by
Thomas Smith
2004
Greed and dishonest science have promoted a lucrative worldwide
epidemic of diabetes that honesty and good science can quickly
reverse by naturally restoring the body’s blood-sugar control
mechanism. |
Introduction
If you are an American diabetic, your physician will never tell you
that most cases of diabetes are curable. In fact, if you even
mention the "cure" word around him, he will likely become upset and
irrational. His medical school training only allows him to respond
to the word "treatment". For him, the "cure" word does not exist.
Diabetes, in its modern epidemic form, is a curable
disease and has been for at least 40 years. In 2001, the most recent
year for which US figures are posted, 934,550 Americans died from
out-of-control symptoms of this disease.1
Your physician will also never tell you that, at one time, strokes,
both ischaemic and haemorrhagic, heart failure due to neuropathy as
well as both ischaemic and haemorrhagic coronary events, obesity,
atherosclerosis, elevated blood pressure, elevated cholesterol,
elevated triglycerides, impotence, retinopathy, renal failure, liver
failure, polycystic ovary syndrome, elevated blood sugar, systemic
candida, impaired carbohydrate metabolism, poor wound healing,
impaired fat metabolism, peripheral neuropathy as well as many more
of today’s disgraceful epidemic disorders were once well understood
often to be but symptoms of diabetes.
If you contract diabetes and depend upon orthodox medical treatment,
sooner or later you will experience one or more of its symptoms as
the disease rapidly worsens. It is now common practice to refer to
these symptoms as if they were separable, independent diseases with
separate, unrelated treatments provided by competing medical
specialists.
It is true that many of these symptoms can and sometimes do result
from other causes; however, it is also true that this fact has been
used to disguise the causative role of diabetes and to justify
expensive, ineffective treatments for these symptoms.
Epidemic Type II diabetes is curable. By the time you get to the end
of this article, you are going to know that. You’re going to know
why it isn’t routinely being cured. And, you’re going to know how to
cure it. You are also probably going to be angry at what a handful
of greedy people have surreptitiously done to the entire orthodox
medical community and to its trusting patients.
The Diabetes Industry
Today’s diabetes industry is a massive community that has grown step
by step from its dubious origins in the early 20th century. In the
last 80 years it has become enormously successful at shutting out
competitive voices that attempt to point out the fraud involved in
modern diabetes treatment. It has matured into a religion. And, like
all religions, it depends heavily upon the faith of the believer. So
successful has it become that it verges on blasphemy to suggest
that, in most cases, the kindly high priest with the stethoscope
draped prominently around his neck is a charlatan and a fraud. In
the large majority of cases, he has never cured a single case of
diabetes in his entire medical career.
The financial and political influence of this medical community has
almost totally subverted the original intent of our regulatory
agencies. They routinely approve death-dealing, ineffective drugs
with insufficient testing. Former commissioner of the FDA,
Dr
Herbert Ley, in testimony before a US Senate hearing, commented:
"People think the FDA is protecting them. It isn’t. What the FDA is
doing and what the public thinks it’s doing are as different as
night and day."
2
The financial and political influence of this medical community
dominates our entire medical insurance industry. Although this is
beginning to change, in America it is still difficult to find
employer group medical insurance to cover effective alternative
medical treatments. Orthodox coverage is standard in all states.
Alternative medicine is not. For example, there are only 1,400
licensed naturopaths in 11 states compared to over 3.4 million
orthodox licensees in 50 states.3 Generally, only approved
treatments from licensed, credentialed practitioners are insurable.
This, in effect, neatly creates a special kind of money that can
only be spent within the orthodox medical and drug industry. No
other industry in the world has been able to manage the politics of
convincing people to accept so large a part of their pay in a form
that often does not allow them to spend it as they see fit.
The financial and political influence of this medical community
completely controls virtually every diabetes publication in the
country. Many diabetes publications are subsidized by ads for
diabetes supplies. No diabetes editor is going to allow the truth to
be printed in his magazine. This is why the diabetic only pays about
one-quarter to one-third of the cost of printing the magazine he
depends upon for accurate information. The rest is subsidized by
diabetes manufacturers with a vested commercial interest in
preventing diabetics from curing their diabetes. When looking for a
magazine that tells the truth about diabetes, look first to see if
it is full of ads for diabetes supplies.
