Burt H Brooks
 

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Burt H. Brooks

Curriculum Vitae 2007

                                                                            for

                                         Bert H. Brooks, D.V.M., B.A., A.A.

                                                                     July 4, 2007

                                                                             

1967                A.A. Degree (Chemistry) from Montgomery College (Maryland).

1969                B.A. Degree (Majors:  Chemistry & Mathematics; Minor: Spanish; K-12 Teaching Credentials) from State University of New York at Brockport.

1969 - 1972     Peace Corps Volunteer in Arequipa and Cuzco, Peru, South America. Taught chemistry, mathematics, physics & scientific photography at La Universidad Católica de Santa María, all in Spanish.

1970                Began breeding, raising, training and showing Peruvian Paso horses. Trained five national champion Peruvian Pasos before graduation from veterinary school.

1972 - 1973     Returned from Peace Corps Peru with 5 Peruvian Pasos and moved to Woodland, CA, to study at UC Davis in preparation for becoming a veterinarian.

1976                Returned to Peru on a horse buying trip.  (Purchased 23 horses for my ranch and filled orders from other horse enthusiasts.)  Began vet school. Owning as many as 40+ Peruvian horses during the peak of the Rancho Paso Peruvian Horse business, now we have only eight Peruvian Pasos which serve as test subjects in the trials of non-invasive nutritional supplement experiments.

1980                Graduated from University of California at Davis School of Veterinary Medicine and opened the Cache Creek Veterinary Service (CCVS) in Woodland, California. Initiated on-going membership in the California Veterinary Medical Association (CVMA) and the American Veterinary Medical Assoc. (AVMA).

1988                Founded the Tri-County Veterinary Association (Woodland, CA) in an effort to improve communication among local practicing veterinarians and increase opportunities for obtaining local Continuing Education courses.

1989                CCVS becomes CCHVS (Cache Creek Holistic Veterinary Service). Realized the shortcomings of allopathy in treatment of chronic disease and began investigating complementary forms of medicine. An average of over 100 hours per year of conventional and complementary Continuing Education (CE) courses and conferences are spent in the pursuit of useful knowledge.

2004                Selected for an Honorary Membership in National Society of Collegiate Scholars (NSCS). Selected as Member of the Research Committee for the American Holistic Veterinary Medical Association (AHVMA). Began submitting case studies to be published in the Journal of the AHVMA.

2007                Case Reports submitted for use on website of the international Electronic Medicine Association (EMA). Awarded “Licentiate” in the EMA for case studies and CE. Published first book: More Than A Theory: A New Medical Paradigm.

 

            After nine years in conventional only practice, I decided that I needed to offer more to my patients and began looking into complementary techniques. Since that time my wife, Melissa and I have added Electronic Stimulation (Electro Acuscope, Myopulse, Rife Technology and Guardian), Homeopathy (including Cell Salts and Homotoxicology), Nutrition Therapy, Muscle Response Testing (MRT), Nambudripad’s Allergy Elimination Technique (NAET), Harmonic Translation, Esoteric Medicine (Chakra Balancing), and the use of Bach Flowers to our practice. As our use of “Energy Medicine” becomes more proficient, our use of drugs declines.

 

            Based on the work of great teachers in the field of kinesiology and other areas of energy medicine, we have developed our own form of Muscle Response Testing which we call Entity Testing and Analysis (ETA). Based on discoveries made with ETA, we have developed a Theory of Chronic Disease and published a book, More Than A Theory: A New Medical Paradigm, which describes our theory and how we developed it through careful observations.

 

            The topic of discussion will be a short description of the Theory of Chronic Disease and how we developed it following observations of the progress made with cases. Discussion of the theory will be followed by presentation of several cases which demonstrate how the theory was implemented in the successful treatment of patients with severe chronic diseases.

 

            The number of cases presented will depend on interest, the number of questions asked and time allotted. I have over fifty cases that can be discussed, and I am sure we will only be able to cover a few of them.

 

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