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Friday, January 8, 2010

One type does not fit all

There has been an assumption medically for many years that there is only one type of cancer. Information about the inaccuracy of this medically assumed information, is still, in many medical care minds, still accepted as fact. This prompts some questions: When will we begin thinking that this probably applies to many illnesses?

Although we have been medically assuming that all bodies work the same way and therefore treating them that way -- but do they? This approach explains why we use the same treatment for similar diseases, without letting ourselves put into practice what logic has begun to tell us.

Human bodies are all similar, but how and why they function differently requires paying more importance to the reasons for those differences. Signs of this progress are being forced on the health care professionals by the American public because it is now difficult to hide this information from them.

The information age has begun to make major changes—positive and negative--that are becoming more and more difficult to camouflage from the public. Where it will take us depends on ourselves and what we do with this pertinent information, only time will tell.

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