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Purification Rundown
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The Purification Rundown, also known as the Purif[1] or the Hubbard Method,[2] is a pseudoscientific procedure that advocates of Scientology claim is a detoxification program. There is no evidence for its efficacy in detoxification, and significant evidence from clinicians that it is dangerous. It involves heat exposure for up to 5 hours a day and can exceed 4 weeks in length. It can potentially cause heatstroke damage, which includes brain injury, heart problems, organ failure, and death. It was developed by Scientology's founder L. Ron Hubbard and used by the Church of Scientology as an introductory service.[1][3] Numerous individuals have been hospitalised as a result of taking part in the process.
It has no known clinical use in treating drug addiction, but followers of Scientology believe it to be the only effective way to deal with the long-term effects of drug abuse or toxic exposure.[3] It forms the basis for programs operated by groups affiliated with the Scientology organization, widely considered to be recruitment fronts, such as Narconon,[4] Criminon,[5] Second Chance,[6] and the International Academy of Detoxification Specialists.[7] The Scientology organization markets these as drug rehabilitation and detoxification programs. The program combines exercise, dietary supplements and long stays in a sauna (up to five hours a day for five weeks).[8] It is promoted variously as religious or secular, medical or purely spiritual, depending on context.[2][5] Hubbard put forward his ideas about niacin in a book called All About Radiation. He claimed to have discovered that large doses of vitamins could both alleviate and prevent radiation sickness.[9] He marketed this anti-radiation mixture in the form of a tablet, calling it "Dianazene". Twenty-one thousand such tablets were seized and destroyed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 1958.[10]
The 1979 predecessor of the Purification Rundown was known as the "Sweat Program" and was similarly designed to remove traces of LSD which, according to Hubbard, remained for long periods in the body.[3][11] The participant had a restricted diet, including large doses of vitamins and a teaspoon of salt, and spent at least an hour a day jogging in a rubberised suit. For some, this regimen lasted for months.[11]
The program was developed for use in Narconon,[12] and was published in Hubbard's Technical Bulletins of Dianetics and Scientology as well as the book Clear Body, Clear Mind.[3][7] Two other books describe the procedure, Purification: An Illustrated Answer to Drugs[3] and Narconon New Life Detoxification Program: the effective purification program by L. Ron Hubbard. The term "Purification Rundown" is a trademark of the Religious Technology Center (the governing body of the Church of Scientology), though an RTC spokesman has denied any licensing arrangement with Narconon.[13]
Process
[edit]The Purification Rundown usually takes several weeks. As well as spending time in saunas, people are required to do light exercise including calisthenics, treadmills, and other similar activities.[citation needed]
The program consists of a course of doses of vitamins (niacin in particular), long periods in a sauna, exercise, and consumption of a blend of vegetable oils, in the belief that the subject will sweat out the toxins and replace the oils in the body's fatty tissues with the vegetable oil.[14] Clear Body, Clear Mind recommends that participants maintain their normal diet throughout the procedure, supplemented with fresh vegetables.[15]: 19
The program requires its participants to ingest the following at regular intervals:
- A multi-vitamin cocktail, the main ingredient of which is niacin. Clear Body, Clear Mind recommends initial doses of 100 mg, increasing to 5,000 mg over the course of the program.[7] This contrasts with the medically recommended level of about 15 mg: larger doses can have severe, even potentially fatal side effects.[7] The participant is told to expect toxic symptoms due to the release of poisons or radiation from their body fat.[16] Thus the effects of niacin overdose, which include skin irritation, flushing, dizziness and headache, are interpreted as a positive effect of the program.[7][16][17]
- Mineral supplements, including calcium, magnesium, iron, zinc, manganese, copper, iodine and potassium.[15]: 83–91
- Up to half a cupful of pure oils per day.[14]
- "CalMag", a drink which Clear Body, Clear Mind describes as a solution of calcium gluconate, magnesium carbonate and vinegar in water, in such proportions that the mix has twice as much elemental calcium as magnesium.[15]: 63–65 This is taken up to three times per day.[14]
- Enough liquids to replace the fluids lost in the sauna.[15]: 19
Hubbard specified that each participant must complete a daily report form, listing the amounts of vitamins, minerals, Cal-Mag and other fluids taken, which is reviewed to make sure they are complying with every aspect of the program.[15]: 113–115
The cost of the program was reported as about US$2,000 in 1990[2] $1,790 "with discounts" in 1996[17] (though another 1996 source claims around $4,000 for a four-week programme),[16] $1,200 in 1998[13] and $5,200 in 2009.[18]
Clear Body, Clear Mind contains a disclaimer which states that the program is not a medical treatment.[7] A similar disclaimer appears in the Hubbard Communication Office Bulletins, noting that the treatment is not a medical process but a purely spiritual activity.[7] Hubbard recommends that the participant should sign a waiver noting that the program is not medical treatment.[7]
Promotion
[edit]The Purification Rundown is promoted as having physical and mental benefits such as lowering cholesterol, relieving pain, and improving memory. Scientology's promotional materials claim it can boost IQ by up to 15 points.[7] Scientologists are strongly encouraged to take part in the program as a necessary step in their spiritual progress.[1][13] Scientology promotes the Purification Rundown to the public as a detoxification program, while it also works with non-religious Scientology-affiliated groups such as Narconon to offer this program as a treatment for addiction and high levels of stress. Conditions that are claimed by Scientologists to respond to the program include cancer, AIDS, heart problems, kidney failure, liver disease and obesity.[19]
In a January 1980 announcement, Hubbard told his followers that a nuclear war was an imminent threat and that the program would enable them to deal with heavy nuclear fallout.[20] He warned that those who completed the program would stand better chances of survival.[20]
The Church of Scientology unsuccessfully tried to have the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to Hubbard for his invention of the program.[20][21]
In California, two organizations were set up by Scientologists to try to give scientific legitimacy to the detoxification program—Foundation for Advancements in Science and Education (FASE) and HealthMed Clinic.[2] Bill Franks, prior Executive Director International of the Church of Scientology, said he was involved in creating FASE and later described it as one of Scientology's front groups. FASE funded research and published articles by Scientologists hailing the effectiveness of Hubbard's procedures. HealthMed, an ostensibly independent organization, used this material to promote Hubbard's detoxification methods to public agencies all over the state. Both bodies were strongly criticized by a group of physicians from the California Department of Health Services.[2][22]
