Most clinicians are familiar with the concept that when a little is good, more is often better, but a lot is still reliably toxic. This results in the mindset of there being little chance of doing harm with supplementing a “little,” especially when the supplements involved are well-known and relatively popular supplements, widely regarded as being beneficial without question. In the case of calcium, iron, and copper the downside of minimal supplementation could not be more clear-cut. All three of these agents are essential for health, especially inside the cells. Nevertheless, once a relatively low daily intake of these nutrients is exceeded only minimally, toxicity rapidly ensues, with the highest intakes resulting in the greatest toxicity. Read more.
Get Informed on Issues Related to Disease
‘Shocking Numbers’ from Acetaminophen Study Suggest Troubling Connection with Autism
“If you give your child acetaminophen between the age of 12 and 18 months, you’re 20 times more likely to have … a child with autism than if you don’t give them any acetaminophen from 12 to 18 months.” A short video. View here.
5G Forests
Watch this short video to see what is planned for our forests. View here.
WHO Admission: Aspartame “Possibly” Carcinogenic
…yet the FDA, responsible for protecting our health and making sure our food is safe, continues to go to bat for Big Food. Action Alert! Would you be concerned if you and your children were consuming a possible carcinogen every day? One that Big Food and the FDA has said is a safe way of avoiding sugar? Read more.
Tart Cherries Relieve Osteoarthritis Pain
If you are among the millions of Americans suffering from joint pain and arthritis, there’s good news about a favorite summer treat. According to research from Oregon Health & Science University, tart cherries help reduce the chronic inflammation that leads to pain. Read more.
Eight Brands of Butter Wrappers Found to Contain High Levels of “Forever Chemicals” –Is Your Favorite Brand on the List?
Mamavation in partnership with Environmental Health News (EHN) sponsored a study that shows 50 percent of 32 butter wrappers from 22 popular brands tested by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are loaded with fluorine, a PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) chemical known to damage human health. Read more.
Stop Polluting Our Air!
The COVID-19 tyranny has awakened Americans to the rampant corruption in our government health care. People have always, though, opposed pollution. But too few realize that governments worldwide for the better part of the century have been dumping toxins in the clouds, hoping to modify weather but also harming our health and wrecking the environment. Read more.
Don’t Let Telecom Ignore Local Rights!
Americans are waking up to the assault of constant 24/7 exposure to radio frequency radiation (RFR) from wireless technology installed and being installed in our homes, cars, streets, local businesses, schools, and communities without our informed consent. While many property owners would prefer to restrict wireless facility expansion in residential neighborhoods, past and current legislation has made that extremely difficult for localities. In Biden’s 2021 infrastructure bill (Public Law No: 117-58), Big Telecom received $65 billion towards the proliferation of unsafe and untested 5G (and beyond) technology without a single mention of safety precautions or even any monitoring of the increase in radiation levels within communities.[1] Read more.
Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH): Saw Palmetto and other dietary factors can help
The prostate gland both produces a fluid component of semen and serves as a muscle-driven switch in men between urination and ejaculation. Like our ears and nose, the prostate continues to grow with age. The normal prostate growth rate is 2.2% per year, doubling in volume every 32.6 years. Unfortunately, the prostate’s location just below the neck of the bladder, around the urethra and ejaculatory ducts, and near the rectum, affords little space for expansion. Read more.
Natural Alternatives to Deadly Prescription Opiates
Since 1997, when the United States became one of only two developed nations that allows direct-to-consumer pharmaceutical advertising, addiction to prescription drugs and prescription drug overdoses have quadrupled (Real Leaders, 2016). In fact, last year, deaths due to prescription drug overdoses surpassed 50,000 per year, dwarfing the number of deaths due to motor vehicle accidents (37,757) and to gun violence (36,252) (Chicago Tribune, 2016). Read more.