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25
Health Benefits of Iodine     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by Trope to Health 1 week ago (+25/-0)
31 comments last comment...
https://files.catbox.moe/pojszc.jpeg

The RDA is an measly 150mcg. Meanwhile, the water is chlorinated, fluoridated, and many household objects are treated with bromine as a flame retardant. Check out the periodic table and you will understand these halogens are competing for the iodine receptors.

The Japanese consume over 12mg of iodine daily from their diet.
23
Meet Your New Doctor     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by Kozel to Health 1 week ago (+23/-0)
18 comments last comment...
15
Lifting weights can slow down brain aging     (scitechdaily.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 3 weeks ago (+18/-3)
37 comments last comment...
12
FDA concealed E. coli outbreak in 15 US states     (www.nbcnews.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 1 week ago (+16/-4)
1 comments last comment...
12
Plastic bottles linked to high blood pressure and heart problems     (www.earth.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 4 weeks ago (+16/-4)
12 comments last comment...
15
RFK Jr. Responds To Report He's Considering Removing COVID-19 Vaccines From CDC Schedule     (www.zerohedge.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Health 4 days ago (+15/-0)
6 comments last comment...
https://www.zerohedge.com/medical/rfk-jr-responds-report-hes-considering-removing-covid-19-vaccines-cdc-schedule

he is mulling? no he should have done that yesterday. these poison should have been banned the first day that he set his foot at the cdc
14
Carlos Santana Postpones San Antonio Concert After Collapsing During Soundcheck, Tests Positive for COVID: Update     (www.yahoo.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Health 4 days ago (+15/-1)
8 comments last comment...
13
I’ve been washing my laundry with white vinegar for a year.     (Health)
submitted by Trope to Health 3 weeks ago (+13/-0)
23 comments last comment...
No endocrine disrupters. Dirt cheap. The clothes come out without any scent. Watched Dr Paul Saladino explain this on YouTube and it’s been working great.

I also keep the vinegar in a glass spray bottle and use it to quickly wipe down the toilet and sink. The bathroom is so clean, you would think Polish people inhabit the house.

Although I do not believe the washing machine or dryer have any serviceable parts manufactured in the United States.
11
No shit, Sherlock. Men prefer natural lips on women over fake pouty ones, study reveals     (nypost.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 2 weeks ago (+13/-2)
0 comments...
12
Audit: Cuomo Spent $453M On 247,343 Medical Devices For COVID... State Used Only 3     (www.zerohedge.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Health 2 weeks ago (+12/-0)
4 comments last comment...
https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/audit-cuomo-spent-453m-247343-medical-devices-covid-state-used-only-3

CONvid was the biggest scam of the 21th century and we are just starting!
12
After long suggesting ADHD has biological basis, scientists now make stunning admission. It was just an excuse to poison your children.     (www.theblaze.com)
submitted by MeyerLansky to Health 2 weeks ago (+12/-0)
13 comments last comment...
https://www.theblaze.com/news/scientists-who-suggested-adhd-has-biological-basis-recants-conclusion

ADHD is apparently an unclassifiable, unmeasurable disorder that requires costly amphetamines to remedy.

The medical establishment has a troubling track record of confidently stating things that just aren't so — as became clear to Americans who suffered injuries from supposedly safe and effective vaccines during the pandemic.

There was a damning admission in New York Times Magazine over the weekend that may inspire new doubts about the credibility of the so-called experts advising the masses on matters of health, namely that attention deficit hyperactivity disorder may not have a basis in biology after all.

That admission was not volunteered from some activist or critic but rather by the Dutch neuroscientist who apparently misled the world into thinking "A.D.H.D. is a disorder of the brain."

'No one knew exactly how the medication worked.'

In a piece titled "Have we been thinking about A.D.H.D. all wrong?" Paul Tough discussed the correlated explosion of ADHD diagnoses and Ritalin prescriptions in the 1990s — a trend, he noted, that was accompanied by criticism from parents and others concerned about the apparent campaign to load kids with methylphenidate and amphetamines.

"You didn't have to be a Scientologist to acknowledge that there were some legitimate questions about A.D.H.D.," wrote Tough. "Despite Ritalin's rapid growth, no one knew exactly how the medication worked or whether it really was the best way to treat children's attention issues."

Parents were right to be concerned.

Ritalin, Adderall, and the other highly addictive stimulants foisted upon hard-to-control American youths have a variety of undesirable side effects, both immediate and long-term.

