date=17 November 2015|quote=Subtitle: Alternative therapies are increasingly mainstream. That means headaches for scientists—and no cure in sight.}}</ref> | |||
==Influences and philosophy== | |||
==Vitamin supplement sales controversy== | |||
{{BLP sources section|date=March 2022}} | |||
Early in 2006, the ] (CSPI) questioned whether Weil, as he claims, has no financial interest in the sales of his personal brand of ] supplements. Weil claims all ]s from these sales go to the Weil ], which supports research in ]. | |||
Weil acknowledges many experiences and individuals that have influenced his philosophical and spiritual ideas, and the techniques he considers valid in his approach to ]. Weil has been open about his own history of experimental and ], including experiences with ]s and ].<ref name=No_Bad_Drugs>{{cite journal|url=http://www.doitnow.org/pages/weil.html|author1=Jim Parker|author2=Christina Dye|title=No Bad Drugs: Interview with Dr. Andrew Weil|journal=Newservice|date=May–June 1983Z|pages=22–31|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090303162751/http://www.doitnow.org/pages/weil.html|archive-date=March 3, 2009|url-status=live}}</ref> Among the individuals who strongly influenced his personal and professional life is the late ] ], who specialized in ].<ref>{{cite news |author =Huba, S.|date=April 2, 1997|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-67898989.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121023115014/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-67898989.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=October 23, 2012|title=Holistic healing's new role|newspaper=]}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author =Weil, A.| year= 2011 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_LTOCLZ-dUEC&pg=PT35 |orig-year = 1995 | title= Spontaneous healing |page=35 | location=New York, NY |publisher=] | isbn= 9780679436072 | quote = Subtitle: : How to discover and enhance your body's natural ability to maintain and heal itself. }}</ref> Weil has further stated that he respects the work of psychologist ], who pioneered the field of ] and now directs the Positive Psychology Center at the ]. Weil has also professed admiration for the work of Stephen Ilardi, professor of psychology at the ], and author of ''The Depression Cure''.<ref>{{cite journal | author = Weil, Andrew | date = October 30, 2011 | title = Culture: Andrew Weil's Spontaneous Happiness, Our Nature-Deficit Disorder | journal = Newsweek | url=http://www.newsweek.com/andrew-weils-spontaneous-happiness-our-nature-deficit-disorder-68053?piano_t=1 | access-date= 17 November 2015 }}</ref> | |||
Weil is widely recognized as having a seminal role in establishing the field of ], where this field is defined as:{{blockquote|a higher-order system of systems of care that emphasizes wellness and healing of the entire person (bio-psycho-socio-spiritual dimensions) as primary goals, drawing on both conventional and CAM approaches in the context of a supportive and effective physician-patient relationship.<ref name=BellWeil02>{{cite journal | vauthors=Bell IR, Caspi O, Schwartz GE, Grant KL, Gaudet TW, Rychener D, Maizes V, Weil A | title=Integrative medicine and systemic outcomes research: issues in the emergence of a new model for primary health care |journal=Arch. Intern. Med. |volume=162 |issue=2 |pages=133–40 |date=January 2002 |pmid=11802746 |doi=10.1001/archinte.162.2.133 }}</ref>}} He says that patients are urged to take the ] prescribed by their physicians, and—in what '']'' describes as a message "becoming a signature formula"— "bend the 'biomedical model' to incorporate alternative therapies, including supplements like omega-3 fatty acids, vitamin D, and herbal remedies; meditation and other 'spiritual' strategies."<ref name="publishersweekly1">{{cite journal | date = August 22, 2011 | title = Nonfiction Book Review: Spontaneous Happiness, Andrew Weil, author | journal = ]}}</ref> Proper ], ], and ] are also emphasized by Weil.<ref name="publishersweekly1"/> In particular, he is a proponent of diets that are rich in organic fruits, organic vegetables, and fish, and is a vocal critic of foods and diets rich in ].<ref name="Weil2005">{{cite web |last1=Weil |first1=Andrew |title=Spotting Trans-Fatty Acids? |url=https://www.drweil.com/diet-nutrition/nutrition/spotting-trans-fatty-acids/ |website=DrWeil.com |access-date=23 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220323224447/https://www.drweil.com/diet-nutrition/nutrition/spotting-trans-fatty-acids/ |archive-date=March 23, 2022 |date=March 31, 2005}}</ref> In an interview on '']'', Weil focused on a view that sugar, starch, refined carbohydrates, and trans-fats are more dangerous to the human body than ]. | |||
However, a front-page story in CSPI's newsletter, ''Nutrition Action'', reported that a 2003 ] that Weil signed with ] to sell the supplements, made public when the online pharmacy sued him for failing to adequately promote them, provided that Weil himself would be paid monthly ] that would total $1.6 million over the five years of the contract; that 1% of the supplement sales from both Weil's own website and drugstore.com would be donated to the foundation and that his company, Weil Lifestyle, would receive ]s of up to 30% on those sales. The newsletter put the total Weil and his associated entities could earn from the deal at $16 million. | |||
Regarding treatment strategies, their side effects, and their efficacy, Weil advocates for the use of whole plants as a less problematic approach in comparison to synthetic pharmaceuticals. In addition, Weil is an advocate of incorporating specific ] into one's diet.<ref name="Stamets2020">{{cite book |last1=Stamets |first1=Paul |title=Fantastic Fungi |year=2020 |publisher=Simon and Schuster |isbn=978-1-64722-172-0 |page=85 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R5vVDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT85 |language=en}}</ref> | |||
A review of the ] ]s filed by the foundation found, however, that they reported no income from Weil through 2003 and 2004. CSPI tried to contact Weil himself to explain whether administrative expenses, salaries or consulting fees might explain this disparity, but he did not respond to their requests. However, on January 27, 2006, Tucson Citizen newspaper reporter Anne T. Denogean reported that "Weil and his people" were "easily reached" and had "no record of anyone from CSPI trying to contact them." | |||
Weil has expressed opposition to the ],<ref name="WeilRosen2004">{{cite book |last1=Weil |first1=Andrew |last2=Rosen |first2=Winifred |title=From Chocolate to Morphine: Everything You Need to Know About Mind-Altering Drugs |year=2004 |publisher=HMH |isbn=978-0-547-52566-2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p6zyPxi4PYoC&pg=PA100 |page=100 |language=en}}</ref> and takes a measured, nuanced approach to the use of recreational drugs.<ref>Weil & Rosen 2004, pp. 111–112</ref> | |||
Since being founded in 2002, the Weil Foundation has given out four grants totaling just $60,000. Half of that went to Weil's own PIM at Arizona . In the Tucson Citizen article, David Stoup, co-chairman of Weil Lifestyle, says expenses relating to starting the three-year-old company had absorbed most donatable profits, but that 2006 will be a turnaround year. According to his web site, www.drweil.com, Weil's 2005 after-tax profits from sales were $154,589, which he donated to the Weil Foundation in May 2006. Projections are that Weil will donate in excess of $350,000 to the Foundation based on 2006 revenue. | |||
Over the next 10 years, Weil Lifestyle has pledged $10 million to the foundation. | |||
==Publications== | |||
As to the $14 million contract, Denoghean's article notes that a lawsuit against Weil eliminated $10.1 million in payments. The article states, "Ironically, given the CSPI allegations, the basis of the drugstore.com lawsuit against Weil was that he wasn't doing a good job of shilling its products," (an irony noted in the ''Nutrition Action'' article). Weil himself has often expressed ambivalence about marketing his name, but says he agreed to do so only because it seemed the only vehicle that can guarantee a steady stream of significant funding for integrative medicine research and clinical efforts. | |||
===Overview=== | |||
While Weil's early books and publications primarily explored ],{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} he has since expanded the scope of his work to encompass healthy lifestyles and health care in general.{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} In the last ten years, Weil has focused much of his work on the health concerns of older people.{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} In his book ''Healthy Aging'', Weil looks at the process of growing older from a physical, social, and cross-cultural perspective,{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} and in his book ''Why our Health Matters'' is focused on ].{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} | |||
