Talk:Leo Galland
Page contents not supported in other languages.
Appearance
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Articles for deletion This article was nominated for deletion on 6 December 2021. The result of the discussion was keep.
Proposed deletion This page was proposed for deletion by ScienceFlyer (talk · contribs) on 4 December 2021.
This article must adhere to the biographies of living persons (BLP) policy, even if it is not a biography, because it contains material about living persons. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libellous. If such material is repeatedly inserted, or if you have other concerns, please report the issue to this noticeboard.If you are a subject of this article, or acting on behalf of one, and you need help, please see this help page .
This article is rated Stub-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale.
It is of interest to the following WikiProjects:
It is of interest to the following WikiProjects:
WikiProject icon This article is within the scope of WikiProject Biography , a collaborative effort to create, develop and organize Wikipedia's articles about people. All interested editors are invited to join the project and contribute to the discussion. For instructions on how to use this banner, please refer to the documentation.BiographyWikipedia:WikiProject BiographyTemplate:WikiProject Biographybiography
WikiProject icon This article is within the scope of WikiProject United States , a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of topics relating to the United States of America on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the ongoing discussions. United StatesWikipedia:WikiProject United StatesTemplate:WikiProject United StatesUnited States
Low This article has been rated as Low-importance on the project's importance scale.
WikiProject icon This article is within the scope of WikiProject Health and fitness , a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of health and physical fitness related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Health and fitnessWikipedia:WikiProject Health and fitnessTemplate:WikiProject Health and fitnessHealth and fitness
Low This article has been rated as Low-importance on the project's importance scale.
WikiProject icon This article is within the scope of WikiProject New York City , a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of New York City-related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.New York CityWikipedia:WikiProject New York CityTemplate:WikiProject New York CityNew York City
Low This article has been rated as Low-importance on the project's importance scale.
WikiProject icon This article is within the scope of WikiProject Medicine , which recommends that medicine-related articles follow the Manual of Style for medicine-related articles and that biomedical information in any article use high-quality medical sources. Please visit the project page for details or ask questions at Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Medicine .MedicineWikipedia:WikiProject MedicineTemplate:WikiProject Medicinemedicine
Low This article has been rated as Low-importance on the project's importance scale.
WikiProject icon This article is within the scope of WikiProject Alternative medicine , a collaborative effort to improve the coverage of Alternative medicine related articles on Wikipedia. If you would like to participate, please visit the project page, where you can join the discussion and see a list of open tasks.Alternative medicineWikipedia:WikiProject Alternative medicineTemplate:WikiProject Alternative medicineAlternative medicine
The Free Image Search Tool or Openverse Creative Commons Search may be able to locate suitable images on Flickr and other web sites. Upload
Prod removed
[edit ]Removing all the sources and then proposing deletion because there are no sources is not how it's done. Binksternet (talk) 05:55, 4 December 2021 (UTC) [reply ]
- Thanks for your comment. As I wrote on the fringe noticeboard, the article hadn't been edited for nearly a year. I then made edits to remove a reference to a defunct and non-notable Huffington Post column (such content was well-known as fringe) and being a "Castle Connolly top doctor" (which is also not notable and considered a scam by some).
- Which sources are you proposing to keep? What do you propose? There doesn't seem to be good sources and notability to support an article for this individual. ScienceFlyer (talk) 08:26, 4 December 2021 (UTC) [reply ]
- Frankly, having looked at the article in the state it was in before ScienceFlyer's latest edits, I'm astonished that someone with Binksternet's long editing experience would think that the article was appropriately sourced, or did anything to establish notability under Wikipedia guidelines. AndyTheGrump (talk) 12:23, 4 December 2021 (UTC) [reply ]
- I have added three reliable sources that verify Leo Galland is a New-York based internist, and removed the PROD. Whether he meets independent notability is a different issue, and a discussion that should be had at WP:AFD. --Animalparty! (talk) 20:24, 4 December 2021 (UTC) [reply ]
Additional sources
[edit ]While the AfD is ongoing, I place here an incomplete, partially annotated list of sources that cover Galland and/or his books, research, and practice, for possible future expansion. --Animalparty! (talk) 04:57, 13 December 2021 (UTC) [reply ]
- Breitbart, Barbara R, ed. (1987). Who's Who in the Biobehavioral Sciences (2nd ed.). New York: Research Institute of Psychophysiology. p. 78. ISBN 978-0-914709-01-5. (basic biographic information, compiled from self-reported questionnaires)
- Brody, Jane E. (October 26, 1989). "HEALTH: Diagnostics; Test Unmasks a Parasitic Disease". The New York Times .
