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Death by Natural Causes

The circumstances of a teenager's medical emergency are in dispute. But her case raises important questions about the line between increasingly popular naturopathic health care and standard medical treatment.

Su and Arnold Wilson of Kenmore, with a photo of their deceased daughter, Megan.
Annie Marie Musselman
Su and Arnold Wilson of Kenmore, with a photo of their deceased daughter, Megan.

Around 11:30 a.m. on July 25, 2001, Su Wilson found her 16-year-old daughter, Megan, lying in bed at their Kenmore home, her chest heaving. "Megan, get up! You have to use your medication," Su recalls telling her daughter, who suffered from chronic asthma. According to her mother's recollections, Megan rose from her bed and used a device called a nebulizer, which transmitted a medicinal vapor to her lungs. When that didn't work, Su called Megan's primary care physician, a Kirkland naturopath named Lucinda Messer.

One critical fact about that day is in dispute. Messer says that she repeatedly urged Megan and her mother to go to the hospital—and they refused. It's noted on the medical chart from that day. But Su Wilson insists Messer never mentioned the hospital.

In any case, these things seem clear: Several hours after Megan woke up, she and her mother arrived at Messer's office, which at the time was across the street from Evergreen Hospital. Messer was busy with another client, so an acupuncturist who worked out of the office, Dan Brown, performed acupuncture on Megan. Messer then treated Megan with a shot of vitamin B-12 and an herbal remedy called a tincture.

What Messer did not do was perform tests used by conventional medical doctors to determine the severity of an asthmatic attack and whether a patient needs to receive emergency care. There is no consensus on whether such tests should be a part of naturopathic care. But most medical doctors agree that they are essential. "The very basics were not done with this child," says Robert Baratz, a Massachusetts internist and critic of alternative medicine who reviewed documents related to the case at the request of Seattle Weekly.

Megan and her mother went home. Some time later, with Megan still struggling to breathe, her father, Arnold Wilson, took her to Lakeshore Clinic. She lost consciousness as they drove into the parking lot and never recovered. Megan Wilson, a pretty, easygoing teenager with long, dark hair and Chinese features inherited from her mother, was pronounced dead at 6:43 p.m., the summer before her junior year of high school. She died of an attack that almost certainly would not have been fatal had she received standard hospital treatment.

The state Department of Health is investigating Messer. Unwilling to release details of an open investigation, the agency will not confirm whether the Megan Wilson case is at issue. But the timing of the investigation, launched in November, coincides with an anonymous letter the Department of Health received outlining the circumstances of Megan's death. The case also resulted in a lawsuit by the girl's parents against Messer and Brown.

It is a landmark case for alternative medicine in this state, both because of the tragic outcome and because it raises important questions about the standard of care to which alternative practitioners should be held.

It also reflects a new era in naturopathy, a field which, simply put, believes in using nature to heal nature. Home to the country's most prominent school of alternative medicine, Bastyr University in Kenmore, Washington is one of only 14 states plus the District of Columbia that licenses naturopaths. In 1993, as part of a sweeping health care reform package, the state passed a law requiring insurance companies to cover services rendered by all types of licensed health care providers, including naturopaths. The move prompted several insurance plans to proffer naturopaths as primary care providers. Regence BlueShield did so. So did Boeing, which is self-insured and is where Megan's father works the graveyard shift as a heating and refrigeration technician.

Once confined largely to providing care that supplements treatment by medical doctors, naturopaths increasingly have become the first person to which patients in all kinds of distress will turn. In April, the Legislature strengthened naturopaths' primary care role by expanding their authority to prescribe drugs, including controlled substances such as codeine and testosterone.

The backing by the state and insurance companies has fueled naturopathy's growth. Numbering in the dozens only a few decades ago locally, naturopaths now claim 700 license holders statewide.

"My case was the first case in Washington where natural medicine was tried—and nobody knew what they were doing," Messer says. Actually, the case never reached trial. It was settled in 2003 for a confidential amount that Messer says was around $250,000 or $300,000. Messer's insurance company never reported the settlement to the state Department of Health, as required by state law.

Messer herself, however, reported the case to the Naturopathic Physicians Board of Medical Examiners in Arizona, where she is also licensed. The board dismissed the case. Looking through the case file now, its executive director, Craig Runbeck, realizes that the board seemed to have considered only information supplied by Messer.


