FACT:
Over 50% of today’s health advice is wrong
and obsolete!
This Bulletin alerts you to 7 current
health notions that are so off-track, they’re dangerous.
I’m giving you this early heads-up because the official
news probably won’t come for many years. Here’s
the story...
| About
Dr. Williams
Dr. Williams
Brings You The Health News FIRST:
“FIRST”
with the tap water scandal
“FIRST”
to warn America about an-aspirin-a-day
“FIRST”
to link
Alzheimer’s to aluminum
“FIRST”
with the soy story
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Health knowledge is changing so fast that many of
medicine’s sacred cows and pet theories have already been
slaughtered and laid to rest...
Hormone therapy was good, now it’s bad. Low-fat
diets were “in,” now they’re “out.”
Eggs were a no-no, now they’re okay. Mammograms and PSA
screenings save lives...or do they?
It’s no fun discovering that something you’ve
been doing (or taking) for years to stay healthy is suddenly useless,
wrong, or even dangerous.
But brace yourself. A barrage of new medical “about-faces”
is on the way! In the pages ahead, you’ll read about 7 medical
theories that have been proven obsolete, yet doctors
still haven’t changed their treatments. For example...
Have you heard the latest
about heart disease?
The cholesterol theory of heart disease has been
dead for 20 years. It was shot full of holes when scientists showed
that the majority of people who suffer heart attacks have
normal cholesterol levels. This makes cholesterol-lowering
drugs irrelevant and useless.
Later studies identified the real cause of heart
disease. Now, prompted by the failure of cholesterol-lowering
drugs to reduce heart disease, doctors are beginning to look into
this “new” theory. But their investigations will take
many years.
Meanwhile, 13 million people in this country remain
on cholesterol drugs, and millions more are being urged to start
taking them. It will be a long time before an official about-face
comes. Tragically, hundreds of thousands of people will go to
their deaths following this old-school advice in the false belief
they’re being protected.
I’ve been waving a red flag about
cholesterol-lowering drugs since August, 1991, when I first discovered
they are not only ineffective, but potentially deadly. (They
can rob the heart of an important nutrient, CoQ10, that powers
its beating.)
I also wrote about a far safer, easier,
and cheaper way to duck a heart attack. It works by cleaning out
the plaque in arteries, which all of us have to one degree or
another.
In July, 1987, I researched an inexpensive white
powder made from fruit pectin. A tablespoon of this powder mixed
in a glass of juice dissolves artery gunk the way Drano™
cleans bathroom pipes. And there are plenty of other substances
that do this job, too—certain foods and oils…the nutrient
lecithin…and specific nutritional supplements,
to name just a few. I’ll tell you more about them in just
a bit.
Sad to say, it will probably take many years,
and many more heart attack victims, before word of these natural
plaque-busters reaches the general public. (If you don’t
want to wait, click
here to learn how to clean out your arteries right now.)
The history of medicine
is full of setbacks and about-faces
About-faces like these are common in health and
medicine, because ours is not an exact science, but one that is
constantly evolving. That’s how progress is usually made.
But here’s the problem: In a perfect world,
you’d learn about these new discoveries right away so you
could quickly benefit. Yet this rarely happens. Instead, the news
is delayed as doctors debate among themselves…greedy special
interest groups fight any change to the status quo…and public
health officials drag their feet through “official channels.”
Hormone replacement therapy for women is another
real-life example…
The colossal hormone fiasco
Doctors began prescribing hormones back in the 1960s
to help women through menopause. Not much was known about these
drugs because little testing had been done. Even so, starting
in the 80s, women were urged to stay on hormone drugs for
life, because the manufacturers promised that they also lowered
women’s risk of heart disease, stroke, and osteoporosis.
continued...
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