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Men should not assume sex when women just wanted to be dating

To avoid being in a rape case, do spend more time with each other before jumping in bed with your date. Women must tell men what they want. Men should not assume and not bring women to unholy places like a hotel room on the first few dates.
Connie
At some point during their courtship, many dating couples decide its time to break down initial boundaries — be they emotional, physical, or both — and engage in asexual relationship. If both people are playing by the same dating rules, sex can serve as the gateway to a consensual, committed relationship.Feb 1, 2007

When To Have Sex – AskMen

6 days ago – In fact, taking sex off the table in this way really opened us up to come up with interesting ways to spend time together other than pounding drinks at the bar with the goal of getting drunk enough to take our clothes off in front of each other — which is what dating in my 20s had been like. We both loved to …

What Men Want You to Know About Dating and Sex – Sex Tips Straight …

Oct 10, 2013 – 50 Things Men Want You to Know Right Now About Dating & Sex. We took to the internet via Reddit and polled our male pals to get their straightforward answers. … So we took to the internet via Reddit and polled our male pals to get their straightforward advice.

Common Issues with Dating and Sex | LoveToKnow

dating.lovetoknow.com/Dating_and_Sex

Dating and sex seem to go hand in hand. At some point, sex becomes an issue in any new dating relationship; it’s really just a question of when. Should you or shouldn’t you? Everyone seems to have an opinion, from doctors and psychologists, to parents and clergy, to friends and passersby. But the only two people in the …

When to have sex with the new guy you’ve been dating – SheKnows

http://www.sheknows.com › LOVE › Sex

Aug 4, 2015 – If you have the same values and goals in life and are attracted to each other, a relationship-oriented guy wants a relationship. Sleeping with him on date one or date 10 is less relevant to him, as he usually dates one person at a time and wants a girlfriend.

The Dating Game: When Should You Have Sex? – WebMD

https://www.webmd.com › Sexual Health › Feature Stories

Feb 1, 2007 – At some point during their courtship, many dating couples decide its time to break down initial boundaries — be they emotional, physical, or both — and engage in a sexual relationship. If both people are playing by the same dating rules, sex can serve as the gateway to a consensual, committed relationship.

Q&A: When Should You Have Sex With Someone You’re Dating …

May 28, 2015 – Dating gurus Neely Steinberg & Mr. Locario sound off on how long women should wait before having sex with a date.

Matchmaker in the Know: Rules About Sex When Dating | HuffPost

Jun 8, 2010 – Have you ever wondered if there are any real rules about sex when you are datingdating? Here’s what I know… 1. There are no real rules when it comes to having sex when you are dating. You need to make your own rules, the rules that feel comfortable for you. 2. The old adage that if you sleep with him …

The Unspoken Rules of Dating & Sex. | elephant journal

Sep 20, 2015 – I quickly learned that there are a whole lot of unspoken rules to dating and sex these days. Ones I wasn’t sure I.

Free Adult Dating Service & sex personals – POF.com

Instanthookups is a casual dating site that makes finding sex in you area easy! Meet a sexy single in your area who wants to have casual sex tonight! Our advanced browsing features allow you to search for a hookup by age, distance, and body type. Your preferences can be adjusted to filter matches to your desires. A free …

Millennials and Sex: A New Take on Dating, Marriage and Monogamy …

The old rules of relationships no longer apply. Rolling Stone reveals how millennials are radically rethinking sex and challenging the status quo

Migraines linked to high sodium levels in cerebrospinal fluid

Acetaminophen use during pregnancy linked to increased risk of behavioral problems in kids

The image shows a section of the sheet music score for The Music of Bohemia.

MUSIC’S ROLE IN REDUCING STRESS FOR CANCER PATIENTS

A new study is to investigate whether music affects the health of cancer patients by soothing them and making them less anxious. Depending on the outcomes, future research could hone in on how much anxiety levels decreased after music therapy and how reduced anxiety affects a patient’s recovery time, complications and willingness to comply with treatment.  READ MORE…

Cancer’s Gene-determined ‘Immune Landscape’ Dictates Progression of Prostate Tumors

Wild type human prostate cells from an organoid (a man-made construct that resembles an organ). These cells have come from a xenograft where they serve as controls for the study of primary prostate cancer tumor cells, which are also injected into mice and then extracted for characterization. Photo: National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health

The field of immunotherapy – the harnessing of patients’ own immune systems to fend off cancer – is revolutionizing cancer treatment today. However, clinical trials often show marked improvements in only small subsets of patients, suggesting that as-yet unidentified variations among tumors result in distinct paths of disease progression and response to therapy.