And then there are the various associations that solicit annual
donations to find a cure for their proprietary disease. Every year
they promise that a cure is just around the corner—just send more
money! Some of these very same associations have been clearly
implicated in providing advice that promotes the progress of
diabetes in their trusting supporters. For example, for years they
heavily promoted exchange diets,4 which are in fact scientifically
worthless—as anyone who has ever tried to use them quickly finds
out. They ridiculed the use of glycaemic tables, which are actually
very helpful to the diabetic. They promoted the use of margarine as
heart healthy, long after it was well understood that margarine
causes diabetes and promotes heart failure.
5
If people ever wake up to the cure for diabetes that has been
suppressed for 40 years, these associations will soon be out of
business. But until then, they nonetheless continue to need our
support.
For 40 years, medical research has consistently shown with
increasing clarity that diabetes is a degenerative disease directly
caused by an engineered food supply that is focused on profit
instead of health. Although the diligent can readily glean this
information from a wealth of medical research literature, it is
generally otherwise unavailable. Certainly this information has
been, and remains, largely unavailable in the medical schools that
train our retail doctors.
Prominent among the causative agents in our modern diabetes epidemic
are the engineered fats and oils that are sold in today’s
supermarkets.
The first step to curing diabetes is to stop believing the lie that
the disease is incurable.
Diabetes History
In 1922, three Canadian Nobel Prize winners, Banting,
Best and
Macleod, were successful in saving the life of a fourteen-year-old
diabetic girl in Toronto General Hospital with injectable
insulin.6
Eli Lilly was licensed to manufacture this new wonder
drug, and the medical community basked in the glory of a job well
done.
It wasn’t until 1933 that rumours about a new rogue form of diabetes
surfaced. This was in a paper presented by Joslyn, Dublin and
Marks and printed in the American Journal of Medical
Sciences. This paper, "Studies on Diabetes Mellitus",7
discussed the emergence of a major epidemic of a disease which
looked very much like the diabetes of the early 1920s, only it did
not respond to the wonder drug, insulin. Even worse, sometimes
insulin treatment killed the patient.
This new disease became known as "insulin-resistant diabetes"
because it had the elevated blood sugar symptom of diabetes but
responded poorly to insulin therapy. Many physicians had
considerable success in treating this disease through diet. A great
deal was learned about the relationship between diet and diabetes in
the 1930s and 1940s.
Diabetes, which had a per-capita incidence of 0.0028% at the turn of
the century, had by 1933 zoomed 1,000% in the United States to
become a disease seen by many doctors.8
This disease, under a variety of aliases, was destined to go on to
wreck the health of over half the American population and
incapacitate almost 20% by the 1990s.9
In 1950, the medical community became able to perform serum insulin
assays. These assays quickly revealed that this new disease wasn’t
classic diabetes; it was characterized by sufficient, often
excessive, blood insulin levels.
The problem was that the insulin was ineffective; it did not reduce
blood sugar. But since the disease had been known as diabetes for
almost 20 years, it was renamed Type II diabetes. This was to
distinguish it from the earlier Type I diabetes, caused by
insufficient insulin production by the pancreas.
Had the dietary insights of the previous 20 years dominated the
medical scene from this point and into the late 1960s, diabetes
would have become widely recognized as curable instead of merely
treatable. Instead, in 1950, a search was launched for another
wonder drug to deal with the Type II diabetes problem.
Cure versus Treatment
This new, ideal, wonder drug would be effective, like insulin, in
remitting obvious adverse symptoms of the disease but not effective
in curing the underlying disease. Thus it would be needed
continually for the remaining life of the patient. It would have to
be patentable; that is, it could not be a natural medication because
these are non-patentable. Like insulin, it would have to be highly
profitable to manufacture and distribute. Mandatory government
approvals would be required to stimulate physicians to prescribe it
as a prescription drug. Testing required for these approvals would
have to be enormously expensive to prevent other, unapproved,
medications from becoming competitive.
This is the origin of the classic medical protocol of "treating the
symptoms". By doing this, both the drug company and the doctor could
prosper in business, and the patient, while not being cured of his
disease, was sometimes temporarily relieved of some of his symptoms.
