Your last paragraph was especially meaningful. I sat with a mother who just buried her 14 year old son recently. She and her son spent years in a dark home, or at medical facilities, in an attempt to mitigate seizures. The seizures began less than one hour post vaccination at one year old. She knows it was due to vaccination but has been gaslit by professionals. I am beyond over the old system at this point and want to build something new and healthy. I have encountered so many parents with children who have been devastated by our current healthcare system. Healthcare is a misnomer if ever there was one.
The whole system's corrupt by design. Before the Flexner Report the American Health landscape was populated with acupuncturists, naturopaths, homeopathy practitioners and alopathic doctors, all co-existant. Then they removed the possibility of graduating from medical establishments without pharmacology and swept all else away, clearing the path for the monopolistic, legally sanctioned butchery and predatory practice we see today.
Glad to see this scam being exposed. It is no better in UK with the NHS where everyone feels entitled to the latest poison big pharma have created a market for.
The first step to solve the problem is to give legal protection to doctors proscribing medicines off piste unless they ars being criminally negligent. The restrictions on safe medicines being used is absolutely criminal. Ivermectin is an obvious one.
Preaching to the choir. The problems become more acute as medicine becomes more and more corporatized.
For those who can afford to seek most of their care outside of insurance-reimbursable healthcare paradigm, their odds of getting trapped in a broken and predatory system can be greatly reduced.
Unfortunately, there is a monopoly on some healthcare services, so it's not always possible to avoid getting sucked into the system.
I love your analogy and thanks for this advice. Very comprehensive. "Imagine you take your car to a repair shop." I took some training at work yesterday in adapting to the data world and acumen is decision-making. They said to do away with gut feelings and depend on data driven decisions. Now my analogy tying your advice and decision making. I just need to vent...pain-driven type. I know it is a bit off the subject but close, the moral is - we should not just surrender our feelings of gut and also mix our own data-driven decisions. I had several surgeries with 3 new disks in my neck. I asked Doc if maybe fuzzing is better. Said now will loose mobility and the disks are very good. According the imagine, the Doc couldn't tell my neck was so bad. Disks were "rotten" and came out in pieces. Through the years all the instability resulted in a spine that didn't know it's place. Now a year later living in absolute pain realizing it was a mistake, now Doc admits fuzzing may have been better. He was an excellent surgeon. Now I am pending a possible full reconstruction. But I just missed the gut. Likewise now about the evil jab gut feelings. Well seems those are also coming true.
Dag, how horrific for you. My situation is not as bad as yours but in similar vein. My left eye is near blind, wrinkled retina which can be corrected by surgery, just a matter of laying the retina flat by removing any gunk under the wrinkle. I went to 3 "surgeons". They all told me the same thing, "oh, we don't do that anymore. We inject a needle into your eyeball once a month for the rest of your life and guaranteed, your vision will not get worse".
I research the substance injected. Reports from Medicare showed increased risk of stroke, heart attack, blood clots, 6th nerve palsy, all cause mortality up, stomach disorders to name a few. A full syringe of Eylea fluid injected into my eyeball every month yet doctors said no side effects and no improved vision.
The waiting room was wall to wall patients for this procedure. I threw the papers they gave me to the floor and stormed out of there. My gut took over to the horror of that procedure. No way could I submit, just like I never submitted to any covid protocols.
Thank you for highlighting the wonderful work of Dr Yoho! Having worked in healthcare for over 30 years (in three different countries) I can only concur with everything he’s saying. I’ve come to despise the “healthcare” system, and would add that calling it this is a complete misnomer. It misleads people into thinking that health comes from this system.
Health can only be achieved through working *with* the body’s systems, with the body as a whole, and pharmaceutically based allopathic medicine always works *against* the body, with drugs that work by blocking some mechanism in the body.
In many other countries it’s called the sick care system, and this is much more appropriate.
