In the News : "G-therapy: New hope for cerebral palsy victims"  
     
  - Indian Express, Express News Service Pune, Dec 8  
 

For Bhosari-based widow Kamal Hinge, supporting the needs of her son Nilesh on her meagre earnings was hardly sufficient, leave alone providing treatment for his cerbral palsy. There seemed to be no light at the end of the tunnel for a Mumbai-based working couple Gomti and T R Narayanan as they rushed from Hinduja to Jaslok Hospital for treating their son Vivek affected by cerebral palsy with motor disability.

Hinge and Narayanan are not alone in their struggle to deal with this severe physical and mental disability affecting children, but definite ray of hope has emerged in the form of hope has emerged in the form of ‘G-therapy’ which does not claim to cure the child. Instead offers a better quality of life for combating this crippling injury.

Nearly 70 per cent of 1,500 patients undergoing G-therapy have shown significant improvement, says Dr.Gunwant Oswal who is a medical practictioner with a BAMS degree and runs a Centre for Developmental disorders at his Sanjivani Clinic.

His G-therapy is based on ‘Sookshama’ Chikitsa’ in which herbs and biochemic salts are in the form of the most minute energy activated, patentised form.

The sub-lingual absorption goes directly at the desired level, says Oswal.

Not only did he present his work at national and international conferences like the 9th World Congress of Paediatrics, London, Eurpoean Academy of childhood Disability at Dublin and Parent-to -Parent conference – USA, but UK- based Rescue- the foundation for the brain-injured infant is currently evaluation Oswal’s work and gathering prima facie evidence of the safety and efficacy of G-therapy.

Even as Oswal’s patients including Hinge and Narayanan vouch for the remarkable change in their children after administering the G-therapy drug, the Rescue foundation’s clinical trial of the G-therapy is also likely to open up new horizons in the treatment of brain injured patients.