How Big Pharma Profits from Keeping You Sick

Would you believe me if I told you that we could end chronic disease in 10 weeks? Watch this fascinating interview with best-selling author Nina Teicholz, Ph.D., who has been researching the dietary guidelines for over 2 decades.

what if I were to tell you that we could literally end chronic disease in 10 weeks would you believe me today I’m bringing on Nina Ty Cults one of the most credible experts in this area she is a best-selling author she has her PhD in nutrition and has been deeply involved in researching the dietary guidelines for over two decades I think you’re going to be thoroughly blown away at this interview so Nina RFK has this huge goal of getting rid of chronic disease and you personally studied this specific area of chronic disease and the dietary guidelines for roughly at least 20 years probably longer than that what based on the most credible research would you say is the solution to chronic disease I think there’s no question that the strongest most rigorous evidence to support disease reversal is with a ketogenic or low carbohydrate diet and what we have is more than a hundred clinical trials now which there’s no greater amount of clinical trial research except for on the Mediterranean diet which does not have as good results there are more than a 100 clinical trials showing that with a ketogenic or low carbohydrate diet that not only can we reverse type two diabetes in merely 10 weeks but also hypertension the vast majority of cardiovascular risk factors non-alcoholic fatty liver disease 10 weeks I mean an average Doctor Who’s treating someone with type two diabetes how many weeks are they treating diabetes for the reversal rate where you reverse a type 2 diabetes diagnosis with standard of care that’s 0. 1% oh my go clinical trials using a ketogenic diet often with support from a mobile app that reversal rate is more than 50% this is huge I mean this should be all over the place it should be in the news doctors should be using it but they’re not really using it are they I’ve been following this for the past 10 years and I have not seen a single mainstream news article on the ability to reverse a diagnosis of type two diabetes using diet natural means you see an article every week every every day on OIC or the gp1s right that tells you that the media is really informed by the pharmaceutical companies by which they’re also funded people think type 2 diabetes is irreversible but that is absolutely positively not true you can do it there’s credible studies and when we talk about credible we’re talking about uh the type of studies that they’ve done and also the number of participants right in the length of time it’s not some little observational study the largest trial ever on type two diabetes reversal had 300 patients in it the patients on average had been living with diabetes for 8. 4 years and the majority of them were on insulin and even so they reversed more than half of their patients diabetes in 10 weeks also tell us about the the reduction of insulin their medication what in this trial nearly 100% of the patients reduced some or all of their medications within a year the patients come off so quickly off their medications that’s one of the reasons that people are with diabetes are counseled to go on a ketogenic with medical supervision not because it’s dangerous not because it has bad side effects but because they need to come off their medication so quickly what is the general consensus of the medical profession’s thoughts on the ketogenic diet you know ever since Robert Atkins came out with his books in the early 1970s there has been a real skepticism out there about the low carbohydrate ketogenic diet and back then it was warranted because were really no good rigorous studies on his approach even though he had a drawer full of medical files but now those Studies have really been done yet we still see the same bias uh I would say bias against this diet and that is for several reasons one is that you know the American Heart Association the American Diabetes Association they’re funded in large part by insulin manufacturers and other drug companies so they have direct conflicts of interest doctors themselves also have these conflicts of interest all their careers they’ve been told that low fat is the way to go so those diets are really almost diametrically opposed and it’s very hard for the medical community to change its mind the American Heart Association the American College of Cardiology have come after the ketogenic diet with virtually no evidence just sort of media campaigns saying keto is dangerous a ketol likee diet is dangerous based on in one case virtually just a spoken presentation with no data and not even a published abstract so I think it’s fair to say there’s something of a propaganda war going on against low car ketogenic I think you could be right it could be on to something there remember someone putting something out it was just ridiculous the definition of keto likee diet well there might be some similarities but it not does not resemble the ketogenic diet right I can’t remember what that diet was but I like that keto likee diet that was the study that came out of um British Columbia by a researcher who simply gave a presentation on her findings that for which there was no abstract for which there was no published anything it it her study had not even been registered in any way and yet they interviewed her they press released her her presentation they didn’t do that for anything else coming out of their annual conference everything else was a legitimate published study why did they do that why why do they want to amplify her findings I mean it’s clickbait but also that headline drives people away from choosing that option if the American College of Cardiology is coming out and saying this diet is dangerous people listen and I think that is the objective behind that or what specific foods does someone have to eat or what have to do with their foods to achieve the state of ketosis which is the fat burning you’re eating ideally natural sources of those Foods so that’s eggs dairy meat fish shellfish very small amounts of starchy vegetables and low sugar fruits it’s a sustainable diet and this is a key point it’s sustainable because fat and protein are what are satiating versus carbohydrates actually trigger hunger they have done experiments why they try to force feed people to eat like a stack of pork chops and people just can’t do it like they’re I’m full I cannot eat another bite let’s say you go try to go from one to the next and you’re not tapping to your own fat you could actually easily get hungry real fast your fat stores are actually like granola bars they’re strapped all over your body and they’re there for when you don’t have anything to eat so when glucose is absent your body can access those fat stores it’s great I’m sitting here and I haven’t had lunch and hopefully I’m now living off of the fat stores in my thighs the moment that glucose enters into to your bloodstream your body it’s like a bank teller window just slapping down you can no longer access your fat stores then you cannot access your own fat for energy the dietary guidelines which you studied extensively people are are influenced by that dietary guideline is it quite extensive as far as where it goes the dietary guidelines are really the most powerful lever in the country on what Americans eat for several reasons one is that by law all federal food programs are required to follow the guidelines so that includes the national school lunch program infant children feeding programs programs for the elderly the military which has an obesity problem equal to the general population is required to teach the guidelines second the guidelines are basically downloaded by health professionals as the gold standard so even if you don’t know about the guidelines when you go to your doctor nurse nutri