The McDougall Program Cures
People;
The Risk Factor Improvements Are Incidental
People are focused on their
numbers, also known as risk factors – so here are the
results for the first 307 people treated in the McDougall
Program in Santa Rosa, CA:
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Reductions of Common Risk Factors with 7 Days of a
Healthy Diet:
(Averages for total patients and subgroups)
Cholesterol = -17 mg/dl
When initially below 190 mg/dl = -10 mg/dl
When initially above 189 mg/dl = -25 mg/dl
Triglycerides = -2 mg/dl
When initially above 149 mg/dl = -30 mg/dl
BUN = -3.5 mg/dl
Blood Sugar = -1 mg/dl (all diabetic medications
stopped for type-2 diabetics)
Type-2 Diabetics (BS initially above 149
mg/dl), medications stopped = -5 mg/dl
Systolic Blood Pressure = -8.5 mmHg (hypertensive
medications stopped, usually day 1)
When initially 120 mmHg or higher = -12 mmHg
When initially 140 mmHg or higher = -15 mmHg
Diastolic Blood Pressure = -6.0 mmHg (hypertensive
medications stopped, usually day 1)
When initially 80 mmHg or higher = -9 mmHg
When initially 90 mmHg or higher = -13 mm Hg
Body Weight = -3.5 pounds
Maximum Weight Loss Program = -4.5 pounds
(Almost the exact same results have been obtained
with the nearly 2000 people who were treated with
the McDougall Program, held between 1986 and 2001 at
St. Helena Hospital, Napa Valley, CA.)
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All results occur
concurrently, medications are discontinued, and most
importantly the patients become healthier, because the
underlying cause of their diseases – severe malnutrition
from the Western diet – is corrected. Primarily, the
benefits come from switching to a health-supporting diet
based on starches, vegetables, and fruits. Secondarily,
exercise and stopping “bad habits,” like coffee and alcohol,
help.
Modern Medicine Provides
Results without Real Benefits
The typical
well-treated patient living in an “advanced society” is fat,
sick, and overmedicated. Justifying all this misery, the
medical and pharmaceutical businesses brag all the way to
the bank about improvements of their customer’s risk
factors (incidental numbers forced to lower values by
drugs).
Attend a luncheon conference
at your local hospital. Your suspicions will be sparked by
the drug-detail person seated in the back of the conference
room – she paid for the lunch and the “expert” speaker.
Your doctor is being taught by one of the big pharmaceutical
companies, like Merck, Upjohn, or Lilly, how to treat your
signs (risk factors) and symptoms with 10 to 20 expensive
drugs. But no one is learning about how to restore your
lost health and appearance.
I am not suggesting your
trusted doctor is in cahoots with big business, purposefully
trying to keep you sick and buying products and services.
Doctors are simply displaying normal human behavior. Stop
for a moment and impartially look at the industries you have
worked with. What determines their activities? Profit.
Always profit. Why should people working for the medical
and pharmaceutical enterprises have higher principles? You
say, “Because the lives of my loved ones are at stake.”
Grow up – stop elevating those in the healthcare industries
to “god-like” status. Give them the same respect you would
anyone else you do business with, like your bank loan
officer or used car dealer.
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Treatment of Signs (Risk Factors) and Symptoms
The
Well-Treated Patient Requires the Following*,
Says the
Drug-Industry:
Cholesterol = Lipitor
Triglycerides = Lopid
Blood Pressure = Norvasc
Blood Sugar = Diabinese
Uric
Acid = Zyloprim
Homocysteine = folic acid
Heart attack prevention = Plavix
Kidney protection = Zestril
Arrhythmia prevention = Atenolol
Blood Clots and Strokes = Coumadin
Reduced BMD (osteoporosis) = Fosamax
Menopause = Provera/Premarin
Impotence = Viagra
Depression = Prozac
Obesity = Orlistat
Headaches = Darvocet
Nasal Allergies = Allegra
Body
aches = Celebrex
Indigestion (GERD) = Prilosec
Constipation = MiraLax
Diarrhea = Lomotil
Body
odors = deodorants and perfumes
You
would be surprised by how frequently patients are on not one or
two, but multi-drug combinations of these medications, until
they change their diets or die.
*Examples of drugs treating risk factors. Realize there are
hundreds of similar drugs sold to you to treat these same signs
and symptoms of disease.
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Risk Factors are
Signs of Disease – Not Disease
Real benefits from the drug
approach to disease are limited and/or of questionable
value, because they fail to treat the underlying problem –
malnutrition. Instead, they treat the signs (risk factors)
that result from years of eating high-fat, high-cholesterol,
high-sugar, highly-refined foods. You can think of these
signs as “warning flags” sent out by your body in an attempt
to tell you that there is “trouble down below” – within your
body. But people do not die from signs of their diseases. I
have never seen a patient die of high cholesterol, or high
blood sugar, or even high blood pressure. What do people
showing these elevated risk factors die of? Sudden closure
of an artery supplying the heart or brain – in common words,
a heart attack or stroke (only two of many possible examples
of common diseases caused by people following the Western
diet).