Now, researchers at the Cancer Center at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) have demonstrated that genetic variations driving prostate cancer determine the composition of the immune cells that have been found to infiltrate primary prostate tumors. These immune cells, in turn, dictate tumor progression and response to treatment. The data, published in Nature Medicine, suggest that profiling patients’ tumors based on this new information could lead to more successful clinical trials and tailored therapies for patients.

“We observed that specific genetic events resulted in striking differences in the composition of immune cells present in and around the tumor – results with important therapeutic implications,” said senior author Pier Paolo Pandolfi, MD, Director of the Cancer Center and Cancer Research Institute at BIDMC. “Our data may be especially relevant for tailoring immunological therapies and for identifying responsive-patient population.”

The third leading cause of cancer-related death in U.S. men, prostate cancer, is linked to a number of diverse genetic mutations that drive the disease. For example, the loss of the tumor suppressor gene PTEN is a frequent event in prostate cancer and is well known to promote the disease in combinations with a plethora of other mutations. Researchers also know that the tumor’s microenvironment – the blood vessels, immune cells, signaling molecules and other factors that surround the tumor – plays an important role in tumor progression and response to therapy.

Pandolfi’s team – including lead author, Marco Bezzi, a post-doctoral fellow in Pandolfi’s lab – engineered mice models to represent four distinct known genetic variations of human prostate cancer. The models lacked either Pten alone or in combination with other genetic alterations known to drive the disease. When the team analyzed the tumors from these mice, they saw profound differences in the types and relative numbers of the immune cells that had accumulated in and around the tumor, what they call the tumors’ “immune landscape”.

For example, specific immune landscapes tumors from the genetic model lacking both Pten and the tumor suppressor gene called Trp53 demonstrated an increased accumulation of myeloid cells, the immune cells that mediate immunosuppression. In stark contrast, tumors from the genetic model lacking Pten and a different tumor suppressor gene called PML lacked intratumoral immune infiltration; that is, the researchers observed no immune cells at all in these tumors, which the scientists dubbed “cold,” or “immune-deserts.” All four mouse models analyzed presented very distinctive immune landscapes and these differences were maintained and exacerbated over time.

The research team also demonstrated that these differences in immune cell composition were directly dictated by the tumors themselves because of their genetic variations. Different tumors, they observed, secreted distinct chemical attractants, which in turn recruited – or didn’t recruit, in the case of the immune-desert tumors – different immune cell types into the tumor. Pandolfi and colleagues further demonstrated that these differences hold true in human prostate cancer. Critically, the immune cells recruited to the tumors were found to be essential in supporting the growth and progression of these tumors.

“We observed that when present, these infiltrating immune cells were required for the tumor to thrive and found therapies to block their recruitment to be effective,” said Bezzi. “On the other hand, the cancer genotype characterized by the so-called ‘immune desert’ phenotype, did not respond to such therapies. On this basis, we can predict the tumor response to immunotherapies and tailor treatment modalities to effectively impact tumors that are otherwise extremely aggressive,” he said.

Thus, because immune cells interact with and also affect tumor response to therapy, these findings may be especially relevant for the development of more precise and effective combinations of immunotherapies and targeted therapies on the basis of the cancer genetic makeup.

“These profound differences in immunological landscapes among various cancer genotypes further highlight the need to thoroughly investigate and integrate genotypes and immune-phenotypes in the context of exploratory cancer treatments in both preclinical and clinical settings,” said Pandolfi.

Fish oil has potential for treating chronic pain and neuropathy

Washington Post 1-15-2018

Hopes of reaching an agreement have been complicated by lingering mistrust between lawmakers after an Oval Office meeting in which President Trump used vulgar terms to describe poor countries. Democrats have said they are unlikely to support any deal that does not protect young illegal immigrants, and there is also no guarantee that a majority of House GOP members will support a stopgap measure.
The tally leaves supporters one vote shy of the 51 required to pass a Senate resolution that would overturn the FCC’s decision to remove rules that banned Internet service providers from blocking or slowing down websites. It would also prohibit the agency from passing similar measures in the future.
The president began the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday the same way he has each day of the long weekend: by tweeting before leaving his private Mar-a-Lago estate and then taking a motorcade to his club.
Aya, 21, from Syria, holds her 7-month-old baby at a makeshift camp. (Myrto Papadopoulos for The Post)
Aya, 21, from Syria, holds her 7-month-old baby at a makeshift camp. (Myrto Papadopoulos for The Post)
Aid workers and local officials say the squalor thousands endure in the main camp on the Greek island of Lesbos is no accident, but rather the result of a deliberate European strategy to keep people away. “There’s no reason why 5,000 people in a camp in Europe cannot have access to basic shelter, health care, toilets and hot water,” a coordinator for Doctors Without Borders said.
The Fix

Analysis

GOP Sen. Jeff Flake is free to speak his mind because he is retiring rather than risking a loss in the primary because he has been an outspoken critic of President Trump. His argument is that to save the party, other Republicans need to follow his lead in not standing by Trump.