Of his books, several have appeared on various bestseller lists, both as hardbacks and as paperbacks (many appearing so in the 1990s<ref name="publishersweekly3">{{cite journal |author1=Maryles, Daisy |author2=Riippa, Laurele | date = March 19, 2001 | title = How They Landed On Top | journal = Publishers Weekly | url = http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/print/20010319/21195-how-they-landed-on-top.html | access-date = 25 November 2015 | quote = Subtitle: In fiction, selling what sells; in nonfiction, small became beautiful. }}</ref>), some of them being ''Spontaneous Healing'' (1995; on the ]),<ref name=NYTbsWeil>{{cite web | date = 2015 | title = Search: 'Andrew Weil' | url =https://query.nytimes.com/search/sitesearch/#/%22Andrew+Weil%22/from19640101to20151125/allresults/1/allauthors/newest/Arts%3B%20Books/ | access-date = 25 November 2015}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=November 2015}}{{better source needed|date=November 2015}} ''Eight Weeks to Optimum Health'' (1997; on the ''Publishers Weekly'' and ''New York Times'' lists),<ref name=NYTbsWeil/><ref name="publishersweekly2">{{cite journal | date = March 24, 2008 | title = Bestselling Books of the Year, 1996-2007 | journal = Publishers Weekly | url = http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/publishing-and-marketing/article/2110-bestselling-books-of-the-year-1996-2007.html | access-date = 25 November 2015 }}</ref>{{better source needed|date=November 2015}} ''Eating Well for Optimum Health'' (2000; ''Publishers Weekly'', ''New York Times''),<ref name=NYTbsWeil/><ref name="publishersweekly2"/>{{better source needed|date=November 2015}} ''The Healthy Kitchen'' (2002, with chef Rosie Daley; ''New York Times''),<ref name=NYTbsWeil/>{{better source needed|date=November 2015}} ''Healthy Aging'' (2005; ''New York Times''),<ref name=NYTbsWeil/>{{better source needed|date=November 2015}} and ''Spontaneous Happiness'' (2011; ''New York Times'').<ref name=NYTbsWeil/>{{better source needed|date=November 2015}} | |||
The CSPI report also alleged that Weil mischaracterized two studies showing that regular consumption of ] which he advocates, claims to use and sells in large quantities, does little to prevent ] or ], contrary to his claims. Likewise, it challenged the health claims Weil makes for ], ] and his "Energy Support Formula." | |||
===List of popular works=== | |||
==Works== | |||
{{div col}} | |||
Weil's writings span over thirty years and include the following ten books: ''The Natural Mind (1972) (2004 rev.)'', ''Marriage of Sun and Moon: Dispatches from the Frontiers of Consciousness'' (1980) (2004 rev.), ''Health and Healing'' (1983) (2004 rev.), ''From Chocolate to Morphine'' with Winifred Rosen (1983) (2004 rev.), ''Spontaneous Healing'' (1995),"Natural Health, Natural Medicine (1995) (2004 rev.) ''8 Weeks to Optimum Health'' (1997) (2006 rev.), ''Eating Well for Optimum Health'' (2000),and ''The Healthy Kitchen'' with Rosie Daley (2002). Weil's latest work, ''Healthy Aging,'' was published in October of 2005. | |||
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====Books==== | |||
He has written forewords for books by Paul Stamets, Lewis-Mehl Madrona, and Wade Davis, among others. | |||
*''The Natural Mind: An Investigation of Drugs and the Higher Consciousness'' (1972, rev. 2004);{{isbn|0-618-47905-8}} | |||
* ''The Marriage of the Sun and Moon: A Quest for Unity in Consciousness'' (Houghton Mifflin Company: 1980); {{isbn|0-395-25723-9}} | |||
*''Health and Healing'' (1983, rev. 2004);{{isbn|0-618-47908-2}} | |||
*''From Chocolate to Morphine: Everything you need to know about mind-altering drugs'' with Winifred Rosen (1983, rev. 1993 & 2004); {{isbn|0-618-48379-9}} | |||
*''Natural Health, Natural Medicine'' (1990, rev. 2004);{{isbn|0-618-47903-1}} | |||
*''Spontaneous Healing'' (Ballantine: 1995); {{isbn|0-8041-1794-2}} | |||
*''Eight Weeks to Optimum Health'' (1997, rev. 2006);{{isbn|978-0-345-49802-1}} | |||
*''Eating Well for Optimum Health'' (2000);{{isbn|0-375-40754-5}} | |||
*''The Healthy Kitchen'' with Rosie Daley (2002);{{isbn|0-375-41306-5}} | |||
*''Healthy Aging'' (2005);{{isbn|0-375-40755-3}} | |||
*''Why Our Health Matters'' (2009){{isbn|978-1-59463-066-8}} | |||
*''Spontaneous Happiness'' (2011){{isbn|978-0-316-12942-8}} | |||
*''True Food: Seasonal, Sustainable, Simple, Pure'' (2014){{isbn|978-0-316-12941-1}} | |||
*''Fast Food, Good Food: More Than 150 Quick and Easy Ways to Put Healthy, Delicious Food on the Table'' (2015){{isbn|978-0-316-32942-2}} | |||
====Ask Dr. Weil collections==== | |||
In addition to answering a few questions a week on his website, Dr. Weil also writes and answers health related questions in "Time Magazine". | |||
Published collections of answers to questions received on his DrWeil.com website: | |||
* ''Women's Health'' {{isbn|0-8041-1674-1}} | |||
* ''Healthy Living'' {{isbn|0-7515-2476-X}} | |||
* ''Natural Remedies'' {{isbn|0-8041-1675-X}} | |||
* ''Common Illnesses'' {{isbn|0-8041-1676-8}} | |||
* ''Vitamins and Minerals'' {{isbn|0-8041-1672-5}} | |||
* ''Your Top Health Concerns'' {{isbn|0-7515-2606-1}} | |||
====Audio-only publications==== | |||
Most recently he wrote an op-ed piece in the New York Times condemning fast food in hospitals. | |||
*''Breathing: The Master Key to Self Healing'', audio CD, ] (2000).{{Full citation needed|date=November 2015}}{{div col end}} | |||
In addition to the foregoing individual paperback, hardback, audio, and electronic versions, various combined and compendia editions have appeared.{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} | |||
===Academic works=== | |||
As of 2015, Weil was serving as series editor of an academic imprint from Oxford University Press called the ''Weil Integrative Medicine Library'', volumes for clinicians in more than 10 medical specialties, including oncology, cardiology, rheumatology, pediatrics, and psychology.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://global.oup.com/academic/content/series/w/weil-integrative-medicine-library-iml/?cc=us&lang=en&|title=Weil Integrative Medicine Library|work=oup.com|access-date=21 November 2015}}</ref> Weil co-edited the first volume, ''Integrative Oncology'', with ], which appeared in 2009.<ref name="OUPbio"/> Academic and scholarly reviews of the series and individual volumes were lacking as of 2015—in almost all cases, the publisher's "Reviews and Awards" tabs lack society or other published reviews (apart from ]).<ref>E.g., for ''Integrative Cardiology'', note absent tab at , and for ''Integrative Dermatology'', note sole appearance of Doody's at </ref> A cancer society review of the second edition of the series' ''Integrative Oncology'' volume, the first volume to have been published, describes the field as "an exciting new discipline" and the book as offering "best-practice methods to prevent cancer and support those affected by it on all levels: body, mind, and spirit" and as being comprehensive, and offering "meticulous, well-written chapters on proven and yet-to-be-proven methods for enhancing cancer care with integrative oncology."<ref>{{cite journal | author = Plana, Ronald | date= October 15, 2014 | title = Integrative Oncology: Mind, Body, and More | journal = The ASCO Post | volume = 5 | issue = 16 | location = Cold Spring Harbor, NY | publisher = American Society of Clinical Oncology | url = http://www.ascopost.com/issues/october-15,-2014/integrative-oncology-mind,-body,-and-more.aspx | access-date = 18 November 2015 }}</ref> | |||
===Other works=== | |||
Weil was a regular contributor to '']'' magazine from 1975 to 1983.<ref>{{cite journal | author = Simunek, Chris | date = September 8, 2003 | journal =] | url=http://www.hightimes.com/ht/grow/content.php?bid=247&aid=2| title = Grow: Interview, Dr. Andrew Weil| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090303162751/http://hightimes.com/grow/csimunek/1054|archive-date=March 3, 2009 }}</ref> More recently, Weil has written the forewords to a variety of books, including ]'s ''Psilocybin Mushrooms of the World''<ref>Weil, Andrew (2011) "Foreword", in Paul Stamets, ''Psilocybin Mushrooms of the World: An Identification Guide'', Illustrated Edition, Berkeley, CA: Crown/Ten Speed Press, {{ISBN|0898158397}}, see , accessed 17 November 2015.</ref> and ]'s ''Coyote Medicine''.<ref>Weil, Andrew (2011) "Foreword", in Lewis Mehl-Madrona, ''Coyote Medicine: Lessons from Native American Healing'', p. 13f, New York, NY: Simon and Schuster, {{ISBN|1439144540}}, see , accessed 17 November 2015.</ref> In the 21st century, Weil has occasionally written articles for ''Time'' magazine.<ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.time.com/time/searchresults?query=%20ANDREW%20WEIL,%20M.D. |title=Andrew Weil, M.D. |magazine=Time |date=December 11, 2006 |access-date=June 5, 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090303162751/http://www.time.com/time/searchresults?query=%20ANDREW%20WEIL%2C%20M.D. |archive-date=March 3, 2009 }}</ref> | |||
