Alexander G. Schauss, PhD, FACN, CEDS, is the Director of Natural and Medicinal Products Research, Life Sciences Division, American Institute for Biosocial and Medical Research, Inc., in Puyallup, Washington. Dr. Schauss is Adjunct Research Professor of Botanical Medicine at the National College of Naturopathic Medicine in Portland, Oregon, and former Clinical Professor of Natural Products Research at the same institution. He has held academic appointments at other institutions, including: Associate Professor of Research at the Southwest College of Naturopathic Medicine and Health Sciences, in Tempe, Arizona; Senior Director of the Southwest College Research Institute in Scottsdale, Arizona; Research Director, Graduate School, City University, Seattle; and, Lecturer in Biostatistics and Epidemiology at Bastyr University in Seattle. Dr. Schauss has been a member of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Office of Alternative Medicine (OAM) Advisory Council (AMPAC) and the Developmental Planning Committee of the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements (ODS). He has been an invited reviewer on botanical standards and information monographs for the US Pharmacopoeia Convention (USP). Dr. Schauss has studied nutrition and botanical medicine for over 30 years. He is a Fellow of the American College of Nutrition (FACN), an Emeritus Member of the New York Academy of Sciences, former Chairman of the Food Policy Council of the National Council for Public Health Policy, an Honorary …
Posts Tagged ‘video’
Dr Schauss speaks at the 2008 Monavie Convention Official Video
Wednesday, June 16th, 2010J Sex Med vs Women’s sexual health-not scientific article-appropriate video for all users
Sunday, April 11th, 2010
Why the Journal of Sexual Medicine (Editor Dr. Irwin Goldstein) has censored this Editorial Comment?… From an anatomical point of view the clitoris cannot be in contact with the anterior vaginal wall and finally the G-spot is only an hypothesis without scientific bases. There is no embryological, anatomical and physiological support about the special sensitivity of the lower anterior vaginal wall. The meaning of words is important in science, but particularly in female sexuality and sexual medicine experts and sexologists should spread certainties for all women not hypotheses or personal opinions: they should use correct scientific terminology. In Foldes’s article, O’Connell’s article, Jannini’s article there are many scientific mistakes! “The clitoral complex, composed of the distal vagina, urethra, and clitoris, is the location of female sexual activity, analogous to the penis in men”: this definition written in O’Connell’s article has no embryological, anatomical and physiological support and in the male penis there is not a vagina. To describe the cluster of erectile tissues (clitoris, bulbs and corpus spongiosum, labia minora, corpus spongiosum of the female urethra) responsible for female orgasm, the correct (and simple) anatomical term is female penis. Sexologists should define as making love, making sex, the case in which the orgasm happens in both partners with or without a vaginal intercourse (Vincenzo Puppo 2005)… See other videos in newsexology