Curbing the epidemic of opioid abuse by rethinking chronic pain

SEX DIFFERENCES IN BRAIN ACTIVITY ALTER PAIN THERAPIES

In-Service Materials for providers serving San Mateo aging population

Pre-Approved In-Service Materials for providers serving San Mateo aging population

Food Safety Documents

Nutrition Program Resources

FDA Fueled Opioid Epidemic

FDA Fueled Opioid Epidemic

January 2018

By William Faloon

William Faloon

William Faloon

Heroin is one of the most addictive substances on earth.

When deprived of opioid drugs like heroin or oxycodone, addicts endure harsh withdrawal that often requires medical intervention. The addict may then undergo long-term treatment to reduce odds of relapsing.1

Recovering opioid addicts may not sleep properly for years. Relentless physical and mental cravings result in over 90% of treated users resuming opioid addiction.2 The final exit for many is recovery or death.

Opioid addiction has skyrocketed in the United States as have fatal overdoses.3

To meet the surging demand, synthetic opioids (like fentanyl) are smuggled into the United States. Those convicted of trafficking opioids can face decades of incarceration.4,5

What if, instead of risking prison, you duped the FDA into approving a synthetic opioid drug for routine pain relief?

That way doctors would widely prescribe your opioid drug with insurance companies paying for it.

Having physicians inadvertently hook their patients creates a large base of addicts who will do anything to avoid the horrors of opioid withdrawal.

That’s what a pharmaceutical company accomplished when it got the FDA to approve their time-released oxycodone in 1995.6

With FDA’s approval in hand, the company launched a marketing campaign to mislead doctors and patients about the risk for addiction and abuse of their opioid drug.6

This article will open your eyes to facts that should have precluded OxyContin® from ever being approved for widespread use.

For those with persistent discomforts, help is available. Greater use of natural alternatives may reduce the growing population of Americans who become dependent on opioid drugs that are approved by the FDA.

An estimated 100 million Americans suffer chronic pain.7

Pain prevalence increases with age due partly to chronic inflammatory issues that exacerbate degenerative diseases such as arthritis and traumatic injury.

Opioid drugs provide immediate relief, but fail to correct the underlying inflammatory problem.

As pain sufferers become tolerant to narcotic drugs, they need to increase their dose. Increased dosage is required to keep their pain in abeyance and to satisfy their unintended addiction to the synthetic opioid their doctor prescribed.

Patients who thought they were going to take “pain pills” for a limited period find themselves hooked on a narcotic drug, something they might refuse if they knew of its addiction risk.

The complex factors that create opioid addiction are incompletely understood.8 The public gets confused when terms like “detoxification” are used to describe what an addict endures to get off opioid drugs.

As you’ll read next, opioid addiction is more difficult to cure than merely removing a “toxin.”

How the Brain Gets Addicted

How the Brain Gets Addicted

Recovering Opioid Addicts
May Not Sleep Properly
For Years

Brain cells contain opioid receptors.8

When a person takes an opioid drug, it quickly fills opioid receptor sites to relieve pain while inducing calmness and euphoria in many people.

Continued opioid drug use (be it heroin or oxycodone) causes opioid receptors to become desensitized in a way that often necessitates higher doses of the opioid drug to keep the brain from going into a physical withdrawal.

In the state of acute withdrawal, the opioid receptor sites in the brain scream for more opioids. With insufficient opioids, the addict can experience intense pain throughout their body that is already agitated because their desensitized opioid receptors are unable to transmit neuronal signals the addict needs to feel normal.

Acute withdrawal is a physical phenomenon that can require medical intervention to prevent possible death. During the acute and chronic withdrawal period, the opioid addict may be unable to achieve normal sleep and is likely to suffer from relentless discomfort and intense agitation, along with craving for opioid drugs.

Over a multi-year recovery period, the opioid receptor sites can become re-sensitized to the low levels of natural opioids produced in the body. This in turn slowly enables the opioid addict to regain a sense of normalcy.

Sleep deprivation, however, can last for years as the brain is unable to achieve sufficient relief from the anxiety because their opioid receptor sites were so damaged. Instant relief can be found by reaching for a heroin or oxycodone “fix,” which can ignite another vicious addiction cycle.

The body produces natural opioids that help mitigate pain and reduce anxiety. There are not enough natural opioids produced, however, to compensate for the loss of receptor site sensitivity caused by prior abuse of the opioid drug.

Understanding how opioids create physical addiction makes the FDA’s approval of opioid drugs (like OxyContin ®) all the more abhorrent.