Additionally, natural medications that actually cured disease would
have to be suppressed. The more effective they were, the more they
would need to be suppressed and their proponents jailed as quacks.
After all, it wouldn’t do to have some cheap, effective, natural
medication cure disease in a capital-intensive monopoly market
specifically designed to treat symptoms without curing disease.
Often the natural substance really did cure disease. This is why the
force of law has been and is being used to drive the natural, often
superior, medicines from the marketplace, to remove the "cure" word
from the medical vocabulary and to undermine totally the very
concept of a free marketplace in the medical business.
Now it is clear why the "cure" word is so vigorously suppressed by
law. The FDA has extensive Orwellian regulations that prohibit the
use of the "cure" word to describe any competing medicine or natural
substance. It is precisely because many natural substances do
actually both cure and prevent disease that this word has become so
frightening to the drug and orthodox medical community.
The Commercial Value of Symptoms
After the drug development policy was redesigned to focus on
ameliorating symptoms rather than curing disease, it became
necessary to reinvent the way drugs were marketed. This was done in
1949 in the midst of a major epidemic of insulin-resistant diabetes.
So, in 1949, the US medical community reclassified the symptoms of
diabetes 10 along with many other disease symptoms into diseases in
their own right. With this reclassification as the new basis for
diagnosis, competing medical speciality groups quickly seized upon
related groups of symptoms as their own proprietary symptoms set.
Thus the heart specialist, endocrinologist, allergist, kidney
specialist and many others started to treat the symptoms for which
they felt responsible. As the underlying cause of the disease was
widely ignored, all focus on actually curing anything was completely
lost.
Heart failure, for example, which had previously been understood
often to be but a symptom of diabetes, now became a disease not
directly connected to diabetes. It became fashionable to think that
diabetes "increased cardiovascular risk". The causal role of a
failed blood-sugar control system in heart failure became obscured.
Consistent with the new medical paradigm, none of the treatments
offered by the heart specialist actually cures, or is even intended
to cure, their proprietary disease. For example, the three-year
survival rate for bypass surgery is almost exactly the same as if no
surgery was undertaken.11
Today, over half of the people in America suffer from one or more
symptoms of this disease. In its beginnings, it became well known to
physicians as Type II diabetes, insulin-resistant diabetes, insulin
resistance, adult-onset diabetes or, more rarely, hyperinsulinaemia.
According to the American Heart Association, almost 50% of Americans
suffer from one or more symptoms of this disease. One third of the
US population is morbidly obese; half of the population is
overweight. Type II diabetes, also called adult-onset diabetes, now
appears routinely in six-year-old children.
Many degenerative diseases can be traced to a massive failure of the
endocrine system. This was well known to the physicians of the 1930s
as insulin-resistant diabetes. This basic underlying disorder is
known to be a derangement of the blood-sugar control system by badly
engineered fats and oils. It is exacerbated and complicated by the
widespread lack of other essential nutrition that the body needs to
cope with the metabolic consequences of these poisons.
All fats and oils are not equal. Some are healthy and beneficial;
many, commonly available in the supermarket, are poisonous. The
health distinction is not between saturated and unsaturated, as the
fats and oils industry would have us believe. Many saturated oils
and fats are highly beneficial; many unsaturated oils are highly
poisonous. The important health distinction is between natural and
engineered.
There exists great dishonesty in advertising in the fats and oils
industry. It is aimed at creating a market for cheap junk oils such
as soy, cottonseed and rapeseed oils.
With an informed and aware public, these oils would have no market
at all, and the USA—indeed, the world—would have far fewer cases of
diabetes.
Epidemiological Lifestyle Link
As early as 1901, efforts had been made to manufacture and sell food
products by the use of automated factory machinery because of the
immense profits that were possible. Most of the early efforts failed
because people were inherently suspicious of food that wasn’t farm
fresh and because the technology was poor. As long as people were
prosperous, suspicious food products made little headway. Crisco,12
the artificial shortening, was once given away free in 21/2 lb cans
in an unsuccessful effort to influence American housewives to trust
and buy the product in preference to lard.
