Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
The trick is that vitamin D is a hormone, which is not the easiest thing to test. Currently, it can only be measured through blood tests, but it is my understanding that one laboratory is planning on a vitamin D saliva test, which would really be a breakthrough, especially if it were cost-effective. If it could be done for something less than $50 per test, it would open up vitamin D testing to a huge number of people who could use this test to raise their awareness of potential vitamin D deficiencies. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
As reported by the CSPI in a recent press release, According to a 1996 report in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, the FDA rejected repeated proposals by NIEHS to test aspartame using more modern methods than were originally used. David Rall, the former director of NIEHS and its National Toxicology Program, said, "any compound that is that widely used needs to be retested with modern methods every once in a while." The State of California, too, has urged new testing of aspartame. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Why don't we test people in this country for nutritional deficiencies? That would do a lot more good than testing people for AIDS; we have well over half the population now suffering from chronic vitamin D deficiencies, and that number is even higher in those with dark skin pigmentation because of its UV blocking effect. Why don't we test people for that? I'll tell you why we don't: because if you test the country for vitamin D and you find that half the population doesn't have enough vitamin D, then you can't sell them overpriced pharmaceutical products to solve their "disease. |
| With that said, consider how crazy this whole AIDS testing proposal is: conventional doctors want to violate your body by forcing you to take a test for a disease that's largely fictional, which will undoubtedly produce false positives, which will earn you the label of "diseased," which will practically force you into a regime of high-cost AIDS drugs, which will enrich the pharmaceutical companies and, meanwhile, transfer even more power to doctors who could then DEMAND that you submit to all sorts of additional tests.
That's the kind of power some U.S. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
But USDA officials in this country believe we should only test something like one cow out of a million, and any time that test comes back positive, do you know what they do? They run a second test, then a third test, then a fourth test until they get the result they want: Negative. I'm not making this up. This is the official unwritten USDA policy on mad cow disease. It's call the "close your eyes and pretend it doesn't exist" policy, which is, coincidentally, the exact same policy followed by the Bush Administration global warming team. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Our medical community doesn't test for nutritional deficiencies because nobody makes any money when the tests come back positive. Anybody can sell nutritional supplements, of course, but what I mean is that there's no controlling interest of the drugs that would be used to treat vitamin D deficiencies as in the case of AIDS. AIDS drugs are patented, so they can be controlled and marked up to produce tremendous profits. Hence the push for AIDS testing. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
The FDA also rejected NIEHS's proposal to test acesulfame potassium, which CSPI says was "abysmally tested" by its manufacturer and showed signs of causing cancer in animals.
Clearly, the FDA only hears what it wants to hear when it comes to protecting the highly profitable aspartame market. Those who have studied a bit of aspartame history know that aspartame was pushed through the FDA by none other than Donald Rumsfeld. Click here to read more articles on aspartame and its dubious history. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
So the only ideas they can come up with are things like, "Hey, let's FORCE the entire adult population to submit to an AIDS test!" What are they going to do, throw you in jail if you refuse? If they pass a federal law mandating national AIDS testing, I promise I'll be at the head of the march on Washington, holding up the banner of health freedom and demanding the law be ruled unconstitutional. It is, technically, a violation of the 4th Amendment, because mandatory AIDS testing is an illegal search of your body. |
| But you see, those aren't the things that the health authorities want to test for, because once again, they really have no desire to send a bunch of people to the health food stores to buy nutritional supplements. It's all about testing only for those things they can treat with drugs, surgery or radiation.
That's why there's the big push for mammograms, by the way. Mammograms actually cause breast cancer because they emit so much radiation. Dr. |
| So out of the long list of things that we could be doing to enhance public health, to eliminate chronic disease and to improve nutrition, the only thing that these doctors can come up with in terms of a suggestion is to test the whole country for AIDS. On my list of the top 1000 things that we need to do to improve the health of our population, testing the whole country for AIDS is somewhere down around #972. There are so many other things that we should be doing first. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
This "disease" is pure fiction, and there is absolutely no blood test, no MRI, no lab test, nothing to diagnose ADHD other than the opinion of someone who most likely earns kickbacks from Big Pharma.
Nearly all pharmaceuticals receiving FDA approval today have been tested on only a few thousand people for a very short period of time (as little as six weeks in some cases). Yet, from such limited testing, the FDA declares the drugs to be safe for everyone, even for long-term use, without a shred of evidence that such long-term use is safe. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Beginning blood sugar balance level was in the red zone meaning that it was at least 35% out of balance according to the Optimal Wellness test.
The Optimal Wellness Analyzer is an analytical system that uses cutting edge science to evaluate health at the cellular level. Objective testing procedures are the basis for this analysis, so there is no subjective input from the tester. A computer-based software program provides printouts with cellular imbalances brought to light. The Optimal Wellness test runs a combination of 45+ tests run on non-fasting urine and non-fasting saliva. |
C. W. Randolph, M.D. See book keywords and concepts |
At this time, a saliva test or capillary blood spot testing may be an appropriate next step to evaluate the current ratio of all three sex hormones.