The program, as delivered by HealthMed, is heavily promoted in the book Diet for a Poisoned Planet by journalist David Steinman, who denies any connection with the Church of Scientology.[23][24] The book was the subject of a paper from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration which accused Steinman of distorting facts.[24] C. Everett Koop, the former Surgeon General of the United States, also criticized the book, recommending that the public stay away from Hubbard's "detoxification" procedure.[5]
Reception
[edit]Theoretical basis
[edit]The theory behind the Purification Rundown is that toxins, drugs, and radioactive particles are stored in body fat, which are released through the exchange of fats (thus the oil consumption) and exercise, and then finally released via perspiration and other normal mechanisms such as body waste.[14] Independent scientific evaluations report that the concentration of toxins or drugs in the sweat is negligible, as they are primarily removed from the body through the liver, the kidneys and the lungs.[7][13] The notion that toxins from fatty tissue can be sweated out is categorically denied by toxicology experts.[7][19] Evidence offered has not demonstrated that detoxification is actually taking place.[25][26]
A 1995 review at a medical conference described the massive doses of niacin as inappropriate, especially since they cause the release of histamine, which is counterproductive when dealing with chemical sensitivity.[27] Psychologist Herman Staudenmayer describes the program as part of a trend for diagnosing and treating a Multiple Chemical Sensitivity disorder which does not correspond to any known disease and is likely to be psychophysiological.[16] He adds, "The position statements of medical societies [...] are unambiguous about the lack of scientific evidence for these practices."[16]
In January 2005, a group of five doctors and nine health education experts acting on behalf of the California Department of Education issued a report examining Narconon and its materials. The report described the key assumptions of the program as unscientific and inaccurate.[28] Three experts consulted by The Buffalo News criticised the weak evidence and dubious assumptions behind the program.[29]
David Emerson Root, a medical doctor affiliated with Narconon, has administered the program for twenty years and stands by the theory behind it.[30] A non-Scientologist, he denies that the program collects money or new members for Scientology.[30]
Effectiveness and safety
[edit]An investigation by the New York Press asked a number of independent doctors about the evidence for the Purification Rundown. None of them endorsed the program's effectiveness and some explicitly described it as dangerous. Several said that no peer-reviewed research on the program had been published in any medical journal.[7] Some apparently supportive studies have been published, but these lack control groups and have other scientific failings.[31]
Newkirk Herald Journal editor Robert W. Lobsinger solicited a number of medical experts' opinions on the program in 1989.[32] James Kenney of the National Council Against Health Fraud condemned those administering the "unproven" treatment as guilty of health fraud. He wrote that "[...] the scientific evidence shows the exact opposite of what Hubbard's theory predicts", warning that large doses of niacin could cause liver damage, gout, gastritis, and other serious side-effects. Dr. David Hogg of Toronto said that the program may be detrimental to participants' health.[32] Dr. C. Mark Palmer of Ponca City, Oklahoma rebutted the theory that sweating would clear out drugs, stating that "No matter how much a patient were made to sweat, it could not significantly increase his clearing of most drugs."[33]
After reviewing materials published by Narconon, University of Oklahoma biochemistry professor Bruce Roe described the program as "a scam" based on "half-truths and pseudo-science."[34] In a 1988 report, Dr. Ronald E. Gots, a toxicology expert from Bethesda, Maryland, called the regimen "quackery", and noted that "no recognized body of toxicologists, no department of occupational medicine, nor any governmental agencies endorse or recommend such treatment."[35] In 1991, the Board of Mental Health in Oklahoma refused to certify the program for use in a Narconon facility on the grounds of potential danger from its high vitamin and mineral doses.[36] A report on Narconon for the Department of Health in California described the mega-doses of vitamins as "hazardous" and "in some cases lethal".[37] Prof. Michael Ryan, a pharmacologist at University College Dublin, testified in a 2003 court case that the program is scientifically unverified and medically unsafe.[38]
Those who market the program insist that it has been proven safe and effective.[19][39] The marketing materials present testimonials for its effectiveness. Some doctors who have observed the treatment have been impressed by the testimonials but asked for evidence that improvements are caused by the program itself rather than suggestion, delusion or the placebo effect.[34] In 2007, psychopharmacology expert John Brick said of his visit to a Manhattan clinic, "Whether it's from some mysterious combination of vitamins or just good diet and exercise, I can't say. But the bottom line is that it helped the patients I talked to." He emphasized the importance of independently verifying the validity of the program, conceding that no causal relationship between the results and the program had been demonstrated.[34]
In a 1999 French court case, five staff members of the Church of Scientology were convicted of fraud for selling the program and other Scientology procedures.[40][41] In Russia, the program has been banned by officials as a threat to public health.[42]
Adverse outcomes
[edit]Paride Ella and Giuseppe Tomba, clients of Narconon in Taceno, Italy, died in 1995 during the vitamin phase of the program, suffering kidney problems and a heart attack respectively.[43]
In 1996, journalist Mark Ebner described the case of a woman who had suffered heatstroke and anemia while on the program.
One day, she was found blue-lipped on the waiting room floor, hemorrhaging. Instead of taking her blood pressure or calling an ambulance or even a doctor, they explained away her bleeding as "restimulation" from radiation she had absorbed from ultrasound testing she'd had years before.[17]
In 1997, two emergency room doctors reported treating a 45-year-old man who had participated in the Purification Rundown. Previously healthy, he had developed tremors while on the program, for which the Church of Scientology recommended further Purification as treatment. Put back in the sauna, he developed seizures and was taken to hospital in an incoherent state. He was diagnosed with severe hyponatremia and required three days of medical treatment.[8] In a similar case, a woman from Medina, Ohio required hospitalization after losing sleep and developing hallucinations during the program.[19] In 2004, a former participant in the UK told reporters that the program had gravely worsened his physical condition, and that he had been denied medical treatment.[44]
A 25-year-old man in Portland, Oregon died from liver failure after having participated in the Purification Rundown. His parents sued the Church of Scientology and the case was settled out of court.[19] Scientology officials blamed the death on prior medical problems.[45]
Adoption by public bodies
[edit]The City Council of Shreveport, Louisiana approved 20 firefighters to take the program via HealthMed in the late 1980s.[46] The city's insurers commissioned an evaluation from toxicologist Ronald E. Gots, who dismissed the program as "quackery", saying it "served no rational medical function."[35][46] As a consequence, Shreveport ended its support.[35]
In 1994, the London Borough of Tower Hamlets covered costs for an alcoholic to go to Narconon for detoxification, but the council withdrew funding when the Church of Scientology connection was revealed.[47] The woman stayed on, funded by Narconon's trustees.[47]
