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Kids with ADHD are being denied help by 'radical postmodernists'

Children with ADHD

Children with ADHD are far more likely to be excluded from school than those without ADHD
'Radical Postmodernists' reject the concept of there being facts or truth, they tell us science is about a "power discourse", each person's "lived experience" is more relevant than scientific knowledge. writes Dr John J Marshall.

Tom, aged 13, has barely made it to the end of the school term. He has been hyperactive all his life, impulsive, poorly organised, forgetful, easily distracted, and struggling to pay attention to his work in school.

He fidgets continuously, wanders out of the classroom and teachers have to follow him to make sure he is safe. His problems wear down his teachers and peers who increasingly reject him. He's seen as having "behaviour difficulties", but Tom has ADHD: a neurodevelopmental condition. School exclusion is a significant risk for Tom and in turn is associated with devastating lifelong impacts affecting learning, mental health, risk for imprisonment and shorter life expectancy. There is an exclusion-to-prison pipeline.

The Scottish Government gathers figures on school exclusion. Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is over-represented in exclusions, but there is no data collected for ADHD. Children with ADHD are far more likely to be excluded from school than those without ADHD. But there is a more profound difficulty. Unknown to Tom's family, they are victims of an ideological struggle that questions the very existence of his underlying problems.

Comment: And yet, for all of the insight into the societal problems of treating children with ADHD, the author seems to be missing several crucial facts that could go a long way towards helping those afflicted:


Cheeseburger

Move over Beyond & Impossible, the "Smart" burger is 100% beef

authentic cheeseburger
© Beef Checkoff


Want to boost your IQ and promote health and wellness? Eat beef made from cattle — it's as simple as that!


In recent weeks, the latest in plant-based and petri-dish protein headlines have dominated the news. And despite consumers not exactly going wild over choices like the Beyond and Impossible Burgers — because really, these are just processed junk parading themselves as alternatives to beef burgers — there appears to be a new contender in town. It's called the Awesome Burger, and it's made by Nestle.

According to Fast Company, "Three years ago, the plant-based but meat-like Beyond Burger hit shelves at a Whole Foods in Colorado. The next month, the Impossible Burger went on the menu at Momufuku Nishi in New York City. Now - as the Impossible Burger starts to roll out at Burger King nationwide, and Beyond recently had the best-performing IPO of the year - Nestlé, the largest food company in the world, is preparing for the U.S. launch of a similarly realistic plant-based burger of its own. Called the Awesome Burger, the new product was developed by Sweet Earth, a California-based brand that Nestlé acquired in 2017."

Comment: Anyone who has even the slightest clue about human nutrition knows that meat is good for you and that the plant-based meat substitutes are non-food chemical nightmares. If it weren't for the constant stream of lies and propaganda, no one would touch these things, opting for real, nutrient dense meat.

See also:


Biohazard

Dr. Drew: Los Angeles facing an 'imminent outbreak' of bubonic plague

Los Angeles homeless tent city
© Frederic J. Brown / AFP / Getty
Dr. Drew Pinsky said Friday that Los Angeles faces an imminent outbreak of bubonic plague because of the growth of the homeless population and the failure of state and local authorities to deal with rodent problems.

Dr. Drew made his comments during a Periscope broadcast by Dilbert cartoonist Scott Adams, who has become a popular political pundit with a daily live audience of thousands of people.

Dr. Drew told Adams that he had predicted the recent typhus outbreak in Los Angeles, which was carried by rats, transferred by fleas to pets, and from pets to humans.

Bubonic plague, Dr. Drew said, like typhus, is endemic to the region, and can spread to humans from rodents in a similar fashion.

SOTT Logo Radio

Objective:Health - Stress is Not the Best so Give it a Rest!

O:H header
It seems everyone these days is experiencing some level of stress, with most of us having what we'd probably classify as too much stress. But despite the common goal of a stress-free existence, a certain level of periodic stress is actually necessary for the organism to function properly.

