URINE THERAPY
(Investigator 199, 2021 July)
History
The
advent of the "New Age" has seen the revival of many bizarre "natural"
therapeutic remedies. Among them, and rapidly gaining popularity, is
Urine Therapy — the use of one's own eliminated waste water for healing
purposes.
The
ancient Greeks were known to use urine extensively to treat wounds, and
for centuries European Gypsies used cow's urine to cure diseases of the
kidneys. The longevity of yogis and Lamas of Tibet has been attributed
to the drinking of their own urine and it was recommended by one 18th
century French dentist as a mouthwash.
In
England during the 1860s and 1870s, the drinking of one's own urine was
a common cure for jaundice, and a former Indian prime-minister in the
1970s, stated on American television that he drank some of his own
urine daily for health maintenance.
The
development of knowledge of urine is an interesting story. Records
indicate that Babylonian physicians (around 4000 B.C.) examined it
sufficiently to note changes in colour. In old Sanskrit writings twenty
different diseases were described, and Hippocrates recorded his
observations made on the urine of patients with fever. Through
succeeding centuries, uroscopy, the art of inspection of urine, became
an accepted part of medical practice, and with it came uromancy.
The
charlatans flourished, travelling the countryside with their flasks,
diagnosing all kinds of diseases, and preying on the gullible. One of
the "water doctors" who saw an oat grain in a urinal stated that the
patient had eaten a horse.
In modern times, a main proponent of Urine Therapy has been John W. Armstrong, author of The Water of Life: A Treatise on Urine Therapy.
Rejected as unfit for military service during World War I, allegedly
suffering from consumption, he was advised to seek the advice of a
doctor. He was diagnosed as being catarrhal rather than consumptive and
put on a regimen of sunshine, fresh air and nutritious foods. He gained
nearly 30 pounds in the ensuing year. Despite the improvement,
Armstrong was not satisfied, and recalling the Bible proverb, "Drink
waters out of thine own cistern", fasted, and took to drinking his own
urine. The treatment was claimed to be effective, he gained weight, his
energy increased, and his skin was rejuvenated.
In
1918, Armstrong began to advise others and supervise their fasts and,
according to his book, treated people suffering with gangrene, various
types of cancer, diabetes, consumption, heart disease, Bright's
Disease, bladder problems, malaria, fevers, wounds, burns, asthma and
many other afflictions with Urine Therapy. As a bonus, Urine Therapy is
the same for every type of ailment — no diagnosis being necessary.
In
1996, belief in the therapeutic benefits of Urine Therapy was given a
boost with the publication of articles such as that which appeared in
the The Manila Chronicle (May
8, 1996) headed, "Use of urine in healing gains more believers". The
report from Ghana, East Africa, details the promotion of urine drinking
and massage by one Dr. Kuesi Offei-Agyeman who runs the New Life Clinic
in Accra. Trained at the Natural Therapy School in Jersey, Britain, and
the School of Natural Hygiene in the US state of Texas, Dr
Offei-Agyeman argues that just as a tree is replenished by its own
leaves, his patients are restored to good health by their urine.
Regarded
by conventional wisdom as an unpleasant waste product meant to be
eliminated, "urine is a reflection of what you have in you" he
explains. "If you eat eggs, meat and beans you will have these
materials in you and they will make your urine taste bad. Potatoes,
lettuce and carrots however will give you sweet tasting urine." Dr.
Offei-Agyeman's treatment includes a strict vegetarian diet — somewhat
antithetical to that of John Armstrong, the contradiction leading one
to conclude that urine plays an insignificant part in the prescribed
treatment, if any at all.
Included
in the article was a dubious anecdotal testimonial from a patient who
declined to be named, and concluded with a note of scepticism from Dr.
Martin Mandara, the acting WHO representative in Ghana who commented:
"It's too early to proclaim the curative powers of urine. I wouldn't
really advise anybody to use it until somebody comes up with more
scientific evidence".
Well
there may or there may not be any evidence, but according to a Reuter's
report in the Science/Health page of the April 20, 1997, Philippine Daily
Inquirer, an Indian, Dr. G. K. Thakkar, chair of the Bombay-based Water
of Life Foundation, said millions of people around the world had cured
themselves of diseases with the centuries¬ old therapy of drinking
urine. Referring to "mad cow disease" he says, "I am deadly confident
that all those cows can be positively cured of the deadly disease by
making them drink their own urine".
Thakkar's
theory posits that the sick produce antibodies for fighting diseases
and excess antibodies passed in the urine can be "recycled" to increase
a person's immunity.
In
February, 1997, Thakkar organised a conference on urine therapy which
drew some 600 scientists, researchers and therapists to southern India.
Many speakers at the conference claimed urine can be used to treat
incurable diseases (if they are incurable how can they be cured?)
including cancer. They also claimed that urine can alleviate the
symptoms of AIDS.
New on the market is a book by Martha M. Christy, Your Own Perfect Medicine,
available from Inner Glow Health Products, RRP $40 + $5. It is claimed
by one book reviewer to be one of the best researched books ever
written about the subject of urine therapy. He hails it as "... the
most astounding proven natural miracle cure that medical science has
ever discovered — and yet none of the incredible research findings on
this incomparable natural medicine have ever been revealed to the
public!" (Another conspiracy theory?)
