Dr. Stasha Gominak Part I - a podcast by Dr. Michelle Robin

from 2021-02-17T17:00

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Dr. Stasha Gominak attended college in California and  medical school at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, receiving her MD degree in 1983. She completed a Neurology residency in 1989 at the Harvard affiliated, Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. From 1991-2004 she practiced as general neurologist in the San Francisco Bay area.

In 2004 Dr. Gominak moved with her husband to Tyler, Texas and began to concentrate on treating neurological illness by improving sleep. She published a pivotal article in 2012 proposing that the global struggle with worsening sleep was linked to reduced sun exposure.

In 2016 she followed with a second article linking the change in the intestinal microbiome to the epidemic of poor sleep, and described a simple process for normalizing sleep and the intestinal bacterial population, called RightSleep®. In 2016 she retired from office practice to have more time to teach.

She currently divides her time between teaching individuals, through virtual coaching sessions and teaching clinicians from a wide variety of medical and dental fields. Her popular courses and lectures help clinicians improve their patients’ health and wellbeing by improving their sleep.

Join Dr. Michelle and Dr. Stasha as they talk about:

  • About her program, RightSleep®, and how we can begin rethinking how we heal our bodies especially with vitamins and boosting the microbiome.
  • Why we’re seeing more and more disease due to the toxicity in our environment including our food.
  • What a healthy microbiome looks like in and outside of the body.
  • The wrong mentality that all bacteria is bad and we have to destroy them.
  • Pros and cons about antibiotics.
  • The many layers of our immune system and why a good microbiome plus Vitamin D and B levels are so important for it to do its job.
  • What level of Vitamin D you should have according to your skin color.
  • The connection between obesity and poor microbiome health.
  • How she became interested in studying sleep.
  • Unpacking genetics and how to heal the body’s unique epigenetics.
  • The specific reasons why some people experience paralyzation while they sleep.

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Further episodes of Small Changes Big Shifts

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Website of Dr. Michelle Robin