Peter Osborne
Dr. Peter Osborne, DC, DACBN, PScD is board certified in clinical nutrition and currently serves on the advisory board for Functional Medicine University.
He has served as the executive director and the vice president for the American Clinical Board of Nutrition. He has also served as an adjunct professor at HCC and Texas Woman's University teaching nutrition and neurophysiology to nursing and occupational therapy students.
He is a doctor of chiropractic and pastoral science. He graduated from Texas Chiropractic College in 2001. During his training, he completed ambassador internships in rheumatology (VA hospital) and family practice.
His work, research, and expertise has been featured by PBS, Netflix, the Harvard Faculty Club, FOX, CBS, US News, the New York Post. He is has been a regular contributor to Fox 26 News in Houston, TX.
His international best selling book, No Grain No Pain was published by Simon & Schuster, and has been translated into five different languages.
For more than 25 years he has dedicated his life to training and teaching doctors on the topics of nutrition, autoimmunity, and gluten sensitivity. He has hosted training clinics and mentored hundreds of medical doctors, pharmacists, osteopaths, chiropractors, and nurses.
He has been hired as a consultant by many top nutritional manufacturers to develop nutritional formulations for clinical use. Many of these formulas are used by doctors and clinics all over the world.
During the week, you can find him at his functional nutrition clinic helping those suffering with autoimmune problems pursue better health through lifestyle and nutrition changes. He shares this information freely through his weekly Youtube show and podcast, The Dr. Osborne Zone. His goal? To reach and save 100 million lives (#save100millionlives).
5 Responses
Shawna and her programs are awesome! Thanks for sharing!
My muscles are gone, and I have a lot of pain in my
wrists. How can I overcome that problem and still
work toward doing pullups?
I would start with the following information and work to build strength in your grip and wrists:
https://stg-gfsociety-testing.kinsta.cloud/the-quickest-way-to-die-poor-muscle-mass/
Do you think it’s possible to come off synthroid (50 mcg)? I’ve been on it 10 years and was just diagnosed with dermatitis herpetiformis and my gene test was positive for gluten sensitivity. Also was diagnosed with a “type 1.5” diabetes, presumed autoimmune by my doctor as I’m not overweight, about 10 years ago.
Just saw that synthroid has corn in it.
Thanks, maer
Hello Ann Wyttenbach
I was also diagnosed with ‘type 1.5 diabetes’ a few months ago (at 32) as I am not over weight (was actually underweight at time of diagnosis – until I started on the insulin. It is presumed an auto-immune disease. I then realised gluten made me feel ill, so cut it from my diet and got a gene test, which came back positive.
I would like to know as much as I can about ‘type 1.5’. What else do you know or have been told about it?? I would really appreciate some more info…
Thanks, Cara 🙂