Second Chance
[edit]"Second Chance" is a program administering the Purification Rundown to substance abuse offenders. Its first center was set up in Ensenada in 1995 with a mix of state and private funding.[48] In October 2001, two officials from Erie County Holding Center in Buffalo, New York visited the Mexican center at a Scientology patron's expense.[5] They were impressed enough to appeal for $700,000 to introduce Second Chance to their own prison, although lack of funds put the project on hold.[5]
In September 2006 a Second Chance project was set up in Albuquerque, New Mexico.[48][49] This center took in hundreds of referrals in its first year but ran into financial trouble.[50] Some judges, unconvinced of its effectiveness, refused to refer offenders.[48] In October 2008, Curry County commissioners ended their contract with the project, after an independent study revealed the center had inflated its success rates.[49][51] In the two years prior, the center had received $1.57 million in federal and state funding.[49] In December 2008, the center was forced to close down after Mayor Martin Chavez accused it of "misrepresentation and deceit".[6][52]
New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project
[edit]The New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project is an initiative in New York City, co-founded by celebrity Scientologist Tom Cruise, which provides Purification Rundowns for public-sector employees who were exposed to toxins in the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks. Its president claimed to have administered the program to over 800 rescue workers.[53] Many participants have claimed positive results, and some local government figures have supported the project,[35] which was awarded public funding.[7][54] However, it has drawn criticism for exposing rescue workers to the potential dangers of the program,[25] for encouraging them to give up conventional medical treatments,[55] for recruiting into Scientology[56] and for channeling funding to Scientology-related bodies.[7]
Utah Meth Cops Project
[edit]Inspired by the New York project, a center in Orem, Utah administers the Purification Rundown to Salt Lake City police who complain of health effects from exposure to meth lab toxins.[57][58] The process is administered under the name of Bio-Cleansing Centers of America and has received public money in addition to private donations.[59] Many police who have taken part claim to have benefited, though a medical doctor associated with the Utah clinic acknowledged in 2007 that there were no studies of the program's effect on people who had been exposed to meth labs.[18]
The major supporter of the clinic has been State Attorney General Mark Shurtleff.[60] In 2007 and 2008, his office spent $140,000 to pay for 20 police to take the program, and requested a total of $440,000 from the Utah State Legislature.[60] The legislature advanced $240,000 of this further funding.[18] In 2009, Republicans in the State Legislature approved an additional $100,000 for the project in the closing days of a session, bypassing a committee which would have reviewed the payment.[18]
Other endorsements
[edit]Scientologist actress Kelly Preston endorsed the program and credited it for helping the health of her son Jett.[61][62]
In a 1998 interview, Heber Jentzsch, president of the Church of Scientology International, credited the program with curing radiation sickness that he allegedly suffered as a result of childhood exposure to nuclear testing in Utah.[13] No cases of radiation sickness have ever been reported in Utah, due to the low level of fallout involved,[63] although some cases of leukemia may have been associated with the tests.[64]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Bouma, Gary D. (2006). Australian Soul: Religion and Spirituality in the 21st Century. Cambridge University Press. p. 9. ISBN 0-521-67389-5.
- ^ a b c d e Sappell, Joel; Robert W. Welkos (June 27, 1990). "Church Seeks Influence in Schools, Business, Science". Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on October 26, 2012. Retrieved January 21, 2009.
- ^ a b c d e Christensen, Dorthe Refslund (2009). "Sources for the Study of Scientology". In James R. Lewis (ed.). Scientology. New York: Oxford University Press US. pp. 420–421. ISBN 978-0-19-533149-3.
- ^ Asimov, Nanette (October 2, 2004). "Church's drug program flunks S.F. test". San Francisco Chronicle. Archived from the original on March 8, 2005. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
- ^ a b c d e Sommer, Mark (February 1, 2005). "Helping Spread the Word". The Buffalo News.
- ^ a b Proctor, Jeff (January 25, 2009). "Scientology Base Denied By Officials". Albuquerque Journal. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n DeSio, John (June 6, 2007). "The Rundown on Scientology's Purification Rundown". New York Press. Archived from the original on January 14, 2009. Retrieved January 21, 2009.
- ^ a b Al-Zaki, Taleb; B Tilman Jolly (January 1997). "Severe Hyponatremia After Purification". Annals of Emergency Medicine. 29 (1). Mosby, Inc.: 194–195. doi:10.1016/S0196-0644(97)70335-4. PMID 8998113.
- ^ Atack, Jon (1990). A Piece of Blue Sky: Scientology, Dianetics and L. Ron Hubbard Exposed. Lyle Stuart / Carol Publishing Group. p. 142. ISBN 0-8184-0499-X.
- ^ Williams, Ian (2007). The Alms Trade: Charities, Past, Present and Future. Cosimo. p. 130. ISBN 978-1-60206-753-0.
- ^ a b Atack, Jon (1990). A Piece of Blue Sky: Scientology, Dianetics and L. Ron Hubbard Exposed. Lyle Stuart / Carol Publishing Group. p. 254. ISBN 0-8184-0499-X.
- ^ Ebner, Mark C.; Andrew Breitbart (2004). Hollywood, interrupted. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 129. ISBN 0-471-45051-0.
- ^ a b c d e Mallia, Joseph (March 3, 1998). "Scientology reaches into schools through Narconon". Boston Herald.
- ^ a b c d McCall, W. Vaughn (2007). "Psychiatry and Psychology in the Writings of L. Ron Hubbard". Journal of Religion and Health. 46 (3). Springer Netherlands: 437–447. doi:10.1007/s10943-006-9079-9. ISSN 1573-6571. S2CID 10629230.
- ^ a b c d e Hubbard, L. Ron (2002) [1990]. Clear Body, Clear Mind: The Effective Purification Program. Bridge Publications. ISBN 1573182249. OL 1949412M.
- ^ a b c d e Staudenmayer, Herman (1996). "Clinical Consequences of the EI/MCS "Diagnosis": Two Paths". Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology. 24 (1). Academic Press: S96–S110. doi:10.1006/rtph.1996.0084. ISSN 0273-2300. PMID 8921563.
- ^ a b c Ebner, Mark (February 1996). "Do You Want To Buy A Bridge?". Spy magazine. Archived from the original on July 21, 2017. Retrieved January 27, 2009.
- ^ a b c d Carlisle, Nate; Robert Gehrke (April 5, 2009). "More state funds quietly budgeted to help cops sweat to health". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved April 6, 2009.
- ^ a b c d e Dougherty, Geoff (March 28, 1999). "Store selling Scientology vitamin regimen raises concerns". St. Petersburg Times. Archived from the original on October 26, 2016. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
- ^ a b c Atack, Jon (1990). A Piece of Blue Sky: Scientology, Dianetics and L. Ron Hubbard Exposed. Lyle Stuart / Carol Publishing Group. pp. 259–261. ISBN 0-8184-0499-X.
- ^ Lyneis, Dick (December 25, 1982). "Ex-aide tells of Hubbard try to gain Nobel Prize". Press Enterprise. Riverside, California. pp. B–1, B-3.
- ^ West, Louis Jolyon (October 1991). "Scientology III". The Southern California Psychiatrist. Southern California Psychiatric Society: 13–15.
- ^ Puzo, Daniel P. (November 29, 1990). "The New Naturalism Controversy Eats at 'Diet for a Poisoned Planet'". Los Angeles Times. p. 27.
- ^ a b Behar, Richard (May 6, 1991). "The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power". Time magazine. Archived from the original on November 2, 2012. Retrieved February 21, 2009.
