i think we may be on the verge of a health revolution... with people finally getting the motivation and information they need to learn how to support the immune system to properly defend against disease. Much like the huge leap forward that was taken when the role that sanitation was playing in disease was understood around the start of the 20th century.
It is actually my theory that increased sanitation practices is (at least part of) what initially drove the formation of the modern medicine industry. People were getting less sick due to being better sanitized, so they had to start inventing diseases to cure.
After the polio vaccination test, came the 'Spanish Flu'. The gubment gave people shots who then became spreaders. It wasn't the flu, it was bacterial pneumonia, and it started in the mid-west of the US. US GIs were infected and sent to Europe for WWI and it spread all over. Masks were one of the biggest reasons so many people died. Fauci did his doctoral thesis on the Spanish flu, and his assertion was that masks contributed greatly to the infection rates. Hmmm.
This! Can't recall the doctors name right now, but a 19th century Dr theorized that something was being transferred from the cadavers Dr's worked on to the mothers delivering babies--infant mortality was insanely high.
He advocated hand washing and was mocked mercilessly...
Semmelweiss. He was destroyed by all the establishment doctors who rejected the idea that their god-like selves needed to wash and change their clothes in a patient setting--They wore their everyday suits and boots in a day when those things weren't washed either.
future proves past ?
i think we may be on the verge of a health revolution... with people finally getting the motivation and information they need to learn how to support the immune system to properly defend against disease. Much like the huge leap forward that was taken when the role that sanitation was playing in disease was understood around the start of the 20th century.
It is actually my theory that increased sanitation practices is (at least part of) what initially drove the formation of the modern medicine industry. People were getting less sick due to being better sanitized, so they had to start inventing diseases to cure.
Yup it was increased sanitation practices and running water that allowed for the dramatic drop in morbidity from disease.
After the polio vaccination test, came the 'Spanish Flu'. The gubment gave people shots who then became spreaders. It wasn't the flu, it was bacterial pneumonia, and it started in the mid-west of the US. US GIs were infected and sent to Europe for WWI and it spread all over. Masks were one of the biggest reasons so many people died. Fauci did his doctoral thesis on the Spanish flu, and his assertion was that masks contributed greatly to the infection rates. Hmmm.
This! Can't recall the doctors name right now, but a 19th century Dr theorized that something was being transferred from the cadavers Dr's worked on to the mothers delivering babies--infant mortality was insanely high. He advocated hand washing and was mocked mercilessly...
Semmelweiss. He was destroyed by all the establishment doctors who rejected the idea that their god-like selves needed to wash and change their clothes in a patient setting--They wore their everyday suits and boots in a day when those things weren't washed either.
Dr Shiva does a great job explaining that.