MDs are dangerous because while they neither understand the miraculous healthy functioning of the human body, nor understand or have any tools at their disposal to support it, the are taught to believe that what they don’t know doesn’t even matter, Rx drugs are the only way, and the wisdom and knowledge base of other practitioners is worthless and to be disparaged, at best.
Unless it’s for an ER visit or a an actually needed surgery — the only truly valuable aspects of medicine — we’d do best to keep our distance from this system.
This especially since the good advice to not “sign financial responsibility forms without modification” is now impossible to follow. I used to do just that, but now the signature required is electronic and the document you sign is both invisible to the patient and impossible to modify as it’s electronic and inaccessible. I’ve walked away from appointments due to this, but what can people do in an emergency to protect themselves from this predatory requirement?
But, to end on a more positive note, thank goodness for responsible and brave individuals like Dr Yoho for revealing the ugly face of allopathic medicine, and for substacks like this one for highlighting and speeding their words! Thank you!
An ideal medical care system would count cured cases and document the cause of the cure. Our current medical systems do not documented any cured cases and medical insurance does not pay for cured cases.
This is quite excellent. and evidence based for the doubters.
But this statement is not evidence based to my mind: "It would feature salaried physicians working in integrated systems like Kaiser Permanente, where insurance, hospitals, and providers coordinate care with aligned incentives."AS far as I know Kaisers outcomes are not really any better overall and despite salaried physicians they too overprescribe and over treat.
Thanks CM. Oh our situations rise and fall like the ebb and flows of a unsurety in everything in a fallen world. Kind of like the story of the boy who got a horse. Now I'm at the part well sorry Satan but God loved me so much He let my lukewarm backsliding Job self endure the suffering because time is short and now that bad pain is doing one good thing... songs are made, people are reached, and God is praised 😀. This current situation is temp. Eternity with Him is forever https://youtu.be/e2cjVhUrmII?si=8Y5v8s10yZPhHMV6
I've seen way more harm done by doctors, hospitals and Nursing Homes than help. Pharma is the other side, they want complete control. With out conquences for their damage. We were making slight progress with the RIGHT TO TRY law. But it doesn't address the need for correct supplements or Nutrition. You mention Vit D3, pat answer your test for it is normal. You spent nearly 7 months with NO sunlight, how can it be normal. What is normal, what Pharmal gets Gov to set. Same goes for Cholestrol it is set for putting you on 1 or more nasty Statins.
I eliminated as much Seed Oils, Corn Syurp, and Fructose as I could, lost 40 lbs. At 76 it was harder to find food without it than stick to avoiding most of it. My Type 2 diabetes went from 18/22 Humalog clicks to 10/5. I no longer know when it spikes or drops.
Americans happy with healthcare here pride themselves on this being where the drug innovations are. Now I’m thinking there are probably a tooon of create-the-problem-so-you-can-create-a-solution drugs that don’t actually work/only semi-work a la mRNA, and drugs that they make but then “find” a problem for.
I remember when Tylenol was removed from the shelves like 3x's in a couple years. I've tried all types of OTC pain relievers thru the years, and without exception, Tylenol was the only one that NEVER worked. Once I was charged $16 in hospital for one Tylenol.
Then I started thinking about nurses scanning your wrist band every time entering your room. Always, always, even in middle of night when you were sleeping. I wondered why. They knew who you were, name on door and over the bed. Were they logging in to record electronically when they took your BP, or were they charging you for doing it? A nurse will not even prop up your pillows without scanning your wrist band. And a doctor you've never seen will poke his head in and ask how you're feeling and charge you for a visit.
Not knowing if I'm right or wrong, but based on what I have witnessed, I'm inclined to believe checking a BP is probably not part of your care therefore you will be charged every time.
