What She Didn’t Learn in Medical School
Written by Dr. Casey Means
I learned virtually nothing at Stanford Medical School about the tens of thousands of scientific papers that elucidate the root causes of why American health is plummeting.
I did not learn that for each additional serving of ultra-processed food we eat, early mortality increases by 18 percent.
This now makes up 67 percent of the foods our kids are eating. I took zero nutrition courses in medical school.
I didn’t learn that 82 percent of independently-funded studies show harm from processed food, while 93 percent of industry-sponsored studies reflect no harm.
I didn’t learn that 95 percent of the people who created the recent USDA food guidelines for America had significant conflicts of interest with the food industry.
I did not learn that one billion pounds of synthetic pesticides are being sprayed on our foods every single year. Ninety-nine percent of the farmland in the United States is sprayed with synthetic pesticides, many from China and Germany, and these invisible, tasteless chemicals are strongly linked to autism, ADHD, sex hormone disruption, thyroid disease, sperm dysfunction, Alzheimer’s, dementia, birth defects, cancer, obesity, liver dysfunction, female infertility and more.
I did not learn that the eight billion tons of plastic that have been produced just in the last 100 years … are being broken down into microplastics that are now filling our food, our water, and we are now even inhaling them in our air, and that very recent research … tells us that now about 0.5 percent of our brains by weight are plastic.
I didn’t learn that there are more than 80,000 toxins that have entered our food, water, air, and homes by industry, many of which are banned in Europe, and they are known to alter our gene expression, alter our microbiome composition and the lining of our gut, and disrupt our hormones.
I didn’t learn that heavy metals like aluminum and lead are present in our food, our baby formula, personal care products, our soil, and many of the mandated medications like vaccines, and that these metals are neurotoxic and inflammatory.
I didn’t learn that the average American walks a paltry 3,500 steps per day even though we know, based on science and top journals, that simply walking 7,000 steps a day slashes by 40-60 percent our risk of Alzheimer’s, dementia, type 2 diabetes, cancer, and obesity.
I certainly did not learn that medical error and medications are the third-leading cause of death in the US.
I didn’t learn that just five nights of sleep deprivation can induce full-blown pre-diabetes. I learned nothing about sleep, and we’re getting about 20 percent less sleep on average than we were 100 years ago.
I didn’t learn that American children are getting less time outdoors now than a maximum security prisoner, and on average, adults spend 93 percent of their time indoors, even though we know from the science that separation from sunlight destroys our circadian biology, and circadian biology dictated our cellular biology.
I didn’t learn that professional organizations that we get out practice guidelines from, like the American Diabetes Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics, have taken tens of millions of dollars from Coke, Cadbury, processed food companies, and vaccine manufacturers like Moderna.
I didn’t learn that if you address these root causes that all lead to metabolic dysfunction and help patients change their food and lifestyle patterns … we could reverse the chronic disease crisis in America, save millions of lives and trillions of dollars in healthcare costs per year.
This is a spiritual crisis. We are choosing death over life, we are choosing darkness over light.
We need a return to courage. We need a return to common sense and intuition. We need a return to awe for the sheer miraculousness of our lives.
We need all hands on deck.
Source: Senator Ron Johnson’s Roundtable on “American Health and Nutrition: A Second Opinion”
Behold, I send you forth as sheep in the midst of wolves: be ye therefore wise as serpents, and harmless as doves.
Matthew 10:16
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One thought on “What She Didn’t Learn in Medical School”
I just watched her and her brothers interview with Tucker Carlson and just finished reading her book. While I agree with a lot of the nutritional advice she gives, one must be careful about her take on the “spiritual” side of what she says. Dr Means is in now way Christian. But rather more into spirituality. She also recommends the use of hallucinagetic mushrooms occasionally for “health” reasons and recounts her own experience with them. Unfortunately a lot of the natural health industry is new agey or delves into spiritualism and doesn’t credit God for his provision and care. Her book is an interesting read (although I’d draw marker over the 3 or 4 swear words in the book) but I’d be careful of what advice I took.
Thank you for the warning, M!