Research has shown no direct link between sugar consumption and the development of diabetes. Any link so far has always been linked to obesity as a result of sugar consumption.kinnison wrote:Excessive sugar and heart disease; well, there is a known problem, called Syndrome X or paradoxical hyperglycaemia, in which insulin and blood glucose are simultaneously raised. People with this problem often go on to develop type 2 diabetes later, and both problems are just about always caused by decades of excessive sugar comsumption. Human hormone and enzyme systems are not well adapted to large quantities of easily absorbed sugar, especially when it isn't burned off by exercise, and sooner or later it can cause these problems. This problem is also negatively correlated with blood chromium levels and positively correlated with chromium levels in urine, which may suggest something.
As for not being well adapted? Says who? You can drink an entire litre of orange juice or sugarcane and your sugar level will go back down to normal within an hour.
NO IT DOESN"T.At any rate, it is well known that type 2 diabetes, and certainly syndrome X, are usually helped by dietary restriction, including exclusion of sugar-containing products and those containing easily-digested starch such as white bread. Strangely enough, a diet similar to the Atkins one works rather well. It is also known that both these problems are correlated with heart disease, and most doctors believe the relationship to be causal.
Yes, moderating diet is one of the most important tools in managing diabetes but the Atkins diet isn't one of them. Considering one of the complications of diabetes is ketoacidosis, increasing that risk factor by adding another causal factor is insane, Show me the evidence that Atkins diet is suitable for diabetics.
Because osteoarthritis has no cure. Its a plain, simple fact. Even chiropracters and other forms of alternative medicine acknowledge this.Doctors don't cure people? No, sometimes they don't - especially with chronic problems such as osteoarthritis, and the more honest ones will tell you so.
And what makes you think glucosamine isn't being prescribed? As for side-effects, you are aware of the common side effects of glucosamine such as indigestion and its interaction with other drugs?For chronic problems such as this, "alternative" methods (did I mention that N.D. is now a more common medical qualification than M.D.? perhaps not) often work a great deal better - and usually don't make you ill in some other way in the process; an example might be glucosamine sulphate for arthritis as opposed to ibuprofen.
mednet
Odd isn't it? Other than the risk for kidney complications, the side-effects are almost the same as ibuprofen.
Depending on how long you been visiting him, he will suggest pharma. If this is your first visit, he certainly SHOULDN"T be prescribing meds unless your cholesterol level is already dangerously elevated.Pharma doesn't influence doctors? Hmmm... maybe there is some reason why the official figures for desirable cholesterol level go down every year? I do know for a fact that doctors in the UK get bonuses of some sort for vaccinations, cholesterol testing and so on. Now - if a doctor has your cholesterol tested, and an official source tells him it's too high, and you already have a decent diet, what is he going to do?
And its pure nonsense. First of all, you're also prescribing pills and not some form of real lifestyle change. Vitamins and supplements are also prescribed as per neccesary, and more importantly, health advice on lifestyle changes are also forthcoming. The UK also has a very strong community health programme backed up by doctors and nurses. In fact, IIRC, the UK uses a relatively strong authoritian approach in its community health program, ranging from regulations on food additives and enrichment to smoking and so forth. You know, the stuff that really makes a difference in good health.Let's sum this up - the whole of this thread in fact. I am saying that doctors are so immersed in the culture of "a pill for every ill" and so dominated by the completely biased information available (4 years of pharmacology, a couple of weeks of nutrition, I believe) that not only do they usually not cure people and miss what's under their noses but, yes, they do harm people. And some of them don't give a damn, either. (Suppressing symptoms is NOT a cure, and neither is installing a mechanical replacement.)
You have absolutely provided no proof whatsoever that UK medical system don't provide good quality healthcare.
Depending on your products, yes, you are. Again, detoxification is just pure bullshit. There's a thin line between "you must manage your diet carefully to enhance your health" and "toxins are invading our body!" and you crossed it.Others here are saying that not only I, but everyone else in my profession, are unqualified quacks who sell completely useless snake oil.
And how does cod liver oil work? And given the high consumption of cod liver oil in the general populace, why isn't this treatment effective for other people?Right, someone tell me something about this (someone is going to light the "anecdote" flame here); girl X (about 25) who, knowing that I work in the herbs and supplements business, asked me what to do about her psoriasis. I might add that she had already gone the rounds and been subjected to phototherapy, assorted highly toxic drugs and disgustingly smelly creams that stained her clothes, and none of all this crap worked. My suggestion, having ascertained that for weight control reasons she was avoiding fish (high in fat!), was cod liver oil - which, incidentally, she bought elsewhere.
Problem gone in 3 weeks as if she had never had it. Doctors had spent a year not curing the problem.
And toxic drugs? Say what? The most toxic component of psorasis pharmco management is steroids.......... if you think that's toxic, you haven't touched chemo yet.