- Ferraro, Susan (3 August 1998). "Consider the Alternative: Total Health Becomes the Option of Mainstream Medicine". New York Daily News . (Dedicated profile of Galland)
- "Doctor offers healing reading". The Times-Picayune . 19 August 1997. p. F5 – via NewsBank. (Profile of Galland and The Four Pillars of Healing: "Dr. Leo Galland is a medical detective who uses his extensive training (at Harvard University and New York University Medical School) to search for answers to real-life medical mysteries. His patients have problems that defy standard treatment. But then, Galland is not your standard physician...")
- Ansorge, Rick (July 29, 1997). "Doctor devoted to righting bodily disharmonies". The Gazette . Colorado Springs. p. 1 – via NewsBank. ("Dr. Leo Galland makes an unlikely apostle for alternative medicine. Schooled in conventional medicine, he's a no-nonsense doc who specializes in treating undiagnosed and hard-to-treat illnesses at his private practice in New York City. You won't find him posing with a bundle of herbs and a mud-smeared face as one of his contemporaries, Dr. Andrew Weil, recently did in Time magazine. But in his just-published new book, The Four Pillars of Healing (Random House), Galland, 54, makes a passionate case for the fusion of alternative and conventional medicine."}}
- Mironowicz, Margaret (4 July 1997). "MD an architect of integrated healing". Waterloo Region Record . p. F1 – via NewsBank.
- "Healthy diet of healing in new books". Austin American-Statesman . 13 July 1997. p. D8 – via NewsBank.
- Berger, Jody (17 April 2015). "Diet, exercise, nutrition can fight autoimmune diseases, some now say". The Deseret News – via NewsBank. (Galland one of several physicians quoted discussing autoimmune disorders, introduced as: "Dr. Leo Galland, director of the Foundation for Integrated Medicine, which is based in New York, an award-winning clinician and the author of several highly acclaimed books."
- "Diet Bookshelf". The Salt Lake Tribune . 3 January 2006. p. B2 – via NewsBank. (book review of The Fat Resistance Diet)
- "The Four Pillars of Healing: How the New Integrated Medicine - The Best of Conventional and Alternative Approaches - Can Cure You". Publishers Weekly . Vol. 244, no. 18. May 5, 1997. p. 204. (book review of The Four Pillars of Healing)
- Marty, Alan T. (1997). "The Four Pillars of Healing". Chest . 112 (6): A16. (book review of The Four Pillars of Healing)
- Hutch, Richard A. (2000). "On Being a "Hip" Doctor Today". Pastoral Psychology. 49 (1): 51–68. doi:10.1023/A:1004673515865. (Extensive analysis of Gallard's The Four Pillars of Healing, e.g.: I begin with a model of healing developed by a leading New York based practitioner of allopathic medicine, Leo Galland. Galland has specialised in treating patients who are at wit's end, that is, their treatment by other physicians has proved to little or no avail and they come to him as a "last resort"... Galland, however, has developed a model of diagnosis that attempts to put the patient back into the picture of health care. Following a summary of Galland's model of diagnosis, I will suggest how treatment protocols of some medical practitioners in the present appear to be responsive to the emphases of his diagnostic model... Galland has done us the service of setting out a "big picture" that portrays how the patient, "eclipsed" from most contemporary allopathy, can be put back into the picture of health and healing... Galland espouses traditional biomedical assumptions about medicine as premised mostly upon rationalism and Darwinism (and, to a lesser degree, empiricism).)
Alternative medicine literature
- Bland, Jeffrey S. (1994). "Neurobiochemistry: A New Paradigm for Managing Brain Biochemical Disturbances" (PDF). Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine. 9 (3): 177–185.
- Jones, David S.; Bland, Jeffrey S. (2005). "History of Functional Medicine" (PDF). Textbook of Functional Medicine. Gig Harbor, WA: Institute for Functional Medicine. pp. 10–14. ISBN 9780977371303.
- Bland, Jeffrey S. (October 2019). "Systems Biology Meets Functional Medicine". Integrative Medicine. 18 (5): 14–18. PMC 7219445 . PMID 32549839.
- "Leo Galland receives Linus Pauling Award". Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine . 6 (5): 27. 2000.
- Schopick, Julia (2005). "Drug–Nutrient Interactions: Leo Galland, M.D., Discusses His New Database" (PDF). Alternative and Complementary Therapies. 11 (2). Mary Ann Liebert: 78–82. doi:10.1089/act.20051178. (Interview with introductory biographical content).
