Layout Image

Archive for type 2 diabetes

Millennials’ health plummets, Chemotherapy demand will rise 50% by 2040, Employed physicians outnumbered self-employed physicians, Anger is harmful to health

By Dr. Rashid A. Buttar
Monday, May 13th, 2019

Advanced Medicine with Dr. Rashid A. Buttar!!

If you missed any of the Advanced Medicine radio shows with Dr. Rashid A. Buttar and Robert Scott Bell, be sure to go to www.MedicalRewind.com to listen to the show replays.
..

TO DOWNLOAD: Click on “DOWNLOAD MP3” in the player below. If audio does not begin to play, click Stop icon then Play icon in player.

Play
Stop
X

Get ready to learn things not traditionally taught to medical doctors!
Some of the things you will hear Dr. Buttar and Robert talk about in this week’s show are:

Millennials’ health plummets after the age of 27: Study finds the generation has unprecedented rates of diabetes, depression, and digestive disorders It’s all downhill from 27, new research reveals. At least if you’re a millennial, chronic conditions and diseases start to rear their heads in your late-20s, and from there things continue to deteriorate, according to a new Blue Cross Blue Shield report.  Millennials, as a generation, are in overall poorer health than their predecessors, Gen X-ers, with higher rates of depression, hyperactivity, substance misuse, type 2 diabetes and Crohn’s disease, among other chronic conditions. The report authors warn that the healthcare community needs to be aware that millennials are facing growing and perhaps unprecedented health concerns that could cost them years of life and cost the US economy money and productivity.


Chemotherapy demand will rise 50% by 2040, study says – Global cancer cases are expected to climb drastically over the next 20 years, leading to a high demand for chemotherapy, a new study says. By 2040, the number of people worldwide who will need chemotherapy to treat cancer could grow to 15 million, according to new research published Wednesday in the Lancet. That would be a 53 percent increase from 9.8 million in 2018. “The rising global cancer burden is undoubtedly one of the major health crises of today,” Brooke Wilson, a researcher at the University of New South Wales who authored the study, said in a news release. “Strategies are urgently needed to equip the global health workforce to enable safe treatment of current and future patients.” To calculate these numbers, the researchers applied clinical best practices guidelines, cancer stage numbers and other data from the United States and Australia to global cases of pediatric and adult cancer estimates. By 2040, lung, breast and colorectal cancers will account for more than 40 percent of the chemotherapy requirements worldwide, the researchers say.


2018 saw more employed physicians than self-employed – In 2018, employed physicians outnumbered self-employed physicians, according to a report from the American Medical Association (AMA). Researchers from the AMA used data from the Physician Practice Benchmark Surveys to identify the practice arrangements of physicians between 2012 and 2018. Information was collected on employment status, practice type, practice size, and practice ownership structure. According to the report, 2018 was the first year that fewer patient care physicians had ownership in their practice than were employees (45.9 versus 47.4 percent). The percent of physicians who were owners dropped from 53.2 in 2012. Younger physicians and women were less likely to be owners. From 2012 to 2018, the percentage of physicians in solo practice decreased from 18.4 to 14.8 percent. Although most physicians still work in small practices, this share has decreased since 2012. In 2018, 54.0 percent of physicians continued to work in practices wholly owned by physicians, although this proportion decreased from 60.1 percent in 2012. The share of physicians working directly for a hospital or in a practice at least partially owned by a hospital increased (from 29.0 to 34.7 percent).


Anger more harmful to health of older adults than sadness – Anger may be more harmful to an older person’s physical health than sadness, potentially increasing inflammation, which is associated with such chronic illnesses as heart disease, arthritis and cancer, according to new research published by the American Psychological Association. “As most people age, they simply cannot do the activities they once did, or they may experience the loss of a spouse or a decline in their physical mobility and they can become angry,” said Meaghan A. Barlow, MA, of Concordia University, lead author of the study, which was published in Psychology and Aging. “Our study showed that anger can lead to the development of chronic illnesses, whereas sadness did not.” Barlow and her co-authors examined whether anger and sadness contributed to inflammation, an immune response by the body to perceived threats, such as infection or tissue damage. While inflammation in general helps protect the body and assists in healing, long-lasting inflammation can lead to chronic illnesses in old age, according to the authors.


… AND MUCH MORE – LISTEN NOW!

Is there life after Trans-D Tropin? YES there is. There is an option. Did you know about the FDA destroying supplement companies by claiming that their products are unapproved new drugs? Click here to read a special message and find out the alternative to Trans-D Tropin.

..
How can you get an Advanced Medicine Seminar in your city?

Just get 50 or more of your friends together and contact info@drbuttar.com to learn the details.

..