Anything can be a stress on the body, whether it's work, relationships, toxic exposure, injury or even poor eating habits or lack of sleep. But much of the negative effects of stress have more to do with how we experience and react to these stressors. Why is it that some people seem to thrive in highly stressful environments, while others seem to be crushed by relatively minor stressors?

How is it that stress gets under our skin? What affect does it have on our brains and bodies? How can we help to mitigate our stress?

Join us on this episode of Objective:Health as we talk about the biology of stress and what you can do about it. And stay tuned for Zoya's Pet Health Segment as she explores the phenomenon of dogs knowing when their owners are coming home.


Links to check out:
Bruce McEwan - When is stress good for you?
Elliot Overton - If You've Got "Adrenal Fatigue", There's Likely Nothing Wrong with Your Adrenals

For other health-related news and more, you can find us on:
♥Twitter: https://twitter.com/objecthealth
♥Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/objecthealth/

♥And you can check out all of our previous shows (pre YouTube) here.

Running Time: 01:22:17

Download: MP3 — 74.9 MB


Health

It's the Insulin Resistance, Stupid: Part 2

Gerald Reaven

Gerald Reaven

Comment: For Part 1 of this series, see here.


Gerald Reaven sets out to discover what insulin resistance syndrome (IRS) is

In the previous column (1), I explained that Gerald Reaven began his research of insulin resistance syndrome (IRS) because he wanted to understand what Harry Himsworth meant when he proposed that the metabolic defect in the commoner form of diabetes is an insensitivity of the patient's tissues to the actions of insulin (2). In the process, Reaven discovered the work of Margaret Albrink and her colleagues (3), which showed that persons with coronary heart disease (CHD), including those with Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), are rather more likely to have elevated blood triglyceride than blood cholesterol concentrations. This finding ran contrary to the idea then gaining global credence: that elevated blood cholesterol concentrations are the singular cause of CHD. At the same time, Peter Kuo in Philadelphia was showing that high-carbohydrate diets, especially those containing sucrose or fructose, caused an increase in blood triglyceride concentrations (hypertriglyceridemia), particularly in those who are carbohydrate-sensitive (4). Thus, Kuo coined the term "carbohydrate-sensitive hypertriglyceridemia" (CSHT).

This led Reaven to ask the question: Why do carbohydrate-sensitive persons with insulin-resistant T2DM have elevated blood triglyceride concentrations?

Comment: Again, for first part of this series, you can go here.

See also:


Arrow Down

Europe faces 'looming syphilis epidemic' thanks to dating apps and reduced fear of HIV

Intravenous drugs
© REUTERS/Steve Parsons/Pool
Syphilis stopped being "a disease of the past" after its worrying resurgence in Europe, health experts told RT. Less fear of contracting HIV and the rise of dating apps are among the factors behind the problem.

The spread of syphilis in Europe is intensifying due to worrying trends in human behavior, the head of the HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted infections and viral hepatitis program at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), Andrew Amato-Gauci, told RT.

Various factors play into the outbreak, such as "people having sex without condoms, multiple sexual partners and a reduced fear of acquiring HIV from condomless sex," he said.

A new report by the ECDC shows that between 2010 and 2017, the number of confirmed cases of syphilis across the EU soared by 70 percent.

Magnify

Transgender and non-binary autism link

transgender

Gender identity clinics should screen patients, says lead author of new paper
New research indicates that transgender and non-binary individuals are significantly more likely to have autism or display autistic traits than the wider population - a finding that has important implications for gender confirmation treatments.

The study, led by Dr Steven Stagg of Anglia Ruskin University (ARU) and published in the journal European Psychiatry, is one of the first pieces of research to focus on people who identify as non-binary.

It found that 14% of the transgender and non-binary group had a diagnosis of autism, while a further 28% of this group reached the cut off point for an autism diagnosis, suggesting a high number of potentially undiagnosed individuals.