- ^ a b Crouch, Edmund A. C.; Laura C. Green (October 2007). "Comment on "Persistent organic pollutants in 9/11 world trade center rescue workers: Reduction following detoxification" by James Dahlgren, Marie Cecchini, Harpreet Takhar, and Olaf Paepke [Chemosphere 69/8 (2007) 1320–1325]". Chemosphere. 69 (8): 1330–1332. Bibcode:2007Chmsp..69.1330C. doi:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2007.05.098. PMID 17692360.
- ^ Farley, Robert (March 30, 2003). "Detox center seeks acceptance". St. Petersburg Times. pp. 1B, 5B – via Newspapers.com.
'There is no data that that kind of experience reduces the level of toxins,' said Dr. Raymond Harbison, professor of environmental and occupational health in the College of Public Health at the University of South Florida.
(courtesy link) - ^ Kurt, T. (1995) "Sauna-Depuration: Toxicokinetics" presentation at 2nd Aspen Environmental Medicine Conference. Aspen, Colorado, September 7–9. cited in Staudenmayer, Herman (1998). Environmental Illness: myth and reality. CRC Press. p. 48. ISBN 978-1-56670-305-5.
- ^ Asimov, Nanette (February 23, 2005). "Schools urged to drop antidrug program". San Francisco Chronicle. p. A1. Archived from the original on March 7, 2005. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
- ^ Sommer, Mark (February 1, 2005). "Addiction specialists criticize detoxification program". Buffalo News.
- ^ a b Gianni, Luke (February 22, 2007). "Scientology does detox, David E. Root, M.D". Sacramento News & Review. Retrieved January 20, 2009.
- ^ Schaffer, Amanda (October 21, 2004). "Poisons, Begone! The dubious science behind the Scientologists' detoxification program for 9/11 rescue workers". Slate. The Washington Post. Retrieved January 29, 2009.
- ^ a b "Medical and Scientific Opinions Regarding The Purification Rundown As Practiced By The Narconon Drug Treatment Program". Newkirk Herald Journal. n.d. Retrieved January 22, 2009.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Drug Center Proposal Criticized". The Oklahoman. September 1, 1989.
- ^ a b c Carey, Art (October 7, 2007). "Clinic's results make 9/11 responders believe". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Archived from the original on October 24, 2007.
- ^ a b c d O'Donnell, Michelle (October 4, 2003). "Scientologist's Treatments Lure Firefighters". The New York Times. Archived from the original on May 22, 2013. Retrieved September 17, 2006.
- ^ Neill, Ushma S. (August 1, 2005). "Editorial: Tom Cruise is dangerous and irresponsible". Journal of Clinical Investigation. 115 (8): 1964–1965. doi:10.1172/JCI26200. PMC 1180571. PMID 16075033.
- ^ Roberton, Craig (December 28, 1981). "Narconon". St. Petersburg Times. pp. 1–B. Retrieved February 21, 2009.
- ^ "Church's purification course unsafe - expert". The Irish Times. February 6, 2003.
- ^ Doward, Jamie (March 27, 2005). "Scientologists will 'purify' drug addicts - for £15,000". The Observer. Guardian News & Media. Retrieved February 21, 2009.
- ^ Bremner, Charles (November 16, 1999). "Former cult chief jailed for fraud". The Times.
- ^ Henley, Jon (September 21, 1999). "French fraud case puts Scientology in the dock". The Guardian.
- ^ Morgan, Lucy (March 29, 1999). "Abroad: Critics public and private keep pressure on Scientology". St. Petersburg Times. Archived from the original on May 22, 2011.
- ^ Biglia, Andrea (February 20, 1995). "Tragedia nella lotta alla droga". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). p. 13.
- ^ Washington, Sam; Phil Kemp (January 2004). "The Bridge to Freedom?". New Humanist. 119 (1). The Rationalist Association. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
- ^ Morgan, Lucy (February 8, 1998). "Scientology got blame for French suicide". St. Petersburg Times. Archived from the original on November 9, 2007.
- ^ a b Gittrich, Greg (December 13, 2003). "Bravest taking the Cruise cure". New York Daily News. Archived from the original on December 16, 2003. Retrieved February 22, 2009.
- ^ a b Oxford, Esther (May 31, 1994). "Storm over cult's alcoholic patient". The Independent. Independent News and Media. Retrieved February 17, 2009.
- ^ a b c Etter, Lauren (January 19, 2007). "Program for prisoners draws fire over Scientology". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved November 23, 2007.
- ^ a b c Johnson, Shama (October 7, 2008). "Commissioners decline to pursue rehabilitation program". Clovis News Journal. Archived from the original on January 19, 2013. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
- ^ Proctor, Jeff (January 25, 2009). "Second Chance removes last inmates from old jail building". Albuquerque Journal. Retrieved February 21, 2009.
- ^ Herzenberg, Michael (November 18, 2008). "Study Questions Drug Treatment Results". KRQE.com. Archived from the original on May 1, 2010. Retrieved February 21, 2009.
- ^ Maher, Jeff; Joshua Panas (February 4, 2009). "ABQ officials tour former rehab facility". KOB.com. KOB-TV. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
- ^ Dunleavy, Steve (June 12, 2007). "Cruises's Clinic OK". New York Post. Archived from the original on October 13, 2007. Retrieved September 8, 2007.
- ^ "Monserrate Defends Detox Program". The Politicker. New York Observer. April 20, 2007. Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved October 6, 2007.
- ^ O'Donnell, Michelle (October 4, 2003). "Scientologist's Treatments Lure Firefighters". The New York Times. p. 1. Archived from the original on June 17, 2012. Retrieved February 4, 2009.
- ^ Friedman, Roger (December 22, 2006). "Tom Cruise Can't Put Out These Fires". Fox 411. Fox. Archived from the original on January 9, 2007. Retrieved February 4, 2009.
- ^ Carlisle, Nate; Rosetta, Lisa (November 8, 2007). "Meth cops swear they can sweat off toxins". The Salt Lake Tribune. Archived from the original on December 28, 2007. Retrieved November 24, 2007.
- ^ Bonisteel, Sara (November 21, 2007). "Utah Foots the Bill for Ailing Cops' Controversial Scientology-Based Detox Treatment". Fox News. Retrieved November 24, 2007.
- ^ Winslow, Ben (November 8, 2007). "Police detox at clinic for exposure to meth". Deseret Morning News. Archived from the original on November 16, 2007. Retrieved February 14, 2009.
- ^ a b Carlisle, Nate (February 22, 2008). "Funding sought for meth cops' health regimen". The Salt Lake Tribune. Media News Group.
- ^ "Scientologist Views On Medicine Questioned". CBS News. CBS Interactive. January 7, 2009. Retrieved June 13, 2009.
