Inhaltsangabe
Avoid mammograms. Switch off birth control drugs-and progestin menopausal drugs, too. Lose your excess fat NOW! Stop holding onto those highly stressful jobs and relationships. Counterintuitive as these may seem, each is among Busting Breast Cancer's Five Simple Steps, documented to effectively prevent breast cancer, thanks to recent developments in our metabolic understanding of cancer. Each reduces your risk of breast cancer by 30 to 80 percent! Dr. Susan Wadia-Ells' shocking new book questions the presumed wisdom of most so-called authorities: National Academy of Medicine, American Cancer Society, Susan G. Komen, and mainstream cancer centers. And why wouldn't we question their wisdom? At least 30 percent of women treated for early-stage breast cancer go on to develop metastatic breast cancer-practically guaranteeing their early death. Physicians must report each recurrence to state registries. But you may be surprised to learn the industry and its federal partners keep these numbers hidden. Perhaps they're just too embarrassing to share. Dr. Wadia-Ells does not pussyfoot around. A journalist with graduate degrees in political economy and women's studies, she aims to change US culture on women's behalf. Reviewing thousands of studies while researching this book, she discovered the 2012 landmark text, Cancer as a Metabolic Disease, by Boston College biologist Thomas N. Seyfried, PhD who lays out the complete biological explanation of how a person's first cancer cell develops. Effective prevention is now possible! Take off the pink ribbons. Stop running for the cure. Keep vitamin D3 above 60 ng/ml. Get rid of the carbs. Practice meditation. Stop suffocating your breast cells' "batteries"-your fragile mitochondria. Take charge; stop that first breast cancer cell before it's ever born. Busting Breast Cancer also proposes political actions: demand the FDA allow affordable $30 hormone-free IUDs; promote breast self-exams; mandate equal insurance coverage for ultrasound screenings and early-prevention thermography. Against a multibillion-dollar industry with too much financial incentive to abandon its failing direction, who can change the course of breast cancer prevention and treatment? YOU can! Only women have the self-interest to do it. And now, with Busting Breast Cancer, you'll have the knowledge, too. Over 900 citations; advance praise from the growing worldwide metabolic oncology community, the DCIS 411 blog, breast cancer survivors and the functional medicine community. Written by an investigative journalist for the general public.
Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor
Susan Wadia-Ells is an investigative journalist and cultural change agent. After losing too many friends to recurrent metastatic breast cancer, after having been "successfully treated early" for breast cancer, they each died a very early and painful death. Busting Breast Cancer is the result of the author's determination and self-imposed poverty, as she spent twelve year researching and writing this definitive work on why US women now face an unnecessary breast cancer epidemic, instigated by pink ribbons and toxic mammograms and crowned by the growing, yet still publicly undisclosed, recurrent metastatic breast cancer epidemic that is reaping increasing profits for cancer industry investors. Dr Wadia-Ells enjoyed a decade-long experience during the 1970s, organizing fellow women employees; then creating and managing the Fortune 200 company's affirmative action plan. She later created national independent conferences on cutting edge feminist topics, raised a son and worked as a reporter for the award-winning small town newspaper, The Brattleboro Reformer. She has also lived and/or worked on cross-cultural communication and development projects in Iran, India, Brazil and Zimbabwe. Dr Wadia-Ells holds a BA degree in political science from Hood College, a MALD degree from The Fletcher School (Tufts University) in political economy and a PhD in Women's Studies from The Union Institute. She has published two prior books on women's adoption experiences and on the biological connection between birth control drugs and breast cancer. She lives in Manchester by the Sea, MA.
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