Elliott
S. Dacher is a pioneer in the emerging medicine of the future. His knowledge
and practical approaches to the field of health and healing have evolved
from his extensive experience as a practicing internist participating
in over 50,000 medical visits and his ongoing independent research and
study.
Dr. Dacher’s current work begins with a fundamentally
new viewpoint that questions all of our current ideas about disease,
aging, death, pain, suffering and health. Drawing upon eastern and western
sources he raises the possibility that a systematic, comprehensive and
in-depth approach can address the root sources of both disease and health,
leading to a radical shift in our well-being.
Dr. Dacher attended medical school at S.U.N.Y.,
Buffalo, and completed his post-graduate training at the Michael Reese
Hospital in Chicago and on the Harvard Medical Service at the Peter
Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston.
In 1975 Dacher moved to Washington, D.C. He served
as a practicing internist, physician/administrator, and director of
wellness and health promotion services for the Kaiser Permanente Health
Care Program. Seeking to investigate and model an innovative approach
to healing, in 1984 Dr. Dacher established a private medical practice
in Virginia. He began exploring approaches such as meditation, imagery,
yoga, biofeedback, alternative therapies and counseling to assist individuals
in expanding consciousness, and developing self-regulation and self-healing
capacities.
In 1995 Dr. Dacher left his medical practice to
begin an in-depth study of the healing process. This work has taken
him to the east where he has studied the theory and practices of eastern
healing. This study and research has led to his most recent book,
Integral Health: The Path to Human Flourishing
(Basic Health, 2006) where Dr. Dacher introduces us to the principles
and practices of a far-reaching vision of health and healing that synthesizes
the wisdom of the East and West.
Dr. Dacher is the author of Whole Healing published
by Dutton in 1996, and Intentional Healing published by Marlowe in June
1996 and subsequently translated into two languages. He has served on
the editorial board of the Journal of Complementary and Alternative
Medicine, is a past fellow of the Institute of Noetic Sciences, and
a former medical advisor to Healthy Living, a Hearst periodical. He
has regularly contributed to books and periodicals, and is a frequent
speaker and presenter at conferences and workshops.
Born in New York City in 1944, Dr. Dacher now lives
in Massachusetts. He has two daughters age 36 and 31. |