How Heroin Abuse was Temporarily Curbed

IMAGE TAG

In the 1960’s, compelling film footage of heroin addicts twisting and screaming as they were strapped to hospital gurneys was shown to high school students. This film footage vividly revealed the horrors that heroin addicts endure as they fight through the acute withdrawal phase.

These films often depicted addicts cooking heroin in rusty spoons and using dirty needles to inject it into their quivering bodies. The visual impact was significant.

Much of society back then viewed heroin (opioid) junkies with disdain. Educated individuals said no to needles and opioids.

The reason for the resurgence of addiction and overdose deaths is the FDA approved an opioid drug that was illegally marketed to physicians as a relatively “safe” pain reliever.

Where Today’s Opioid Epidemic Started

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In the early 1990s, a company called Purdue Pharma developed a highly-addictive semi-synthetic opioid drug and named it OxyContin®.9 The company funded clinical trials showing that OxyContin® in long-acting form relieved pain for up to 12 hours with few of the side effects associated with opioid drugs.10

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) reviewed the company-funded clinical studies on the use of OxyContin® and approved it. The FDA was told that because OxyContin® was in a “time-release” tablet, it posed a lower threat of abuse and addiction.10

The FDA reviewer (Curtis Wright, MD) who led the approval of OxyContin® left the FDA and within 2 years was working for Purdue Pharma.10

This kind of revolving door between the FDA and pharmaceutical companies has been previously exposed in this magazine, and more recently in the Washington Post and on the CBS TV program 60 Minutes.

We view this revolving door as deferred bribery or “business as usual” as it relates to how the FDA approves new drugs and allows dangerous ones to remain on the market.

Purdue Pharma heavily promoted their OxyContin® to primary-care physicians who had little training in the treatment of serious pain or in recognizing signs of drug abuse.6 OxyContin® rapidly became the instant fix for patients complaining of any kind of discomfort since the drug usually provided immediate relief.

OxyContin® does this by occupying the opioid receptor on brain cells. As pain returned, so did the patient for a refill of higher-dose OxyContin® to counteract the desensitized (less responsive) brain cell opioid receptors caused by their prior use of OxyContin®.

It did not take long for experienced drug abusers and novices to discover that chewing an OxyContin® tablet, crushing it and snorting the powder, or injecting it with a needle produced a high as powerful as heroin.

By year 2000, parts of the United States began to see skyrocketing rates of addiction and crime related to OxyContin®,11,12 which has severely worsened in recent years.

Purdue Pharma Gets Indicted13

Between 1995 and 2001, Purdue Pharma brought in revenue of $2.8 billion from sales of its FDA-approved OxyContin® drug.13

The active ingredient in OxyContin® is oxycodone, which is a semi-synthetic opioid narcotic.

Unlike drugs such as Percocet® that contain oxycodone and other ingredients, OxyContin® contained large amounts of pure oxycodone in each time-released tablet.

Purdue Pharma recognized they would face resistance from doctors who were concerned about the potential for OxyContin® to cause addiction.13

To counter this, the company developed a fraudulent marketing campaign designed to promote OxyContin® as a time-released drug that was less prone to such problems.13

As addiction rates soared, Purdue Pharma and its executives were criminally charged for misrepresenting the addiction potential of OxyContin® to physicians.

In 2007, Purdue Pharma settled the criminal charges by paying a $634 million fine.6 The executives who perpetrated the crimes were not sentenced to serve any jail time and the company was allowed to continue selling different versions of oxycodone-containing drugs.14,15

As had been widely reported in recent years, neither Purdue Pharma nor the FDA has effectively stopped what has been an explosive growth in America’s addiction for opioid drugs that Purdue conned the FDA into approving 23 years ago.

Unequal Justice

While heroin dealers forfeit their property and personal liberty, those responsible for today’s opioid addictionepidemic continue to profit enormously. This is courtesy of the FDA approving and allowing ongoing sale of opioid prescription drugs.

FDA fuels this epidemic further by approving lower-cost generic opioid narcotics.

Yet the public does not understand how easy it is for brain cells to develop a physical craving for opioid drugs (and not everyone prescribed opioids becomes dependent or addicted).

Opioid Epidemic Reaches All-Time High in 2017

IMAGE TAG

The FDA initially allowed Purdue Pharma to market a theory that OxyContin® was less prone to addiction than typical opioids.

This bureaucratic blunder in 1995 is the genesis of today’s nationwide crisis of opioid addiction, overdoses, and deaths. This includes heroin (from poppies), oxycodone, and more powerful opioid-receptor site occupiers such as fentanyl(which is an opioid drug sometimes used for general anesthesia).16-19

The charts on these pages speak for themselves.20,21

These bleak numbers reflect over 200,000 lost lives caused by opioid drugs that never should have been approved for widespread use.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) revealed research in 2017 suggesting that the numbers of deaths attributed to opioid abuse are grossly underestimated.22-24

I cannot tell you how many times I’ve said NO to doctors and dentists who have offered me OxyContin®prescriptions with lots of refills.