Margarine was introduced and was bitterly opposed by the dairy
states in the USA. With the advent of the Depression of the 1930s,
margarine, Crisco and a host of other refined and
hydrogenated products began to make significant penetration into the
food markets of America. Support for dairy opposition to margarine
faded during World War II because there wasn’t enough butter for the
needs of both the civilian population and the military.13
At this point, the dairy industry, having lost much support, simply
accepted a diluted market share and concentrated on supplying the
military.
Flax oils and fish oils, which were common in the stores and
considered dietary staples before the American population became
diseased, have disappeared from the shelf. The last supplier of flax
oil to the major distribution chains was Archer Daniels Midland, and
it stopped producing and supplying the product in 1950.
More recently, one of the most important of the remaining, genuinely
beneficial, fats was subjected to a massive media disinformation
campaign that portrayed it as a saturated fat that causes heart
failure. As a result, it has virtually disappeared from the
supermarket shelves. Thus was coconut oil removed from the food
chain and replaced with soy oil, cottonseed oil and rapeseed oil.14
Our parents and grandparents would never have swapped a fine,
healthy oil like coconut oil for these cheap, junk oils. It was
shortly after this successful media blitz that the US populace lost
its war on fat. For many years, coconut oil had been our most
effective dietary weight-control agent.
The history of the engineered adulteration of our once-clean food
supply exactly parallels the rise of the epidemic of diabetes and
hyperinsulinaemia now sweeping the United States as well as much of
the rest of the world.
The second step to a cure for this disease epidemic is to stop
believing the lie that our food supply is safe and nutritious.
The Nature of the Disease
Diabetes is classically diagnosed as a failure of the body to
metabolize carbohydrates properly. Its defining symptom is a high
blood-glucose level. Type I diabetes results from insufficient
insulin production by the pancreas. Type II diabetes results from
ineffective insulin. In both types, the blood-glucose level remains
elevated. Neither insufficient insulin nor ineffective insulin can
limit post-prandial (after-eating) blood sugar to the normal range.
In established cases of Type II diabetes, these elevated blood sugar
levels are often preceded and accompanied by chronically elevated
insulin levels and by serious distortions of other endocrine
hormonal markers.
The ineffective insulin is no different from effective insulin. Its
ineffectiveness lies in the failure of the cell population to
respond to it. It is not the result of any biochemical defect in the
insulin itself. Therefore, it is appropriate to note that this is a
disease that affects almost every cell in the 70 trillion or so
cells of the body. All of these cells are dependent upon the food
that we eat for the raw materials they need for self repair and
maintenance.
The classification of diabetes as a failure to metabolize
carbohydrates is a traditional classification that originated in the
early 19th century when little was known about metabolic diseases or
processes.15 Today, with our increased knowledge of these processes,
it would appear quite appropriate to define Type II diabetes more
fundamentally as a failure of the body to metabolize fats and oils
properly. This failure results in a loss of effectiveness of insulin
and in the consequent failure to metabolize carbohydrates.
Unfortunately, much medical insight into this matter, except at the
research level, remains hampered by its 19th-century legacy.
Thus Type II diabetes and its early hyperinsulinaemic symptoms are
whole-body symptoms of this basic cellular failure to metabolize
glucose properly. Each cell of the body, for reasons which are
becoming clearer, finds itself unable to transport glucose from the
bloodstream to its interior. The glucose then remains in the
bloodstream, or is stored as body fat or as glycogen, or is
otherwise disposed of in urine.
It appears that when insulin binds to a cell membrane receptor, it
initiates a complex cascade of biochemical reactions inside the
cell. This causes a class of glucose transporters known as GLUT4
molecules to leave their parking area inside the cell and travel to
the inside surface of the plasma cell membrane.
When in the membrane, they migrate to special areas of the membrane
called caveolae areas.16 There, by another series of biochemical
reactions, they identify and hook up with glucose molecules and
transport them into the interior of the cell by a process called
endocytosis. Within the cell’s interior, this glucose is then burned
as fuel by the mitochondria to produce energy to power cellular
activity. Thus these GLUT4 transporters lower glucose in the
bloodstream by transporting it out of the bloodstream into all the
cells of the body.
