Dr. Steven R. Gundry See book keywords and concepts |
Most hospital patients admitted for heart disease have low magnesium levels. Magnesium is given to all open-heart surgery patients to prevent irregular heartbeats and potentially fatal arrhythmias as well as to keep their blood pressure down. I start all my hypertensive Club members on regular magnesium tablets, working them up to 500 to 1,000 mg per day. For dosages of the other compounds, refer to www.drgundry.com. |
Andreas Moritz See book keywords and concepts |
Hospitals, which often house very large numbers of sick people, are the ideal breeding environment for the sometimes deadly bugs. hospital patients generally have a lower level of immunity and offer little or no resistance to them. Many of the microbes are passed on to the patients through the cooling towers, air conditioning and heating systems in hospitals. The hospital staff, due to constant exposure to the bugs, are fairly immune to them, but may pass them on to patients by touching them or their food, bedding, clothing, or medications. |
| The most common trigger for authorizing a blood transfusion for hospital patients awaiting surgery is a low hemoglobin level {hemoglobin in red blood cells is used to transport oxygen to all the other cells in the body; and red blood cells need iron to accomplish that). Women naturally have a lower red blood cell count than men but medics use the same trigger levels for both men and women. "Iron deficiency anemia continues to be among the leading reasons for transfusions, even though it rarely warrants [them]," said the U.S. Office of Technology report in its concluding statement. |
| Today, up to 60 percent of all hospital patients and up to 80 percent of all nursing home patients are vitamin D deficient. What's worse, 76 percent of pregnant mothers are severely vitamin D deficient. To get the disease-curbing benefits of sunlight, you need to get outside at least three times a week, for a minimum of 15-20 minutes each time.
Pharmaceutical companies have also recognized the importance of vitamin D in the cure of cancer and other illnesses and now produce expensive drugs that contain synthetic Vitamin D. |
| Instead of giving hospital patients easy-to-digest liquid foods to eat, they are most often given solid, concentrated foods, such as meat, pork, eggs, etc.. This will merely deplete the little energy they have left in them. This energy must now be used to attend to the newly ingested food, when the body should be using its energy stores to overcome the toxicity crisis. An immune system that has already been compromised by a massive influx of toxins is no longer able to effectively ward off bacteria, parasites or viruses. |
Charles Barber See book keywords and concepts |
Kennedy was trying to do with the signing of the Community Mental Health Act of 1963, intended to create a network of outpatient clinics to serve former hospital patients. The drugs of the 1960s were—at least initially, during the earnest and naive early days of the peace and protest and civil rights movements— ingested in some kind of en masse effort to enhance the spiritual consciousness of the youth who took them. For the most part, people took acid and smoked pot together, sharing the experience, for good or ill, as a collective unit. |
Devra Davis See book keywords and concepts |
Nevertheless, throughout the country hospital patients continued to be killed by German physicians and nurses as part of this overall scheme to rid the population of the ill.
The state killing machine did not always run smoothly. Nuns who worked in the numerous Catholic hospitals had dedicated themselves to a life of healing and other Christian ideals. Perplexed by being ordered to murder sick patients, they asked the bishops what they were supposed to do. Catholic doctrine forbids euthanasia but also requires obedience to the government. |
Bottom Line Health See book keywords and concepts |
| Recent studies show that 5% to 10% of hospital patients in the United States get an infection during their stay, and nearly 100,000 die annually as a result. This compares with approximately 13,000 deaths from hospital-acquired infections in 1992.
Self-defense: Keep hospital stays as short as possible. Visitors and hospital staff should wash their hands before and after contact with you. With some infectious diseases, such as tuberculosis, visitors and staff may need to wear a mask, gown and gloves to prevent the spread of the infection. |
| Although hospital patients can't control everything that happens in the hospital, they can lower their risks more than they realize.
Example: Use only a hospital that's accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. This type of accreditation means the hospital is evaluated every three years to ensure that it meets the best standards in cleanliness, infection control, drug administration guidelines, etc. More than 15,000 health-care facilities are accredited—but many others aren't. To check, go to www.quali tycheck.org, or call 630-792-5800. |
| Hospitalists are doctors who treat only hospital patients. Both types of specialists provide superior hospital care and don't maintain private practices "on the side."
•How often does the hospital perform the procedure you're undergoing? The best outcomes usually occur at hospitals where a given procedure is performed most often, on average.
Examples: A top-flight hospital will perform at least 500 open-heart procedures annually. . .100 carotid-artery grafts or surgeries.. .and 25 mastectomies. |
| PREVENT HOSPITAL INFECTIONS
Each year, an estimated 2 million hospital patients develop an infection. With the emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, even a minor initial infection can be fatal.
We all know the importance of hand washing, so insist that visitors (including nurses and doctors) wash their hands before touching you. A quick rinse doesn't help. Studies show that you must wash vigorously with soap and warm water for at least 15 seconds to remove all bacteria. As an alternative, hand-sanitizing gel, which is now located outside many hospital rooms, may be used by visitors. |
| Many hospital patients and their families don't realize that at every hospital, in addition to all the advanced drugs and technical procedures, there's also a group of people—doctors and others—who spend a great deal of time focusing on the personal, human and moral issues of medicine—an ethics committee. Members of this committee help work through the many troubling medical issues that can arise. |
Andreas Moritz See book keywords and concepts |
More than 3,000 hospital patients in the U.S. undergo wrong-side surgery each year.
