Oooooooo, zamanimizin en sanli ve en buyuk sahtekarlik olan; "Candida" sahtekarligina inanmissiniz..
Candida; HER CANLIDA vardir ama, bir tek, yeni doganin ilk 1 ayinda ve asiri uzun sure Antibiyotik
D vitamini ile bir alakasi yok..
Asagidaki yaziyi okuyun veya Ingilizce bilen birisine okutun.. Yoksa, cok zarar goreceksiniz..
Problems Reported
In 1986, two doctors from Loyola University Stritch School
of Medicine reported seeing four young women whose nonspecific
complaints included chronic fatigue, anxiety, and depression.
All four mistakenly believed they had disseminated candidiasis
and were taking nystatin or ketoconazole, which had been prescribed
by their family physicians. All had read The Yeast Connection
and had carried the book into the office during their visits.
One patient on ketoconazole had hepatitis, which resolved when
the drug was stopped [9].
Worse yet, a case has been reported of a child with a severe
case of disseminated candidiasis who had been seen by a "Candida
doctor" and given inadequate treatment. The report concluded
that "the advice of yeast connection advocates may be inappropriate
even for illnesses in which Candida is implicated." [10]
Perhaps the saddest report was a letter in a health-food magazine
from a woman appealing for help and encouragement. She said that
a clinical ecologist had been treating her for allergies and Candida
for four years, that initial tests showed she "was allergic
to all foods" as well as to numerous chemicals and inhalants,
and that so far nothing had helped.
Dubious Diagnostic Questionnaires
The Yeast Connection contains a 70 or 90-item "candida
questionnaire" and score sheet to determine how likely it
is that health problems are yeast-connected. Crook has marketed
several versions to physicians who accept his theories. The documents
state,"if your point score is over 180, candida almost certainly
plays a role in causing your health problems." Scores over
120 mean "candida probably plays a role," 60 to 120
means it "possibly plays a role," and scores under 60
mean it is "less apt" to play a significant roll.
Shorter questionnaires have appeared in magazine articles,
ads for products sold through health food stores, and flyers used
by chiropractors. The most notorious were used as marketing devices
by Nature's Way, of Springville Utah, whose product Cantrol,
was a conglomeration of capsules containing acidophilus, evening
primrose oil, vitamin E, linseed oil, caprylic acid, pau d'arco,
and several other substances.
Under federal law, any product intended for the prevention
or treatment of disease is a drug, and it is illegal to market
new drugs that do not have FDA approval. In 1989, the FDA's Health
Fraud Branch issued instructions and a sample regulatory letter
indicating that it was illegal to market vitamin products intended
for treating yeast infections. In 1990, Nature's Way and its president,
Kenneth Murdock, settled an FTC Complaint by signing a consent
agreement to stop making unsubstantiated claims that Cantrol is helpful against yeast infections caused by Candida albicans.
Nature's Way promoted Cantrol with several versions
of a self-test—one of which is pictured below—based on common
symptoms the manufacturer claimed were associated with yeast problems.
The FTC charged that the test was not valid for this purpose.
The company also agreed to pay $30,000 to the National
Institutes of Health to support research on yeast infections [11].
|
- This questionnaire was part of a health-food store display
Nature's Way distributed in 1986.
- Do you know many people who would not answer "yes"
to at least three questions?
|
This action and several others have driven most of the "anti-Candida"
concoctions from the marketplace and stopped their direct promotion
to the public. However, the ingredients of these products are
still marketed individually as "dietary supplements"
and practitioners still prescribe them to their patients.
In 1990, the New Jersey State Attorney General secured consent
agreements barring Linda Choi, M.D., and Pruyakant Doshi, M.D.,
from diagnosing and treating "Candida albicans overgrowth
syndrome." Both were assessed $3,000 for investigative costs
and had their medical license placed on probation for one year.
Among other things, investigation by the State medical board had
concluded that "Candida albicans overgrowth" was not
generally recognized as a clinical entity and had not been established
as the cause of the conditions the doctors treated.
I believe that practitioners who diagnose nonexistent "yeast
problems" should have their licenses revoked. Some apply
this diagnosis to nearly every patient they see.
SIMDI; siz, Turkiye'nin Saglik Bakanligi'nin, halki korumak adina, bu SAHTEKARLARA karsi
herhangi bir islem yapacagini zannediyorsaniz, cok aldanirsiniz!!!
Bu sahtekarlarla, siz mucadele edeceksiniz...