In the short term, they can cause side effects such as bladder pain, bloody urine, an irregular heartbeat and palpitations, diarrhea, headaches, joint pain, trouble sleeping, confusion, agitation, seizures, and vomiting. In the long term, these drugs can apparently impact growth, dopamine regulation, and memory formation and retention and cause elevated blood pressure, psychosis, and mood disorders.

Over the past decade, prescriptions for stimulants to remedy imagined ADHD have skyrocketed — by 58% between 2012 and 2022. Most of the drugs dished out have been amphetamines, according to a 2023 document prepared for the Drug Enforcement Administration.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an estimated 7.1 million American children (approximately 1 in 9) aged 3-17 had ADHD diagnoses as of 2022. That's up from two million in the mid-1990s. Over half of the children currently diagnosed with ADHD receive at least one ADHD medication.

Tough noted that the medical establishment, already bullish on the ADHD craze, seized upon the initial results of the Multimodal Treatment of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Study. The study, published in 1999, suggested that Ritalin was effective.

After the Ritalin train left the station at full speed, James Swanson — who subsequently went to consult for drug companies, including the manufacturer of Adderall — and his colleagues realized that their study championing stimulant use had aged poorly.

While the children in their MTA study reported improvements after 14 months of choking down stimulants, after 36 months, their advantage had effectively disappeared such that they were expressing the same supposed symptoms as the comparison group. Years later, the same test subjects turned out to be an inch shorter than their peers.

In other words, the medical establishment was hyping and pushing addictive drugs largely on the basis of perceived short-term gains that, unlike drug dependency, faded in under two years.

"There are things about the way we do this work," Swanson, now in his 80s, told Tough, "that just are definitely wrong."

"I don't agree with people who say that stimulant treatment is good," Swanson said, after spending three decades studying the drugs. "It's not good."

Swanson is apparently not the only supposed ADHD expert now having significant doubts.

Edmund Sonuga-Barke, a researcher in psychiatry and neuroscience at King's College London, told Tough, "I've invested 35 years of my life trying to identify the causes of A.D.H.D., and somehow we seem to be farther away from our goal than we were when we started."

'We're terrified of what will happen to the kids who can't get the meds.'

"We have a clinical definition of A.D.H.D. that is increasingly unanchored from what we're finding in our science," added Sonuga-Barke.

Sonuga-Barke suggested further that ADHD is not a static, easily definable, or objectively measurable condition.

That's not what Martine Hoogman, the chair of the Enigma ADHD working group, and her team suggested in a 2017 paper funded by the National Institutes of Health and published in the Lancet Psychiatry, a peer-reviewed Elsevier journal.

After years of academic chatter about potential physical differences in the brains of people with ADHD diagnoses, Hoogman and her team compared the cortical volumes of ADHD-diagnosed subjects with those of a control group.

While Tough indicated their data showed the opposite to be true, Hoogman and her team originally stated:

We confirm, with high powered analysis, that ADHD patients truly have altered brains, i.e. that ADHD is a disorder of the brain. This is a clear message for clinicians to convey to parents and patients, which can help to reduce the stigma of ADHD and get a better understanding of ADHD. This way, it will become just as apparent as for major depressive disorder, for example, that we label ADHD as a brain disorder. Also, finding the most pronounced effects in childhood provides a relevant model of ADHD as a disorder of brain maturation delay.

Hoogman did a complete about-face when recently pressed about her statement, telling Tough, "Back then, we emphasized the differences that we found (although small), but you can also conclude that the subcortical and cortical volumes of people with A.D.H.D. and those without A.D.H.D. are almost identical."

"The A.D.H.D. neurobiology is so much more complex than that," added Hoogman.

Sonuga-Barke indicated that there is a desperation among some scientists to find evidence pointing to the biological nature of ADHD.

"In the field, we're so frightened that people will say it doesn't exist," said Sonuga-Barke. "That this is just bad parenting, from the right, or this is just a product of our postindustrial society, from the left. We have to double down because we're terrified of what will happen to the kids who can't get the meds. We've seen the impact they can have on people's lives."

'It's infuriating.'

The well-documented overdiagnosis and overtreatment of ADHD in children and adults is troubling on its face but far worse when considered in light of Sonuga-Barke's understanding that ADHD diagnoses are purely subjective and effectively unfalsifiable; Swanson's admission that ADHD treatment doesn't help in the long-run; and Hoogman's admission that there is not a biological signature for the supposed disorder.

Blaze News previously noted that the Trump administration's plan to assess the prevalence and impact of pharmaceuticals on children has some childhood psychiatrists and other prongs of the pharmaceutical industry panicking. After all, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. might cost them a source of revenue by taking a closer look at ADHD.