Given these and other major health risks linked with a stay in the hospital, it can be said that hospitals are among the most dangerous places in the world. I, therefore, advise you to do everything necessary to prevent illness from arising in the first place so that you can avoid them altogether, unless of course, it is for an emergency like an accident. |
J. Douglas Bremner See book keywords and concepts |
Clostridium difficile usually attacks hospital patients who have been on multiple antibiotics that have wiped out their normal colonic bacteria. Clindamycin was the antibiotic most commonly associated with Clostridium difficile in the 1970s, on the basis of the facts that it was more commonly used in hospitals in debilitated patients and that it had a greater capacity than other antibiotics to wipe out normal bacterial flora. |
Melody Petersen See book keywords and concepts |
A hint of just how many hospital patients killed by medicines were being buried before the truth could be revealed came in a report published in 2002. Researchers in Norway said they had studied every death occurring in a hospital over two years. In many cases, they performed an autopsy to try to verify the initial death determination. They found that 9 percent of the deaths were directly caused by drugs, while another 9 percent were indirectly caused by medications. In all, the researchers tied almost one of every five deaths at the hospital to prescription drugs. |
Elaine Magee See book keywords and concepts |
According to the AICR, a recent study of adult hospital patients found that live culture yogurt decreased the incidence and duration of diarrhea brought on by antibiotics. At the very least, yogurt adds another meal or snack option for people with intestinal issues. So keep yogurt in your diet as a preventive measure, and should you fall ill with diarrhea, consider incorporating it into your self-treatment.
Yogurt with active cultures can discourage vaginal yeast infections in women. |
Dawson Church See book keywords and concepts |
If schoolchildren learned these techniques to help them cope with playground stresses, if hospital patients learned them to help them cope with pain, if people in social crises used them to help stabilize their emotions, then panic and powerlessness would no longer thwart sensible action. The reservoir of sane, stable intellectual and emotional power that lies within us would be unlocked and brought to bear on the social problems that lie before us.
Just as sudden healing miracles are a possibility for our bodies, sudden social miracles are possible for our culture. |
Dr. Timothy Scott See book keywords and concepts |
The number of state mental hospital patients declined more between 1965 and 1966 than at any time previously.25 The next year saw an even greater decline.26 The following year's decline was greater still.27 Obviously, any state could save large sums by transferring state mental hospital patients to nursing homes, and that is exactly what they did.
Many other factors added to the decline which continued throughout the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Hideyo Noguchi of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research publishes data on injecting an inactive syphilis preparation into the skin of 146 hospital patients and normal children in an attempt to develop a skin test for syphilis. Later, in 1913, several of these children's parents sue Dr. Noguchi for allegedly infecting their children with syphilis ("Reviews and Notes: History of Medicine: Subjected to Science: Human Experimentation in America before the Second World War").
(1913)
Medical experimenters "test" 15 children at the children's home St. |
Andreas Moritz See book keywords and concepts |
The patients' already strained digestive and immune systems are unable to handle these additional toxins, while also trying to eliminate as much fecal waste from the bowel as possible. Many hospital patients suffer from constipation because of drug treatments, lying in bed all day, or eating constipating foods, such as meat and potatoes. Congested bowels are a highly fertile ground for microbial infection, which is more likely
5 Heating animal proteins hardens and destroys them. This is called coagulation. |
Mark Sircus See book keywords and concepts |
Centers for Disease Control
The infection has long been common in hospital patients taking antibiotics for other reasons. As the drugs kill off other bacteria in the digestive system, the C. diff microbe can proliferate.
Hospitals might be forced to use magnesium chloride or just watch as more and more die from their refusal to step outside their medical boxes and use something that can safely help deal with this and other medical situations. |
Alex Steffen See book keywords and concepts |
But after recognizing the impact of cafeteria operations on hospital patients and visitors, they also began looking for ways to green the dining areas. Because of the endorsement of this program by major national agencies, the idea is likely to spread. Remember when hospitals had cigarette vending machines in their waiting rooms and ashtrays in their recovery rooms? |
Mike Adams, the Health Ranger See article keywords and concepts |
Up to 60% of all hospital patients are vitamin D deficient.
76% of pregnant mothers are severely vitamin D deficient, causing widespread vitamin D deficiencies in their unborn children, which predisposes them to type 1 diabetes, arthritis, multiple sclerosis and schizophrenia later in life. 81% of the children born to these mothers were deficient.
Up to 80% of nursing home patients are vitamin D deficient.
food and fast food restaurants out." But the staff there is against him. They say, "We want our junk food. We want our diabetes-promoting, heart disease-promoting, cancer-causing foods. It's our choice." They want this stuff. Gosh, I hate to say it, but have you ever been in a hospital and looked at the health of the nursing staff? I used to volunteer in a nursing home. I have seen it first-hand. |
Dr. Timothy Scott See book keywords and concepts |
Understanding the decline in the number of mental hospital patients following 1955 must start with the question, "Why did the number of patients increase at rates that far exceeded the growth in the nation's population?"
The population of the United States increased by 656% from 1850 to 1950, but the mental hospital population increased 10,835% during these same years.1 A small proportion of this surge was likely due to actual increases in mental instability. |
| Obviously, any state could save large sums by transferring state mental hospital patients to nursing homes, and that is exactly what they did.
Many other factors added to the decline which continued throughout the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s. Today psychiatric hospitals, general hospitals with psychiatric wards and community mental health centers have largely replaced the role played by large state mental hospitals. |
by Michael Murray, N.D. and Joseph Pizzorno, N.D. See book keywords and concepts |
| In one study, Italian researchers compared the presurgery diets of 207 hospital patients who had cataracts removed with 706 patients who did not have to have the operation. Consumption of bell peppers was associated with a reduced risk for cataract surgery.
Bell peppers also contain substances, including capsaicin, flavonoids, and vitamin C, which have been shown to prevent blood clot formation and reduce the risk of heart attacks and strokes. |