Comment: There are many factors converging in our era that have led to the rise in gender dysphoria, from autism and social contagion to the corporations that profit from pushing these disorders, as well as the overall malaise that permeates Western society: Also check out SOTT radio's:


Donut

Processed foods are a much bigger health problem than we thought

potato chips junk food
© Getty Images
“These refined carbohydrates could be feeding the bad bacteria in the small intestine,” said researcher Marit Zinocker, “and that’s where inflammation starts."
The case against processed food just keeps getting stronger. But, amazingly, we still don't understand exactly why it's so bad for us.

In two new papers published in the BMJ, the more ultraprocessed — or industrially manufactured — foods a person ate, the more likely they were to get sick and even die. In one study, they were more likely to suffer from cardiovascular problems. The other linked an ultraprocessed diet to a higher risk of death from all causes.

Those studies followed a first-of-its-kind randomized controlled trial, out of the National Institutes of Health: Researchers found people following an ultraprocessed diet ate about 500 more calories per day than those consuming minimally processed, whole foods.

Comment: See also:


Cheeseburger

Impossible Burger goes after Regenerative meat rancher Will Harris

grazing animals

The plant-based burger company called regenerative grazing the "clean coal of meat" in a recent report. That hasn't gone over well amongst carbon ranchers.


Rancher Will Harris says he was "stunned" when he got wind last week that Impossible Foods, the makers of the plant-based Impossible Burger, called regenerative grazing "the 'clean coal' of meat" in their 2019 Impact Report.

Speaking by phone from White Oak Pastures, his 153-year-old farm in Bluffton, Georgia, Harris said, "I think there were many mis-truths in that attack."

The feud is the latest in an ongoing discussion about whether regenerative meat production and high-tech plant-based alternatives can co-exist. And for holistically managed animal operations like Harris's, the suggestion that all meat production should be seen as having the same impact on the environment constitutes a battle cry.

Comment: Impossible Burger is pushing hard to get consumers to Ditch nature in favor of fake food
Eating meat is not synonymous with harming the environment; it's industrial farming practices that inflict the damage. Some also believe eating meat means ripping out more forests so animals can graze, but I'm certainly not advocating for that.

U.S. cropland is currently dominated by a two-crop planting cycle of corn and soybeans, largely for animal feed. Like concentrated animal feeding operations, these monocrops are devastating the environment, and even though they're plant foods, are part of the problem, not the solution.

Getting rid of these large swaths of corn and soy fields, which, if you've ever visited one, you'll know are chemical-laden and largely devoid of life, is key, as is reverting them back to what they were before, namely grasslands for grazing animals.

Grasslands are key to fixing many environmental problems, and herbivores are a necessary part of this ecosystem. By mimicking the natural behavior of migratory herds of wild grazing animals - meaning allowing livestock to graze freely, and moving the herd around in specific patterns - farmers can support nature's efforts to regenerate and thrive.



Info

Henry H. Bauer: All vaccines are not equally safe and effective

vaccine question
Recent outbreaks of measles have brought widespread unrestrained criticism of parents who have avoided vaccinating their children under the presumed influence of misguided ideological "anti-vaxxers." But at least some of the anger and blame should be directed at official sources for refusing to admit that some vaccines occasionally do bring sometimes very serious harm to some individuals. By not admitting that, officialdom provides unwarranted credibility to allegations of official cover- ups, allegations then expanded to blanket warnings against vaccinating in general.

There are three main ways in which vaccines can sometimes cause harm to some individuals.

One is the presence in some vaccines of preservatives to protect against contamination by bacteria. Being toxic to bacteria, they can also be toxic to higher forms of life. A commonly used preservative, thimerosal, is a mercury-containing organic substance, and organic-mercury compounds are indeed often toxic to human beings.

Comment: Professor Bauerr is taking a 'middle of the road' stance on the vaccine issue, while addressing 'possible harm' that cause concern. It should be noted that there is much more to consider when in comes to whether or not one should get vaccinated. Read the following for more information: