by Sarah Myhill, MBBS Here in UK the rot started during the 1980s when NHS doctors were allowed to run and own their own pharmacies. Such GPs, when treating any child with a cough or cold, often prescribed paracetamol, an antibiotic and a cough suppressant. For the...
by Thomas E. Levy, MD, JD As the acute cases of COVID have continued to decline, the prevalence of the Persistent Spike Protein (PSP) syndrome has continued to increase. The spike protein is that part of the COVID pathogen that attaches to ACE2 receptors throughout...
by Margaret Matsumoto I never thought I would end up working in a Midwest pharmacy for 30 years. Growing up in Hawaii, I also never knew that my favorite childhood beach was considered one of the prettiest in the world. It was where my father liked to fish, and that...
by Gary S. Goldman, PhD There exists a heated controversy as to whether COVID-19 vaccines and associated boosters are truly “safe and effective.” Health care providers and regulators recommend COVID-19 vaccines to all individuals, despite differences in...
by Patrick Holford In the days of Hippocrates, diseases were blamed on the gods. He didn’t buy that and explored the causes of disease saying ‘let food be thy medicine’. Nowadays a lot of diseases are being blamed on genes — because knowledge...
by Tom Taylor We are somewhat indoctrinated by prior generations to eventually expect to spend a few years in the old folks’ home being sick, but how avoidable is that? The associated question I carry around is, “Why save for retirement if all you are...