Kennedy noted during his confirmation hearing before the Senate Finance Committee that "15% of American youth are now on Adderall or some other \[attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder\] medication."

"We are not just overmedicating our children, we are overmedicating our entire population," said Kennedy. "Half the pharmaceutical drugs on earth are now sold here."

Conservative commentator Matt Walsh noted in response to the New York Times Magazine article, "ADHD is one of the greatest scams in modern history. Millions of kids have been given mind-altering drugs on the basis of a lie. Now after decades — and after shouting down and defaming those of us who knew better — they're finally starting to admit it. It's infuriating."

Author and journalist Alex Berenson tweeted, "It's unbelievable that drug companies and shrinks ('telehealth' in particular) have pushed this junk for so long."
11
An apocalypse is coming for millions! If you took it, get your affairs in order! A devastating surge is about to “explode”!     (pomf2.lain.la)
submitted by bossman131 to Health 2 weeks ago (+11/-0)
8 comments last comment...
https://pomf2.lain.la/f/hatscrjy.png

Multiple Oncologists Warn: ‘Turbo Cancers Set to Explode’ Among Covid-Vaccinated.....https://slaynews.com/news/top-oncologists-warn-turbo-cancer-explode-covid-vaccinated/
9
Here is a chart I made for class which details the differences between dopamine and the other neurotransmitters.     (files.catbox.moe)
submitted by Trope to Health 3 weeks ago (+9/-0)
9 comments last comment...
https://files.catbox.moe/v0wxr7.jpeg

Figured this could help us understand the difference between dopamine and joy. I often hear the term dopamine thrown around like it is the only chemical that matters while neglecting the others. This chart serves to demystify that.

You’ll find an insidious fact that dopamine is NOT a molecule of joy but a molecule of discontent and excite. It calls us to seek and gather. As dopamine rises, serotonin drops. So it will serve us well to be mindful of how our minds operate. It also serves to contrast from the niggers who are unable to understand such systems.
7
HHS Stops Funding For Next-Generation COVID-19 Vaccine     (www.zerohedge.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Health 1 week ago (+7/-0)
0 comments...
1
Artificial sweetener E955 confuses brain and increases hunger     (parade.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 1 month ago (+8/-7)
8 comments last comment...
2
Poor Europeans live as healthy as wealthy Americans     (www.euronews.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 3 weeks ago (+6/-4)
2 comments last comment...
6
Tucker Carlson Horrified As Dr. Mary Talley Bowden Drops Chilling COVID Statistic     (www.zerohedge.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Health 3 weeks ago (+6/-0)
7 comments last comment...
-1
Sperm count has fallen 50% since 1970s; 15.4% percent since mRNA     (www.youtube.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 2 weeks ago (+6/-7)
4 comments last comment...
5
Citing BS Study, WebMD Claims COVID Vaxx ‘Still Crucial’ For Kids     (www.zerohedge.com)
submitted by dosvydanya_freedomz to Health 4 weeks ago (+5/-0)
2 comments last comment...
-2
Japan chain shuts down after pests found in food     (www.bbc.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 1 month ago (+4/-6)
2 comments last comment...
4
Under 10% of U.S. adults between the ages of 18 and 34 lived alone in 2022, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.     (www.msn.com)
submitted by paul_neri to Health 1 month ago (+4/-0)
0 comments...
2
Deadly diagnosis after vaping for 3 years     (people.com)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 2 weeks ago (+5/-3)
4 comments last comment...
2
Why beverage cans can be a Health Hazard     (Health)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 2 weeks ago (+4/-2)
2 comments last comment...
Beverage cans are convenient, but their tops are exposed. During shipping and storage, they can collect dust, germs, or bacteria like E. coli. A 2017 study found 40% of tested cans had bacteria on their rims.

Bottles are safer. Their sealed caps keep the rim clean until you open them. This reduces the risk of ingesting something harmful.

Can makers once tried a solution. In the 1990s, they added plastic caps to protect can tops. Tests showed these caps cut contamination risks by up to 80%.

Strangely, most companies stopped using them. The caps increased costs, and some argued wiping cans was sufficient. Environmental concerns about extra plastic also factored in.

Without caps, cans stay risky. Germs can linger, and you can’t always tell. Wiping them down before drinking is the best way to protect yourself.
-1
Vitamin D could have prevented 90% of Covid-19 deaths     (thedailycoin.org)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 2 weeks ago (+4/-5)
2 comments last comment...
0
Grapefruit can block many drugs. Even after few days before     (en.wikipedia.org)
submitted by Conspirologist to Health 1 week ago (+4/-4)
1 comments last comment...