I angrily bark back at these doctors by asking, “Are you out of your mind?” for trying to prescribe me a narcotic for something that is not particularly painful.

But how would a typical patient know to refuse an opioid prescription?

After all, the drug is approved by the FDA to treat pain. And since much of the public still thinks the FDA protects the public health, people generally follow their doctors prescribing orders.

The reality is the FDA should have known if you give a person an opioid drug, some will become addicted in a way that their brain cells constantly crave more of the opioid compound.8

Opioid addiction has reached crisis levels despite record numbers of people being incarcerated for its illicit distribution.

Education Over Incarceration

IMAGE TAG

I continue to advocate education over incarceration as the nearly 40-year “war on drugs” has been an abysmal failure. This is evidenced by massive numbers of:

• Opioid addicts25-27

• Opioid overdose fatalities28-30

• Drug addiction treatment centers31

• Incarcerated drug traffickers (who are often addicts themselves)32,33

Educating school children about the mechanisms of opioid tolerance, dependence, addiction, and withdrawal will go a long way to dissuade them from considering an opioidcompound.

Opioids need to regain the stigma that was successfully imparted on my generation in the 1960s/1970s era.

HORRORS OF OPIOID WITHDRAWAL

When an addict acutely stops taking their opioid drug, they can endure multiple physical withdrawalsymptoms including:8,34

• Systemic pain as the opioid receptors in their brain are no longer occupied by the opioid drug.

• Flu symptoms like runny nose, watery eyes, diarrhea, and nausea.

• Hot and cold sweats that involve feeling cold and shivering uncontrollably while simultaneously profusely sweating.

• Persistent insomnia that can last for years before normal sleep is restored.

These physical-withdrawal agonies can be vanquished by resuming the opioid drug.

In addition to the acute withdrawal agonies, there is a constant craving to have those brain opioid receptors occupied by an opioid drug, without which the addict cannot feel normal.

Is it any wonder that up to 90% of addicts who undergo medical intervention resume their opioid drug use?2

The horrific consequences of opioid withdrawal, including the skyrocketing numbers of lethal overdoses, makes the FDA’s approval of OxyContin® even more heinous.

Dealing With Reality

It is estimated that one-third of Americans suffer chronic pain.7

Drugs like OxyContin® effectively treat serious short- and long-lasting pain.

The problem is that some people become addicted with their very first opioid prescription. This can occur as opioid receptors become less responsive to the drug, triggering a vicious cycle where more drug is needed to achieve desired effect.

Last month we introduced an alternative solution for those who suffer chronic pain. This dual-nutrient formula is capable of modulating pain signals and modifying inflammatory responses that lead to systemic pain sensation. There is no escape, however, from the agonies of acute and long lasting opioid withdrawl.

In this month’s issue, we publish a brief review of the carnage of opioid addiction and overdose deaths that are sweeping the United States.

This would not have happened had the FDA bothered to look at the underlying mechanism of opioid addiction before approving a controlled-release opioid for widespread use in 1995.

We also introduce this month a new prebiotic chewable tablet that feeds the beneficial bacteria in your gastrointestinal tract. This special prebiotic is designed to help boost healthy bifidobacteria levels that critically decline with age.

AS THIS ARTICLE WAS BEING FINALIZED…
media

Most of this article was written in April 2017.

Before it could appear in Life Extension Magazine®, the media woke up to the opioid crisis that is causing horrific human suffering and record-setting overdose deaths.

In October 2017, CBS News’s 60 Minutes in conjunction with the Washington Postaired an investigative report exposing federal government corruption that continues to fuel “the worst drug epidemic in American history.35,36

The FDA is responsible for initiating this addiction crisis and intensifying it by approving more opioid drugs for sale at your local pharmacy. The FDA is now trying to remove some of the generic opioid drugs that are most likely to create addiction.

As body counts rose from overdose deaths, however, the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) tried to stop the illicit distribution of FDA-approved opioid drugs. Big Pharma responded by hiring away DEA’s top attorneys and enforcement staff.

Big Pharma went further and lobbied Congress for new legislation that impedes the ability of the DEA to curb illicit distribution of FDA-approved opioids.

The bill, written and sponsored by Big Pharma, passed Congress by unanimous consent in 2016 and was signed into law by the president.

To view this CBS News/Washington Post joint expose on federal corruption, visit: www.LifeExtension.com/opioid

We at Life Extension have exposed FDA incompetence and corruption relating to fraudulent drug approvals dating back to the 1980s.

