Barry 
        Bittman, MD is a neurologist, author, international speaker, award-winning 
        producer/director and inventor. As CEO and Medical Director of the Mind-Body 
        Wellness Center, a comprehensive, interdisciplinary outpatient medical 
        facility in Meadville, PA., Dr. Bittman has pioneered a new paradigm for 
        treating the “whole person.” Based upon extensive research, 
        he developed 
Insights 
        for Living Beyond Cancer with Bernie Siegel, MD, a program that integrates 
        the power of mind, body and spirit with conventional medical care. Dr. 
        Bittman has also created similar programs for individuals facing the challenges 
        of asthma, cardiovascular disease, chronic lung disease and diabetes. 
      His 
        medical perspectives, emphasizing a mind-body approach have been presented 
        in his book, Reprogramming Pain, written to help individuals transform 
        pain and suffering into health and success. His latest book, 
Maze 
        of Life, co-authored with Anthony DeFail, is a soul-searching parable 
        about restoring hope, meaning and purpose amidst life’s challenges.
      As         the host of the first nationally-syndicated integrative medicine weekly 
        Public Radio program, 
Mind-Body 
        Matters, Dr. Bittman interviewed 115 of the world's leading visionaries. 
        His program featured cutting-edge in-depth perspectives that scientifically 
        substantiate the integration of complementary approaches into conventional 
        healthcare. Dr. Bittman's more than 250 articles on a host of integrative 
        medical topics have been published in his newspaper column, 
Mind 
        Over Matter.
      Based 
        upon his commitment for shaping the future of cancer care in traditional 
        medicine, Dr. Bittman served as a board member of the American Cancer 
        Society at the state level for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. He is 
        also CEO of ECaP, Exceptional Cancer Patients, an organization founded 
        by Bernie Siegel, MD in 1978 dedicated to providing retreats, training 
        for health professionals, resources and information for individuals facing 
        the challenges of cancer and other chronic illnesses. 
      Dr. 
        Bittman has been awarded three patents for his invention, Mindscope®, 
        introduced in 1992 as the world’s first clinical tool linking the 
        nervous system to a multimedia environment. Bittman’s innovative 
        biofeedback technology has been successfully utilized in clinical settings 
        throughout the U.S., Canada and Europe. A customized application was also 
        incorporated into the training program of U.S. National Figure Skating 
        Champion, Tonia Kwiatkowski.
      Dr. 
        Bittman's "whole person" approach has been featured in numerous 
        leading publications throughout the world, including USA Today, Business 
        Week, Time, Prevention, Discover, O (Oprah Magazine), the New York Times, 
        the San Francisco Chronicle, the Washington Post, Scientific American, 
        Men's Fitness, Health magazine, Spirituality & Health, New Age Journal, 
        Self magazine and numerous other leading publications.
      In 
        1995 Dr. Bittman began 
TouchStar 
        Productions, a company dedicated to providing evidence-based resources 
        to help individuals harness their inner healing potential as a complementary 
        approach to traditional healthcare. With an emphasis on Psychoneuroimmunology, 
        the medical discipline that studies the interaction between emotions, 
        nervous system, endocrine system and immune system function, TouchStar’s 
        initial releases (available through select distributors in the US and 
        Canada) feature multimedia journeys through nature with introductions 
        by world-renowned authors. SmithKline Beecham, one of the world’s 
        leading pharmaceutical companies, is distributing TouchStar’s self-help 
        program entitled Affirmations For Getting Well Again, to cancer specialists 
        throughout the nation. Affirmations for Getting Well Again also won the 
        coveted first place awards in the Wellness and Cinematography categories 
        from among 632 entries at the 1997 American Medical Association’s 
        International Health and Medical Film Festival in San Francisco.
      Based 
        on his conviction that Recreational Music-making is an effective therapeutic 
        strategy in conventional medical settings, Dr. Bittman led a team of researchers 
        who investigated the biological effects of the 
HealthRHYTHMS 
        group drumming protocol he co-developed. This foundational study (Alternative 
        Therapies, Jan. 2001) correlated group drumming with increased activity 
        of Natural Killer cells, specialized white blood cells that seek out and 
        destroy cancer cells and virally-infected cells. 
      Along 
        with Karl T. Bruhn, acknowledged as "Father of Music Making and Wellness," 
        his research team also demonstrated substantial reductions in burnout 
        and mood disturbances in long-term care workers, as well as significant 
        cost savings using a Recreational Music-making protocol (
Advances in 
        Mind-Body Medicine, November 2003). A similar approach was also shown 
        to benefit nursing students (
The International Journal of Nursing Education 
        Scholarship, July 2004).
      With 
        a focus on the aging continuum, Dr. Bittman led a team of researchers 
        to document the impact of Recreational Music-making in the long-term care 
        continuum. His extensive compilation of data from two long-term care centers 
        documented multiple psychosocial benefits across the aging spectrum (
Provider, 
        Nov. 2004).
      Dr. 
        Bittman's latest research, a 2-phase study demonstrated for the first 
        time that playing a musical instrument reverses multiple elements of the 
        human stress response on the genomic level (
Medical 
        Science Monitor Feb. 2005). His team included researchers from 
        Loma Linda University School of Medicine and Applied Biosystems, the developer 
        of the original technology that led to the successful mapping of the human 
        genome announced in June, 2000. Stress-reduction was far greater for individuals 
        participating in their first group keyboard lesson (Yamaha's Clavinova 
        Connection) than for subjects who simply relaxed and read newspapers and 
        magazines. In addition, the researchers introduced the concept of 
individualized 
        genomic stress induction signatures, which uniquely demonstrate biological 
        diversity in action.