Immunity and Individuality
What Children Need for Their Healthy Development — for Life
- Publisher
InterActions - Published
3rd September - ISBN 9781915594020
- Language English
- Pages 102 pp.
- Size 5.25" x 8"
From the latest research and insights in immunology
Citing the latest research in immunology, Thomas Hardtmuth’s exposition challenges the prevalent medical thinking on what is really needed for children’s healthy development into adulthood. From research on the gut–brain axis and the microbiome to studies on the role our individuality and emotions play in their interaction with—and as part of—the immune system, the insights described in this book are bound to turn many concepts of health upside down. It is essential knowledge for all fields of health, education and parenting.
“Extremely informative, clear and easily understandable, Thomas Hardtmuth presents a must-read for all those who deal with children and adolescents and are interested in the development of a healthy, strong immune system.... With the latest scientific findings, he takes us on an exciting journey and shows how complex but also how multi-layered and differentiated the human immune system works—and has to learn to work in the first place!... By the end of the reading one not only feels well informed: those who read the book also feel deeply touched, inwardly refreshed and enriched by new aha-experiences—and motivated to put this knowledge into practice.”
— Michaela Glöckler, MD
“When medicine finally throws off its materialistic, pharma-centric ideology and becomes a genuinely holistic scientific practice, this book is what a new-paradigm medicine will look like. A must-read, leading-edge book for a new, properly founded medical science.”
— Richard House, PhD, Chartered Psychologist, coauthor of Beyond Mainstream Medicine
“I would go as far as to suggest it as first-line reading for everyone, especially, but not only, for those in educational and therapeutic professions who realize the critical point that humanity has now reached and are seeking alternatives.”
— James Dyson, MD
C O N T E N T S:
Foreword by Michaela Glöckler
Introduction
Immunological development
Individual processing of external influences: four interacting levels
The brain as a higher immune organ
The ‘Gut–Brain Axis’
Why is it healthy to have microbial diversity?
The microbiome and modern diseases
Emotions, trauma and immune system
Resilience
Touch, skin and psyche
Epigenetics
Autoimmune diseases
Warmth and immune functions
Ego presence and immune functions
Summary
Index
Thomas Hardtmuth, MD
Dr. Thomas Hardtmuth, MD, born in 1956, is a physician and freelance writer. He studied medicine in Munich and works as a senior physician specializing in thoracic surgery at the Heidenheim Clinic. Dr. Hardtmuth lectures and leads seminars in the field of medical and anthropological issues. His publications include Das verborgene Ich: Aspekte zum Verständnis der Krebskrankheit (The hidden “I”: Aspects of understanding cancer), 2003 and Denkfehler. Das Dilemma der Hirnforschung (Errors in thinking: The dilemma of brain research), 2006.