Get our animals off drugs!

Here’s some more evidence on why it’s a wise decision to cut meat out of your diet if you are truly seeking for optimal health!  When the animals are drugged and people eat their flesh (MEAT), health challenges are bound to result!  Read this article and let us know what commitments you’re willing to make to cut out the toxins from your life and continue on the wellness journey.

Meat and Antibiotics: Getting Our Animals Off Drugs

Posted by BRYAN WALSH Tuesday, June 29, 2010 at 12:55 pm

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA)—gingerly, gingerly—took a step on Monday towards addressing one of the most fundamental but unknown threats to public health: the overuse of antibiotics in animal food and water. The FDA said in a new policy document that the uses of antibiotics for agriculture should be limited to treated sick animals, and that veterinarians should be involved in giving out the drugs. (See the FDA document here.) The change came in part out of concerns that the use of antibiotics on animals was helping to breed resistant bacteria—an estimated 100,000 people a year now die from hospital-acquired bacterial infections that can no longer be treated with most antibiotics, thanks to resistance.

While doing nothing to change the present oversight of antibiotics, the document is the first signal in years that the agency intends to rejoin the battle to crack down on agricultural uses of antibiotics that many infectious disease experts oppose.

Doesn’t sound like a big deal, right? Drugs like penicillin and tetracycline were developed to help sick people, and it might stand to reason that they should be preserved for use in sick people—not to speed the growth of pigs, chicken and cattle. And given the scale of the problem—according to the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), about 13 million lbs. or 70% of all antibiotics in the U.S. goes to food animal production—the FDA’s statement was just a baby step. As Deputy FDA Commissioner Joshua Sharfstein told reporters in a news conference after the recommendation was made: “We’re not expecting people to pick up this guidance and change their practice tomorrow. This is the first step in the FDA establishing the principles from which we could then move, if necessary, toward other mechanisms of oversight, which is regulation.” Sharfstein was so cautious he might as well have been wearing a flak jacket and a crash helmet while speaking.

But he has reason to be careful. the powerful agriculture industry has fought every attempt by federal regulators to crack down on the use of antibiotics in animals—and they’ve won every time . The meat industry argues that antibiotic use in animals is far lower than its critics say—the Animal Health Institute, a trade group, estimates that just 13% of all agricultural antibiotics are used for growth promotion, with the rest going to treat sick animals or prevent illness. And they’ll fight hard against any attempt by the government to limit their ability to dispense drugs to the millions of swine, chicken and cattle being raised for food in the U.S. “Show us the science that use of antibiotics in animal production is causing this antibiotic resistance,” Dave Warner of the National Pork Council told the Washington Post.

It is difficult to make the direct connection between an antibiotic being used on a pig in Iowa and a person dying from drug-resistant Salmonella in a hospital in New York. But there’s no disputing that doctors are increasingly worried about the rise of resistant bacteria and the threat the problem poses to each of us. The Centers for Disease Control found in its 2005 annual report that half of all Campylobacter infections are drug resistant. One in five Salmonella infections, and nearly 100,000 Salmonella infections would resist treatment with at least five antibiotics, according to Congressional testimony in 2009 by Margaret Mellon, the director of the food and environment program at the UCS. The World Health Organization has sounded the alarm of antibiotic resistance, and the Institute of Medicine has estimated that longer hospital stays because of resistant food-borne microbes cost the U.S. an additional $4 to $5 billion a year in health care costs—plus all the additional time sick people have to take off work. Superbugs like MRSA—Methicillin resistant Staphylococcus aureus—are truly scary, resistant to nearly every antibiotic we have at our disposal. We’re in an arms race with bacteria—and we’re in danger of losing, as Dr. Ken Harvey of La Trobe University’s School of Public Health in Melbourne told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation today:

“Although we’ve developed new antibiotics, the more we’ve used them the more the bacteria have become resistant. It’s sort of Darwinian selection of the species if you like.” Dr Harvey says bacteria have the edge in this evolutionary battle. “We’re grossly outnumbered by bacteria and they’ve got very efficient mechanisms of mutating, becoming resistant, passing on that mechanism of resistance to other germs.”