The new scandal revealing how our federal government initiated and fuels the opioid crisis is a sad but accurate vindication of our long-standing revolving-door allegations, whereby federal employees view their work as paving the way to lucrative careers in the industry they supposedly “regulate” under the deceitful guise of consumer protection.

Recall that the FDA reviewer who led the approval of OxyContin® left the FDA and within two years was working for Purdue Pharma (maker of OxyContin®).

Obtain Nutrient Formulas at Year’s Lowest Prices

This is the time of year when we discount prices on every one of our advanced nutritional formulas.

Longtime supporters take advantage of the once-a-year Super Sale to stock up on their favorite nutrient formulas.

To order nutrients you need at Super Sale prices, call 1-800-544-4440 (24 hours).

For longer life,

For Longer LifeWilliam Faloon


How I Am Fighting Back

Image with Caption

The first exposé book
was titled: FDA: Fraud,
Deception and Abuse

(2009) • Item#33816
Retail price $20
Super Sale price $13.50
(only a few copies left)
Image with Caption

My second rendering is
titled: Pharmocracy
(2011) • Item#33835
Retail price $24
Super Sale price $8.64
Image with Caption

My just-published new
book is titled:
Pharmocracy II (2017)
Item#34133
Retail price $20
Super Sale price $13.50
Four copies only $9 ea.

I’ve written hundreds of articles that meticulously describe how misguided FDA policies are the leading causes of disability and death.

Every few years, a publisher chronicles my articles into a book that is widely disseminated.

In response to today’s health-care-price conundrum, Pharmocracy II documents why conventional medicine costs so much and provides practical solutions that Congress (not influenced by pharmaceutical lobbyists) can implement to to help resolve this nation’s worsening healthcare cost crisis.

Pharmocracy II advocates for a free market approach that can spare Medicare and other government entitlement programs from insolvency, while improving the health of all Americans.

This book provides a rational basis for removing the compulsory aspect of healthcare regulation and allowing free-market forces to compete against government-sanctioned medicine.

More importantly, Pharmocracy II empowers the citizenry to inundate Congress with a unified demand to tear down corrupt regulations that are bankrupting the United States and suppressing cures for killer diseases.

The cover price for Pharmocracy II is $20. Your price is $13.50 during our annual Super Sale. Please consider buying four or more copies to send to your representative and two senators to educate them about misguided and corrupt government policies that are causing needless loss of human life. These books also make a great holiday gift.

Any of these books can be ordered by calling 1-800-544-4440 (24 hours/7 days).


References

  1. Available at: https://www.addictioncenter.com/community/in-remembrance-of-philip-seymour-hoffman-the-importance-of-education-in-recovery/. Accessed October 16, 2017.
  2. Smyth BP, Barry J, Keenan E, et al. Lapse and relapse following inpatient treatment of opiate dependence. Ir Med J. 2010;103(6):176-9.
  3. Available at: https://www.usnews.com/news/blogs/data-mine/2015/07/07/heroin-use-skyrockets-in-us-cdc-says. Accessed October 16, 2017.
  4. Available at: https://www.ussc.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/research-and-publications/quick-facts/Heroin_FY15.pdf. Accessed October 16, 2017.
  5. Available at: https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL30722.pdf. Accessed October 16, 2017.
  6. Van Zee A. The promotion and marketing of oxycontin: commercial triumph, public health tragedy. Am J Public Health. 2009;99(2):221-7.
  7. Reuben DB, Alvanzo AH, Ashikaga T, et al. National institutes of health pathways to prevention workshop: The role of opioids in the treatment of chronic pain. Annals of Internal Medicine. 2015;162(4):295-300.
  8. Kosten TR, George TP. The neurobiology of opioid dependence: implications for treatment. Sci Pract Perspect. 2002;1(1):13-20.
  9. Jayawant SS, Balkrishnan R. The controversy surrounding OxyContin abuse: issues and solutions. Ther Clin Risk Manag. 2005;1(2):77-82.
  10. Available at: http://www.latimes.com/projects/oxycontin-part1/. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  11. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/2001/07/29/magazine/the-alchemy-of-oxycontin.html. Accessed October 26, 2017.
  12. Available at: http://fortune.com/2011/11/09/oxycontin-purdue-pharmas-painful-medicine/. Accessed October 26, 2017.
  13. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/10/business/11drug-web.html. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  14. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/21/business/21pharma.html. Accessed October 11, 2017.
  15. Available at: http://www.purduepharma.com/healthcare-professionals/products/. Accessed October 26, 2017.
  16. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/09/02/upshot/fentanyl-drug-overdose-deaths.html. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  17. Available at: http://www.cnn.com/2017/09/08/health/heroin-deaths-samhsa-report/index.html. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  18. Available at: http://www.businessinsider.com/opioid-overdose-death-statistics-2017-2016. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  19. Available at: https://www.statnews.com/2017/06/27/opioid-deaths-forecast/. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  20. Available at: https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/6/6/15743986/opioid-epidemic-overdose-deaths-2016. Accessed October 27, 2017.
  21. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/08/03/upshot/opioid-drug-overdose-epidemic.html. Accessed October 27, 2017.
  22. Available at: https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2017/t0425-EIS-conference.html. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  23. Available at: http://www.cnn.com/2017/04/24/health/opioid-deaths-cdc-report/index.html. Accessed October 26, 2017.
  24. Available at: https://www.cdc.gov/media/dpk/cdc-24-7/eis-conference/pdf/Infectious-disease-complicates-opioid-overdose-deaths.pdf. Accessed October 26, 2017.
  25. Available at: http://www.cnn.com/2017/06/29/health/opioid-addiction-rates-increase-500/index.html. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  26. Available at: http://www.theguardian.com/us-news/series/americas-addiction-epidemic. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  27. Available at: https://www.asam.org/docs/default-source/advocacy/opioid-addiction-disease-facts-figures.pdf. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  28. Available at: https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/06/05/upshot/opioid-epidemic-drug-overdose-deaths-are-rising-faster-than-ever.html. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  29. Available at: https://sputniknews.com/us/201703071051325942-drug-overdose-rates-us/. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  30. Available at: https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/epidemic/index.html. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  31. Available at: https://www.samhsa.gov/data/substance-abuse-facilities-data-nssats/reports?tab=10. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  32. Available at: http://www.drugwarfacts.org/chapter/drug_prison. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  33. Available at: https://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/dofp12.pdf. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  34. Available at: https://www.addictionsandrecovery.org/opioid-opiate-recovery.htm. Accessed October 18, 2017.
  35. Available at: https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2017/investigations/dea-drug-industry-congress/. Accessed October 27, 2017.
  36. Available at: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/ex-dea-agent-opioid-crisis-fueled-by-drug-industry-and-congress/. Accessed October 27, 2017.

