Which specific therapies and modalities does Dr. Pete Sulack use in his holistic healing practice?
Executive summary
Dr. Pete Sulack’s holistic practice centers on chiropractic and “functional, metabolic, and holistic” protocols that combine faith-driven care, nutrition, detox and oxygenation therapies, targeted supplements (Redeem Essentials), and what he and some outlets describe as repurposed drugs plus orthomolecular and lifestyle therapies in cancer context [1] [2] [3] [4]. His public materials emphasize a resilience program and an 87‑page “Resilience Protocol” he offers to the public that reportedly details nutrition, detox and mindset steps [5] [3].
1. Chiropractic and structural care as the founding modality
Sulack is a chiropractor by training and founded Redeem Health/Exodus Chiropractic; multiple bios and the clinic site present spinal and musculoskeletal care as the core clinical service around which his broader wellness work is organized [6] [7] [1].
2. “Functional, metabolic, and holistic” protocols — a branded, plural approach
Profiles and his autobiography-style descriptions repeatedly describe the approach as “functional, metabolic, and holistic,” indicating a multi-component philosophy (not a single therapy). Those descriptions are used to explain how he applied the same protocols he used clinically to his own illness recovery [1] [3].
3. Nutrition, detoxification, oxygenation and lifestyle therapies
Podcasts and interviews with Sulack list nutrition, detox, oxygenation therapies and broader lifestyle measures (mindset, metabolic support) as central parts of his regimen. These appear in his interviews as concrete program elements he recommends to patients and followers [2] [5].
4. Supplements and a proprietary line: Redeem Essentials
Sulack’s practice promotes a supplement line called Redeem Essentials, described as products he “personally uses and recommends” and connected to personalized supplement bundles via an online quiz—this indicates supplementation is an explicit modality in his practice [3] [8].
5. Faith, mindset and ministry integrated into care
Faith-based healing and spiritual outreach are explicit components: his public materials and interviews frame healing as faith-fueled and include ministry work (Matthew 10) and mindset protocols alongside physical therapies [3] [5].
6. Cancer-focused elements: repurposed drugs, orthomolecular support, and mitochondrial framing
Sources reporting on his cancer work state he discusses a protocol involving repurposed antiparasitic/anthelmintic drugs (ivermectin, mebendazole, fenbendazole) used alongside “orthomolecular support and lifestyle therapies,” and frames treatment around mitochondria and metabolic strategies; these appear in an article about repurposed drugs and in interviews where he offers a detailed protocol to listeners [4] [5].
7. Use of baking soda and terrain-based ideas
Some clinic listings and media quotes attribute use of baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) as a buffering/terrain-based element Sulack has referenced in describing his regimen and its effects on pH and immune function [8] [9].
8. Programs and deliverables: “Be Resilient” and the 87‑page protocol
Sulack markets a Be Resilient program and an 87‑page Resilience Protocol he makes available to the public; press and podcast descriptions say these documents contain the specific nutrition, detox and mindset protocols he used [3] [5].
9. What the available reporting does not state
Available sources do not publish full clinical protocols, precise dosing, complete treatment schedules, objective outcome data from independent trials, or explicit medical oversight mechanisms for the repurposed‑drug regimens [4] [5]. They also do not include peer‑reviewed clinical trial evidence validating the efficacy or safety of the full combined protocol as practiced by Sulack [4].
10. Competing perspectives and implicit agendas to note
Public-facing materials mix clinical language (“functional medicine,” “orthomolecular support”) with religious testimony and product marketing (supplement line, downloadable protocols), creating overlapping agendas: clinical advocacy, spiritual testimony, and commerce [3] [8]. Reporting that highlights repurposed antiparasitic drugs frames them as promising but comes from outlets and interviews that promote Sulack’s protocol; independent scientific vetting is not shown in these sources [4] [5]. Readers should weigh promotional aims of clinic pages and podcasts alongside claims of personal recovery.
Limitations: this analysis strictly uses the provided sources. For verifiable, clinical details (dosing, safety, independent outcomes), available sources do not mention them; those specifics are not found in current reporting [4] [5].