
The
Naturopathic Care Healesville is located at Moora
Moora a co-operative eco friendly residential
community located on a beautiful owned-in-common property situated
on Mount TooleBeWong, near the township of Healesville.
We have an organic farm with Community
Supported Agriculture (CSA) and run a Willing Workers
On Organic Farms (WWOOF) program. Open day for Moora Moora is
on the first Sunday of every month at 1pm. Appointments can be
made at the clinic Monday to Saturday.
"
Our food should be our medicine. Our medicine should be our food."
~ Hippocrates (460 BC - 377 BC)
Quality
foods are vital to optimum health, Jason and Ally give the patient
the knowledge of how to prevent illness, maintain health, and
reverse the effects of chronic disease using diet and lifestyle.
You do not have to become over zealous, because a little c'est
la vie is essential to good health, the key is learning moderation.
Jason
and Ally advise on the role of food in the promotion, maintenance
and restoration of optimum health. Information is given on the
energic properties and the known chemical constituents of foods
in order to overcome specific disease states and to raise vitality.
Jason
is a lecturer of Food as Medicine at Endeavour College of Natural
Health (formerly known as the Australian College of Natural Medicine).
Jason's
own experience with Crohn's disease (a severe inflammatory condition
of the digestive tract) led him on his own healing journey, of
which food plays a major part.
Jason
and Ally have a passion for using food as medicine to maintain
health and wellbeing, combining oriental traditions and modern
nutrition. Food as medicine is a basis, a foundation on which
to build other therapies. If a whole food diet is used medicines
prescribed will have a more profound effect and will be required
less.

The
Ten Reasons to Go Organic below are reprinted from Grow Organic
No. 102 October-December 1997 Excerpted from an article by Sylvia
Tawse in Delicious, April 1994 and CROPO Issue 23, July,1995.
1:
To Protect Future Generations
"We
have not inherited the earth from our fathers, we are borrowing
it from our children" -Lester Brown. The average child receives
four times more exposure than an adult to at least eight widely
used cancer-causing pesticides in food. Food choices made now,
determine your child's future health.
2.
To Prevent Soil Erosion
Soil
is the foundation of the food chain in organic gardening. In conventional
farming, however, the soil is used more as a medium to hold plants
in a vertical position, so they can be chemically fertilised.
Soil structure is neglected and the top-soil is washed or blown
away.
3.
To Protect Water Quality
Water
makes up two-thirds of our body mass and covers three quarters
of the planet. Pesticides and other chemicals widely contaminate
ground water and rivers and pollute our primary source of drinking
water.
4.
To Save Energy
Modern
farming uses more petroleum than any other industry. More energy
is now used to produce synthetic fertilisers than to till, cultivate
and harvest crops. Organic farming is still based on labor intensive
practices such as hand weeding, green manure and cover crops instead
of chemicals.
5.
To Keep Chemicals Off Your Plate
Many
pesticides and herbicides were registered long before extensive
research linking them to cancer and other diseases could be established.
They are poisons designed to kill living organisms and can also
harm humans. In addition to cancer, pesticides are implicated
in birth defects, nerve damage and genetic manipulations.
6.
To Protect Farm Workers
Farmers
have a much larger risk than non-farmers of contracting cancer.
Farm worker health is also a serious problem in developing nations,
where pesticide use can be poorly regulated. An estimated one
million people are poisoned annually by pesticides.
7.
To Help Small Farmers
Most
organic farms are small, independently owned family farms of less
than 100 acres. Many family farms have been lost this past decade.
Organic farming could be one of the few survival tactics left
for family farms.
8.
To Support A True Economy
Although
organic foods might seem more expensive than conventional foods,
conventional food prices don't reflect hidden costs such as pesticide
regulation and testing, hazardous waste disposal and clean up
and environmental damage. If the hidden environmental and social
costs of chemically-produced conventional produce were added to
that produce, it would be more than double the price of organic
food.
9.
To Promote Biodiversity
The
conventional farmer uses monoculture, the planting of large plots
of land with the same crop year after year. This approach leaves
the soil lacking in natural minerals and nutrients, which have
to be replaced by chemical fertilisers in increasing amounts.
Single crops are also more susceptible to pests, making farmers
more reliant on pesticides. Insects have become genetically resistant
to certain pesticides and despite the increased uses of chemicals,
crop losses are increasing. Organic farmers encourage natural
predators on their farms and are content with a smaller harvest.
They also practice crop rotation to add health and energy to the
soil.
10.
For A Better Taste
Organic
farming starts with the nourishment of the soil, which leads to
the nourishment of the plant and, ultimately, our palate. Ask
the many chefs who prefer to use organic foods.
Disclaimer:
Every
effort has been made to ensure that the content of this website
is accurate and current. The information herein is not designed
to replace the expert and individual medical advice provided by
your Health Care Provider.