Top aging and health hacks 1-15-2018

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Nitric Oxide Dump Exercise with nose breathing to lower blood pressure and thin blood
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Signs of the preactive/ active phase of dying and medications for terminally ill
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Eggplant and apple cider vinegar for skin cancer
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DMSO, hydrogen peroxide and Vit C fight cancer cells
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Philippines Coconut Wine -Tuba
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Home page / Archives
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Non pasteurized beers have more health benefits
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MEDICATIONS TO AVOID that worse PD (Parkinson’s disease)
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Anti-aging and Parkinson/Alzheimer’s prevention: Enzymes and apple cider vinegar
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Can Gout be cured permanently?
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Detox your lungs from air pollution and metal toxins and for early lung cancer
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Fatigue and Red (bloodshot) eyes from WebMD
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Avoid chronic bronchitis with green apple, onions, garlic, vinegar and rest
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Your complete DNA sequence will help shape the future of medicine
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Welness Mama: How to Avoid the Most Common Fitness Mistakes Women Make
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Can balsamic vinegar help with gout?
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Parasites and their effects on your immune system
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Anabolic and catabolic process, hormones and exercise
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How important is the thymus gland in keeping your body free from diseases?
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Growth hormone DHEA increases libido/anti-aging
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3
Eat protein-rich food when drinking alcohol to protect your stomach
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3
Learn tech skills at coursera.org for Free
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3
Lung cancer in the Philippines
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3
Increase the body’s oxygen carrying capacity with exercise, EPO and whole foods
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3
Iron and sweet wormwood herb kill breast cancer cells in 16hrs
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3
Fight VIRUS with Enzymes from pineapple and papaya, baking soda, alkaline food, calcium and magnesium from whole foods
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2
How the brain helps us to learn and make decisions, attention and learning
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2
Tanglad or lemongrass to help lower blood pressure
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2
How we help terminally ill seniors in the bay area
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2
Restore your vision naturally y Dr. Mercola
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2
Digestive enzymes help in healing fractures, preventing kidney stones and heart disease and more
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2
Dr Mercola on Knee Osteoarthritis
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2
How do you lower your bad cholesterol?
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2
Nitric Oxide for strong blood vessels’ cells , up with exercise, melons, cucumber, Vit C, E, amino acid – L-arginine, L-citrulline
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2
Whole foods prevent inflammation
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2
Fasting, sun bathing ,Vit C, Lysine, turmeric, green tea, carrots and raw food diet to reduce tumor size
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2
Massage oil of fresh ginger and coconut oil relieves joint pain
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2
Hepatitis C comments by Dr Mercola
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2
Negative emotions, cortisol, immune system and neurological disorders
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2
Hunched posture in Dementia and Parkinsons
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2
Hiatal Hernia, Pancreatitis, Pancreatic Cancer and the Western Diet
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2
California Telemedicine Policy
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2
Apple cider vinegar kills parasites, cleansing to the liver and prevents stroke
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2
How to Prepare Oregano Leaves for Cough Medicine
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2
New Biomarker predicts Alzheimer’s and link to diabetes
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2
Stop female genital mutilation
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2
How we help terminally ill seniors in the bay area
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2
16 Tips On How To Treat HPV Naturally And Effectively At Home
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2
Non medical home care with wearable for smart home monitoring
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2
Foods that delay the rate of brain atrophy in patients with Alzheimer’s disease
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2
Parkinson and Exercises
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2
Coconut and yams or sweet potatoes vs whole wheat
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2
Medical Tests for Women in Their 40s
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1
Eggplant and apple cider vinegar for skin cancer
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1
Vestibular function declines starting at age 40
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1
IRS-1 protein in blood, indicative of Alzheimer
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1