Remember to pick up the international best seller “9 Steps To Keep the Doctor Away!” http://www.the9steps.com/ (if you buy the book, you can get a DVD for an incredible discount!)..
..

Click HERE to learn more Facts on Toxicity

..
Click HERE for Free access to the AHEAD MAP (Medical Assessment Program). Use Invitation Code 11 to gain access.

..

Categories : Uncategorized
Tags : 9 steps, adult health, Advanced Medicine, AHEAD Map, Anger, anger harmful to health, anti-aging, autism, auto-immune diseases, cancer, cardiac disease, Center for Advanced Medicine, Centers for Advanced Medicine, chemotherapy, child health, Crohn’s disease, CVA, depression, detoxification, Developmental delays, Dr. Buttar, Dr. Rashid A Buttar, Employed physicians, Gen X-ers, Health, health optimization, Heart Disease, Heavy Metals, HOW report, hyperactivity, Inflammation, keep the doctor away, life enhancement, longevity medicine, Lymes, Medical Rewind, Millennials, persistent organic pollutants, prevention, Robert Scott Bell, Stroke, substance misuse, the 9 steps, Toxicity, type 2 diabetes, wellness

Flu Shot and Children, Mercury and Lead exposure raises cholesterol, Skin cancer deaths have soared, Type 2 diabetes affecting younger healthier people

By Dr. Rashid A. Buttar
Monday, November 5th, 2018

Advanced Medicine with Dr. Rashid A. Buttar!!

If you missed any of the Advanced Medicine radio shows with Dr. Rashid A. Buttar and Robert Scott Bell, be sure to go to www.MedicalRewind.com to listen to the show replays.
..

TO DOWNLOAD: Click on “DOWNLOAD MP3” in the player below.

Play
Stop
X

Get ready to learn things not traditionally taught to medical doctors!
Some of the things you will hear Dr. Buttar and Robert talk about in this week’s show are:

Doctors’ son died 10 days before flu shot appointment. Now, they want to save your child – Two physicians who lost their young son to the flu last year want parents to listen to their message, born of great grief and suffering: Get your child a flu shot. Drs. Laura and Anthony Sidari’s 4-year-old son, Leon, did not get the flu vaccine last year. He died on Christmas Day, less than 48 hours after he started feeling sick. “I didn’t know a condition could kill a child that quickly who had been previously healthy,” said Laura, a psychiatrist. “This has been a hard haul for us, and we’re very private people, but we’re trying to help other families.” Leon was one of 185 US children who died in the 2017-18 flu season, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — a historic high. Approximately 80% of those children had not received a flu shot, according to the CDC. Laura and Anthony, a rheumatologist, had wanted to get Leon and his 2-year-old brother flu shots at a pharmacy. They lived in Texas, where state law prohibits pharmacists from vaccinating anyone under the age of 7.

 

Lead, mercury exposure raises cholesterol levels – Higher levels of lead and other heavy metals detected in the blood was associated with increased levels of lower density lipoprotein (LDL—bad cholesterol) and total cholesterol, according to preliminary research to be presented in Chicago at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Sessions 2018. Researchers reviewed information from NHANES 2009-2012, a national representative database which includes cholesterol levels and blood levels of heavy metals among U.S. adults. They found a notable difference between those with the least blood levels of heavy metal and those with the most, with LDL becoming progressively higher as lead levels increased.

Compared with those who had the lowest levels of a metal, those with the highest:

  • had 56 percent greater odds of having higher total cholesterol if they have the highest level of lead;
  • were 73 percent more likely to have higher total cholesterol if they had the highest levels of mercury in their blood;
  • had 41 percent higher risk of elevated total cholesterol if their cadmium levels were in the highest levels; and
  • were 22 percent more likely to have higher bad cholesterol if they were in the highest lead levels.

In addition, mercury levels increased the odds for higher LDL by 23 percent among those who fell in the middle for their heavy metal levels, compared to those with the lowest level. The rise in cholesterol seen with increasing heavy metal levels in the blood might have cardiovascular consequences in people exposed to heavy metals, such as in areas with disaster water crises. This suggests the need for screening for heavy metals as a risk for high cholesterol and cardiovascular disease, the authors noted.

 

Skin cancer deaths rates soar, mostly for men: study – Skin cancer deaths among men have soared in wealthy nations since 1985, with mortality rates among women rising more slowly or even declining, researchers told a medical conference in Glasgow Sunday. Reasons for the discrepancy between sexes are unclear but evidence suggests men are “less likely to protect themselves from the sun” or heed public health warnings, lead researcher Dorothy Yang, a doctor at the Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust in London, told AFP. More than 90 percent of melanoma cancers are caused by skin cell damage from exposure to the sun or other sources of ultraviolet (UV) radiation such as tanning beds, according to the US Centers for Disease Control (CDC). In eight of 18 countries examined, men’s skin cancer death rates increased over three decades by at least 50 percent. In two nations — Ireland and Croatia — it roughly doubled. Also seeing a sharp jump were Spain and Britain (70 percent), The Netherlands (60 percent), as well as France and Belgium (50 percent).