==Critiques and controversies== | |||
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===Medical=== | |||
Medical professionals in particular have criticized Weil for promoting treatment claims and ] practices described as unverified or inefficacious, or for otherwise rejecting aspects of ]. Weil's rejection of some aspects of ] and his promotion of ] practices that are not verifiably efficacious were criticized in a 1998 ''New Republic'' piece by ], emeritus editor-in-chief of ] and emeritus professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.<ref name=Relman>{{cite magazine | author=Relman, Arnold S. |author-link=Arnold S. Relman | date = December 14, 1998 | magazine= ] | url=https://newrepublic.com/article/118224/arnold-relman-reviews-andrew-weil-alternative-medicine |title=A Trip to Stonesville: Andrew Weil, the boom in alternative medicine, and the retreat from science }}</ref> The late ] of ], writing in the journal ''Academic Medicine'' in 2001, criticized Weil and various aspects of complementary and alternative medicine, asserting that it held a "magical world-view"; he continued, saying,{{blockquote| | |||
On advocating emotional criteria for truth over criteria based on empirical data and logic, New Age medical gurus such as Andrew Weil ... have convinced many that "anything goes" ... By denigrating science, these detractors have enlarged the potential following for magical and pseudoscientific health products.<ref name=Bayerstein>{{cite journal|author=Beyerstein, B. L. |s2cid=41527148 |title=Alternative Medicine and Common Errors of Reasoning |journal=] |volume=76 |issue=3 |year=2001 |pages=230–237 |pmid=11242572 |doi=10.1097/00001888-200103000-00009 |doi-access=free }}</ref>}}In 2003, ], author of ''The Body/Mind Connection'' (2000),{{Full citation needed|date=November 2015}} a physician trained at ], and former Chair of the Department of Medicine in the Tucson, Arizona, Carondelet system, criticized Weil in a televised discussion for what he considered irresponsible advocacy of untested treatments.<ref>{{ cite episode |last=Buckmaster |first=Bill (host) | year = 2003 | series = Arizona Illustrated | title = , (November 3, 2003) | url = http://uanews.org/story/arizona-illustrated-frontline-look-at-alternative-medicine | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20151118235111/http://uanews.org/story/arizona-illustrated-frontline-look-at-alternative-medicine | url-status = usurped | archive-date = November 18, 2015 | network = PBS | station = KUAT-TV | location = ] | transcript = ''YouTube'' title (July 30, 2008): Dr. Steven Knope debates Andrew Weil on the merits of Integrative Medicine (Part I) | transcript-url = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a11t5NXaOQI | access-date=17 November 2015 }}</ref> ], a recognized British science writer, and ], a former Professor of Complementary Medicine at the University of Exeter, echoed Beyerstein's criticism in their 2008 book ''Trick or Treatment'', saying that although Weil correctly promotes exercise and smoke-free lifestyles "much of his advice is nonsense."<ref>{{cite book|author =Singh, S. |author-link=Simon Singh |author2=Edzard, Ernst E. |author-link2=Edzard Ernst |name-list-style=amp | title=Trick or Treatment: The Undeniable Facts About Alternative Medicine | page=256 | year=2008 | location = New York, NY | publisher = ] | isbn=9780393337785|title-link=Trick or Treatment: The Undeniable Facts About Alternative Medicine }}</ref> | |||
===Social=== | |||
Hans Baer of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the ], writing in 2003, has argued that Weil's approach represents a general limitation of the holistic health/New Age movement, in its "tendenc to downplay the role of social, structural, and environmental factors in the etiology of disease" in the United States, and in doing so, represents a failure to "suggest substantive remedies for improving access to health care", generally, for the "millions of people who lack any type of health insurance"; at the same time, Baer notes (with negative connotations) that Weil instead contributes "to a long tradition of entrepreneurialism in the U.S. medical system."<ref name=Baer03/><ref name=Baer04/>{{rp|20,29,119,130ff}} | |||
===Ethical=== | |||
Beginning in 2006, as the result of his commercial ventures, Weil—as David Gumpert has described—has placed himself in the "awkward position of ... having to defend himself against charges of inappropriately exploiting his ]."<ref name=GumpertBloom06>{{cite journal | author = Gumpert, David E. | date = March 27, 2006 | journal = Bloomberg | title = Small Business: Dr. Weil, Heal Thyself | url = https://www.bloomberg.com/bw/stories/2006-03-27/dr-dot-weil-heal-thyself | access-date = 25 November 2015 }}</ref> Commenting on a cover article in a recent 2006 edition of the ]'s "highly respected" ''Nutrition Action Healthletter'',<ref name=CSPItrustintocash>{{cite journal | author = CSPI | date = January–February 2006 | journal = Nutrition Action Healthletter | title = Supplementing Their Income: How Celebrities Turn Trust Into Cash | url = https://www.cspinet.org/nah/01_06/sup.pdf | access-date = 25 November 2015 | location = Washington, DC | publisher = ] | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160304051515/https://www.cspinet.org/nah/01_06/sup.pdf | archive-date = 2016-03-04 | url-status = dead }}</ref> Gumpert called attention to: | |||
* a $14 million deal Weil's business enterprise had made with ],<ref name=CSPItrustintocash/><ref name=GumpertBloom06/> | |||
* the DrWeil.com personalized service of recommending supplements (purchase of which are made easy via DrWeil.com and drugstore.com),<ref name=CSPItrustintocash/><ref name="GumpertBloom06" /> | |||
* long-standing recommendations for supplements appearing despite studies questioning their efficacy,<ref name=CSPItrustintocash/><ref name=GumpertBloom06/> and to | |||
* the clear nature of the pressures on Weil because of the deals, and the clear consanguinity of person and brand.<ref name=GumpertBloom06/> | |||
The '']'' article noted, in particular, ]'s 2005 lawsuit against DrWeil.com for Weil's having "failed to perform any of his marketing obligations", noting that in a 2004 ''Larry King Live'' interview, Weil failed to promote this business partner, despite the program offering "reasonable opportunity for Weil to use efforts to promote drugstore.com."<ref name=GumpertBloom06/> Moreover, the ] newsletter noted that their investigations into the vitamin and supplement recommendation service led them to conclude that the algorithms behind the recommendations were, by default, set to recommend purchases: regardless of how the online inquiries of the personalized service were answered, "we couldn't get the Advisor to stop recommending that we buy supplements."<ref name=CSPItrustintocash/><ref name=GumpertBloom06/> The CSPI article concludes, "Beware of doctors who sell what they recommend."<ref name=CSPItrustintocash/><ref name=GumpertBloom06/> | |||
In 2006, the ] also commented on a '']'' magazine piece by Weil rebutting a recent '']'' report on the failure of fish oil supplements to significantly reduce risk of serious heart arrhythmias,<ref>"", (2006) ''Nutrition Action Newsletter'', Center for Science in the Public Interest, January/February 2016, pp 3-6. Archived from the on June 13, 2010. Accessed December 28, 2019.</ref> where he emphasized the benefits of ] supplements without a disclaimer that he had a direct commercial interest in the sale of these supplements.<ref name=Advertorial>{{cite journal|author = CSPI|date = June 19, 2006|journal = CSPI Newsroom: Integrity in Science Watch |title = Time Runs Andrew Weil Advertorial|url = http://www.cspinet.org/integrity/press/200606191.html|access-date = 17 November 2015|location = Washington, DC |publisher = ]|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20090303162751/http://www.cspinet.org/integrity/press/200606191.html|archive-date = 2009-03-03|url-status = dead}}</ref> | |||
Another specific criticism has been leveled with regard to the message of his ''Healthy Aging'' (2005), which argues that aging should be accepted as a natural stage in life,{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} while these skin care products were being sold at ] with the advertising claim of the products' "optimiz skin's defense against aging"—alongside a large picture of Weil.<ref name=nytimes>{{cite web|last1=Wadler|first1=Joyce|title=What Goes With Gray?|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/20/garden/20weil.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0|work=The New York Times|date=20 October 2005|access-date=23 November 2014}}</ref> | |||