What can you save with solar-powered electric vehicle?
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1
Leaky gut, leaky brain, eat your garlic and pickles by C Guthrie
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1
Dementia = Low blood pressure + low potassium + diabetes
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1
Anti-aging Vitamin B3, Niacin
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1
Drug Interaction Probability Scale – DIPS
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1
Lung disease: COPD among white and black women
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1
I love my caregiver
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1
Potassium in bananas and cantaloupe
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1
Cooked your greens rich in oxalates to prevent kidney stones
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1
TP53 gene affects tumor suppression
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1
Why you need pharmacogenetic tests when taking Vancomycin
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1
Does occasional use of anticholinergic drugs such as Benadryl have serious neurological risks?
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1
Medical Tests for Women in Their 40s
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1
Blindness and Amnesia cure using Optogenetics
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1
Spending on top meds,Codeine,Abacavir,pharmacogenetic tests
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1
Leg cramps, heart muscles, magnesium and CQ10
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1
What are the benefits of eating chicken soup during pregnancy?
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1
Negative emotions, cortisol, immune system and neurological disorders
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1
Foods to eat and avoid when you have Gout and leg pains
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1
Mitochondrial function between the heart and skeletal muscles and biomarkers of Heart Failure
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1
Hair loss,breast cancer, Zinc and Copper balance
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1
Not patentable anti-cancer plant-fruit , soursop or Guyabano fruit, Vitamins C and B-rich
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1
Menu for the healthy plus kitchen tips
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1
Mullein herb for lung and breast health – COPD signs, symptoms and diagnosis
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1
Gout, Dementia, Chelation Therapy
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Energy and Anatomy = Cancer and aging
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FOXO3, a gene linked to intelligence and involved in insulin signalling that might trigger apoptosis
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1
How does a CBC test for a leukemia patient usually look like?
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1
Fungus , raw carrots and prostate cancer
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Philippines Coconut Wine -Tuba
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Quickly assesses live tissue cellular antioxidant levels
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It’s Your Brain, Not Your White Blood Cells, That Keeps You Warm
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1
Glycogen Metabolism and Energy Metabolism of the Brain
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1
Pineapple, celery, carrots and Arthritis
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Dopamine pathways and Parkinson
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Breast cancer over treatment: What if I decide to just do nothing?
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1
What will happen if a person accidentally drinks kerosene/petrol/diesel?
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1
USA Mental Health Data
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1
What is Mitochondrial DNA depletion syndrome?
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Roman Coriander, Fennel flower or Black Cumin Seed Oil as an anti-tumor, anti-gastritis and anti-convulsant oil
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1
Health News from Medicinenet
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1
Measure healthy aging with blood/urine test
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1
Stop aging of your face with DIY Vitamin C serum by wellnessmama
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Help! Need Your Ideas for Great Protest Signs for the April 15 Trump Tax March
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How doctors can borrow a scanner to measure anti-oxidant levels
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Antioxidants and insulin sensitivity
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Anxiety with Dementia decreased by calcium and magnesium nutrients
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Grow your nerves to prevent depression – medications – drugs causes it
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Megacolon in cats causing constipation
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Detect cancer early – Biological Impedance Analysis (part 1)
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Prostate flush and masturbation
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Top health and aging hacks 1-8-2018
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Iodine prevents cancer growth; up avocado and reduce caffeine intake to prevent Thyroid cancer
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CAM, holistic ways on cancer, depression, heart health, women and men
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8 Things We Learned From David Letterman’s Interview With Barack Obama
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Serum vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 as predictor of Chronic Heart Failure
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Reduce the stress hormone cortisol
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Medical doctors: 2014 tax law changes , impact and financial strategies