Penticton Herald

Effective treatment for auditory hallucinat­ions

- KEITH ROACH

DEAR DR. ROACH: Years ago, I went to a doctor for sinus problems. He needed to put a drainage hole in my ear.

For a while, everything was fine. But now I hear people talking to me. They say they are hooked up to my head. They talk through my head day and night, and I can’t get any peaceful sleep or rest.

Sometimes they talk very ugly and vulgar. They know everything I think, say or write, and they tell me about it. I seem to be losing my memory as well.

Do you know what this is? I’m 78 years old, and I need my life back.

ANSWER: The voices are not real. They are called auditory hallucinat­ions, and they are the hallmark of a general class of mental illnesses called psychoses.

Schizophre­nia is a common cause of auditory hallucinat­ion, but it is unusual to see someone at 78 years old with the first episode. In older adults, psychosis can be the result of a large number of medical conditions.

The best thing for you to do is see both a psychiatri­st and a medical doctor (that is, a doctor specializi­ng in a field like internal medicine or family practice) so you can be evaluated.

It’s very important that you go right away, as there is very effective treatment to stop the voices and get your life back.

DEAR DR. ROACH: I have been reading about former President Ronald Reagan and the way he was treated for cancer. The reports say he was treated in Germany with oxygen therapy and was cured.

Why aren’t more doctors using this treatment if it was so successful? Is it a money thing?

ANSWER: The historical record shows that President Reagan was treated in 1985 for a cancerous polyp at Bethesda Naval Medical Center.

His cancer was found during a routine colonoscop­y. It was successful­ly treated with surgery, requiring removal of a section of colon.

He underwent another colonoscop­y in 1987, and four polyps were removed, none of which was cancerous.

Oxygen therapy is not an appropriat­e or effective treatment for colon (or other) cancer, which usually is curable if found early enough.

This is why I agree with the recommenda­tions for colon cancer screening, most commonly done via colonoscop­y.

I found on the internet two separate versions of the story that President Reagan was treated in Germany.

There is no evidence to support either of them. I agree that the story here is about money — but it’s about unscrupulo­us people preying on fears of cancer to promote an expensive and useless treatment.

Very little makes me angrier than someone exploiting people with cancer (or those who fear they have cancer) with a useless (or worse) treatment that may prevent someone from getting possibly curative treatment through convention­al means, as President Reagan did.

Email to ToYourGood­Health @med.cornell.edu.

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