Health & Wellness
"I'm still a little shocked and in disbelief," explained Kim Sebek, daughter of San Marcos resident Jerry Sebek, who died on June 25.
"Dad was a wonderful family man who loved to hunt and fish and do things out in the water," she told mySA.com. "We've been coming here (Turtle Bay) for years and this is just an unfortunate thing that happened."
According to Kim, Sebek never swam in the water and had no visible cuts on his body at the time.
Emerging research is illuminating the dark side of wearing sunshades.
Sunglasses block UV light from entering the pineal gland through the optic nerves in the eyes.
This prevents the brain from sending the signal to the pituitary gland to produce melanin, the pigment that tans the skin and protects it from burning.

This Thursday, Aug. 23, 2018 file photo shows an arrangement of aspirin pills in New York. A new study suggests millions of people need to rethink their use of aspirin to prevent a heart attack. If you've already had a heart attack, doctors recommend taking a low-dose aspirin a day to prevent a second one. But if you don't yet have heart disease, doctors now advise routine aspirin can do more harm than good.
A daily low-dose aspirin is recommended for people who have already had a heart attack or stroke and for those diagnosed with heart disease.
But for the otherwise healthy, that advice has been overturned. Guidelines released this year ruled out routine aspirin use for many older adults who don't already have heart disease — and said it's only for certain younger people under doctor's orders.
The artificial sweetener is used in thousands of products including big brands. The experts have cast serious doubts and have safety questions. They have enough evidence that this alternative causes neurological harm.
The aspartame, an artificial sweetener is used in everything these days with a label "Calorie Free" and "Sugar-Free" for health-conscious people. This may be causing more harm than giving any health benefits.
Comment: Experts have long doubted the safety of aspartame. It is the non-experts who accept phony studies about aspartame safety that have allowed this poison to pass as consumable.
- Diet soda, aspartame shown to destroy kidney function
- Aspartame in diet soda linked with premature death in women
- Nations starting to Ban Aspartame
- Aspartame A Risk To Public Health
- Aspartame linked to leukemia and lymphoma
- Does Aspartame Cause Human Brain Cancer? (Hint: Yes!)
- Artificial sweeteners linked to type 2 diabetes
- Adverse reactions to Aspartame comprises 75% of complaints to FDA each year
- Aspartame exposed - GM Bacteria used to create deadly sweetener
Candida auris has become a serious global health threat since it was identified a decade ago, especially for patients with compromised immune systems.
It has been reported in more than 30 countries and is probably more widespread than that because the organism is hard to identify without specialized laboratory methods.
It is resistant to multiple antifungal drugs, and can spread between patients in hospitals and other health-care facilities and cause outbreaks. The fungus can lead to infections of the bloodstream, heart or brain, and early studies estimate that it is fatal in 30 to 60 percent of patients.
And glyphosate is no exception.
The reports of harmful effects of glyphosate are exploding — within the medical and scientific community as well as the general public. At a time when bee populations are already declining, a recent study reported that glyphosate perturbs gut bacteria of bees, making them susceptible to infection.1
But how exactly does this highly controversial chemical affect humans? Glyphosate toxicity is a topic I've written about numerous times. This time we'll talk specifically about the various ways glyphosate exposure could lead to devastating health consequences, one of which includes pretending to be glycine, an amino acid that is crucial for protein synthesis.
Comment: See also:
- Glyphosate & Autism: Scientist Stephanie Seneff explains the indisputable link
- Objective:Health #16 - 2 Billion Rea$ons to Avoid Glyphosate
- WSU researchers see health effects across generations from glyphosate
- Glyphosate Use is Far Worse Than We Could Imagine
- The impact glyphosate can have on your health
- Glyphosate found to raise the risk of non-Hodgkin lymphoma by 41%
In a recently published study conducted by the Environment America Research and Policy Center, researchers found that the water at beaches in 29 coastal and Great Lakes states contained concentrations of bacteria well in excess of Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standards - including the harmful organisms that inhabit human feces - which they said could sicken millions of beachgoers annually.
"It's hard to believe that 47 years after we passed the Clean Water Act that we are still concerned with poop in the water when people want to go swimming," John Rumpler, clean water program director for the center, told USA Today.
Characterized by feelings of nervousness and restlessness, increased heart rate, hyperventilation, sweating, trembling, difficulty concentrating and uncontrolled worry, it has the ability to impact every area of one's life. There are many theories regarding the root cause of the condition, including genetics, brain chemistry, environmental factors or other medical factors and/or disease, however, nothing has been proven definitively. Instead, the scientific community continues to explore these leads further in the hope of an answer.
One small study out of Japan may provide an important insight into the connection between nutritional deficiencies and mental health, revealing that low levels of vitamin B6 and iron may actually trigger the chemical changes in the brain responsible for panic attacks, hyperventilation and other forms of anxiety.
The author correctly points out that in 1963, before the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine was licensed, there were 3-4 million people who contracted measles each year. The immunization campaign which utilizes the MMR vaccine has decreased the incidence of measles. The author blames vaccine refusers for fueling outbreaks of measles. Yes, the recent outbreak in measles has been primarily in the unvaccinated population. However, mandating that every child receive the MMR does not guarantee a measles-free population. China continues to have measles outbreaks even though Chinese children are the most vaccinated in the world--over 99% of Chinese children are fully vaccinated for measles.[ii] Furthermore, there has been a rash of mumps outbreaks across the US since 2006-all in fully vaccinated populations.[iii] In 2015-2016, 453 cases of mumps were recorded with 98% being fully vaccinated. In fact, from 2016-2017, there have been over 9,200 cases of mumps in the US, mostly from fully vaccinated people.
Comment: Cardiology experts: Statins MUST be avoided at all costs!
- Vascular surgeons write a damning report about lowering cholesterol drugs
- Experts claim statins are a waste of time: Studies show cutting bad cholesterol fails to slash heart risk
- Medical Madness: Cholesterol drugs linked to eye damage, JAMA study confirms anew
- Statin scandal: More doctors reveal their dangerous side-effects and failure to improve outcomes
Studies in mice revealed that animals bred to develop amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a form of the disease that affected the cosmologist Stephen Hawking, improved and lived longer when they were given an organism called Akkermansia muciniphila.
Among other substances, the microbe secretes a molecule called nicotinamide which may slow the course of motor neurone disease by improving the function of muscle-controlling neurons in the brain.














Comment: Deadly water-borne infections appear to be on the rise but, as of yet, no acknowledgement or explanation for why this may be is forthcoming from the authorities: