Guest guest Posted October 30, 2000 Report Share Posted October 30, 2000 In a message dated 10/25/00 10:33:52 AM Eastern Standard Time, egroups writes: << I thought the chemo attacked our immunesystem even more and made things worst. >> But, the cancer has to be dealt with FIRST . After that is destroyed then they will go back to treeating the liver disease which is a much slower progressive disease then cancer. Joanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 2000 Report Share Posted October 30, 2000 Heidi, Have you switched to DIGEST form of the LIVERSUPPORT_L yet? Will greatly reduce your mail load each day.as it will all come in one single digest instead of the single (and repetative) e-mails. Joanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 30, 2000 Report Share Posted October 30, 2000 In a message dated 10/25/00 10:33:52 AM Eastern Standard Time, egroups writes: << AIH need more recognition and exposure. Education is the key. >> Ginger.Not only does AIH need more recognition but all autoimmune liver diseases and autoimmune illness in general. I have PBC and many don't understand that either..then their is PSC and many other diseases ...Joanne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2004 Report Share Posted October 21, 2004 In a message dated 10/21/04 9:21:55 PM Mountain Daylight Time, SSRI medications writes: > Hunt wrote a book Operation Paperclip about Nazi scientists, some of > whom had participated in these gruesome medical experiments (the > high-altitude ones, for example) who were brought over her by our government > after World War II. Oh, gawd, we put a lot of those war criminals to work. The CIA learned their dirty tricks from Reinhard Gehlen, the head of security for the Third Reich. We also put Klaus Barbie on our payroll, and Bormann, too. Don't get me started. LOL " Blind Reason " a novel of pharmaceutical intrigue Think your antidepressant is safe? Think again. It's Unsafe At Any Dose Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2004 Report Share Posted October 21, 2004 In a message dated 10/21/04 9:21:55 PM Mountain Daylight Time, SSRI medications writes: > Hunt wrote a book Operation Paperclip about Nazi scientists, some of > whom had participated in these gruesome medical experiments (the > high-altitude ones, for example) who were brought over her by our government > after World War II. Oh, gawd, we put a lot of those war criminals to work. The CIA learned their dirty tricks from Reinhard Gehlen, the head of security for the Third Reich. We also put Klaus Barbie on our payroll, and Bormann, too. Don't get me started. LOL " Blind Reason " a novel of pharmaceutical intrigue Think your antidepressant is safe? Think again. It's Unsafe At Any Dose Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 22, 2004 Report Share Posted October 22, 2004 Buchanan did an interview about that on recently .. I have the transcript if you'd like it. You can also go to http://www.fixingamerica.org I was appalled by what I read in Klaus Barbie, