This is the other video from The Jackson Lab that accompanies the article above. Researcher Julia Oh, Ph.D., discusses the microbiome and their research approach.
This reminds me of a documentary on treating cancer I saw in the late 1980's. It may have been the one on interferon that I mentioned in another thread.
There was a middle-aged woman in a hospital bed who had been diagnosed with cancer. In desperation, she was telling her husband that she had...
Oh, he's very qualified... :)
[If you're wondering about "Dr." Ed's bushy white hair, I'm pretty sure it's a reference to Sam Jaffe's portrayal of "Dr. Zorba" on the "Ben Casey" TV series in the early 1960's.
There's been a small outbreak of Kawasaki disease in San Diego. Usually a disease of young children, it causes inflammation of blood vessels throughout the body and can be fatal if not treated. Kawasaki's is considered rare. Its cause is unknown.
In San Diego, sixteen children have come down...
Below is Columbia's July 2018 write up on how the combined results of microbiome and metabolite testing identified ME/CFS patients 84% of the time. As @Andy said, it needs to be replicated, and it's not a clinical test but something that I imagine can only be found in research settings. Still...
When it comes to patients, perhaps instead of "activists" they should have used the term "engaged patients," as this 2016 World Health Organization document would seem to suggest.
Patient Engagement: Technical Series on Safer Primary Care...
Somehow, "evidence" sounds considerably more convincing than "indications."
When asking my doctor if a medical procedure is safe, I'm not sure that I'd want to hear him say that "there are indications that the science is sound."
The is pretty strange. It sounds like this article might turn out to look like one investigative reporter investigating another investigative reporter. I wonder how other investigative reporters, and reporters at large, are going to feel about that.
Someone once said that it is the duty of...
I haven't read the whole thing in detail, but when they say that 43% of their subjects reported a professional diagnosis of depression, seasonal affective disorder, or dysthymia compared to 7% of the US population, it's not clear to me if they distinguished whether such a diagnosis was made...
I wonder if those categorized as "dangerous and irrational" will include the 113 leading experts (including 56 PhD's, and at least 59 Physicians), 10 Members of Parliament and 52 Patient/Advocacy groups that called for an independent re-analysis of PACE...
So, after hearing that current exercise recommendations are like telling a frostbite patient to walk through the snow, the Public Health Minister's response was, effectively, "Don't worry. I've checked and we've got plenty of snow"?
I'm pretty sure that this is a "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" sort of thing and that the dogs are actually studying the psychologists - possibly in an attempt to understand the psychologists' emotional attachment to CBT.
A couple of years ago I got a rather bad case of conjunctivitis which was caused by dry eyes creating friction between my eyes and my contact lenses. It's known as "giant papillary conjunctivitis" or GPC.
It was painful and resulted in light sensitivity and a strange "haze" to my vision, as if...
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