Many of the molecules involved in these glucose- and
insulin-mediated pathways are lipids; that is, they are fatty acids.
A healthy plasma cell membrane, now known to be an active player in
the glucose scenario, contains a complement of cis-type w=3
unsaturated fatty acids.17 This makes the membrane relatively fluid
and slippery. When these cis- fatty acids are chronically
unavailable because of our diet, trans- fatty acids and short- and
medium-chain saturated fatty acids are substituted in the cell
membrane. These substitutions make the cellular membrane stiffer and
more sticky, and inhibit the glucose transport mechanism.18
Thus, in the absence of sufficient cis omega 3 fatty acids in our
diet, these fatty acid substitutions take place, the mobility of the
GLUT4 transporters is diminished, the interior biochemistry of the
cell is changed and glucose remains elevated in the bloodstream.
Elsewhere in the body, the pancreas secretes excess insulin, the
liver manufactures fat from the excess sugar, the adipose cells
store excess fat, the body goes into a high urinary mode,
insufficient cellular energy is available for bodily activity and
the entire endocrine system becomes distorted. Eventually,
pancreatic failure occurs, body weight plummets and a diabetic
crisis is precipitated.
Although there remains much work to be done to elucidate fully all
of the steps in all of these pathways, this clearly marks the
beginning of a biochemical explanation for the known epidemiological
relationship between cheap, engineered dietary fats and oils and the
onset of Type II diabetes.
Orthodox Medical Treatment
After the diagnosis of diabetes, modern orthodox medical treatment
consists of either oral hypoglycaemic agents or insulin.
• Oral hypoglycaemic agents
In 1955, oral hypoglycaemic drugs were introduced. Currently
available oral hypoglycaemic agents fall into five classifications
according to their biophysical mode of action.19 These classes are: biguanides; glucosidase inhibitors; meglitinides; sulphonylureas;
and thiazolidinediones.
The biguanides lower blood sugar in three ways. They inhibit the
normal release by the liver of its glucose stores, they interfere
with intestinal absorption of glucose from ingested carbohydrates,
and they are said to increase peripheral uptake of glucose.
The glucosidase inhibitors are designed to inhibit the amylase
enzymes produced by the pancreas and which are essential to the
digestion of carbohydrates. The theory is that if the digestion of
carbohydrates is inhibited, the blood sugar level cannot be
elevated.
The meglitinides are designed to stimulate the pancreas to produce
insulin in a patient that likely already has an elevated level of
insulin in their bloodstream. Only rarely does the doctor even
measure the insulin level. Indeed, these drugs are frequently
prescribed without any knowledge of the pre-existing insulin level.
The fact that an elevated insulin level is almost as damaging as an
elevated glucose level is widely ignored.
The sulphonylureas are another pancreatic stimulant class designed
to stimulate the production of insulin. Serum insulin determinations
are rarely made by the doctor before he prescribes these drugs. They
are often prescribed for Type II diabetics, many of whom already
have elevated ineffective insulin. These drugs are notorious for
causing hypoglycaemia as a side effect.
The thiazolidinediones are famous for causing liver cancer. One of
them, Rezulin, was approved in the USA through devious political
infighting, but failed to get approval in the UK because it was
known to cause liver cancer. The doctor who had responsibility to
approve it at the FDA refused to do so. It was only after he was
replaced by a more compliant official that Rezulin
gained approval
by the FDA. It went on to kill well over 100 diabetes patients and
cripple many others before the fight to get it off the market was
finally won. Rezulin was designed to stimulate the
uptake of glucose from the bloodstream by the peripheral cells
and to inhibit the normal secretion of glucose by the liver. The
politics of why this drug ever came onto
market, and then remained in the market for
such an unexplainable length of time with regulatory agency
approval, is not clear.20
As of April 2000, lawsuits commenced to clarify this situation.21
• Insulin Today, insulin is prescribed for both the
Type I and Type II
diabetics. Injectable insulin substitutes for the insulin that the
body no longer produces. Of course, this treatment, while necessary
for preserving the life of the Type I diabetic, is highly
questionable when applied to the Type II diabetic.
It is important to note that neither
insulin nor any of these oral hypoglycaemic agents exerts any curative action whatsoever on any
type of diabetes. None of these medical strategies is designed to
normalize the cellular uptake of glucose by the cells that need it
to power their activity.