- ^ "Bahamas using 2 experts for Travolta son autopsy". USA Today. Associated Press. January 4, 2009. Retrieved January 5, 2014.
- ^ Beck HL, Krey PW (April 1983). "Radiation exposures in Utah from Nevada Nuclear Tests". Science. 220 (4592): 18–24. Bibcode:1983Sci...220...18B. doi:10.1126/science.6828876. PMID 6828876.
- ^ Stevens W, Thomas DC, Lyon JL, et al. (August 1990). "Leukemia in Utah and radioactive fallout from the Nevada test site. A case-control study". JAMA. 264 (5): 585–91. doi:10.1001/jama.264.5.585. PMID 2366297.
External links
[edit]Promotional sites
[edit]- Purification Program - Scientology Purification Rundown Procedure
- Frequently Asked Questions - Answer to FAQs
- Narconon International - Official Narconon site
Critical sites
[edit]- Narconon Exposed
- Stop Narconon
- Junkfood Science: A cautionary tale of poor science, politics and money gone astray
- Narconon Drug Abuse Prevention Program Evaluation Archived December 22, 2019, at the Wayback Machine Report published by California Department of Education
Purification Rundown
View on GrokipediaOrigins and Development
Inception by L. Ron Hubbard
L. Ron Hubbard, founder of Scientology, conceived the Purification Rundown as a regimen to address what he described as lingering physical and mental effects of drugs and toxins stored in the body's fatty tissues, which he claimed interfered with the effectiveness of Dianetics auditing and spiritual progress.[7] This initiative stemmed from Hubbard's observations of increasing drug use among individuals seeking Scientology services in the 1970s, particularly LSD and other hallucinogens, which he asserted deposited residues that could reactivate psychological aberrations during auditing sessions.[3] Preliminary versions, such as the "Sweat Program" or "LSD Sweat Out," emerged around 1978 as targeted pilots to expel LSD residues through sweating, exercise, and niacin supplementation, tested initially on small groups including Sea Org members.[8] The full Purification Rundown was formalized and issued by Hubbard in a technical bulletin dated December 4, 1979, expanding the protocol to encompass a broader detoxification for all drug histories, not limited to LSD.[9] [10] In this bulletin, Hubbard outlined the program's core elements—graduated exercise, high-dose niacin to mobilize toxins, extended sauna sessions for elimination via sweat, and nutritional support with polyunsaturated oils and vitamins—as a prerequisite step on the "Bridge to Total Freedom," positioning it as essential for clearing the body before advanced auditing.[10] Hubbard drew on his earlier writings from the 1960s about drug impacts on the mind but adapted them into this structured physical regimen based on reported successes from the pilots, though without independent empirical validation at the time.[11] Hubbard's development process involved iterative refinement through Church-organized trials, with the Rundown quickly integrated into Scientology practices by 1980, as announced in communications to followers emphasizing its role in countering environmental and pharmaceutical toxins.[12] The program's inception reflected Hubbard's broader pseudoscientific framework linking bodily purity to mental clarity, though subsequent medical critiques have questioned the efficacy of its mechanisms, such as niacin-induced flushing for toxin release, absent rigorous clinical trials.[5] Hubbard compiled related materials into the posthumously published book Clear Body, Clear Mind in 1990, which serves as the primary reference but postdates the original implementation.[13]Historical Context and Initial Implementation
The Purification Rundown was developed amid L. Ron Hubbard's observations that residual drug and toxin effects, particularly from hallucinogens like LSD prevalent in the 1960s and 1970s counterculture, hindered progress in Scientology auditing sessions. Hubbard contended that such substances lodged in fatty tissues, reactivating during stress or auditing to produce somatic and aberrative responses, thus necessitating a preparatory detoxification step before advanced spiritual processing. This concern built on Hubbard's earlier writings, such as in Science of Survival (1951), where he discussed sweating as a means to eliminate stored toxins, but gained urgency with the escalation of recreational drug use documented in U.S. government reports showing over 10 million Americans experimenting with illicit drugs by the mid-1970s.[10][1] An initial precursor, the Sweat Program, was employed in the mid-1970s specifically to mitigate LSD residues believed to destabilize auditing gains. On February 6, 1978, Hubbard formalized and expanded this into the Purification Rundown via Hubbard Communications Office Bulletin (HCOB) titled "The Purification Rundown Replaces the Sweat Program," positioning it as a mandatory introductory service to address not only drugs but also environmental pollutants and medications. The bulletin outlined the regimen—combining controlled exercise, high-dose niacin, vitamins, and prolonged sauna sessions—as essential for mobilizing and excreting embedded toxins prior to Objective Processes on the Bridge to Total Freedom.[14][15] Implementation began immediately within Church of Scientology organizations, with the program integrated as a prerequisite for further auditing by late 1978. Early adopters reported subjective improvements in mental clarity and physical tolerance, prompting rapid dissemination; by early 1980, completion successes were noted across international centers, solidifying its role in standardizing participant preparation. The protocol's rollout coincided with Hubbard's broader refinements to Scientology technology during his sequestration period, reflecting an empirical adjustment based on field feedback from auditors observing persistent drug-induced barriers.[16][11]Program Components and Protocol
Core Elements: Exercise, Nutrition, and Sauna Therapy
The Purification Rundown, as formulated by L. Ron Hubbard, integrates exercise, nutrition, and sauna therapy into a daily regimen intended to mobilize and expel stored drug residues and other toxins from adipose tissues through increased circulation, biochemical support, and perspiration. Participants follow a structured schedule under supervision, typically dedicating four to five hours per day to these elements combined with rest periods, continuing until subjective indicators of completion are met, such as stabilized vitamin intake without adverse reactions.[1][17] Exercise in the program emphasizes moderate aerobic activity to elevate heart rate and promote fat metabolism, with running specified as the primary form—usually 20 to 30 minutes per session on a track or treadmill before sauna exposure. This step aims to "work up circulation" and dislodge embedded substances from body fats, as Hubbard described in his writings, avoiding excessive strain to prevent fatigue. Fluid intake is encouraged post-exercise to support hydration, and the activity is repeated daily without variation until program endpoints.[17][9] Nutrition protocols feature a calorie-controlled diet prioritizing vegetables, tubers, whole grains, and lean proteins while restricting saturated fats and processed foods; daily caloric intake is calibrated around 2,000 to 3,000 units, supplemented by polyunsaturated oils like canola or safflower to aid fat solubilization. Vitamin and mineral megadoses form the cornerstone, starting low and escalating—particularly niacin (vitamin B3) from 100 mg up to 5,000 mg daily, combined with vitamins A, C, D, E, and a full B-complex, plus calcium, magnesium, and potassium—to purportedly counteract deficiencies and trigger lipid release via niacin-induced flushing. These supplements, totaling dozens of pills per day, are taken with meals under monitoring to mitigate side effects like gastrointestinal upset or skin irritation.[5][18][19] Sauna therapy constitutes the bulk of daily time, with participants alternating 30- to 60-minute exposures in dry heat at 140 to 180°F (60 to 82°C) for a total of 2.5 to 5 hours, interspersed with cooling breaks, hydration (up to a gallon of fluids including electrolytes and salt), and rest to induce profuse sweating as the excretory mechanism. Hubbard specified this as the "major part" of the process, using low-humidity commercial saunas to maximize diaphoresis without steam, with temperature adjustments based on individual tolerance to avoid overheating. Linens or casts of vegetable oil are sometimes applied to the skin for additional purported detoxification support.[17][9][20]Dosage and Duration Guidelines