On my website, I offer a viable option for those women or men who believe or have evidence that their hormone balance has shifted and requires treatment. You can go to www.hormonewell.com/hormoneconsultation.html to learn more about how you can obtain a comprehensive hormone level profile via a saliva test or schedule a one-on-one telephone consultation with me or one of my personally trained nurse practitioners. |
Carol Simontacchi See book keywords and concepts |
But a better test is available.
The ELISA/ACT LRA is a combination of the Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbant Assay (ELISA), the Advanced Cell test (ACT), and the Lymphocyte Response Assay (LRA). This simple blood test can detect the body's delayed immune response to as many as 400 substances. Developed by ELISA/ACT Biotechnologies, the test must be prescribed by your physician. reintroduce the foods to their diets. Their discomfort then is often quite extreme—an exaggerated response to the offending substance. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
After a minute or two, the pump stopped automatically and the lid was, indeed, somewhat sealed. To test the seal, I opened the lid and heard the sound of air rushing back into the container. This was an indication that some air had actually been removed by the pump.
The balloon test
To test the unit further, I partially inflated a small balloon then placed it inside the container with the grapefruit. Since the pressure of air inside the balloon is fixed at atmospheric pressure, once I closed the lid the balloon should have expanded as the air was removed from the chamber. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
They run a second test, then a third test, then a fourth test until they get the result they want: Negative. I'm not making this up. This is the official unwritten USDA policy on mad cow disease. It's call the "close your eyes and pretend it doesn't exist" policy, which is, coincidentally, the exact same policy followed by the Bush Administration global warming team. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Anywhere that we could get people to participate in this test, we could help dramatically reduce the vitamin D deficiency across the population, which would have enormously positive consequences for the health of newborns especially.
Vitamin D detector would have strong supporters, but vehement opposition from the sunscreen industry
However, if such a device existed, I can tell you right now who would be against it. Sunscreen manufacturers apparently don't want people to get more sunlight. They want people to block sunlight, because that's how they sell their products. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
They run a second test, then a third test, then a fourth test until they get the result they want: Negative. I'm not making this up. This is the official unwritten USDA policy on mad cow disease. It's call the "close your eyes and pretend it doesn't exist" policy, which is, coincidentally, the exact same policy followed by the Bush Administration global warming team. |
| It's because the Bush Administration has made it illegal for beef ranchers to test their own cows for mad cow disease. The USDA actually sued one rancher that tried to conduct safety testing in order to comfort his overseas buyers of U.S. beef. U.S. authorities said, nope, we can't have any more safety testing in this country unless the feds conduct it -- in which case the government can cover up all the positive mad cow detection results and pretend that U.S. beef is perfectly safe for mass consumption.
Countries like Japan have banned U.S. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Using four-year-olds as guinea pigs to test psychotropic drugs is more than merely unethical; it's predatory. It's Nazi-esque in its use of human beings for medical experiments, and yet it remains strangely acceptable across society. Child Protective Services does nothing. Hospitals gladly run the trials (they get paid, of course). Psychiatrists and doctors happily drug these children, observe them, then draw their blood, all in the name of corporate profits. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Mike: What about landing page testing that wants to test all the different variations? What if people want to test different headlines and graphics? Is there a software or service they can use?
Wilson: Yes. I'm just about to publish results of some testing I did on subscription forms. For large companies, I recommend a company called offermatica.com, and they have a program that builds options into the actual web page people are looking at and substitutes that information in there. The second company I recommend is called vertster.com. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
More and more doctors are becoming aware of the benefits of vitamin D, and they would gladly recommend patients test their own vitamin D levels at home so they could increase their consumption of healthy fish oils or vitamin D supplements, or boost their sensible exposure to sunlight so that they could be healthier individuals.
I think a low-cost vitamin D sensor represents one of the most desperately-needed technologies for enhancing public health and preventing disease in a way that would make much of today's expensive cancer treatments utterly obsolete. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
First, this positive result is from the second test conducted on this particular cow in Alabama. The first test also produced a positive result, but it was a less precise test -- one that's faster and less expensive to conduct. When the first test produced a positive result, the USDA declared it to be "inconclusive" -- that's USDA doublespeak for the word "positive." They call it inconclusive because they don't want to use the word "positive" anywhere near mad cow disease. |
Andreas Moritz See book keywords and concepts |
If you are not sure about its authenticity, test it by using the kinesiology muscle test.4 Other oils have also been used, but may not be as effective as olive oil.
Q. I read on the Internet that the stones people passed during the liver cleanses are just hardened lumps of olive oil. Is there any truth to this?
A. |
Jack Challem See book keywords and concepts |
Your physician can test your blood levels of DHEA and thyroid hormone to determine whether they are normal or low. You will need a prescription for thyroid hormone; DHEA and melatonin can be purchased without a prescription.
DHEA
Principal use: For moderately severe depression, lack of sexual desire, and erectile dysfunction.
What else you should know: DHEA (dehydroepiandrosterone) is a steroid hormone and a precursor to estrogen and testosterone. |