The prognosis with this orthodox treatment is increasing disability
and early death from heart or kidney failure or the failure of some
other vital organ.
Alternative Medical Treatment
The third step to a cure for this disease is to become informed and
to apply an alternative methodology that is soundly based upon good
science.
Effective alternative treatment that directly leads to a cure is
available today for some Type I and for many
Type II diabetics. About 5% of the diabetic population
suffers from Type I diabetes; about 95% has Type II diabetes.22
Gestational diabetes is simply ordinary diabetes contracted by a
woman who is pregnant.
For the Type I diabetic, an alternative methodology for the
treatment of Type I diabetes is now available. It was developed in
modern hospitals in Madras, India, and
subjected to rigorous double-blind studies to prove its efficacy.23
It operates to restore normal pancreatic beta cell function so that
the pancreas can again produce insulin as it should. This approach
apparently was capable of curing Type I diabetes in
over 60% of the patients on whom it was tested. The major
complication lies in whether the antigens that originally led to the
autoimmune destruction of these beta cells have disappeared from or
remain in the body. If they remain, a cure is less likely; if they
have disappeared, the cure is more likely. For reasons already
discussed, this methodology is not likely to appear in the United
States any time soon, and certainly not in the American orthodox
medical community.
The goal of any effective alternative program is to repair and
restore the body’s own blood-sugar control mechanism. It is the
malfunctioning of this mechanism that, over time, directly causes
all of the many debilitating symptoms that make orthodox treatment
so financially rewarding for the diabetes industry. For Type II
diabetes, the steps in the program are:24
• Repair the faulty blood sugar control system.
This is done simply
by substituting clean, healthy, beneficial fats and oils in the diet
for the pristine-looking but toxic trans-isomer mix found in
attractive plastic containers on supermarket shelves. Consume only
flax oil, fish oil and occasionally cod liver oil until blood sugar
starts to stabilize. Then add back healthy oils such as butter,
coconut oil, olive oil and clean animal fat. Read labels; refuse to
consume cheap junk oils when they appear in processed food or on
restaurant menus. Diabetics are chronically short of minerals; they
need to add a good-quality, broad-spectrum mineral supplement to the
diet.
• Control blood sugar manually during the recovery cycle.
Under
medical supervision, gradually discontinue all oral hypoglycaemic
agents along with any additional drugs given to counteract their
side effects. Develop natural blood-sugar control by the use of
glycaemic tables, by consuming frequent small meals (including
fibre-rich foods), by regular post-prandial exercise, and by the
complete avoidance of all sugars along with the judicious use of
only non-toxic sweeteners.25 Avoid alcohol until blood sugar stabilises in the normal range. Keep score by using a pinprick-type
glucose meter. Keep track of everything you do with a medical diary.
• Restore a proper balance of healthy fats and oils when the blood
sugar controller again works.
Permanently remove from the diet all
cheap, toxic, junk fats and oils as well as the processed and
restaurant foods that contain them. When the blood sugar controller
again starts to work correctly, gradually introduce additional
healthy foods to the diet. Test the effect of these added foods by
monitoring blood sugar levels with the pinprick-type blood sugar
monitor. Be sure to include the results of these tests in your diary
also.
• Continue the program until normal insulin values are also restored
after blood sugar levels begin to stabilize in the normal region.
Once blood sugar levels fall into the normal range, the pancreas
will gradually stop overproducing insulin. This process will
typically take a little longer and can be tested by having your
physician send a sample of your blood to a lab for a serum insulin
determination. A good idea is to wait a couple of months after blood
sugar control is restored and then have your physician check your
insulin level. It’s nice to have blood sugar in the normal range;
it’s even nicer to have this accomplished without excess insulin in
the bloodstream.
• Separately repair the collateral damage done by the disease.
Vascular problems caused by a chronically elevated glucose level
will normally reverse themselves without conscious effort. The
effects of retinopathy and of peripheral neuropathy, for example,
will usually self repair. However, when the fine capillaries in the
basement membranes of the kidneys begin to leak due to chronic high
blood glucose, the kidneys compensate by laying down scar tissue to
prevent the leakage. This scar tissue remains even after the
diabetes is cured, and is the reason why the kidney damage is not
believed to self repair.
