naturopathic doctor news & review
About NDNR
Razi Ann Berry and David Tallman, DC, ND, founded NDNR in 2005. For two decades, NDNR has documented, published, and disseminated case-based evidence for naturopathic and integrative practitioners worldwide, advancing clinical knowledge through practitioner-led case reports and peer-reviewed education.
Our archive holds the largest collection of applied natural medicine case reports in existence, documenting real interventions, dosages, and patient outcomes. NDNR publishes The Journal of Applied Natural Medicine, produces live and virtual summits, masterclasses, and multimedia clinical education, and is a NANCEAC-accredited continuing education provider.
NDNR serves NDs, MDs, DOs, DCs, NPs, PAs, PhDs, and allied healthcare professionals.
Razi Ann Berry has received the AANP Champion of Naturopathic Medicine Award, the Mindshare Rising Tide Award, the Mindshare Best Digital Media Award, and Corporation of the Year.
NDNR has been recognized by SCNM, CNDA, OANP, and NYANP, the Foundations Project and Mindshare. Since 2014, NDNR has hosted the annual Physician Choice Awards.
NDNR 20 Years of Publishing
Key milestones from 2005 to today
Custom Publishing
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Featured News
Caffeine Not the Best for Fighting Sleep Deprivation
NODE SMITH, ND Rough night of sleep? Relying on caffeine to get you through the day isn't always the answer, says a new study from Michigan State University. Researchers from MSU's Sleep and Learning Lab, led by psychology associate professor Kimberly Fenn, assessed...
New Plant Sterol May Lessen Anxiety
NODE SMITH, ND A natural food supplement reduces anxiety in mice, according to a new Weizmann Institute of Science study. The plant-derived substance, beta-sitosterol, was found to produce this effect both on its own and in synergic combination with an antidepressant...
New Class of Memory Cells for Remembering Faces
NODE SMITH, ND Scientists have long searched in vain for a class of brain cells that could explain the visceral flash of recognition that we feel when we see a very familiar face, like that of our grandmothers. But the proposed "grandmother neuron" -- a single cell at...
Getting Closer to a Targeted Treatment for Alzheimer’s
NODE SMITH, ND A new University of Arizona Health Sciences study found women on hormone therapy were up to 58% less likely to develop neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's disease, and reduction of risk varied by type and route of hormone therapy and...
Environmental Factors of Keeping Brain Young
NODE SMITH, ND A stimulating environment keeps the "hippocampus" -- which is the brain's memory control center -- young, so to speak. Causes of this are molecular mechanisms that affect gene regulation. These current findings from studies in mice provide clues as to...
RNA Can be Written into DNA
NODE SMITH, ND Cells contain machinery that duplicates DNA into a new set that goes into a newly formed cell. That same class of machines, called polymerases, also build RNA messages, which are like notes copied from the central DNA repository of recipes, so they can...







