By Linda on Jan 25, 2010 in Food | comments(0)
Linda’s comment: There has not been one death caused by a vitamin or dietary minerals. Toxicology shows zero deaths from multiple vitamins; zero deaths from any of the B vitamins; zero deaths from vitamins A, C, D, or E; and zero deaths from any other vitamin, yet the media and the medical establishment continue to slam the use of the very thing that could keep them healthy. FOLLOW THE MONEY folks…read the Orthomolecular Medicine News Service report from October 14, 2009. Are we safe? I would say yes. I would have been dead by now had it not been for the supplements I take. The FDA and the news media are always looking for the bodies, but of course they need to protect the pockets of the Pharmaceutical industry, which btw does multi million dollar studies using 500 mg of VitC and then turn around and say the 500 mg of VitC showed no significance??!! I guess not…what a waste of money….I take 20,000 grams of VitC daily, along with the rest of the FIGHT program….With all the health problems I suffer from it is the vitamins/supplement/herbals that keep me going…
Start standing up for your CHOICE and RIGHTS folks. Do your research and then listen to your body as you swallow your choices of medical herbals….
Be Healthy
Linda
Excerpt:
(OMNS, October 14, 2009) There was not even one death caused by a vitamin or dietary mineral in 2007, according to the most recent statistics available from the U.S. National Poison Data System. The 132-page annual report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers published in the journal Clinical Toxicology shows zero deaths from multiple vitamins; zero deaths from any of the B vitamins; zero deaths from vitamins A, C, D, or E; and zero deaths from any other vitamin. (1)
Continued
By Linda on Dec 22, 2009 in Infections | comments(0)
NOTHING is rare these days!! If Hepatitis, parasites, Lyme, can be passed on why do they find it so hard to believe that this amoeba can be passed on???? There are liver recipients who get a new liver ONLY to find it is infected with Hepatitis, Lyme and parasites!! If the health departments will not classify Lyme as an STD, how can we expect them test for parasites. Yes, I agree there are many parasites that we humans can and DO pass on to each other….Another reason to make sure you are on a life-long detox, so you are aggressively fighting these “rare” issues and disease. If it is true and you can get the infection by breathing it in, then it is a MUST that we use ACS200ppm.
Regards,
Linda or Angel
JACKSON, Miss. - An extremely rare infection has been passed from an organ donor to at least one recipient in what is thought to be the first human-to-human transfer of the amoeba, medical officials said Friday. Four people in three states received organs from a patient who died at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in November after suffering from neurological problems, said Dave Daigle, a spokesman for the Centers for Disease Controls and Prevention. Continued
By Linda on Dec 22, 2009 in Infections | comments(0)
Center for Comparative Medicine, Schools of Medicine and Veterinary Medicine,
University of California at Davis, One Shields Avenue, Davis, California 95616;
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, State University of New
York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook, New York 11794. Continued
By Linda on Dec 16, 2009 in Toxins | comments(0)
Findings from a November 9, 2009, Environmental Health News report have revealed that many varieties of balsamic vinegar contain trace amounts of lead that are contributing to neurological and other damage in both children and adults. Ingestion of a single tablespoon of vinegar with the highest tested levels of lead was found to potentially raise a child’s blood lead level by 30% while two tablespoons a day would raise it by 55%. Continued
By Bryan Rosner on Nov 29, 2009 in Infections | comments(0)
Clinical practice guidelines are increasing in number. Unfortunately,
when scientific evidence is uncertain, limited, or evolving, as is often
the case, conflict often arises between guideline committees and
practicing physicians, who bear the direct responsibility for the care of
individual patients. The 2006 Infectious Diseases Society of America
guidelines for Lyme disease, which have limited scientific support,
could, if implemented, limit the clinical discretion of treating physicians
and the treatment options available to patients
Introduction
Clinical practice guidelines are now ubiquitous throughout the
United States. The National Guidelines Clearing House, under the
category “diseases,” currently lists 2,126 separate guidelines on its
web site. Clinical guidelines are intended to assist physicians in
patient care by clearly communicating the results of the guideline
committees’ evaluation of available therapeutic options. However,
the processes by which individual guidelines are constructed may be
less clear, leading to disagreements between the issuing committee
and the physicians who treat patients-physicians who may well be
as experienced and knowledgeable as the guideline committee.
Continued
By Linda on Nov 26, 2009 in Infections | comments(2)
Linda’s comment: Several of us have been trying for years to get the Department of Health to classify Lyme disease as an STD. Doctors including Lyme Literate Medical Doctors=LLMD’s, are split. We now know that Lyme can be sexually transmitted. It makes sense to classify Lyme as STD. We need to do all we can to help stop the spread of Lyme and Company. I suggest when talking to your children about their sexual activities, to strongly warn them about the chance of getting sexually transmitted Lyme. Continued
By Linda on Nov 19, 2009 in Infections | comments(0)
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/170934.php
A large new study confirms that people with severe mental disorders - such as schizophrenia or other psychotic disorders - are 25 percent to 40 percent more prone to die from heart disease than people without mental illness are.
Moreover, smoking and physical inactivity - behaviors that individuals potentially can change - significantly contribute to this increased risk of death, found researchers led by Amy Kilbourne, Ph.D. Continued
By Linda on Nov 16, 2009 in Toxins | comments(0)
Linda’s comments: No only do we have to worry about eating wild meat containing Lyme disease, but now we have to be concerned about the “lead” exposure from eating this meat. There is also proof that deer from our high mountain ranges are getting lead exposure from the “coal” stacks in China.
Heavy metals is all around us and it is a must that we begin a journey in a lifelong daily detox program to reduce these heavy metals from our bodies. For those with chronic illness, like Lyme disease, it becomes deadly. If you have amalgams, it is important to have them safely removed by a dentist that knows how to remove them properly. Look for a Holistic dentists and if there are none in your community, then ask around for dentists that have experience in removing amalgams safely.
You can help protect yourself by finding a lifelong daily detox like the FIGHT program. I have been on this protocol for over a year and am very pleased. Feel free to ask questions about the products I have found that replenish my body to a healthy state. Don’t get caught up in a once a year cleanse. A lifelong cleanse is vital for good health.
Regards,
Linda Continued