Your last paragraph was especially meaningful. I sat with a mother who just buried her 14 year old son recently. She and her son spent years in a dark home, or at medical facilities, in an attempt to mitigate seizures. The seizures began less than one hour post vaccination at one year old. She knows it was due to vaccination but has been gaslit by professionals. I am beyond over the old system at this point and want to build something new and healthy. I have encountered so many parents with children who have been devastated by our current healthcare system. Healthcare is a misnomer if ever there was one.
Canadian naturopath Amandha Volmer calls it a 'disease support system'. Far more apt.
The whole system's corrupt by design. Before the Flexner Report the American Health landscape was populated with acupuncturists, naturopaths, homeopathy practitioners and alopathic doctors, all co-existant. Then they removed the possibility of graduating from medical establishments without pharmacology and swept all else away, clearing the path for the monopolistic, legally sanctioned butchery and predatory practice we see today.
Glad to see this scam being exposed. It is no better in UK with the NHS where everyone feels entitled to the latest poison big pharma have created a market for.
The first step to solve the problem is to give legal protection to doctors proscribing medicines off piste unless they ars being criminally negligent. The restrictions on safe medicines being used is absolutely criminal. Ivermectin is an obvious one.
Thank you for covering this book. I read it in 2020 and it surpassed my expectations. I have given out many copies over the years.
Preaching to the choir. The problems become more acute as medicine becomes more and more corporatized.
For those who can afford to seek most of their care outside of insurance-reimbursable healthcare paradigm, their odds of getting trapped in a broken and predatory system can be greatly reduced.
Unfortunately, there is a monopoly on some healthcare services, so it's not always possible to avoid getting sucked into the system.
This book sounds wonderful. But I have, a few years ago, read the book ‘What Really Makes You Ill’ which covers all the same ground as this book.
I love your analogy and thanks for this advice. Very comprehensive. "Imagine you take your car to a repair shop." I took some training at work yesterday in adapting to the data world and acumen is decision-making. They said to do away with gut feelings and depend on data driven decisions. Now my analogy tying your advice and decision making. I just need to vent...pain-driven type. I know it is a bit off the subject but close, the moral is - we should not just surrender our feelings of gut and also mix our own data-driven decisions. I had several surgeries with 3 new disks in my neck. I asked Doc if maybe fuzzing is better. Said now will loose mobility and the disks are very good. According the imagine, the Doc couldn't tell my neck was so bad. Disks were "rotten" and came out in pieces. Through the years all the instability resulted in a spine that didn't know it's place. Now a year later living in absolute pain realizing it was a mistake, now Doc admits fuzzing may have been better. He was an excellent surgeon. Now I am pending a possible full reconstruction. But I just missed the gut. Likewise now about the evil jab gut feelings. Well seems those are also coming true.
Dag, how horrific for you. My situation is not as bad as yours but in similar vein. My left eye is near blind, wrinkled retina which can be corrected by surgery, just a matter of laying the retina flat by removing any gunk under the wrinkle. I went to 3 "surgeons". They all told me the same thing, "oh, we don't do that anymore. We inject a needle into your eyeball once a month for the rest of your life and guaranteed, your vision will not get worse".
I research the substance injected. Reports from Medicare showed increased risk of stroke, heart attack, blood clots, 6th nerve palsy, all cause mortality up, stomach disorders to name a few. A full syringe of Eylea fluid injected into my eyeball every month yet doctors said no side effects and no improved vision.
The waiting room was wall to wall patients for this procedure. I threw the papers they gave me to the floor and stormed out of there. My gut took over to the horror of that procedure. No way could I submit, just like I never submitted to any covid protocols.
Thank you for highlighting the wonderful work of Dr Yoho! Having worked in healthcare for over 30 years (in three different countries) I can only concur with everything he’s saying. I’ve come to despise the “healthcare” system, and would add that calling it this is a complete misnomer. It misleads people into thinking that health comes from this system.
Health can only be achieved through working *with* the body’s systems, with the body as a whole, and pharmaceutically based allopathic medicine always works *against* the body, with drugs that work by blocking some mechanism in the body.