The Purification Rundown prescribes a progressive daily regimen centered on niacin supplementation to mobilize purported drug residues stored in body fat, combined with physical activity and heat exposure. Niacin intake begins at 100 milligrams per day, taken orally with meals or prior to exercise, and escalates gradually—typically by 100 to 500 milligrams every few days—up to a maximum of 5,000 milligrams daily, or until a pronounced flushing reaction indicates saturation.[21][22] This escalation is monitored by supervisors to avoid excessive discomfort, with the niacin intended to enhance circulation and trigger the release of toxins alongside other B vitamins and polyunsaturated oils. Participants perform 20 to 30 minutes of moderate aerobic exercise, such as running or treadmill work, immediately after niacin ingestion to stimulate sweating and fat metabolism, followed directly by sauna sessions.[23] Sauna time totals 2.5 to 5 hours per day in a low-temperature dry sauna (around 140-180°F), segmented into 20- to 30-minute intervals with 5- to 10-minute cool-down breaks for hydration using electrolyte solutions containing calcium, magnesium, and salt to replenish minerals lost through perspiration.[21][1] Supplementary nutrition includes high-dose multivitamins (e.g., full spectrum of B vitamins, 5,000-10,000 milligrams vitamin C, vitamins A, D, and E), essential fatty acids from vegetable oils, and a diet emphasizing fresh vegetables, fluids, and avoidance of stimulants, all calibrated to support the purported detoxification without medical oversight beyond program staff.[1] The full program duration varies by individual response, generally spanning 2 to 5 weeks of daily sessions (5-7 days per week), accumulating 30 to 100 hours of sauna exposure, and concludes when subjective indicators like stabilized mood, absence of drug-related cravings or dreams, and consistent lack of flushing response are observed.[5][3]Monitoring and Completion Criteria
The Purification Rundown is monitored by a trained supervisor who oversees daily participation, ensuring adherence to the prescribed schedule of exercise, niacin intake, sauna sessions, and nutritional supplements.[1] Participants maintain worksheets logging symptoms, niacin dosages (starting low and increasing gradually to a maximum of 5,000 milligrams), and reactions such as flushing or restimulation of past drug effects, which the supervisor reviews to adjust the program and prevent overexertion or adverse reactions.[15] Health monitoring includes observation for dehydration, fatigue, or vitamin overload, with provisions for rest days if needed, though the regimen typically spans 2.5 to 5 hours daily over several weeks.[3] Completion criteria, known as "end phenomena" in Scientology terminology, are met when the participant exhibits a stable lack of restimulative effects from niacin ingestion, signifying the purported elimination of stored drug residues and toxins from body tissues.[15] This is verified through a challenge test where niacin is administered without triggering prior symptoms like itching, emotional disturbances, or perceptual anomalies linked to historical substance use, indicating the body is "clear" of such residuals per the program's theory.[24] The supervisor attests to this attainment before certifying completion, after which participants may proceed to subsequent Scientology services; durations vary individually but often total 100-300 hours, with no fixed endpoint beyond the end phenomena.[15]Theoretical Underpinnings
Hubbard's Model of Drug and Toxin Residues
L. Ron Hubbard asserted that many drugs and environmental toxins, owing to their fat-soluble properties, become trapped in the body's adipose tissues rather than being fully metabolized and excreted following initial exposure. These residues, he claimed, can persist in fatty tissue for years, evading natural elimination processes and accumulating from sources such as street drugs, pharmaceuticals, pesticides, and preservatives prevalent in modern society.[25][1][18] Hubbard's model posits that stored residues mobilize into the bloodstream during conditions of physiological stress, illness, or fat breakdown—such as through exercise or caloric deficit—potentially reactivating original pharmacological or toxic effects. For instance, he described how LSD residues could trigger delayed "flashbacks" or perceptual disruptions long after use, while broader toxin release impairs neural communication, contributing to diminished mental acuity, learning deficits, memory issues, and cravings.[25][1] This reintoxication, according to Hubbard, erects a biochemical impediment to cognitive function and spiritual rehabilitation, necessitating targeted intervention to purge the deposits.[25][18] Developed through observations in the 1970s, Hubbard's framework emphasizes that incomplete clearance of lipophilic substances underlies chronic post-exposure symptoms, distinguishing it from conventional views on drug pharmacokinetics by extending storage effects to a wide array of chemicals beyond persistent pollutants like DDT.[1][25] The theory underpins protocols like the Purification Rundown, where niacin-induced lipolysis, aerobic exercise, and sauna sweating purportedly facilitate residue extraction and expulsion via perspiration and enhanced circulation.[18][25]Proposed Mechanisms of Detoxification
The Purification Rundown, as outlined by L. Ron Hubbard, posits that drugs, toxins, and environmental chemicals—particularly fat-soluble substances like LSD metabolites—persist in the body's adipose tissues long after initial exposure, potentially causing lingering physiological, psychological, and spiritual effects such as cravings or reactive behaviors.[25][26] Hubbard theorized that these residues are not fully metabolized by standard liver and kidney processes and instead sequester in fat cells, where they can be mobilized and eliminated through targeted interventions.[27] This model draws on observations from the 1960s and 1970s, including reports of adverse reactions in former LSD users, leading Hubbard to advocate a regimen to systematically release and excrete these stored compounds.[28] Central to the proposed detoxification is niacin (vitamin B3), administered in escalating doses up to 5,000 mg daily, which Hubbard claimed induces lipid mobilization by causing the oxidation of fatty acids trapped in tissues, thereby freeing embedded toxins for circulation and subsequent elimination.[7] This effect is attributed to niacin's known pharmacological action as a peripheral vasodilator, producing a "flushing" response that proponents interpret as evidence of toxin release, though biochemical analyses indicate it primarily reflects prostaglandin-mediated skin reactions rather than xenobiotic expulsion.[1] Accompanying moderate exercise, such as running or calisthenics for 30 minutes daily, purportedly enhances circulation and fat metabolism, accelerating the breakdown of adipose stores to dislodge residues into the bloodstream.[29] Sauna therapy, involving 2.5 to 5 hours of low-temperature (around 140–180°F) exposure daily, is proposed to facilitate excretion primarily via sweat, with Hubbard asserting that perspiration carries out mobilized fat-soluble toxins that would otherwise evade urinary or fecal pathways.