Other
enthusiasts include Beatrice Bartnett, a naturopathic chiropractor, and
Margie Adelman, a massage therapist who, in their book The Miracles of Urine Therapy,
extol the virtues of the therapy claiming it will "cleanse" the body of
"toxins". Urine, according to the authors, is "the blood of Christ" and
"a gift from your creator for your spiritual growth and physical
well-being". Reading the list of side effects — nausea, vomiting,
migraines, boils, pimples, rashes, palpitations, diarrhoea, uneasiness
and fever, the cure seems to me to be worse than the complaint.
Theory
While
repulsed readers are shaking their heads in disbelief, I hasten to add
that in addition to urine, Armstrong also advocated a well-balanced
diet of meat, fish, poultry, eggs, steamed vegetables, salads, fresh
seasonal fruits, brown rice, and whole-wheat bread. Processed and
highly refined foods were to be avoided. Whether Urine Therapy or a
well-balanced diet was responsible for Armstrong's alleged successful
cures is hardly a moot point.
The source of Armstrong's inspiration, Proverbs: 5:15, reads, "Drink waters out of thine own cistern1,and running waters out of thine own well". Further, in Isaiah: 36:16
we read, "... eat ye everyone of his vine, and everyone of his fig
tree, and drink ye everyone the waters of his own cistern". According
to Cruden's Complete Concordance, the only references to "cisterns" in the Bible refer to drinking water containers not the Vesica urinaria.
There is little doubt in my mind, that it is to these the text refers.
Practice
Drinking one's own urine.
Assessment
Before
the public uncritically accepts such a dubious therapy, it would be
advisable to ask whether or not there is any reliable scientific
evidence to substantiate the claims. Then again, perhaps only a lay
knowledge of the urinary system would suffice to obviate even that
necessity. Let's take a look at the function of that remarkable organ —
the kidney, as described in the Encyclopaedia Britannica.
"Relatively
small in size and unique for the amount of work the kidneys perform,
their chief function is the elimination of waste substances from the
blood through the formation of urine. They separate and incorporate
into the urine the digested products of protein and substances in the
blood which are formed continuously as a result of the normal
constructive activity of the body. Nearly 700 litres of blood pass
through the kidneys daily, ten per cent of which is selectively removed
by them as it passes. Of this ten per cent, most is reabsorbed by the
tubular cells together with the amino acids, building blocks of
protein, sugar and chlorides, Only three per cent is finally secreted
as urine".
It
is the process of reabsorption which completely destroys any
credibility that may be had in the efficacy of urine therapy. Most
substances have what is called a kidney threshold level. If the
concentration of a substance in the blood exceeds its kidney threshold
level, the excess is not reabsorbed and is released into the urine as
unwanted waste. Drinking one's urine therefore, is analogous to pouring
water into an already full vessel — it's not needed and won't be
accepted.
Furthermore,
drinking urine puts things (waste products) back into the body that the
body has already chosen to get rid of. That can include trace amounts
of noxious chemicals the body has detoxified. How does it make sense to
put them back in?
Therapies aside, urine does have some practical uses.
Certain
animals use their urine to mark the boundaries of their territories,
and in the January 27, 1995 issue of European, it was reported that,
"Sweden is exporting synthetic wolf urine to Kuwait, where it is
sprayed on roads to prevent camels colliding with cars". During the
1994 Winter Olympic Games in Lillehammer, Norway, the same method was
used to stop elks straying onto mountain roads.
1. According to the definition of "cistern" in Cruden's Complete Concordance to the Old and New Testaments,
it is an artificial reservoir, built of rock or brick, excavated in the
rock to hold rain water. Many of the houses had their own private
cistern, provided with a bucket and a windlass and filled by water from
the roof. (Eccl. 12:6)
References:
Armstrong, John W. 1971. The Water of Life; A Treatise on Urine Therapy (2nd ed.) Health Science press. Essex, England.
Bartnett, B. and Adleman, M. 1987. The Miracles of Urine Therapy. Margate, Fla.: Lifestyle Institute.
Cruden, Alexander. (Ed. C. H. Irwin, MA, DD., A. D. Adams, MA, and S. A.Waters.) 1985. Cruden's Complete Concordance to the Old and New Testaments. Lutterwort Press, Cambridge.
Edwards, Harry. 1996, A Piddling Matter, the Skeptic, 16(4):22-23. Australian Skeptics Inc.
Grossman, Richard. 1986. The Other Medicines. Pan Books Ltd. London.
Encyclopaedia Britannica. 1992. The Kidney. Vol. 6.
Fortean Times. Sidelines. May, 1996.
Kastner, Mark AL. 1993. Alternative Healing. Halcyon Publishing, La Mesa, CA.
Keeton, Prof. William T. 1967. Excretory Mechanisms in Animals. Biological Science. p.288 W. W. Norton & Co. NY.
Odell, Howard M. M.D. 1964. The Kidney: Its Diseases and Disturbances. The New Illustrated Medical and Health Encyclopaedia. Vol. 8. p.1168 Odhams Books, Long Acre, London.
Philippine Daily Inquirer. 1996. "Indian doc says urine can cure mad cow disease." April 20.
Raso, Jack. M.S., R.D. (Ed. Stephen Barrett, M.D.) 1994 "Alternative" Health Care, A Comprehensive Guide. Prometheus Books. Amherst, N.Y.
The Manila Chronicle. 1996. "Use of Urine in healing gains more believers." May 8, 1996.
H.
Edwards, H. 1999 Alternative, Complementary, Holistic & Spiritual Healing, Australian Skeptics Inc.