Weil has also been accused by others in the alternative health movement of being involved in the "dishonest practice of spreading ] about competitors' products, while pretending to be objective 3rd ."<ref>Corriher, Sarah C. (2015) "Doctor Andrew Weil: Whose Side Is He Really On?", ''The Health Wyze Report'', (online, undated), see , accessed 18 November 2015.</ref>{{better source needed|date=November 2015}} | |||
===Political=== | |||
Weil's 1983 ''Chocolate to Morphine'' roused the ire of Florida senator ], "who demanded that the book, a veritable encyclopaedia of various drugs and their effects on humans, be removed from schools and libraries."<ref name=EB15/><ref>{{cite book | author = Torgoff, Martin | date = 2004 | title = Can't Find My Way Home: America in the Great Stoned Age, 1945-2000 | page = 431ff | location = New York, NY | publisher = Simon and Schuster | isbn = 978-0743258630 | url = https://archive.org/details/cantfindmywayhom00torg | url-access = registration | access-date = 18 November 2015 }}</ref> | |||
==Formal corrective actions== | |||
In 2009, the US ] sent a warning letter to Weil's Weil Lifestyle LLC, regarding "Unapproved / Uncleared / Unauthorized Products Related to the H1N1 Flu Virus" in particular, a "Notice of Potential Illegal Marketing of Products to Prevent, Treat or Cure the H1N1 Virus Virus]]."<ref name=FDALetter>{{cite web|author=FDA |date=2009 |title=Inspections, Compliance, Enforcement, and Criminal Investigations: Compliance Actions and Activities: Warning Letters, Weil Lifestyle LLC |location=Washington, DC |publisher=U.S. Food and Drug Administration |url=https://www.fda.gov/iceci/enforcementactions/warningletters/ucm186837.htm |quote=Unapproved/Uncleared/Unauthorized Products Related to the H1N1 Flu Virus; and Notice of Potential Illegal Marketing of Products to Prevent, Treat or Cure the H1N1 Virus. |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090303162751/https://www.fda.gov/iceci/enforcementactions/warningletters/ucm186837.htm |archive-date=March 3, 2009 |url-status=live }}{{primary source inline|date=November 2015}}{{primary source inline|date=November 2015}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=November 2015}} The FDA was primarily concerned with several implicit claims in Weil Lifestyle LLC's marketing literature, that certain products could help ward off such viruses.{{citation needed|date=November 2015}} | |||
==Awards and recognition== | |||
Weil appeared on the cover of '']'' magazine in 1997 and again in 2005, and ''Time'' named him one of the 25 most influential Americans in 1997 and one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2005.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=https://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1972656_1972712_1973796,00.html |title=Andrew Weil - The 2005 Time 100 |magazine=] |date=April 18, 2005 |access-date=January 30, 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090303162751/http://content.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0%2C28804%2C1972656_1972712_1973796%2C00.html |archive-date=March 3, 2009 |url-status=live |last1=Gupta |first1=Sanjay }}{{Verify source|date=November 2015}}{{Verify source|date=November 2015}}</ref> He was inducted into the ] in 1998.<ref name=AoA10/><ref>{{cite web|title= Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement |website=www.achievement.org|publisher=]|url=https://achievement.org/our-history/golden-plate-awards/#science-exploration}}</ref> His "Ask Dr. Weil" website was chosen by ''Forbes''{{'}} ''Best of the Web Directory'' in 2009 for having offered "straightforward tips and advice on achieving wellness through natural means and educating the public on alternative therapies."<ref>{{cite web |date=2009 |work=Forbes Best of the Web Directory |title=Ask Dr. Weil |url=https://www.forbes.com/bow/b2c/review.jhtml?id=2544 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090303162751/http://www.forbes.com/bow/b2c/review.jhtml?id=2544 |archive-date=3 March 2009 |access-date=17 November 2015 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The Integrative Healthcare Symposium (IHS) awarded Weil as the recipient of its 2022 Leadership Award.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Andrew Weil accepts leadership award at IHSNY22|url=https://www.integrativepractitioner.com/whole-systems-medicine/news/2022-02-18-andrew-weil-accepts-leadership-award-at-ihsny22|access-date=2022-02-20|website=www.integrativepractitioner.com|language=en}}</ref> | |||
==Media appearances== | |||
Weil blogs for the '']''<ref>{{cite news | date = 2015 | title = Dr. Andrew Weil | work = ] | url = http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andrew-weil-md/ | access-date = 17 November 2015 }}</ref> and has been a frequent guest on ''Larry King Live'' on ],<ref>{{cite web |url=http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0305/08/lkl.00.html |title=CNN.com - Transcripts |access-date=2018-09-21 }}</ref> '']'',<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.oprah.com/health/recipes-for-your-heart/all |title=Recipes for Your Heart |access-date=2018-09-21 }}</ref> and '']''.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.today.com/health/why-should-i-take-vitamin-my-health-2D80556302 |title=Why should I take a vitamin for my health? |last=Weil |first=Andrew |date=22 September 2005 |access-date=2018-09-21 }}</ref> Weil appeared in the 2012 documentary on the need for a "rescue" of American healthcare, '']''.<ref>{{cite journal | last=Catsoulis | first=Jeanette | date= October 4, 2012 | title=Review: Pitting Drug Regimens Against Prevention, 'Escape Fire: The Fight to Rescue American Healthcare' | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/05/movies/escape-fire-the-fight-to-rescue-american-healthcare.html?_r=0 | journal = The New York Times | access-date=25 November 2015 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last=Turan | first=Kenneth | date= October 4, 2012 | title = Review: 'Escape Fire' Calls for Drastic Changes to U.S. Healthcare | url=https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/movies/la-xpm-2012-oct-04-la-et-mn-escape-fire-20121005-story.html | journal = Los Angeles Times | access-date=25 November 2015| quote=Subtitle: Filmmakers Matthew Heineman and Susan Froemke not only deftly make the case that the system is ill but also effectively argue for a dramatic change in thinking. }}</ref> | |||
He also appeared in the 2019 documentary '']''.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://fantasticfungi.com/|title=Fantastic Fungi: A film by Louie Schwartzberg on Mycelial Connection|website=Fantastic Fungi}}</ref> | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist}} | |||
* Center for Science in the Public Interest, January/February 2006; "" ''Nutrition Action''. | |||
* Denogean, Anne; January 27, 2006; "Health guru Weil disputes claim he's cashing in on public's trust"; '']''. | |||
* Academy of Achievement, November 3, 2005; "" ''Achievement.org''. | |||
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==Further reading== | ||
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* "I think if I stop being controversial I wouldn't be doing my job…I'm interested in things that don't fit established conceptions…that don't fit accepted models, and in trying to determine what's true and useful." | |||
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* "I felt really compelled to follow my own path." | |||
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* The editors of EB (2015). "Andrew Weil, American Physician", In ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' (online, 18 November), see , accessed 18 November 2015. | |||
* {{cite news | author = Anon | date= April 14, 2012 | title = Medicine and its rivals: The believers | newspaper = The Economist | url = http://www.economist.com/node/21552554 | access-date = 17 November 2015 | quote = Subtitle: Alternative therapies are increasingly mainstream. That means headaches for scientists—and no cure in sight. }} | |||
* {{cite journal | author = Garner, Dwight | date= January 7, 2010 | title = Books of the ''Times'': Tune In, Turn On, Turn Page | journal = The New York Times | url = https://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/08/books/08book.html | access-date = 17 November 2015 }} | |||
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Latest revision as of 03:06, 17 November 2024
American physician and author (born 1942) Not to be confused with French mathematician André Weil, or with American writer Andy Weir.The article's lead section may need to be rewritten. Please help improve the lead and read the lead layout guide. (November 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Andrew Weil | |
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Weil in 2015 | |
Born | Andrew Thomas Weil (1942-06-08) June 8, 1942 (age 82) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Alma mater | Harvard University |
Occupation(s) | Medical Doctor, author |
Andrew Thomas Weil (/waɪl/, born June 8, 1942) is an American celebrity doctor who advocates for integrative medicine.