And a small but growing number of studies are connecting the use of antibiotics on farms to resistant bacteria in hospitals. A strain of MRSA responsible for 20% of all MRSA infections in the Netherlands has been shown to be transmitted from pigs to farmers and their families, and hospital staff. Even news organizations as mainstream as CBS have begun to raise questions about the connection between antibiotic use in our farms and resistant bacteria, as this Katie Couric investigation from February shows.

The meat industry has argued that restricting antibiotics in animal feed will lead to unbearably high costs, but other countries have already taken that step without destroying their to make bacon. In Europe, Denmark led the way by banning antibiotics for growth promotion in 1998, after concerns grew about resistant bacteria. In the years since the industry has thrived—Danish swine production  from 18.4 million in 1992 to 27.1 million in 2008, while total antibiotic use decline 51% from an all-time high in 1992. I had a chance to see the situation for myself when I was in Denmark last December for the UN climate change summit. Pork farmers told me that the rule was a pain when it was first put into practice, but that they’d adjusted, taking better care of their pigs because they knew that they could no longer rely as heavily on drugs. (Antibiotics were still available for sick animals, but were much more closely regulated.) And in 2006 the European Union followed suit and banned antibiotics for growth promotion.

Given all that, what the FDA did on Monday is too weak, not too strong—as some public health groups argued. “Te FDA has proposed good steps, but they have not gone far enough or moved fast enough,” said Representative Louise Slaughter of New York, who happens to be the only microbiologist in Congress. “We cannot wait any longer.” Given how strong the farm lobby is in the U.S.—which I can tell you from experience—we might be waiting forever.

Vitality Checklist

How are you really feeling? Many people just settle with being symptom-free of major disease and think that they’re healthy.  But if you’re like me, you live a fast-paced life and desire OPTIMAL HEALTH to be and do MORE of what you LOVE!

Take this Vitality Checklist Quiz and let us know how you’re really doing!   If there’s a gap between WHERE YOU WANT TO BE and WHERE YOU ARE NOW, Let’s TALK! We have guaranteed solutions that provide results!

Using the following statements as indicators of health and wellness. Rate yourself on items 1-15 with “5″ being the most/best and “1″ being the least/worst. This is not intended as a thorough health diagnostic, but rather as an opportunity to take note of factors that contribute to vibrant health.
1 2 3 4 5
1. I wake up with a positive ‘can do’ attitude most days. _ _ _ _ _
2. I sleep soundly and awaken feeling refreshed and ready to go. _ _ _ _ _
3. My level of energy is ample and balanced throughout the day. _ _ _ _ _
4. I am able to do daily activities and sustain energy without the use of coffee, caffeine, or other stimulants. _ _ _ _ _
5. I feel well most days–have infrequent colds/flu and show no evidence of degenerative/autoimmune conditions. _ _ _ _ _
6. I easily manage life’s daily stresses without significant nervous tension or upsets. I feel joy and happiness daily and feel positive most of the time. _ _ _ _ _
7. I digest food easily without a decline in energy after meals or gastric upset. No bloating or gas. I easily eliminate daily. _ _ _ _ _
8. I exercise on a regular basis–2-5 times a week, including at least 20 minutes of aerobic activity. _ _ _ _ _
9. When I exercise or do physical work, I recover quickly with no soreness or stiffness. _ _ _ _ _
10. I am free of discomfort from old injuries. _ _ _ _ _
11. I am free of food and environmental allergies/sensitivities. _ _ _ _ _
12. I am free of recurring discomforts:–i.e. headaches, stomach aches, constipation, neck/back, joint pain, skin rashes, etc. _ _ _ _ _
13. I am at a comfortable body weight/size/body composition. _ _ _ _ _
14. I am free from the need to use tobacco, alcohol, sugar or particular foods on a regular basis. (i.e. have no substance addictions) _ _ _ _ _
15. For women:My monthly menstrual cycle is regular and uneventful i.e., without PMS/ discomfort. _ _ _ _ _
16. I take _____  pharmaceutical drugs on a regular basis

As you review your scores, consider the items you scored below “4.” Use your scores to identify your health goals, such as:

__ Lose weight, especially fat and reduce cravings.

__ Balance hormones, effectively handle stress.
__ Support immune system and help clear my body of toxins (including pharmaceutical drugs)
__ Enhance my general energy/vitality level/moods and body functioning

__ Support optimal digestion, absorption, and elimination
__ Provide overall nutritional support and anti-aging protection for myself and family

__ Achieve optimal performance for exercise/sports, reduce soreness and improve recovery time

Oil spill WILL affect your health!

