Posts Tagged ‘allopathic medicine’
Type 2 Diabetes Treatment Failure
Type 2 diabetes treatment failure is distressing to say the least. Doctors’ diabetic care seems to accelerate the growth of both the pharmaceutical industry and the medical supply business.
Doctor’s Advice
The doctor’s advice is oddly consistent with the American dietary approach. Eat everything in moderation. That advice hasn’t paid off. Their solution to the problem is an insulin injection or a pill along with a jab of the finger a few times a day.
Their cash flow isn’t hurt, but the potential for a full recovery isn’t anywhere to be seen. What are the medical community’s benchmarks for successful disease management? Well it seems the simple trick to success is not to challenge the patient to change their lifestyle, but to just comply with the drug schedule, and adjust medication with glucose monitoring.
The treatment isn’t about science; though that is what it is suppose to be about. The medical system is about care not cure. That is the real problem. Doctors support a system that is about volume, and what works best is maintenance.
Here is some advice from a pediatric endocrinologist and senior scientist in the UAB Comprehensive Diabetes Center. For Halloween he gave parents three options.
Counting Carbohydrates
By counting carbohydrates, kids can enjoy some of the treats that Halloween has to offer in moderation. This option allows the child to keep up with how many carbs they are eating: the example is one unit of insulin for every 15 or 20 grams of carbohydrates.
This is the doctor’s quote: “This is an easy option for kids on an insulin pump because they can just dial in an extra dose of insulin to compensate for what they are about to eat. But for kids that take shots, this could prove to be more difficult or inconvenient if they have to go to the school nurse for an extra dose,”
What is wrong with this solution is that everything can be solved with a shot of insulin. This message sets the stage for life, with using insulin as the fix for poor dietary choices. Sometimes you need the insulin, but to use it as a springboard to survival is absurd. The next problem is the quality of the treats and the ingredient list. These treats will deplete the body of its store of vitamins and minerals, which are needed and used by the pancreas, liver, and all systems that support the body’s ability to deal with sugar and toxins, such as artificial flavor and colors.
This is considered a proactive approach by both the parents and physician. The child needs to feel part of the crowd, and enjoy the American past time of eating poor quality fuel for the body.
Exchanging Candy
The second solution suggested is that the parents can trade the child a gift, money, or low carb snack for their candy. Parents can also provide a substitute snack for their child if the class is holding a Halloween party at school.
I know as a parent that this sounds good and it may work. However, to offer cash or a gift makes the candy seem to have a high value. What the problem is this is considered a practical solution, since we live in the real world. This approach doesn’t remove sweet treats but perpetuates its value.
The low carb approach is good and even better if it’s structured to be the desired item by the child. The way to do that isn’t mystical; it’s eating healthy while pregnant, and starting the baby on a good diet. The chances of having diabetes would be lower with this approach.
Dessert
kids can savor their Halloween treats without an extra shot or dose of insulin by having them for dessert after dinner. The quote “By incorporating a sugary treat into meal time, when a child would normally get a dose of insulin, it eliminates the need for adding doses to their regimen.”
Another idea I am not fond of and the reason is there is an aticipation of a reward. It takes sweets and holds them in high esteem. Protecting health and remaining safe from disease is the main goal, not building deals around things that aren’t good for diabetes.
Removal of harmful substances is a necessary tool for the parents of diabetic children. Avoiding the American way of eating will enable diabetic children to achieve a long and healthy life.
Cancer a Winning Hand
The focus on any cancer treatment should be creating a winning hand. The focus shouldn’t be on eradicating the tumour, it should be on creating perfect health. Cancer isn’t a mystical occurrence. The mission is not to think eradicating a cancer is synonymous with health.
Health an Inside Job
What the medical segment has done is to separate the disease from the person. They look outside for a cure. Inside is where all the activity is going on. What that really means is the patient is outsourcing their health care. Succeeding to fail is what happens to the patient when the pharmaceutical kingdom tries to outdo the plant kingdom.
Pharmaceutical Harm
The threshold to the poisons called treatment is lower than one would expect. Pharmaceuticals cleared for use are not necessarily safe. The threshold of toxicological concerns are an appreciable risk to human health. There is no common sense used in pharmaceutical applications.
Empowered Patient
The missing ingredient is all medical treatment is an empowered patient. While prevention is the best medicine the next best thing is correcting what is wrong. That could range from diet, stress, chemical exposure, emotions and belief system. It is time to get territorial: this is your life and your body. The medical community and the pharmaceutical industry are very territorial. They protect their research and patents.
We haven’t scratched the surface on our healing ability. Our personal health is over-regulated and under capitalized. What that means is we have put some large entity in charge of our health. At the same time we have under capitalized other areas of natural healing.
So far most of oncology is whistling in the dark. The worst part is they are discharging the risks of very toxic treatments. They look at that as a by-product of treatments. This isn’t a suitable approach since they usually don’t score a home run.
The patient has to make the winning hand by implementing their own innovated strategies with or without allopathic treatment. I will feature success stories on this blog. People heal by their sheer power and that must be integrated into any treatment plan be it allopathic or natural.
Bottom Line
I think the term alternative healing shouldn’t be applied to natural healing, but to the medical system. Real healing is synonymous with wellness.
Cancer Treatment a Word of Caution, Part 1
Cancer Treatment a Word of Caution
When we say cancer treatment a word of caution, we mean paragraphs full of cautionary warnings.
There is a relatively new medication for pancreatic cancer. It is a drug used for advanced liver and kidney cancer and appears to be effective against cancer stem cells in pancreatic cancer. The drug sorafenib inhibited typical properties of cancer stem cells from pancreas tumors and greatly reduced tumor growth. The effect lasted four weeks before new colonies of cancer stem cells formed that no longer reacted to a further treatment with sorafenib.
Well if that isn’t a breakthrough I don’t know what is. Except for these side effects we have a winner.
The drug manufacture claims that you will not get all the side effects, and they are almost always reversible, will go away after therapy is complete, and of course are quite manageable. It’s a promise that isn’t guaranteed in writing. These are the garden variety of problems.
Constipation; diarrhea; dry skin; hair thinning or loss; headache; loss of appetite; mouth, bone, muscle, stomach, or joint pain; nausea; tiredness; vomiting; weakness; weight loss.
These are the big boys. Seek medical attention right away if any of these SEVERE side effects occur when using Sorafenib:
Severe allergic reactions (rash; hives; itching; difficulty breathing; tightness in the chest; swelling of the mouth, face, lips, or tongue); black, tarry stools; chest pain; confusion; coughing or vomiting blood; decreased sexual ability; decreased urination; depression; fainting; fever, chills, or sore throat; irregular heartbeat; mouth sores; numbness of an arm or leg; one-sided weakness; redness, pain, swelling, numbness, tingling, or blisters on the palms of hands or soles of feet; seizures; severe or persistent dizziness; severe stomach pain; shortness of breath; speech changes; sudden severe headache or vomiting; sudden weight gain; swelling of the ankles, hands, or feet; unusual bruising or bleeding; vision changes; yellowing of the eyes or skin.
This is just part one, wait there are more delightful surprises. Come back and see for yourself the drawbacks of these kind of drugs.