Early life and education
Weil was born in Philadelphia, on June 8, 1942, the only child of parents who operated a millinery store, in a family that was Reform Jewish. He graduated from high school in 1959, and was awarded a scholarship from the American Association for the United Nations, giving him the opportunity to go abroad for a year, during which he lived with families in India, Thailand, and Greece. From this experience, he became convinced that American culture and science was insular and unaware of non-American practices. He began hearing that mescaline enhanced creativity and produced visionary experiences, and finding little information on the subject, he read The Doors of Perception by Aldous Huxley.
In 1960, Weil entered Harvard University, where he majored in biology with a concentration in ethnobotany. At Harvard, he developed curiosity about psychoactive drugs. He met Harvard psychologists Timothy Leary and Richard Alpert, and separately engaged in organized experimentation with mescaline. Weil wrote for Harvard Crimson. One published account of the period describes a falling out of Weil from the group that included the faculty—among whom the experimentation with drugs was contentious, and with regard to undergraduates, proscribed; the falling out involved an exposé on drug-use and supply that Weil wrote for the Crimson. Weil wrote of faculty experimentation with drugs in a series of Crimson pieces:
- "Better Than a Damn", (February 20, 1962), his apparent first Crimson piece;
- "Alpert Defends Drugs on 'Open End,'" (May 27, 1963); and
- "Investigation Unlikely in Dismissal of Alpert", (May 29, 1963).
and that this reporting included the claim that "undergraduates had indeed been able to obtain access to psilocybin from members" of the Harvard faculty research team that was involved in such research. As late as 1973, Weil's name appears in conjunction with an editorial regarding the 1963 firing of Alpert, which stated the view that it would be "unfortunate if the firing of Richard Alpert led to the suppression of legitimate research into the effects of hallucinogenic compounds", distancing himself and the Crimson from the "shoddiness of their work as scientists ... less of incompetence than of a conscious rejection of scientific ways of looking at things."
Weil's undergraduate thesis was titled "The Use of Nutmeg as a Psychotropic Agent", specifically, on the narcotic properties of nutmeg, inspired by a class with David McClelland, chair of the Department of Social Relations, and a former director of Harvard's Center for Research in Personality. In 1964, he graduated cum laude with a B.A. in biology.
Medical training
Weil entered Harvard Medical School, "not with the intention of becoming a physician but rather simply to obtain a medical education." He received a medical degree in 1968, although "the Harvard faculty ... threatened to withhold it because of a controversial marijuana study Weil had helped conduct" in his final year. Weil moved to San Francisco and completed a one-year medical internship at Mount Zion Hospital in 1968–69. While there, he volunteered at the Haight-Ashbury Free Clinic. Weil went on to complete one year of a two-year program at NIH, resigning due to "official opposition to his work with marijuana".
Career
Following his internship, Weil took a position with the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) that lasted approximately one year, to pursue his interests in research on marijuana and other drugs; during this time he may have received formal institutional permission to acquire marijuana for the research.
Weil is reported to have experienced opposition to this line of inquiry at the NIMH, to have departed to his rural northern Virginia home (1971-1972), and to have begun his practices of vegetarianism, yoga, and meditation, and work on writing The Natural Mind (1972). At the same time, Weil began an affiliation with the Harvard Botanical Museum that would span from 1971 to 1984, where his work included duties as a research associate investigating "the properties of medicinal and psychoactive plants". His interests led him to explore the healing systems of indigenous people, and with this aim, Weil traveled throughout South America and other parts of the world, "collecting information about medicinal plants and healing", from 1971 to 1975, as a fellow for the Institute of Current World Affairs.
In 1994, Weil founded the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine in Tucson, Arizona.
Andrew Weil is the founder of True Food Kitchen, a restaurant chain serving meals on the premise that food should make one feel better. There are currently 44 restaurants in the chain.
View of conventional medicine
Evidence-based medicine is a stated central component of the higher-order "system of systems" Weil envisions integrative medicine to be. It is clear that in both scholarly/academic and popular settings, Weil's statements suggest practices from alternative therapies as being something to add to conventional medical treatment plans. However, Weil is also on record speaking disparagingly of conventional, evidence-based medicine, both in academic and popular contexts. For instance, he is quoted as having said to a group commencing after a month-long training program in integrative medicine at the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine that "that evidence-based medicine, at its worst, 'is exactly analogous to religious fundamentalism'" (though the source leaves unclear whether any specific aspect of evidence-based medicine was given).
Influences and philosophy
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Weil acknowledges many experiences and individuals that have influenced his philosophical and spiritual ideas, and the techniques he considers valid in his approach to medicine. Weil has been open about his own history of experimental and recreational drug use, including experiences with narcotics and mind-altering substances. Among the individuals who strongly influenced his personal and professional life is the late osteopath Robert C. Fulford, who specialized in cranial manipulation. Weil has further stated that he respects the work of psychologist Martin Seligman, who pioneered the field of positive psychology and now directs the Positive Psychology Center at the University of Pennsylvania. Weil has also professed admiration for the work of Stephen Ilardi, professor of psychology at the University of Kansas, and author of The Depression Cure.
Weil is widely recognized as having a seminal role in establishing the field of integrative medicine, where this field is defined as:
a higher-order system of systems of care that emphasizes wellness and healing of the entire person (bio-psycho-socio-spiritual dimensions) as primary goals, drawing on both conventional and CAM approaches in the context of a supportive and effective physician-patient relationship.
He says that patients are urged to take the Western medicine prescribed by their physicians, and—in what Publishers Weekly describes as a message "becoming a signature formula"— "bend the 'biomedical model' to incorporate alternative therapies, including supplements like omega-3 fatty acids, vitamin D, and herbal remedies; meditation and other 'spiritual' strategies." Proper nutrition, exercise, and stress reduction are also emphasized by Weil. In particular, he is a proponent of diets that are rich in organic fruits, organic vegetables, and fish, and is a vocal critic of foods and diets rich in partially hydrogenated oils. In an interview on Larry King Live, Weil focused on a view that sugar, starch, refined carbohydrates, and trans-fats are more dangerous to the human body than saturated fats.