'It's crap, bullshit stuff,' Dr. Lucinda Messer says of the Wilsons' charges of negligence. She asserts that it's the Wilsons who were negligent for shunning conventional medical help. 'There was so much neglect here.'

"It's crap, bullshit stuff," Messer says of the Wilsons' charges of negligence. She asserts that it's the Wilsons who are guilty of negligence for shunning conventional medical help. "There was so much neglect here," she says. If patients ignore your advice, she asks, "What do you do? What do you do?"

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  • 07/26/2011 9:54:00 AM

    As their studies compile, more herbs and treatments are added to the list of accepted medicines. However, many herbs and treatments have been proven to be bogus medicine. This represents a challenge for both the user and the agencies because they have to ascertain that the treatments they either use or advocate are legitimate.

  • 07/26/2011 8:34:00 AM

    Reseach into herbal medicine is growing and evidence of efficacy is growing at a rapid rate. Universities such as the University of Meryland Medical Centre, are publishing good quality, researched information on herbal medicine, herbs and other aspects of alternative medicine.

  • WLU 07/22/2011 5:13:00 PM

    This article is a prime example of false balance. Naturopathy has no uniting theme, no scientific basis; it consists solely of treatment modalities that have not been proven effective by scientific research. Many of them are so dubious that it would revolutionize several branches of knowledge if they turned out to be true. The prime example is homeopathy, which isn't "controversial" as stated in the article. Homeopathy is rank quackery, there's no reason to expect it to work beyond providing (expensive) comfort while the body heals without assistance. Most are also self-contradictory; a naturopath will use both acupuncture and ayurvedic at the same time despite completely different frameworks and theories. Naturopaths themselves essentially admit their nostrums are ineffective through their advocacy for the right to prescribe real medications. Treatments demonstrated genuinely effective will simply be adopted by mainstream medicine, another reason why naturopathy can only define itself by criticizing real medicine. And the standard party lines spouted by "natural treatment" groups are rank nonsense as well: "It's thousands of years old/ancient wisdom" just means it's old; dying of smallpox, or during child birth, or from a broken bone is older than any medicine out there. Ancient Egyptians used crocodile dung for birth control. Old just means old, it doesn't mean effective. "Big Pharma is evil" is both not an argument, and hypocritical. Last I checked naturopaths and the companies that produced the products they used were not doing it for free. "It's natural" doesn't mean it's safe. Snake venom is natural, so is cholera. Nature didn't come into existence to treat our diseases, nature created most of them. "Real medicines have risks" doesn't justify using fake medicines. Real medicines have risks because they do something, fake medicines like homeopathic preparations are simply a waste of money. Further, such fake medicines can delay effective treatments with tragic results, such as in this article. "Doctors only treat, they don't prevent" is also nonsense. Doctors routinely conduct tests for conditions that don't show symptoms such as high blood pressure and cholesterol. Doctors also routinely recommend maintaining a reasonable weight and exercise to their patients and have done so for decades. It is not the doctor's fault if a patient fails to follow through with their recommendations, and it certainly doesn't justify believing in (expensive) magic. "Doctors don't care about their patients" is also false. Doctors do care, but most health behaviors require engagement from the patient. There are a lot of patients to see, doctors must make good use of their time. Naturopathy represents an expensive service of dubious merit that is only available to the relatively well-off. A system being imperfect means the system should be improved. It doesn't justify any other system. The choice is not "medicine vs naturopathy", there is a legion of choices and the best ones are the ones with solid evidence behind them. Problems with medicine does not make naturopathy's approach, training or treatments any better, it just means there are problems with medicine. Naturopathy's flaws remain no matter how many side effects chemotherapy might have.

  • Medical Negligence Ireland 07/01/2011 9:33:00 AM

    It is true that can be the natural cause of the death because today every things is mixture any medicine so it is good cause of the disease which be occur the people is die.

  • trish russell 03/28/2009 9:14:00 PM

    I can tell you lots of Death stories by Hospitals and Docters , it can happen to anyone,,, the parents should have taken her to a emergency room without asking anyone. My son went to school with a boy who was at home with a headache and his dad found him ,, took him to the Lakeshore clinic with "real" docters they sent him home and said he had the Flu,,, He died 10 hours later from "Bacterial Meningitis" So everyone makes mistakes sadly but The parents should have known better.... I have more stories about family and docters and hospitals that make death mistakes...

