Page 263 - Wasserstoff Medizin
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Medicine.” – Dr. Marcia Angell, a physician and longtime editor-in-chief of the
                         New England Medical Journal (NEMJ) (source)


                         “The case against science is straightforward: much of the scientific literature,
                         perhaps half, may simply be untrue. Afflicted by studies with small sample sizes,
                         tiny effects, invalid exploratory analyses, and flagrant  conflicts of interest,
                         together with an obsession for pursuing fashionable trends of dubious importance,
                         science has taken a turn towards darkness.” – Dr. Richard Horton, the current
                         editor-in-chief of the Lancet – considered to be one of the most well respected
                         peer-reviewed medical journals in the world. (source)

                  The question is being asked in the mainstream: How to Keep Long-Term Care From
                  Bankrupting Us. Another is, How Can We Keep People Out of Nursing Homes? The
                  strongest, safest, most effective and cost effective answer is hydrogen best delivered in
                  both gaseous and aqueous forms simultaneously. Yet we hear In a startling investigation,
                  CNN has learned that the maker of a drug designed to treat an uncommon condition is
                  increasingly pushing it on nursing home residents with dementia and Alzheimer’s — with
                  sometimes dire consequences.

                  Hard to all believe how bad and expensive and dangerous the practice of modern medicine
                  has gotten. ‘No One is Coming:’ Investigation Reveals Hospices Abandon Patients at
                  Death’s Door is another horror story recently released warning Americans that you are
                  risking everything by trusting and counting on modern medicine.

                         “As her husband lay moaning in pain from the cancer riddling his body, Patricia
                         Martin searched frantically through his medical bag, looking for a syringe. She
                         had already called the hospice twice, demanding liquid methadone to ease the
                         agony of Dr. Robert E. Martin, 66. A family practice physician known to everyone
                         as “Dr. Bob,” he had served the small, remote community in Wasilla, Alaska, for
                         more than 30 years. But the doctor in charge at Mat-Su Regional Home Health
                         and Hospice wasn’t responding.”


                         “It took six days and three more calls before he received the liquid methadone he
                         needed. Hospice denied Patricia Martin’s requests for a catheter, and she and her
                         son had to cut away his urine-soaked clothing and bedding, trying not to cause
                         him additional pain. The supervising hospice doctor never responded.”




















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