Regarding treatment strategies, their side effects, and their efficacy, Weil advocates for the use of whole plants as a less problematic approach in comparison to synthetic pharmaceuticals. In addition, Weil is an advocate of incorporating specific medicinal mushrooms into one's diet.
Weil has expressed opposition to the war on drugs, and takes a measured, nuanced approach to the use of recreational drugs.
Publications
Overview
While Weil's early books and publications primarily explored altered states of consciousness, he has since expanded the scope of his work to encompass healthy lifestyles and health care in general. In the last ten years, Weil has focused much of his work on the health concerns of older people. In his book Healthy Aging, Weil looks at the process of growing older from a physical, social, and cross-cultural perspective, and in his book Why our Health Matters is focused on health care reform.
Of his books, several have appeared on various bestseller lists, both as hardbacks and as paperbacks (many appearing so in the 1990s), some of them being Spontaneous Healing (1995; on the New York Times list), Eight Weeks to Optimum Health (1997; on the Publishers Weekly and New York Times lists), Eating Well for Optimum Health (2000; Publishers Weekly, New York Times), The Healthy Kitchen (2002, with chef Rosie Daley; New York Times), Healthy Aging (2005; New York Times), and Spontaneous Happiness (2011; New York Times).
List of popular works
Books
- The Natural Mind: An Investigation of Drugs and the Higher Consciousness (1972, rev. 2004);ISBN 0-618-47905-8
- The Marriage of the Sun and Moon: A Quest for Unity in Consciousness (Houghton Mifflin Company: 1980); ISBN 0-395-25723-9
- Health and Healing (1983, rev. 2004);ISBN 0-618-47908-2
- From Chocolate to Morphine: Everything you need to know about mind-altering drugs with Winifred Rosen (1983, rev. 1993 & 2004); ISBN 0-618-48379-9
- Natural Health, Natural Medicine (1990, rev. 2004);ISBN 0-618-47903-1
- Spontaneous Healing (Ballantine: 1995); ISBN 0-8041-1794-2
- Eight Weeks to Optimum Health (1997, rev. 2006);ISBN 978-0-345-49802-1
- Eating Well for Optimum Health (2000);ISBN 0-375-40754-5
- The Healthy Kitchen with Rosie Daley (2002);ISBN 0-375-41306-5
- Healthy Aging (2005);ISBN 0-375-40755-3
- Why Our Health Matters (2009)ISBN 978-1-59463-066-8
- Spontaneous Happiness (2011)ISBN 978-0-316-12942-8
- True Food: Seasonal, Sustainable, Simple, Pure (2014)ISBN 978-0-316-12941-1
- Fast Food, Good Food: More Than 150 Quick and Easy Ways to Put Healthy, Delicious Food on the Table (2015)ISBN 978-0-316-32942-2
Ask Dr. Weil collections
Published collections of answers to questions received on his DrWeil.com website:
- Women's Health ISBN 0-8041-1674-1
- Healthy Living ISBN 0-7515-2476-X
- Natural Remedies ISBN 0-8041-1675-X
- Common Illnesses ISBN 0-8041-1676-8
- Vitamins and Minerals ISBN 0-8041-1672-5
- Your Top Health Concerns ISBN 0-7515-2606-1
Audio-only publications
- Breathing: The Master Key to Self Healing, audio CD, Sounds True (2000).
In addition to the foregoing individual paperback, hardback, audio, and electronic versions, various combined and compendia editions have appeared.
Academic works
As of 2015, Weil was serving as series editor of an academic imprint from Oxford University Press called the Weil Integrative Medicine Library, volumes for clinicians in more than 10 medical specialties, including oncology, cardiology, rheumatology, pediatrics, and psychology. Weil co-edited the first volume, Integrative Oncology, with Donald Abrams, which appeared in 2009. Academic and scholarly reviews of the series and individual volumes were lacking as of 2015—in almost all cases, the publisher's "Reviews and Awards" tabs lack society or other published reviews (apart from Doody's). A cancer society review of the second edition of the series' Integrative Oncology volume, the first volume to have been published, describes the field as "an exciting new discipline" and the book as offering "best-practice methods to prevent cancer and support those affected by it on all levels: body, mind, and spirit" and as being comprehensive, and offering "meticulous, well-written chapters on proven and yet-to-be-proven methods for enhancing cancer care with integrative oncology."
Other works
Weil was a regular contributor to High Times magazine from 1975 to 1983. More recently, Weil has written the forewords to a variety of books, including Paul Stamets's Psilocybin Mushrooms of the World and Lewis Mehl-Madrona's Coyote Medicine. In the 21st century, Weil has occasionally written articles for Time magazine.
Critiques and controversies
Medical
Medical professionals in particular have criticized Weil for promoting treatment claims and alternative medicine practices described as unverified or inefficacious, or for otherwise rejecting aspects of evidence-based medicine. Weil's rejection of some aspects of evidence-based medicine and his promotion of alternative medicine practices that are not verifiably efficacious were criticized in a 1998 New Republic piece by Arnold S. Relman, emeritus editor-in-chief of The New England Journal of Medicine and emeritus professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. The late Barry Beyerstein of Simon Fraser University, writing in the journal Academic Medicine in 2001, criticized Weil and various aspects of complementary and alternative medicine, asserting that it held a "magical world-view"; he continued, saying,
On advocating emotional criteria for truth over criteria based on empirical data and logic, New Age medical gurus such as Andrew Weil ... have convinced many that "anything goes" ... By denigrating science, these detractors have enlarged the potential following for magical and pseudoscientific health products.
In 2003, Steven Knope, author of The Body/Mind Connection (2000), a physician trained at Weill Cornell Medical College, and former Chair of the Department of Medicine in the Tucson, Arizona, Carondelet system, criticized Weil in a televised discussion for what he considered irresponsible advocacy of untested treatments. Simon Singh, a recognized British science writer, and Edzard Ernst, a former Professor of Complementary Medicine at the University of Exeter, echoed Beyerstein's criticism in their 2008 book Trick or Treatment, saying that although Weil correctly promotes exercise and smoke-free lifestyles "much of his advice is nonsense."
Social
Hans Baer of the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the University of Arkansas, writing in 2003, has argued that Weil's approach represents a general limitation of the holistic health/New Age movement, in its "tendenc to downplay the role of social, structural, and environmental factors in the etiology of disease" in the United States, and in doing so, represents a failure to "suggest substantive remedies for improving access to health care", generally, for the "millions of people who lack any type of health insurance"; at the same time, Baer notes (with negative connotations) that Weil instead contributes "to a long tradition of entrepreneurialism in the U.S. medical system."
Ethical
Beginning in 2006, as the result of his commercial ventures, Weil—as David Gumpert has described—has placed himself in the "awkward position of ... having to defend himself against charges of inappropriately exploiting his medical-celebrity status." Commenting on a cover article in a recent 2006 edition of the Center for Science in the Public Interest's "highly respected" Nutrition Action Healthletter, Gumpert called attention to:
- a $14 million deal Weil's business enterprise had made with drugstore.com,
- the DrWeil.com personalized service of recommending supplements (purchase of which are made easy via DrWeil.com and drugstore.com),
- long-standing recommendations for supplements appearing despite studies questioning their efficacy, and to
- the clear nature of the pressures on Weil because of the deals, and the clear consanguinity of person and brand.