Here is an analogy to help
you understand the consequences of misdirected treatments.
Imagine for a moment that you are a doctor working in an
emergency room. Through the doors late one evening a
semi-comatose patient is wheeled in. You ask your nurse to
collect the vital information. After making her evaluation,
she reports to you that the patient is coughing, has a fever
of 104 degrees, and has an infected lung (pneumonia). After
some serious contemplation you recommend aspirin, to treat
the fever (one sign he has pneumonia). Within an hour you
have a patient with a normal body temperature, and 30
minutes later he is dead. Are you proud of your medical
care? If you had directed your attention to the infected
lung (pneumonia) and used antibiotics, then your patient
would have lived, and by the way, his temperature would have
also come down to normal in a short time.
I have witnessed doctors
bragging about how well they had controlled a patient’s
blood pressure while the patient was lying in the ICU dying
of a heart attack. Was that good service? – To allow his
patient’s arteries to continue to rot with a “well-treated”
blood pressure. Instead, the doctor’s attention should have
been focused on teaching the importance of a healthy diet
and lifestyle, rather than stuffing the trusting patient
with pills.
Monitor and Treat Risk
Factors Carefully
Risk factors are signs giving
you important information – for example, an elevated
cholesterol means the plaques in your arteries are at risk
of bursting. This information can serve to motivate, and
armed with all the right information, can produce a cure.
After I have brought to life
every bit of good health my patients have with a proper diet
and some lifestyle changes, I will cautiously treat risk
factors with medications, because in some cases the benefits
from this drug therapy outweigh the risks and costs.
Here are some examples of
actions I take when risk factors remain elevated:
Cholesterol:
For high risk patients, I use statins or niacin with
cholesterol-binding-agents to lower cholesterol below 150
mg/dl. Determining who is at high risk is a judgment call
(an educated guess). A patient with a history of heart
disease or stroke will usually get a prescription from me.
(See my newsletter articles: September 2002: Cholesterol –
When and How to Treat; June 2003: Cleaning Out Your
Arteries.)
Hypertension:
After several months of monitoring, I will treat levels of
blood pressure of 160/100 mmHg or greater. I usually use
diuretics (chlorthalidone) first, and then beta blockers
next. I am cautious to not lower the pressure below 140/85
mmHg with medications. (See my newsletter articles: August
2002: Take Blood Pressure at Home - Get Off Your
Medications; July 2004: Over-treat Your Blood Pressure and
You Could Die Sooner.)
Type-2 Diabetes:
I usually do not give medications
unless the patient is losing too much weight or has symptoms
of diabetes (excessive thirst or urination). Very elevated
blood sugar levels can be of concern to the patient and his
family (such as levels above 350mg/dl). For everyone’s
peace of mind, I may use medications to bring about
better-looking numbers. Also, if the patient were to become
ill or injured, then insulin might be necessary during this
period of extreme physical stress. (See my newsletter
article: February 2004: Type-2 Diabetes – the Expected
Adaptation to Overnutrition.)
Triglycerides:
For high risk patients with levels above 300 mg/dl, I may
give niacin or statins. (See my newsletter article:
February 2003: Niacin - A Time Honored Treatment for
Cholesterol and Triglycerides.)
Uric acid:
I will use colchicine and/or allopurinol for patients with a
history of uric acid stones or gout. I do not treat solely
because of an elevated uric acid level.
Obesity: If there
were effective drugs, I might use them in severely
overweight patients, who are unwilling or unable to change
their diet and to exercise (a combination which is always a
cure). Bariatric surgery is effective and special cases may
warrant such extreme treatment. (See my newsletter articles:
December 2004: Lose a Half Pound a Day – Set Point; January
2005: Pushing Your Set Point to the Limits – The McDougall
Program for Maximum Weight Loss.)
Have You Pushed Your Health to
the Limits?
The McDougall Program gets results in 7 days. You can do
anything for 7 days. If you have not already done so, I
challenge you to follow a diet based on starches with the
addition of fruits and vegetables. And go for a daily walk.
Before you start, talk to your doctor. Have your blood
pressure and body weight recorded. Check out some basic
blood tests, like cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood
sugar. Discuss the medications you are now taking with your
doctor and seek advice for adjustments. (I find that it is
usually safe to reduce or discontinue most medications,
especially if in doubt.) Recheck everything in 7 days.
My experience has been that you will have made more
subjective and objective improvements in less than one week,
at no cost, than you have made in years of buying thousands
of dollars worth of “powerful drugs.” Take my challenge and
you will not only see better numbers, but you will
experience the improved health and personal appearance you
deserve.
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