[30] To support this, participants consume high-calorie intakes (4,000–10,000 calories daily) rich in polyunsaturated vegetable oils, theorized to "flush" contaminated fats by promoting lipolysis and replacing them with cleaner lipids, while multivitamins and minerals replenish nutrients depleted during the process.[28] Hubbard's writings, such as in Clear Body, Clear Mind (published 1990), frame this combination as a precise sequence to prevent re-accumulation, with sweat analysis purportedly showing elevated toxin levels post-regimen.[26] Independent toxicological reviews, however, challenge these mechanisms, noting that sweat contains negligible concentrations of fat-soluble xenobiotics compared to urine or bile, and that niacin lacks demonstrated efficacy for adipose toxin extraction beyond its role in general metabolism.[5] Studies in peer-reviewed journals, including those evaluating similar sauna-based protocols, find no verifiable increase in systemic toxin clearance attributable to the regimen, attributing perceived benefits to hydration shifts or placebo effects rather than Hubbard's residue model.[31] Proponents, including some publications in Medical Hypotheses, cite anecdotal sweat assays and neuroendocrine improvements, but these lack replication in controlled trials and originate from affiliated researchers.[27][32] The theory remains unendorsed by mainstream pharmacology, which emphasizes hepatic cytochrome P450 enzymes and renal filtration as primary detox pathways for most compounds.[33]Promotion and Applications
Role in Scientology Practices
The Purification Rundown functions as a mandatory preparatory step in Scientology's sequential spiritual advancement framework, the Bridge to Total Freedom, designed to eliminate purported drug and toxin residues that impair auditing efficacy. Auditing, Scientology's central one-on-one counseling process aimed at resolving reactive mind influences, is believed to be hindered by biochemical barriers from substances lodged in fatty tissues, which Hubbard claimed could induce mis-emotion, physical discomfort, or unstable case gains during sessions.[1] Developed by L. Ron Hubbard in 1977 and detailed in his 1990 book Clear Body, Clear Mind: The Effective Purification Program, the Rundown is positioned as essential for anyone with exposure to drugs—recreational, pharmaceutical, or environmental—ensuring a "clean" bodily state before engaging in Dianetics or Scientology processes.[1][9] Within Church practices, the program is supervised by trained personnel at local Scientology organizations or advanced facilities, typically spanning 2 to 5 weeks of daily regimens totaling up to 5 hours, including running, sauna exposure, niacin intake, and caloric intake calibrated to body fat estimates. Completion criteria involve subjective indicators such as reported clarity of perception, absence of drug phantoms (hallucinated sensations), and medical oversight to confirm tolerance, after which participants attest to restored mental acuity via written successes.[1] This step precedes introductory auditing actions like the Objectives Rundown, reinforcing Scientology's doctrine that physical detoxification underpins thetan rehabilitation and prevents "drug restimulation" from derailing progress toward Clear and Operating Thetan states.[1] Non-compliance or incomplete delivery is flagged in internal ethics reviews as a potential barrier to further services, aligning with Hubbard's policy bulletins emphasizing its role in maintaining case stability.[34] Church policy mandates the Rundown for all new public with drug histories, as Hubbard asserted in technical bulletins that even past aspirin use could embed residues affecting spiritual awareness, thus integrating it as a gateway rite that has been completed by an estimated hundreds of thousands of members since inception.[1] In operational terms, it exemplifies Scientology's applied philosophy of addressing the whole person—body, mind, and spirit—prior to esoteric pursuits, with facilities like the Purification Unit at larger bases overseeing delivery to sustain organizational expansion.[1]Adaptations in Narconon and Secular Programs
Narconon, a drug rehabilitation network founded in 1966 by William Benitez, incorporates the Purification Rundown—renamed the "New Life Detoxification" program—as its second phase following initial drug withdrawal management.[35] This adaptation maintains the core Hubbard protocol of moderate exercise (typically running), extended sauna sessions up to five hours daily, high-dose niacin escalating from 100 mg to 5,000 mg, polyunsaturated oils, and multivitamins, with durations varying from 2 to 6 weeks based on individual response and perceived toxin elimination via sweat and urine.[36] The program is positioned within Narconon's secular framework, emphasizing physical detoxification to address residual drug effects on the body and mind, without explicit reference to Scientology's spiritual auditing, though operational materials derive directly from L. Ron Hubbard's writings in Clear Body, Clear Mind.[37] In Narconon centers worldwide, the rundown is supervised by trained staff using Hubbard's guidelines for monitoring symptoms like niacin flush or fatigue, with completion determined by subjective reports of improved clarity and optional re-runs if drug cravings persist.[36] Adaptations include integration with subsequent phases, such as objective processes and life skills training, to form a comprehensive 3- to 6-month residential treatment model claiming to interrupt the addiction cycle through bodily purification.[38] Narconon operates over 50 facilities globally, including in the United States, Europe, and Australia, marketing the protocol as a non-medical, drug-free alternative to conventional rehab, despite its origins in Scientology practices developed in the early 1970s.[21] Secular applications beyond Narconon have emerged in clinical research for non-addiction detoxification, notably adapting the Hubbard method for veterans with Gulf War Illness. A 2012-2015 randomized trial evaluated a 4- to 6-week protocol of daily exercise, sauna-induced sweating, escalating niacin doses up to 6,000 mg, and supplements like omega-3 oils, reporting feasibility and symptom reduction in participants exposed to chemical agents.[39] Similarly, a 2019 intervention study for the same condition used comparable elements—moderate aerobic activity, 2.5 hours of sauna daily, and niacin with other nutrients—observing tolerability and potential mitigation of protracted symptoms without religious framing.[40] These medical adaptations strip away Hubbard's thetan-related rationale, focusing instead on empirical claims of mobilizing fat-stored toxins for excretion, as tested in controlled settings for occupational exposures like pesticides or solvents.[41] Orthomolecular practitioners, drawing from niacin research by Abram Hoffer since the 1950s, have independently employed high-dose niacin with sauna for schizophrenia and toxin clearance, predating and paralleling Hubbard's synthesis, though without the full structured rundown.[42] Such uses remain experimental, with protocols customized for safety (e.g., lower niacin starting at 100 mg and medical oversight), and are not endorsed by major health bodies like the FDA or WHO for routine detox.Evidence of Efficacy
Internal Studies and Anecdotal Reports