The Forbes article noted, in particular, drugstore.com's 2005 lawsuit against DrWeil.com for Weil's having "failed to perform any of his marketing obligations", noting that in a 2004 Larry King Live interview, Weil failed to promote this business partner, despite the program offering "reasonable opportunity for Weil to use efforts to promote drugstore.com." Moreover, the CSPI's newsletter noted that their investigations into the vitamin and supplement recommendation service led them to conclude that the algorithms behind the recommendations were, by default, set to recommend purchases: regardless of how the online inquiries of the personalized service were answered, "we couldn't get the Advisor to stop recommending that we buy supplements." The CSPI article concludes, "Beware of doctors who sell what they recommend."
In 2006, the Center for Science in the Public Interest also commented on a Time magazine piece by Weil rebutting a recent JAMA report on the failure of fish oil supplements to significantly reduce risk of serious heart arrhythmias, where he emphasized the benefits of fish oil supplements without a disclaimer that he had a direct commercial interest in the sale of these supplements.
Another specific criticism has been leveled with regard to the message of his Healthy Aging (2005), which argues that aging should be accepted as a natural stage in life, while these skin care products were being sold at Macy's with the advertising claim of the products' "optimiz skin's defense against aging"—alongside a large picture of Weil.
Weil has also been accused by others in the alternative health movement of being involved in the "dishonest practice of spreading fear, uncertainty, and doubt about competitors' products, while pretending to be objective 3rd ."
Political
Weil's 1983 Chocolate to Morphine roused the ire of Florida senator Paula Hawkins, "who demanded that the book, a veritable encyclopaedia of various drugs and their effects on humans, be removed from schools and libraries."
Formal corrective actions
In 2009, the US Food and Drug Administration sent a warning letter to Weil's Weil Lifestyle LLC, regarding "Unapproved / Uncleared / Unauthorized Products Related to the H1N1 Flu Virus" in particular, a "Notice of Potential Illegal Marketing of Products to Prevent, Treat or Cure the H1N1 Virus H1N1 Virus." The FDA was primarily concerned with several implicit claims in Weil Lifestyle LLC's marketing literature, that certain products could help ward off such viruses.
Awards and recognition
Weil appeared on the cover of Time magazine in 1997 and again in 2005, and Time named him one of the 25 most influential Americans in 1997 and one of the 100 most influential people in the world in 2005. He was inducted into the Academy of Achievement in 1998. His "Ask Dr. Weil" website was chosen by Forbes' Best of the Web Directory in 2009 for having offered "straightforward tips and advice on achieving wellness through natural means and educating the public on alternative therapies." The Integrative Healthcare Symposium (IHS) awarded Weil as the recipient of its 2022 Leadership Award.
Media appearances
Weil blogs for the Huffington Post and has been a frequent guest on Larry King Live on CNN, Oprah, and The Today Show. Weil appeared in the 2012 documentary on the need for a "rescue" of American healthcare, Escape Fire. He also appeared in the 2019 documentary Fantastic Fungi.
References
- Jameson, Marni (14 June 2010). "The cult of celebrity doctors". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ CSPI (January–February 2006). "Supplementing Their Income: How Celebrities Turn Trust Into Cash" (PDF). Nutrition Action Healthletter. Washington, DC: Center for Science in the Public Interest. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
- ^ Gumpert, David E. (March 27, 2006). "Small Business: Dr. Weil, Heal Thyself". Bloomberg. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
- ^ The editors of EB (2015). "Andrew Weil, American Physician", In Encyclopædia Britannica (online, 18 November), see , accessed 18 November 2015.
- "Andrew Weil, Shaman, M.D." The New York Times.
- Collins, Judy (2017-02-28). "15 - Lives of the diet gurus; Dr. Andrew Weil". Cravings: How I Conquered Food. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. pp. 92ff. ISBN 978-0-385-54132-9.
- ^ Lattin, Don (2010). The Harvard Psychedelic Club (Paperback ed.). New York, NY: HarperCollins. ISBN 9780061655944.
- ^ Garner, Dwight (January 7, 2010). "Books of the Times: Tune In, Turn On, Turn Page [Review, "The Harvard Psychedelic Club: How Timothy Leary, Ram Dass, Huston Smith and Andrew Weil Killed the Fifties and Ushered In a New Age for America," by Don Lattin]". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- ^ Anon. (1962). "Writer: Andrew T. Weil". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- Smith, Robert E. (March 15, 1962). "Psychologists Disagree On Psilocybin Research". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- ^ Finnegan, John P.; Freed, David (May 27, 2013). "In Early 1960s, Experiments With Hallucinogenics Caused Major Uproar, Minor Shake-up". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- ^ Doblin, Richard Elliot (2000). "The Evolution of the Regulation of the Medical Uses of Psychedelic Drugs and Marijuana (Chapter 1)" (PDF). Regulation of the Medical Use of Psychedelics and Marijuana (June 2000) (PhD). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University. pp. 5–69, esp. 36. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
- Weil, Andrew T. (February 20, 1962). "Better Than a Damn". The Harvard Crimson: 2. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
Subtitle: From the Bottle.
- Weil, Andrew T. (May 27, 1963). "Alpert Defends Drugs on 'Open End'". The Harvard Crimson: 1, 6.
- Weil, Andrew T. (May 29, 1963). "Investigation Unlikely in Dismissal of Alpert". The Harvard Crimson: 1. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
Faculty Members Regret Lack of Details, But See No Issue of Academic Freedom.
- Russin, Joseph M.; Weil, Andrew T. (January 24, 1973). "The Crimson Takes Leary, Alpert to Task". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
'Roles' & 'Games' In William James.
- ^ "Andrew Weil Biography and Interview". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
- ^ Baer, H.A. (2003). "The Work of Andrew Weil and Deepak Chopra—Two Holistic Health/New Age Gurus: A Critique of the Holistic Health/New Age Movements", Medical Anthropology Quarterly. 17 (2, June): 233-250, esp. 233f, 236, see and and , accessed 20 November 2015.
- ^ Baer, H. A. (2004). "Deconstructing Andrew Weil and Deepak Chopra (Chapter 5)". Toward an Integrative Medicine: Merging Alternative Therapies with Biomedicine. Vol. 17. Walnut Creek, CA: Rowman & Littlefield/AltaMira. pp. 119–136, esp. 120, 132f, and passim. doi:10.1525/maq.2003.17.2.233. ISBN 978-0759103023. PMID 12846118. S2CID 28219719. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
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ignored (help) - Lasswell, Mark (25 September 1995). "Mind Opener". People. 45 (13). Retrieved 23 November 2014.
- ^ Relman, Arnold (8 March 2002). "A Trip to Stonesville: Some Notes on Andrew Weil, M.D." Quackwatch. Archived from the original on 24 January 2017. Retrieved 8 May 2017.
- ICWA (2015). "Past Fellows: Andrew T. Weil, Years: 1971-1975, Topic: Altered States of Consciousness, Area: Mexico, Guatemala, Panama, Colombia, United States". Washington, DC, US: Institute of Current World Affairs. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
- ^ Integrative Oncology. Weil Integrative Medicine Library. Oxford University Press. 2014-09-03. ISBN 9780199329724. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
{{cite book}}
:|work=
ignored (help) - "Andrew Weil Center for Integrative Medicine, Leadership Team".
- ^ Bell IR, Caspi O, Schwartz GE, Grant KL, Gaudet TW, Rychener D, Maizes V, Weil A (January 2002). "Integrative medicine and systemic outcomes research: issues in the emergence of a new model for primary health care". Arch. Intern. Med. 162 (2): 133–40. doi:10.1001/archinte.162.2.133. PMID 11802746.
- ^ "Nonfiction Book Review: Spontaneous Happiness, Andrew Weil, author". Publishers Weekly. August 22, 2011.
- Anon (April 14, 2012). "Medicine and its rivals: The believers". The Economist. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
Subtitle: Alternative therapies are increasingly mainstream. That means headaches for scientists—and no cure in sight.
- Jim Parker; Christina Dye (May–June 1983Z). "No Bad Drugs: Interview with Dr. Andrew Weil". Newservice: 22–31. Archived from the original on March 3, 2009.
