Why Are Many Diseases Back, Decades After Being Wiped Out in the U.S.?

Border-Patrol-Laredo-LM-Otero-Associated-Press-640x480An E. coli epidemic in Seattle and Kansas City and 19 other states? TB in New York and Manassas, Virginia? Leprosy in New Hampshire? Dengue Fever in Laredo? What’s going on here?

If you think data about illegal alien crime is hidden from public, just try to find information on the contagious diseases brought across our borders by illegal aliens from nearly 100 countries. If we survey the anecdotal and sporadic official data of the past fifteen years, there is no doubt we are being invaded daily by dangerous diseases. Continue reading

Sharp rise in antipsychotic drugs being prescribed to BABIES

Experts warn there’s no medical evidence they are safe in children

In 2014, 20,000 antipsychotic prescriptions made for children 2 and under

In 2014, 20,000 antipsychotic prescriptions made for children 2 and under

The number of babies and toddlers being prescribed antipsychotic drugs has soared in just one year in the US, experts have warned.

Almost 20,000 prescriptions for the medication were written for children younger than two in 2014.

It marks a steep rise from the previous year when 13,000 prescriptions for the drugs were made out – a jump of 50 per cent in the 12-month period, the New York Times reported. Continue reading

Number of children in the US suffering ADHD jumps 43%

Sharp rise in girls battling the condition

adhaMore than one in ten children and teenagers in the US suffer attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), according to a new study.

That reflects a 43 per cent increase in ADHD diagnoses in schoolchildren – with spikes in diagnoses among girls, Hispanics and older children.

Nearly 5.8 million children between the ages of 5 and 17 are now diagnosed with ADHD, the study found. Continue reading

Energy Drinks Linked to Diabetes

redbullThe combination of caffeine and sugar in energy drinks cause teenagers’ blood glucose and insulin levels to ‘spike’, new research warns.

Adolescents who consume the popular drinks may suffer subsequent problems bringing blood sugar levels down to normal, which have been linked to diabetes in later life, the study found.

Consumption of trendy caffeine-containing energy drinks has soared over the last 10 years.
Despite a warning label stating they are not recommended for ‘children’, researchers say the drinks are ‘aggressively marketed’ to, and increasingly consumed by, children, teenagers and young adults. Continue reading

Garlic Kills 14 Kinds Of Cancer And 13 Types Of Infection

Why Don’t Doctors Prescribe It?

garlic_01Garlic is known to be an extremely effective vegetable, which can provide an immense number of health benefits. The list of diseases that garlic can kill is long, and includes:

  • Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus Aureus (MRSA)
  • Thrush (Fungal overgrowth in oral cavity)
  • Pseudomonas Aerigonosima, including drug-resistant strains.
  • Cytomegalavirus Infections
  • Mycotoxin-associated aflatoxicosis
  • Helicobacter Pylori infection
  • Candida (Yeast) infection
  • Klebseilla infection
  • HIV-1 infection
  • Vibrio infection
  • Mycobacterium Tuberculosis, multi-drug resistantClostridium infection
  • Viral Infections: Herpes Simplex 1 and 2, Parainfluenza virus type 3, vaccinia virus, vesicular stomatitis virus and human rhinovirus type 2.
  • Group B Streptococcus Infection

Continue reading

Frankincense effectively kills ovarian cancer cells

frankincense-and-myrrh-1Could an ancient aromatic resin really hold the key to stopping the spread of ovarian and other cancers? Scientific research suggests that very well may be the case for frankincense, a plant resin derived from a tree called Boswellia, grown in parts of Arabia and Africa.

Frankincense has been prized for centuries as an anti-inflammatory treatment, used for alleviating symptoms of such varied conditions as asthma, gastroenteritis and a variety of skin disorders. Continue reading

Can the body’s immune response help treat cancer?

In recent years, researchers have looked at how to stimulate T-cells to combat tumors. CREDIT ILLUSTRATION BY VICTO NGAI

In recent years, researchers have looked at how to stimulate T-cells to combat tumors. CREDIT ILLUSTRATION BY VICTO NGAI