  • sh 01/03/2009 3:26:00 PM

    Where is Child Protective Services in all of this? How messed up do these parents have to be, in order to not read up on Asthma, and understand how serious a problem it is? As for the Quack in this story, please continue to tincture yourself, but leave others alone. Quackery is setting back the American view of health care by 100 years. Why not just drill holes in people's heads, or let blood? Nothing about Naturopathy or Homeopathy is discrete science, merely some truth mixed with mythos. People that believe in this crap should be allowed to die on their own, but should not be allowed to spread this crap to other people. This story basically highlights the problems people who believe in this stuff, given the huge resource which the internet is, it's hard for me to believe the parents would choose a quack. I would charge the parents, and the Quack involved in this, this is outright child abuse.

  • Kasra Pournadeali 01/30/2008 4:35:00 AM

    The June 8th article �Death by Natural Causes� by Nina Shapiro does not accurately reflect the training, regulation or safe practice of naturopathic medicine in Washington State. In her article, Ms Shapiro complains about naturopathic training, focusing on how there is no mandatory residency program. She, quotes off-hand comments about how important residency was for some medical doctors, but fails to mention that the training of naturopathic physicians includes graduation from an institution that is accredited by organizations recognized by the U. S. Department of Education, how it includes both classroom and clinical training, and how it meets the stringent requirements of the State of Washington Department of Health. She also neglects to include how naturopathic graduates must pass national board exams prior to licensure, and how the education, training and licensure of naturopathic physicians has been determined by numerous expert bodies to be consistent with the practice of naturopathic medicine in this state. Ms Shapiro then takes exception with naturopathic medicine functioning under it own standards of practice using quotes including: �There can�t be a double standard.� She fails to mention that, in the treatment of asthma, the naturopathic standards are very similar to conventional medical standards. Naturopathic protocols include limiting allergens and other asthma triggers as well as the use of nutrition, botanicals and other adjuncts to help the patient�s overall status, and that it is agreed that a naturopathic physician (just as a medical primary care physician) must immediately refer to a medical specialist or the ER without hesitation when appropriate. Every health care profession has its own standards based on tried and true regulatory process. Naturopathic Medicine, in this respect, is no different. Ms Shapiro then criticizes: �In investigating naturopaths, however, the Department of Health consults only their peers, not medical doctors.� She fails to mention that all health care professions utilize peer regulation in Washington State in a process managed and directed by the State of Washington Department of Health. The inference that disciplinary determinations are made without expert knowledge is simply untrue. The Department of Health can and does secure all of the necessary expert data before reaching a determination in a disciplinary matter regardless of where the expert comes from. If the case Ms. Shapiro mentions is in the state disciplinary process you can be certain that a fair and knowledgeable determination will be forthcoming. Ms Shapiro then assaults the scientific credibility of naturopathic medicine with the off-hand quote �Many naturopathic interventions are poorly supported by science�. In fact, conventional medicine, naturopathic medicine and all other health care professions include treatments that are well studied, and some that are not. Many traditional therapies that have provided long-term safe and consistent outcomes have not been subject to clinical trials. This applies to conventional medicine, naturopathic medicine and virtually every other health care practice. We are all moving toward increasing clinical trials with evidence-based treatment models. In fact, naturopathic medicine does have a strong evidence-based component, and it is unfair to characterize the naturopathic profession & naturopathic practice based on a single quote without facts. Millions of Americans use natural medicine every day with documented success. And, naturopathic physicians, who have led the safe and effective delivery of these treatments in Washington State for more than 90 years, have among the best safety record of any profession in our state. Naturopathic Medicine meets the highest standards of education, training, licensure, regulation and safety. It is not reasonable to try to discredit this profession�s high standards and exceptional safety record using opinions and quotes without facts or balancing data. Nor is it reasonable to condemn a profession because it is not conventional medicine. We are different even though we share many treatments, and therefore we use standards and protocols that are consistent with our unique practice. We provide safe, effective, evidence-based treatments that are not part of conventional medicine just as conventional providers provide safe, effective care that is different from what we provide. Our standards are not lesser because they are different. In fact, contrary to the tone of Ms Shapiro�s article, naturopathic physicians enjoy a close, cooperative relationship with medical physicians in our state in part because we strive to maintain the highest standards. Kasra Pournadeali, ND, President, Washington Association of Naturopathic Physicians 21 June 2005

 

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