In many other countries it’s called the sick care system, and this is much more appropriate.
MDs are dangerous because while they neither understand the miraculous healthy functioning of the human body, nor understand or have any tools at their disposal to support it, the are taught to believe that what they don’t know doesn’t even matter, Rx drugs are the only way, and the wisdom and knowledge base of other practitioners is worthless and to be disparaged, at best.
Unless it’s for an ER visit or a an actually needed surgery — the only truly valuable aspects of medicine — we’d do best to keep our distance from this system.
This especially since the good advice to not “sign financial responsibility forms without modification” is now impossible to follow. I used to do just that, but now the signature required is electronic and the document you sign is both invisible to the patient and impossible to modify as it’s electronic and inaccessible. I’ve walked away from appointments due to this, but what can people do in an emergency to protect themselves from this predatory requirement?
But, to end on a more positive note, thank goodness for responsible and brave individuals like Dr Yoho for revealing the ugly face of allopathic medicine, and for substacks like this one for highlighting and speeding their words! Thank you!
An ideal medical care system would count cured cases and document the cause of the cure. Our current medical systems do not documented any cured cases and medical insurance does not pay for cured cases.
This is quite excellent. and evidence based for the doubters.
But this statement is not evidence based to my mind: "It would feature salaried physicians working in integrated systems like Kaiser Permanente, where insurance, hospitals, and providers coordinate care with aligned incentives."AS far as I know Kaisers outcomes are not really any better overall and despite salaried physicians they too overprescribe and over treat.
Thanks CM. Oh our situations rise and fall like the ebb and flows of a unsurety in everything in a fallen world. Kind of like the story of the boy who got a horse. Now I'm at the part well sorry Satan but God loved me so much He let my lukewarm backsliding Job self endure the suffering because time is short and now that bad pain is doing one good thing... songs are made, people are reached, and God is praised 😀. This current situation is temp. Eternity with Him is forever https://youtu.be/e2cjVhUrmII?si=8Y5v8s10yZPhHMV6
I've seen way more harm done by doctors, hospitals and Nursing Homes than help. Pharma is the other side, they want complete control. With out conquences for their damage. We were making slight progress with the RIGHT TO TRY law. But it doesn't address the need for correct supplements or Nutrition. You mention Vit D3, pat answer your test for it is normal. You spent nearly 7 months with NO sunlight, how can it be normal. What is normal, what Pharmal gets Gov to set. Same goes for Cholestrol it is set for putting you on 1 or more nasty Statins.
I eliminated as much Seed Oils, Corn Syurp, and Fructose as I could, lost 40 lbs. At 76 it was harder to find food without it than stick to avoiding most of it. My Type 2 diabetes went from 18/22 Humalog clicks to 10/5. I no longer know when it spikes or drops.
Americans happy with healthcare here pride themselves on this being where the drug innovations are. Now I’m thinking there are probably a tooon of create-the-problem-so-you-can-create-a-solution drugs that don’t actually work/only semi-work a la mRNA, and drugs that they make but then “find” a problem for.
Inventing new diseases to treat is a very profitable business model.
I remember when Tylenol was removed from the shelves like 3x's in a couple years. I've tried all types of OTC pain relievers thru the years, and without exception, Tylenol was the only one that NEVER worked. Once I was charged $16 in hospital for one Tylenol.
Then I started thinking about nurses scanning your wrist band every time entering your room. Always, always, even in middle of night when you were sleeping. I wondered why. They knew who you were, name on door and over the bed. Were they logging in to record electronically when they took your BP, or were they charging you for doing it? A nurse will not even prop up your pillows without scanning your wrist band. And a doctor you've never seen will poke his head in and ask how you're feeling and charge you for a visit.
Not knowing if I'm right or wrong, but based on what I have witnessed, I'm inclined to believe checking a BP is probably not part of your care therefore you will be charged every time.