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‘Aspirin Is Not As Helpful As We Thought’(TR)
CBS 3 PHILLY ^ | 22 JULY 2019 | STEPHANIE STAHL

Posted on 07/22/2019 4:58:43 PM PDT by Extremely Extreme Extremist

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To: Albion Wilde
Depending on your doctor and diagnoses, they can give you a cocktail of other substances to make you feel better. Chelation is basically EDTA in saline. Vitamins and minerals can be added to suit. Also my clinic can give you what they call UBV treatment. They take your blood out and run it through UV light and put it back in your vein. I've heard of people that came in with the flu and left with no symptoms. It again is expensive, like $300-$400. Another treatment they do is called prolo. They take your blood and separate the stem cells out and inject them at the site of an injury such as rotator cuff, or torn knee. Regular doctors use this for pro athletes injury. I believe these are $400- $600 and might be paid for with insurance depending on the diagnosis. Sports doctors can charge $1500-$2000 or more per injection, but insurance will cover it. I've heard that with 3 injections, people have avoided even surgery for torn rotator cuffs which normally require up to a year of recovery. He also uses Hyperbaric chambers for stroke victims, burns, and other problems.

These holistic doctors are people that want to heal you no matter what it takes, even going against FDA or JAMA. Cost is generally cheaper than a mainstream doctor because they know the bottomless billfold of insurance and government will not pay for non approved treatments.

Mainstream doctors are politically biased against these doctors and pay lobbyists to squash insurance coverage. If you realize how much money heart trouble and diabetes generate for the medical field vs a safe treatment, as safe as aspirin, that has positive results, you can see the motivation to squash information on this subject. This treatment has been available since the 1940's, yet no real blind studies have happened. I only am aware of two clinics within 150 miles of me, but they are full to the brim 6 days a week with 40-50 chairs. Each chair has a testimony of miraculous cures or they would stop coming. If this method of treatment was ever acceptable, it would take hundreds of billions of health dollars out of the system.

101 posted on 07/24/2019 9:06:56 AM PDT by chuckles
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To: Albion Wilde

Minimum $100 per treatment. But first you have to find a doctor that does chelation as part of his/her practice. There would usually be a treatment per week then one per month maintenance. Since I have new plumbing I don’t do them any more. I’m 75 and doubt I outlast the surgical fix.

Chelation is not covered by medical insurance or Medicare.


102 posted on 07/24/2019 1:59:41 PM PDT by waredbird
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To: chuckles

I will strongly consider it, and I very much appreciate this primer info!


103 posted on 07/24/2019 5:22:59 PM PDT by Albion Wilde (It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it. --Douglas MacArthur)
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