WE KNOW YOU’RE CONCERNED ABOUT THE OIL SPILL, SO ARE WE! And like many of us, I’m sure you’re concerned about how this can potentially affect your health!  We’ve helped countless people with concerns just like yours.

WE HAVE FREE SAMPLES TO SHARE WITH YOU! Just use the link at the top of this website!

We flew from Chicago to South Florida today.  We looked out into the wetlands, lush green scenery, and the ocean.. it was beautiful but despite the sunshine we were down in spirits.  The saddest part of all this is the harm it will do to us!  The picture s of animals, fish, birds, nature that is devastated breaks our hearts as well.   Here’s finally someone who has said YES to the question of “Will the oil spill be dangerous to your health?”  From nausea and vomitting to major chronic auto-immune disease-symptoms!  The food supply is affected, the air is more polluted, and we have no idea what the long-term affects of this will do to our future generations, let alone our beautiful planet.  You need to guard your immune system now more than ever and we’re here to help!

We’ll look at how these GUARANTEED products can potentially help you fight against the toxins and help you have optimal health!

-Glyconutrients for immune support

-Plant Sterols for endocrine support

-Antioxidants for protection

-Plant based vitamin/mineral complex to nourish

Read this FOX News blog from Dr Manny Alvarez and let us know how you feel!

We still don’t know the extent of the devastation that 200,000 gallons a day of crude oil spewing into the Gulf waters will have on our country. So far, it’s proving to be one of the largest human-caused environmental disasters in U.S. history. We know that the effects on the animal and plant populations have been disastrous, and we’ll be watching closely as the they continue to unfold. However, one question remains: Will this oil spill affect our health?

The short answer is, yes. There are well-documented analyses on the effects of environmental pollution of previous oil spills — some which have occurred inland and certainly the Exxon Valdez spill in the Alaskan waters of the Prince William Sound in 1989. You have to remember that it only takes about a quart of crude oil to pollute 150,000 gallons of water. Crude oil contains substances such as benzene and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons that have been proven to cause severe reactions in humans — some mild, such as nausea, vomiting and fatigue. But studies have also linked exposure to these compounds to more serious conditions like leukemia and certain types of cancers.

Another negative health effect that could come from this massive environmental catastrophe is the potential for exposure to heavy metals, such as lead — which we know can be very detrimental to the health of an unborn child — resulting in low birth weight, developmental delays, miscarriage and even stillbirth. So pregnant women are especially vulnerable to these heavy metals.

Look, we all know what happens to us humans when our food chain gets contaminated with chemicals and the havoc it can wreak on our health. So the bottom line the best protection we have a situation like this is educating ourselves. The government is doing what they can to clean up and prevent human consumption of contaminated food, but we should also practice personal responsibility for the things we eat. It’s important that attention be paid to the communities in the immediate areas of potential exposure. And certainly, for seafood lovers like myself, be aware of where your food is coming from.

The potential for health problems resulting from airborne pollutants where oil is washing ashore is minimal. But for those living in affected areas living with pulmonary diseases, like asthma or emphysema, aromatic irritants could enhance symptoms. As of now, there haven’t been any reports of respiratory side effects, but just keep an eye on the story and take the proper precautions.

Finally, let us pray for the people of Louisiana and surrounding coastal communities, and for the fisherman whose livelihood will surely be affected by this terrible accident. In an area that has suffered great losses at the hands of natural disasters like Hurricane Katrina, it’s imperative that we continue to show our love and support for the communities that have been a source of joy for Americans.

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