A word of warning… When retinopathy develops, there may be a
temptation to have the damage repaired by laser surgery. This laser
technique stops the retinal bleeding by creating scar tissue where
the leaks have developed. This scar tissue will prevent normal
healing of the fine capillaries in the eye when the diabetes is
reversed. By reversing the diabetes instead of opting for laser
surgery, there is an excellent chance that the eye will heal
completely. However, if laser surgery is done, this healing will
always be complicated by the scar tissue left by the laser.
The arterial and vascular damage done by years of elevated sugar and
insulin and by the proliferation of systemic candida will slowly
reverse due to improved diet. However, it takes many years to clean
out the arteries by this form of oral chelation. Arterial damage can
be reversed much more quickly by using intravenous chelation
therapy.26 What would normally take many years through diet alone
can often be done in six months with intravenous therapy. This is
reputed to be effective over 80% of the time. For obvious reasons,
don’t expect your doctor to approve of this, particularly if he’s a
heart specialist.
Recovery Time
The prognosis is usually swift recovery from the disease and
restoration of normal health and energy levels in a few months to a
year or more. The length of time that it takes to effect a cure
depends upon how long the disease was allowed to develop.
For those who work quickly to reverse the disease after early
discovery, the time is usually a few months or less. For those who
have had the disease for many years, this recovery time may lengthen
to a year or more. Thus, there is good reason to get busy reversing
this disease as soon as it becomes clearly identified.
By the time you get to this point in this article, and if we’ve done
a good job of explaining our diabetes epidemic, you should know what
causes it, what orthodox medical treatment is all about, and why
diabetes has become a national and international disgrace.
Of even greater importance, you have become acquainted with a
self-help program that has demonstrated great potential to actually
cure this disease. 8
Endnotes:
1. National Center for Health Statistics, "Fast Stats",
Deaths/Mortality Preliminary 2001 data 2. Dr Herbert Ley, in response to a question from Senator Edward
Long about the FDA during US Senate hearings in 1965 3. Eisenberg, David M., MD, "Credentialing complementary and
alternative medical providers", Annals of Internal Medicine
137(12):968 (December 17, 2002) 4. American Diabetes Association and the American Dietetic
Association, The Official Pocket Guide to Diabetic Exchanges,
McGraw-Hill/Contemporary Distributed Products, newly updated March
1, 1998 5. American Heart Association, "How Do I Follow a Healthy Diet?",
American Heart Association National Center (7272 Greenville Avenue, Dallas, Texas 75231-4596,
USA),
http://www.americanheart.org
6. Brown., J.A.C., Pears Medical Encyclopedia Illustrated, 1971, p.
250 7. Joslyn, E.P., Dublin, L.I., Marks, H.H., "Studies on Diabetes
Mellitus", American Journal of Medical Sciences 186:753-773 (1933) 8. "Diabetes Mellitus", Encyclopedia Americana, Library Edition,
vol. 9, 1966, pp. 54-56 9. American Heart Association, "Stroke (Brain Attack)", August 28,
1998,
http://www.amhrt.org/ScientificHStats98/05stroke.html ; American Heart Association, "Cardiovascular Disease Statistics",
August 28, 1998,
http://www.amhrt.org/Heart_and_Stroke_A_Z_Guide/cvds.html
"Statistics related to overweight and obesity",
http://niddk.nih.gov/health/nutrit/pubs/statobes.htm
http://www.winltdusa.com/about/infocenter/healthnews/articles/obesestats.htm
10. "Diabetes Mellitus", Encyclopedia Americana, ibid., pp. 54-55 11. The Veterans Administration Coronary Artery Bypass Co-operative
Study Group, "Eleven-year survival in the Veterans Administration
randomized trial of coronary bypass surgery for stable angina", New
Eng. J. Med. 311:1333-1339 (1984); Coronary Artery Surgery Study
(CASS), "A randomized trial of coronary artery bypass surgery:
quality of life in patients randomly assigned to treatment groups",
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535 5727, toll free in North America) 22. American Heart Association, "Diabetes Mellitus Statistics",
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