This article informs readers about the wife of Dr. Rashid Buttar a British-born American licensed osteopathic physician full of controversy.
Rashid Ali Buttar was an American conspiracy theorist, anti-vaxxer and licensed osteopathic physician. He was born on 1966 in England, United Kingdom. He was known for his controversial use of chelation therapy for numerous conditions, including autism and cancer.
He had twice been reprimanded by the North Carolina Board of Medical Examiners for unprofessional conduct and cited by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for illegal marketing of unapproved and adulterated drugs.
He immigrated with his parents to the U.S. at the age of 9 and grew up in rural Rosebud, Missouri. He attended Washington University, graduating with a bachelor’s degree in biology and religion, and then earned a Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine degree from University of Osteopathic Medicine and Health Sciences in Des Moines, Iowa.
Buttar had made the claim of being board certified by several entities, all of which are listed as “questionable organizations” by Quack watch, including the American Academy of Preventative Medicine, American Academy of Integrative Medicine, and American College for Advancement in Medicine; the latter’s primary purpose is the promotion of chelation therapy.
In 1998, Buttar launched and served as medical director for Medical Spa and Rejuvenation Center, a provider of massage services, in Huntersville, North Carolina.
In 2007, Buttar was brought before the North Carolina Board of Medical Examiners, accused of unprofessional conduct for providing ineffectual therapies to four cancer patients. Three of those patients later died.
Following public hearings in 2008, the panel recommended that Buttar’s license “be suspended indefinitely” and that he be prohibited from treating children or patients with cancer, but stayed the decision, ultimately giving Buttar a formal reprimand in 2010 while allowing him to continue to practice.
In July 2009, Buttar and his wife Debbie achieved the rank of “blue diamond” within the distributor network of the multi-level marketing company Monavie, which sold an acai-based beverage until going into foreclosure in 2015.
In April 2010, the FDA sent Buttar a warning letter for illegally marketing unapproved topical creams as drugs via his websites, YouTube videos, and radio appearances.
In 2019, the North Carolina Medical Board disciplined Buttar after receiving two complaints. In one case, a physician was worried that Buttar’s treatment of a cancer patient hindered appropriate treatment and increased the patient’s pain and suffering. In the other case, Buttar admitted that his personal relationship with the parent of a young patient constituted a boundary violation.
In March 2021, an analysis by the Center for Countering Digital Hate of Twitter and Facebook anti-vaccine content found Buttar to be one of the top twelve individual and organization accounts producing up to 65% of all anti-vaccine content on the platforms.
In May 2023 reports circulated online attributed to his family stating that Buttar had died on May 18.
Meet the wife of Dr. Rashid Buttar
Dr. Rashid Buttar’s wife’s name is Debbie Buttar; she is an author, professionally.
Debbie Buttar, a published author, hails from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and later moved to the Southern region of the United States following her graduation from the University of South Carolina. Dr. Buttar is a private person when it comes to information about his family.
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