- "The Allergy Solution: A Clinical Conversation with Leo Galland, MD, and Robert Rountree, MD". Alternative and Complementary Therapies. 23 (1): 1–6. 2017. doi:10.1089/act.2016.29090.lga.
Primary sources
- Adatto, Kiku; Doebele, Kathleen Gormale; Galland, Leo; Granowetter, Linda (1979). "Behavioral Factors and Urinary Tract Infection". JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association . 241 (23): 2525. doi:10.1001/jama.1979.03290490031020.
- Galland, Leo (1985). "Magnesium Deficiency in Mitral Valve Prolapse". In Halpern, MJ; Durlach, J (eds.). Magnesium Deficiency: Physiopathology and Treatment Implications 1st European Congress on Magnesium, Lisbon, October 1983. Karger. pp. 117–119. doi:10.1159/000410559.
- Galland, Leo (1985). "Normocalcemic tetany and candidiasis". Magnesium. 4 (5–6): 339–344. PMID 3914583.
- Galland, Leo (1986). "Increased requirements for essential fatty acids in atopic individuals: a review with clinical descriptions". Journal of the American College of Nutrition . 5 (2): 213–228. doi:10.1080/07315724.1986.10720126.
- Galland, Leo (1988). "Magnesium and inflammatory bowel disease". Magnesium. 7 (2): 78–83. PMID 3294519.
- Galland, Leo (1988). "Magnesium and immune function: an overview". Magnesium. 7 (5–6): 290–299. PMID 3075245.
- Galland, Leo; Lee, Marty; Bueno, Herman; Heimowitz, Colette (1990). "Giardia lamblia Infection as a cause of Chronic Fatigue". Journal of Nutritional Medicine . 1 (1): 27–31. doi:10.3109/13590849009003131.
- Witkin, S. S.; Kalo-Klein, A.; Galland, L.; Teich, M.; Ledger, W. J. (1991). "Effect of Candida albicans plus Histamine on Prostaglandin E2 Production by Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells from Healthy Women and Women with Recurrent Candidal Vaginitis". Journal of Infectious Diseases . 164 (2): 396–399. doi:10.1093/infdis/164.2.396.
- Galland, Leo (1997). "Intestinal Toxicity: New Approaches to an Old Problem". Alternative and Complementary Therapies . 3 (4): 288–295. doi:10.1089/act.1997年3月28日8.
- Galland, Leo (2005). "Patient-centered Care: Antecedents, Triggers, and Mediators" (PDF). Textbook of Functional Medicine. Gig Harbor, WA: Institute for Functional Medicine. pp. 79–92. ISBN 9780977371303.
- Galland, Leo (2010). "Diet and Inflammation". Nutrition in Clinical Practice . 25 (6): 634–640. doi:10.1177/0884533610385703. (Invited review article)
- Stevens, Laura J; Kuczek, Thomas; Burgess, John R; Stochelski, Mateusz A; Arnold, L Eugene; Galland, Leo (2013). "Mechanisms of behavioral, atopic, and other reactions to artificial food colors in children". Nutrition Reviews . 71 (5): 268–281. doi:10.1111/nure.12023.
- Galland, Leo (2014). "The Gut Microbiome and the Brain". Journal of Medicinal Food . 17 (12): 1261–1272. doi:10.1089/jmf.2014.7000.
- Galland, Leo; Galland, Jonathan (2017). "The Stress–Allergy Connection". Alternative and Complementary Therapies . 23 (4): 144–145. doi:10.1089/act.2017.29118.lga.
- Galland, Leo (2019). "Lifestyle Influences on the Microbiome". In Perlmutter, David (ed.). The Microbiome and the Brain. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. ISBN 9781351235709.
Categories:
- Biography articles of living people
- Stub-Class biography articles
- Stub-Class biography (science and academia) articles
- Low-importance biography (science and academia) articles
- Science and academia work group articles
- WikiProject Biography articles
- Stub-Class United States articles
- Low-importance United States articles
- Stub-Class United States articles of Low-importance
- WikiProject United States articles
- Stub-Class Health and fitness articles
- Low-importance Health and fitness articles
- WikiProject Health and fitness articles
- Stub-Class New York City articles
- Low-importance New York City articles
- WikiProject New York City articles
- Stub-Class medicine articles
- Low-importance medicine articles
- Stub-Class society and medicine articles
- Low-importance society and medicine articles
- Society and medicine task force articles
- All WikiProject Medicine pages
- Stub-Class Alternative medicine articles
- Wikipedia requested images of people of the United States