The Schnare et al. study, published in 1982, examined a detoxification regimen involving caloric restriction, exercise, sauna sessions, and supplementation with niacin, vitamins, and oils—elements mirroring the Purification Rundown—in 33 participants with elevated levels of fat-stored xenobiotics such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and hexachlorobenzene.[31] Participants underwent the program for an average of 25 days, during which body fat biopsies and urine samples showed average reductions of 23-60% in targeted toxins, with researchers attributing the effect to mobilized fat releasing stored compounds for excretion via sweat and urine.[43] Conducted by affiliates of the Foundation for Advancements in Science and Education, which supported Hubbard's detoxification concepts, the study lacked a control group and independent replication, limiting its generalizability.[44] Narconon programs, which incorporate the Purification Rundown as the initial detoxification phase, have reported internal evaluations of overall efficacy, though not isolating the Rundown's contribution. A self-conducted survey of 323 graduates found 73.5% remained drug-free and 94% arrest-free six months post-completion, with the detoxification step credited for addressing residual drug effects to facilitate subsequent behavioral components.[45] Similar internal data from Narconon facilities, such as a Swedish center tracking 49 graduates, indicated 80% drug abstinence at six months, alongside improvements in employment and family relations, again encompassing the full program starting with purification.[45] These assessments rely on self-reported outcomes from participants in Scientology-affiliated settings, without blinded controls or external validation.[19] Anecdotal reports from Purification Rundown completers, primarily shared through Scientology and Narconon channels, describe subjective improvements in energy, mental clarity, and physical symptoms. One participant reported feeling "reborn" with "enormous amounts of energy," enhanced vision, and a "squeaky clean" bodily sensation post-program.[46] Another noted reduced chronic aches, pains, anxiety, and emotional volatility following completion.[47] Former members have recounted modest benefits, such as increased vitality, often linked to the exercise and sauna components rather than toxin elimination.[48] These accounts, while consistent in reporting perceived wellness gains, originate from biased sources and may reflect placebo effects, hydration, or physical activity rather than the program's purported mechanism of residue purging.[19]Independent Evaluations and Clinical Trials
Independent evaluations of the Purification Rundown remain sparse, with no large-scale, randomized controlled trials confirming its core claim of mobilizing and excreting stored drug or toxin residues from body fat. A 2008 systematic review by the Norwegian Institute of Public Health analyzed available studies on Narconon programs, which centrally feature the Rundown as a detoxification phase, and determined that methodological weaknesses—such as absence of control groups, self-reported outcomes, low follow-up rates (as low as 21% in one Swedish evaluation), and potential selection bias—preclude reliable conclusions on efficacy for drug prevention or rehabilitation.[49] Similarly, a 2007 pilot assessment of the New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project, which applied Rundown elements to 9/11 responders exposed to airborne toxins, reported over 60% symptom improvement in an initial cohort of 100 participants after 3-4 months, alongside detected reductions in blood levels of mercury and lead; however, the study lacked a control arm, relied on subjective symptom scores, and involved partial funding from Scientology-affiliated sources, compromising independence.[50] A 2019 randomized waitlist-controlled pilot trial tested a Hubbard-inspired protocol (including niacin, exercise, and sauna) in 29 Gulf War Illness veterans, finding it feasible with high adherence (99% completion in a tolerability substudy) and modest short-term gains in quality-of-life measures, but no significant differences in objective biomarkers of detoxification or long-term symptom resolution compared to controls.[40][41] These findings align with broader critiques that while participants may experience placebo effects or benefits from exercise and hydration, the regimen does not demonstrably accelerate clearance of lipophilic toxins beyond standard physiological processes handled by the liver and kidneys.[31] One evaluation outside addiction contexts examined the Rundown's application to 122 Vietnamese victims of Agent Orange/dioxin exposure in 2021, reporting symptom reductions (e.g., skin disorders, fatigue) in 91% of cases post-treatment; yet, 35% lacked baseline clinical testing, no randomized controls were used, and the study occurred in Scientology-supported centers, introducing potential confounding from non-blinded delivery and cultural expectations of benefit.[51] Overall, peer-reviewed literature highlights risks like niacin-induced hepatotoxicity and sauna-related dehydration over proven causal mechanisms for residue elimination, with independent bodies such as public health agencies emphasizing the need for rigorous trials absent to date.[41]Comparative Analysis with Standard Detox Methods
The Purification Rundown, as described in L. Ron Hubbard's writings, posits that drug residues persist in fatty tissues for years, contributing to cravings and health issues, and claims to address this through prolonged sweating in saunas, high-dose niacin to mobilize lipids, exercise, and vegetable oils to bind toxins.[32] In contrast, standard medical detoxification for substance use disorders focuses on managed withdrawal using evidence-based protocols, including pharmacological agents like benzodiazepines for alcohol or opioids for heroin to mitigate acute symptoms, alongside hydration, nutrition, and monitoring by healthcare professionals, without reliance on sweat-based elimination.[52] Pharmacokinetic data indicate that while lipophilic substances such as THC can store in adipose tissue and release slowly during lipolysis, most drugs clear the body via hepatic and renal pathways within days to weeks, with negligible long-term residues impacting behavior absent ongoing use.[53] Independent evaluations of the Purification Rundown reveal no large-scale, randomized controlled trials demonstrating superior toxin elimination or reduced relapse compared to conventional methods; available studies, often small or affiliated with Scientology programs like Narconon, report subjective improvements but lack controls for placebo effects or natural recovery.[24] Narconon, which incorporates the Rundown, asserts success rates of 70-80% for sustained abstinence, based on internal surveys excluding dropouts, but external audits, such as a 2007 Norwegian review, found completion rates below 20% and outcomes no better than typical residential programs, where long-term abstinence hovers at 10-30% post-discharge.[54][55] Standard rehabilitation, integrating cognitive-behavioral therapy and medications like methadone, shows meta-analytic evidence of 20-40% improved abstinence at one year versus untreated cohorts, with retention rates averaging 34% in therapeutic communities, though relapse remains common due to multifactorial addiction etiology beyond purported toxin residues.[56][57]| Aspect | Purification Rundown/Narconon | Standard Medical Detox/Rehab |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Mechanism | Sweat-induced fat mobilization and excretion of stored residues via niacin and sauna.[32] | Pharmacological symptom management and organ-supported clearance (liver, kidneys); behavioral interventions target psychological dependence.[52] |
| Evidence Base | Limited to self-reported or small observational studies; no peer-reviewed RCTs confirming residue removal or causal efficacy.[24] | Supported by RCTs and meta-analyses for withdrawal mitigation and relapse prevention; e.g., opioid agonists reduce overdose risk by 50%.[56] |
| Reported Outcomes | Claimed 75%+ abstinence, but independent data show high attrition (70-80%) and unverified long-term effects.[54] | 40-60% program completion; 20-50% one-year abstinence with integrated care, measured via validated scales.[55] |
| Safety Profile | Risks include niacin-induced hepatotoxicity, dehydration from extended saunas (up to 5 hours daily), and electrolyte imbalance; case reports of adverse events in unsupervised settings.[58] | Lower risk under medical supervision; complications like seizures managed with protocols, though unsupervised withdrawal carries mortality risks (e.g., delirium tremens).[52] |