 

Type 2 diabetes affecting younger, leaner population –  It is well recognized that increasing rates of Type 2 diabetes are mainly driven by obesity and lifestyle factors. But that’s not the whole story. Genetics and epigenetics – changes in gene expression – also play an important role. We are starting to see an increase in Type 2 diabetes in leaner people at a much younger age than usually associated with the disease. This means in addition to focusing on good diet and exercise, we need better awareness of groups most at risk of Type 2 diabetes. These include many ethnic groups, women with a history of gestational diabetes and people with a family history of diabetes. In my clinical practice, I have seen teenagers and even children as young as seven, as well as younger patients of Asian, African and Middle Eastern origin with Type 2 diabetes. Among indigenous people in Central Australia, rates of diabetes are some of the worst in the world, at around three times that of non-indigenous people. Studies in some remote communities suggest a prevalence of Type 2 diabetes of up to 30 percent, compared to a rate of around 5 percent in the non-indigenous population.

 

… AND MUCH MORE – LISTEN NOW!

 

Is there life after Trans-D Tropin? YES there is. There is an option. Did you know about the FDA destroying supplement companies by claiming that their products are unapproved new drugs? Click here to read a special message and find out the alternative to Trans-D Tropin.

..
How can you get an Advanced Medicine Seminar in your city?

Just get 50 or more of your friends together and contact info@drbuttar.com to learn the details.

..

Remember to pick up the international best seller “9 Steps To Keep the Doctor Away!” http://www.the9steps.com/ (if you buy the book, you can get a DVD for an incredible discount!)..
..

Click HERE to learn more Facts on Toxicity

..
Click HERE for Free access to the AHEAD MAP (Medical Assessment Program). Use Invitation Code 11 to gain access.

 

 

..

Categories : Uncategorized
Tags : 9 steps, adult health, Advanced Medicine, AHEAD Map, anti-aging, autism, auto-immune diseases, cancer, cardiac disease, Center for Advanced Medicine, Centers for Advanced Medicine, child health, CVA, detoxification, Developmental delays, Dr. Buttar, Dr. Rashid A Buttar, Flu Shot and Children, Health, health optimization, Heart Disease, Heavy Metals, HOW report, keep the doctor away, life enhancement, longevity medicine, Lymes, Medical Rewind, Mercury and Lead exposure raises cholesterol, persistent organic pollutants, prevention, Robert Scott Bell, skin cancer, Skin cancer deaths have soared, Stroke, the 9 steps, Toxicity, type 2 diabetes, Type 2 diabetes affecting younger healthier people, wellness

Show Archives

  • Red blood cells and iron levels, Uric Acid and Cholesterol levels, Determine the underlying cause of diseases, Titanium, Dieting vs Change in Lifestyle, Heavy Metals in Makeup, Periodic Fever Disorder, Types of Toxicity, and much much more August 26, 2019
  • Stem Cells, Emotions and Disease, Personality Interaction August 19, 2019
  • Role of the subconscious mind plays in healing, Development to year 7, Subliminal programs available to members, Updating our belief system August 12, 2019
  • Emotional techniques, Naysayers, Overcoming fears, Using Stem Cells with Autism August 5, 2019
  • Prospectives, Healing Crisis, Detoxification Process, Aluminum Toxicity, Glutathione is not a chelator, Natural Concentrators, Key component in treating Autism, DMSA dangers, July 29, 2019
  • Single most important thing, What was a cancer cell before the onset of cancer, What is the difference in cancer cell types, Allergies, Autoimmune System, July 23, 2019
  • What is non-excretion, Yeast July 15, 2019
  • Rheumatoid Arthritis, Increased Injuries as we age, Mineral absorption, Poor reaction to Methyl vitamin B supplement, Whey Protein and Lactose intolerance, Sulfur Allergy, Autism and those over 16, B12 deficiencies, Anxiety, Heartburn & Acid Reflux July 8, 2019
  • Emotional & Psychological Toxicity, Importance of Conflict Resolution with complete awareness, Absence of Disease is NOT Health, Important Principal: In all things when growth stops decay begins, Lyme Disease July 1, 2019
  • Scar Tissue, Vitamin C, Autism Defined Videos, AskDrButtar.com, Eczema, Amalgam Fillings, What to do before you get pregnant, Infections, Scalp fungus, Rosacea June 24, 2019

CLICK FOR MORE ARCHIVES

Medical Rewind with Dr. Rashid A. Buttar
Copyright © 2023 All Rights Reserved