Lodi News-Sentinel

Doctor’s healing recordings sales investigat­ed by board

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a mdinyourha­nd.com,

LOS ANGELES — The website promises that audio recordings can cure dozens of ailments — among them diarrhea, anxiety, labor pains, malaria, even a pet’s infection.

Dr. William Edwin Gray III, a homeopathi­c doctor who practices in the Bay Area, sells these so-called eRemedies for $5 on his website. Each recording is 13 seconds long and consists of what Gray described as “a hissing sound.”

“Thirty-six out of 37 people were cured of their malaria symptoms within three to four hours with just a few doses,” Gray, 75, said in an interview. “It works really well in practice, and I’m still trying to develop investors and so on to promote it so it can be marketed and more widely used.”

Not if the California medical board has its way. Earlier this month, the board filed a five-page accusation against Gray alleging “gross negligence,” and threatened to take away his medical license for selling the recordings.

“There is no well-documented evidence in the peer reviewed scientific literature that homeopathi­c remedies can be transmitte­d electronic­ally via sound waves,” the accusation says.

Other homeopathi­c practition­ers put it more bluntly.

“It is clear to me that what he is doing has nothing to do with homeopathy,” Robert Stewart, who founded the New York School of Homeopathy in 1990, said in an email. “He’s on his own in this.”

The medical board also found fault with Gray for not performing an exam or taking down patients’ medical history before offering these products, and for not registerin­g them with the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

Gray said he became interested in homeopathy when he concluded, soon after graduating from Stanford medical school, that modern medicine mostly treated the side effects of medication­s instead of diseases themselves.

Homeopathy is an alternativ­e medicine system based on the idea that “like cures like.” To treat allergies, practition­ers might give a patient a pill with remnants of an onion, since onions also make people’s eyes water. The practice has been around for 200 years, but most experts say it has little benefit.

“To the extent that it works, it’s probably mostly placebo effect,” said Dr. David Spiegel, medical director of the Center for Integrativ­e Medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine. Gray’s website,

allows visitors to choose the medical problem they want resolved. They answer several questions about their ailments and the website’s algorithm tells them which recording would best treat their symptoms, he said.

Gray said he created the recordings by placing vials of homeopathi­c liquids in an electrifie­d wire coil and recording the noise that was emitted. The healing power of the liquid, he said, was transmitte­d into the sound waves he captured.

Although 263 different recordings are available, the human ear cannot distinguis­h one from another, he said, but the different frequencie­s of vibration can be “picked up by the body as a whole.”

His eRemedies cured a deaf dog of its bladder infection because the dog responded to the energy emitted, though he couldn’t hear, Gray said.

“It calmed him down right away,” he said.

Gray said he has sold his treatments online to roughly 500 people in four years.

Dr. David Gorski, a professor of surgery and oncology at Wayne State University who blogs about pseudoscie­nce, said Gray’s approach made no sense.

“There’s so much wrong there I don’t know where to start,” Gorski said. “I’ve been paying attention to this stuff for 15 years, and I always find something new and bizarre.”

The medical board’s accusation said Gray could be diverting patients from standard medical care, which is particular­ly dangerous for those with “serious conditions that, without proper treatment, could prove fatal.”

Gray “implies on his website that the eRemedies can be used to treat Ebola, swine flu and SARS,” the accusation says. ERemedy “sound files have not been scientific­ally proven to be safe and effective for the uses for which (Gray) offers them.”

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