- Huba, S. (April 2, 1997). "Holistic healing's new role". The Cincinnati Post. Archived from the original on October 23, 2012.
- Weil, A. (2011) . Spontaneous healing. New York, NY: Knopf. p. 35. ISBN 9780679436072.
Subtitle: : How to discover and enhance your body's natural ability to maintain and heal itself.
- Weil, Andrew (October 30, 2011). "Culture: Andrew Weil's Spontaneous Happiness, Our Nature-Deficit Disorder". Newsweek. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- Weil, Andrew (March 31, 2005). "Spotting Trans-Fatty Acids?". DrWeil.com. Archived from the original on March 23, 2022. Retrieved 23 March 2022.
- Stamets, Paul (2020). Fantastic Fungi. Simon and Schuster. p. 85. ISBN 978-1-64722-172-0.
- Weil, Andrew; Rosen, Winifred (2004). From Chocolate to Morphine: Everything You Need to Know About Mind-Altering Drugs. HMH. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-547-52566-2.
- Weil & Rosen 2004, pp. 111–112
- Maryles, Daisy; Riippa, Laurele (March 19, 2001). "How They Landed On Top". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
Subtitle: In fiction, selling what sells; in nonfiction, small became beautiful.
- ^ "Search: 'Andrew Weil'". 2015. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
- ^ "Bestselling Books of the Year, 1996-2007". Publishers Weekly. March 24, 2008. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
- "Weil Integrative Medicine Library". oup.com. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
- E.g., for Integrative Cardiology, note absent tab at , and for Integrative Dermatology, note sole appearance of Doody's at
- Plana, Ronald (October 15, 2014). "Integrative Oncology: Mind, Body, and More [Bookmark; Title: Integrative Oncology (Second Edition), Editors: Donald I. Abrams, MD, and Andrew T. Weil, MD, Publisher: Oxford University Press]". The ASCO Post. 5 (16). Cold Spring Harbor, NY: American Society of Clinical Oncology. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
- Simunek, Chris (September 8, 2003). "Grow: Interview, Dr. Andrew Weil". High Times. Archived from the original on March 3, 2009.
- Weil, Andrew (2011) "Foreword", in Paul Stamets, Psilocybin Mushrooms of the World: An Identification Guide, Illustrated Edition, Berkeley, CA: Crown/Ten Speed Press, ISBN 0898158397, see , accessed 17 November 2015.
- Weil, Andrew (2011) "Foreword", in Lewis Mehl-Madrona, Coyote Medicine: Lessons from Native American Healing, p. 13f, New York, NY: Simon and Schuster, ISBN 1439144540, see , accessed 17 November 2015.
- "Andrew Weil, M.D." Time. December 11, 2006. Archived from the original on March 3, 2009. Retrieved June 5, 2013.
- Relman, Arnold S. (December 14, 1998). "A Trip to Stonesville: Andrew Weil, the boom in alternative medicine, and the retreat from science". The New Republic.
- Beyerstein, B. L. (2001). "Alternative Medicine and Common Errors of Reasoning". Academic Medicine. 76 (3): 230–237. doi:10.1097/00001888-200103000-00009. PMID 11242572. S2CID 41527148.
- Buckmaster, Bill (host) (2003). "[A discussion with Drs. Andrew Weil and Steven Knope on alternative medicine], (November 3, 2003)". Arizona Illustrated. Tucson, Arizona. PBS. KUAT-TV. Archived from the original on November 18, 2015. YouTube title (July 30, 2008): Dr. Steven Knope debates Andrew Weil on the merits of Integrative Medicine (Part I). Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- Singh, S. & Edzard, Ernst E. (2008). Trick or Treatment: The Undeniable Facts About Alternative Medicine. New York, NY: W. W. Norton. p. 256. ISBN 9780393337785.
- "Supplementing Their Income: How Celebrities Turn Trust Into Cash", (2006) Nutrition Action Newsletter, Center for Science in the Public Interest, January/February 2016, pp 3-6. Archived from the original on June 13, 2010. Accessed December 28, 2019.
- CSPI (June 19, 2006). "Time Runs Andrew Weil Advertorial". CSPI Newsroom: Integrity in Science Watch. Washington, DC: Center for Science in the Public Interest. Archived from the original on 2009-03-03. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- Wadler, Joyce (20 October 2005). "What Goes With Gray?". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 November 2014.
- Corriher, Sarah C. (2015) "Doctor Andrew Weil: Whose Side Is He Really On?", The Health Wyze Report, (online, undated), see , accessed 18 November 2015.
- Torgoff, Martin (2004). Can't Find My Way Home: America in the Great Stoned Age, 1945-2000. New York, NY: Simon and Schuster. p. 431ff. ISBN 978-0743258630. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
- FDA (2009). "Inspections, Compliance, Enforcement, and Criminal Investigations: Compliance Actions and Activities: Warning Letters, Weil Lifestyle LLC [October 15, 2009]". Washington, DC: U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Archived from the original on March 3, 2009.
Unapproved/Uncleared/Unauthorized Products Related to the H1N1 Flu Virus; and Notice of Potential Illegal Marketing of Products to Prevent, Treat or Cure the H1N1 Virus.
- Gupta, Sanjay (April 18, 2005). "Andrew Weil - The 2005 Time 100". Time. Archived from the original on March 3, 2009. Retrieved January 30, 2014.
- "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
- "Ask Dr. Weil". Forbes Best of the Web Directory. 2009. Archived from the original on 3 March 2009. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- "Andrew Weil accepts leadership award at IHSNY22". www.integrativepractitioner.com. Retrieved 2022-02-20.
- "Dr. Andrew Weil". The Huffington Post. 2015. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
- "CNN.com - Transcripts". Retrieved 2018-09-21.
- "Recipes for Your Heart". Retrieved 2018-09-21.
- Weil, Andrew (22 September 2005). "Why should I take a vitamin for my health?". Retrieved 2018-09-21.
- Catsoulis, Jeanette (October 4, 2012). "Review: Pitting Drug Regimens Against Prevention, 'Escape Fire: The Fight to Rescue American Healthcare' [NYT Critics' Pick]". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
- Turan, Kenneth (October 4, 2012). "Review: 'Escape Fire' Calls for Drastic Changes to U.S. Healthcare". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 25 November 2015.
Subtitle: Filmmakers Matthew Heineman and Susan Froemke not only deftly make the case that the system is ill but also effectively argue for a dramatic change in thinking.
- "Fantastic Fungi: A film by Louie Schwartzberg on Mycelial Connection". Fantastic Fungi.
Further reading
- The editors of EB (2015). "Andrew Weil, American Physician", In Encyclopædia Britannica (online, 18 November), see Andrew Weil | Biography, Books, & Facts, accessed 18 November 2015.
- Anon (April 14, 2012). "Medicine and its rivals: The believers". The Economist. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
Subtitle: Alternative therapies are increasingly mainstream. That means headaches for scientists—and no cure in sight.
- Garner, Dwight (January 7, 2010). "Books of the Times: Tune In, Turn On, Turn Page [Review, 'The Harvard Psychedelic Club: How Timothy Leary, Ram Dass, Huston Smith and Andrew Weil Killed the Fifties and Ushered In a New Age for America,' by Don Lattin]". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
External links
Categories:- 1942 births
- Living people
- 21st-century American Jews
- 21st-century American male writers
- 21st-century American non-fiction writers
- American drug policy reform activists
- American health and wellness writers
- American male non-fiction writers
- American medical writers
- Celebrity doctors
- Central High School (Philadelphia) alumni
- Diet food advocates
- The Harvard Crimson people
- The Harvard Lampoon alumni
- Harvard Medical School alumni
- Jewish American activists
- Jewish American non-fiction writers
- Jewish physicians
- Nautilus Book Award winners
- People in alternative medicine
- Physicians from California
- Psychedelic drug researchers
- Psychonautics researchers
- University of Arizona faculty