In the summer of 1890, an adventurous seventeen-year-old from New Jersey named Elizabeth Dashiell travelled across the United States by train. During the journey, she caught her hand between the seats of a Pullman car. The hand became swollen and painful, and, when it didn’t heal after she returned home, Dashiell consulted William Coley, a young surgeon in New York City. Unable to determine a diagnosis, he made a small incision below the bottom joint of her pinkie finger, where it connected to the back of her hand, to relieve the pressure, but only a few drops of pus drained out. During the following weeks, Coley saw Dashiell regularly. In the operating room, he scraped hard, gristly material off the bones of her hand. But the procedure gave only fleeting relief. Finally, Coley performed a biopsy that showed that Dashiell had sarcoma, a cancer of the connective tissue, which was unrelated to her initial injury. In a desperate attempt to stop the cancer’s spread, Coley followed the practice of the time and amputated Dashiell’s arm just below the elbow. But the sarcoma soon reappeared, as large masses in her neck and abdomen. In January, 1891, she died at home, with Coley at her bedside. Continue reading

Using Spices to Heal Disease

Indian doctor devotes career to using therapeutic power of ancient medicine

Bulk-Spices-FoodIn many parts of the world, including India, spices are considered sacred and used both as a food and for medicine. Due to their effectiveness, this ideology has now spread into Western medicine. Written by Bharat B. Aggarwal, Healing Spices: How to Use 50 Everyday and Exotic Spices to Boost Health and Beat Disease, details the story of an Indian doctor who has dedicated his career to making scientific breakthroughs involving the use of spices to treat chronic diseases. Continue reading

Five Foods That Feed Cancer

Health-and-Medical-Newspaper-960x645Some foods can speed you to your grave. Rather than promote health and healing, some foods are known to feed cancer more than they feed you.

Soda
Sodas are known to be bad for you, but did you know they can cause cancer? Sodas are loaded with sugar, artificial flavors, artificial colors, and preservatives as well as other chemicals. Caramel coloring agents are added to the drinks to give it that brown color. This process can produce a possible carcinogen called 4-methylimidazole. Surprisingly enough, the FDA has yet to limit the amount of this chemical byproduct allowed in sodas. Researchers have found that just drinking one can of soda a day raises the risk of cancer and this affects between 44% and 58% of all Americans.
Continue reading

10 Early Warning Signs of Lung Cancer

lung-cancerMany people see a lung cancer diagnosis as a death sentence. That’s understandable, since lung cancer kills more than 1.3 million people a year. But when caught early enough, lung cancer can be treatable and, often, curable. According to the National Cancer Institute, the five-year survival rate for lung cancer that hasn’t metastasized, or spread, is slightly more than 50 percent, as compared to nearly 4 percent for lung cancer that’s already spread to other organ systems. So pay close attention to these early — and sometimes surprising — signs of lung cancer, and be assertive about bringing anything suspicious to your doctor’s attention. Continue reading

American Cancer Society admits conventional cancer treatment causes more cancer

chemo_02The more radiation therapy you receive, the more likely it is you’ll develop a second cancer caused by that radiation, according to a document[PDF] released by the American Cancer Society, which admits that certain organs such as the breast and thyroid are more prone to developing a second cancer.

This information is followed by a new study which found that second cancers in Americans have increased a whopping 300 percent since the 1970s, all of which are a completely new type of cancer and not a reoccurrence of an old cancer.

The study also found that first cancers have spiked 70 percent over the last 45 years, highlighting the burgeoning profitability of an industry that shows no signs of slowing down as capital gains from cancer drugs reached the $100 billion mark last year. Continue reading

Chemtrails: Just Another Conspiracy Theory?

chemtrailsWhile hiking through the woods, I am having a Rachel Carson “silent spring” moment. It’s early fall, nature is still beautiful, albeit a bit dry. There are no birds chirping, no squirrels, no snakes, just an annoying horse fly and a few mosquitoes. The fern gully is bone dry; all ferns have turned rusty brown from lack of rain. I finally spot a few small fishes darting about in the yellowish creek water.

The sky is blue for now but crisscrossed by grey and white trails that don’t disappear at all like vapors do but dissipate and blend hours and hours later into a strangely colored mist with blue-grey edges that blanket the sky. What is this? Why are the trails so perfectly parallel in both directions and intersecting like a chess board? Why would a plane maneuver in this grid pattern if it’s flying the shortest distance possible to a specific destination? Continue reading

Specialty drugs now cost more than the median household income

The average annual retail cost of specialty drugs used to treat complex diseases such as cancer, rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis now exceeds the median U.S. household income, according to a recent published report.

imrs.phpThe study of 115 specialty drugs found that a year’s worth of prescriptions for a single drug retailed at $53,384 per year, on average, in 2013 — more than the median U.S. household income, double the median income of Medicare beneficiaries, and more than three times as much as the average Social Security benefit in the same year. The report was prepared by the AARP Public Policy Institute to highlight the impact of drug prices on seniors. Continue reading