Lyme Movie FREE to watch on Hulu! Must See!
By Linda on Aug 19, 2011 in F.I.G.H.T. | comments(0)
By Linda on Aug 19, 2011 in F.I.G.H.T. | comments(0)
By Linda on Nov 16, 2009 in Toxins | comments(0)
Linda’s comment: Mercury is in everything….learn to read your labels…..high fructose corn syrup is in EVERYTHING and HFC is full of mercury. I certainly believe that Mercury Toxicity is epidemic and for those with chronic illness and children are in trouble ingesting all this mercury. I have been on the FIGHT protocol for over a year now and I am very pleased at how I feel.
I challenge all of those interested in reducing their heavy metal loads, to give the FIGHT program a 3 month try. You might be surprised at how you feel. We must constantly be reducing our total body burden of pathogens and toxins and this lifelong daily detox program is the way to go.
Angel Huggzzz
Linda
Is Mercury Toxicity an Epidemic?
Author: Joseph Pizzorno, ND
Source: Vitamin Retailer Magazine, June 2009
Conventional medicine has dismissed mercury toxicity as a clinical concern except in cases of obvious poisoning. This is due to the poor correlation between the various measures of mercury body load and clinical symptoms. It is also the reason the dental community has in the past so consistently denied that amalgam fillings are a health risk. (Although called “silver” fillings, they are actually about 55 percent mercury.) However, the integrative medicine community has for decades believed that chronic low-level mercury exposure is the root cause of many chronic diseases ranging from autism to heart disease to “brain fog.” Continued
By Linda on Nov 16, 2009 in Infections | comments(0)
DEHLI (Reuters Health) – Diagnosis of malaria by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing of saliva is non-invasive and comparable to the current gold standard blood smear examination, a multicenter group of researchers reports.
A rapid test for malaria that has a high sensitivity and specificity “could potentially avert more than 100,000 malaria-related deaths each year and save nearly $200 million that is spent on unnecessary treatments annually,” Dr. Davis C. Nwakanma from the Medical Research Council, Fajara, Banjul, Gambia and his team and colleagues estimate. Continued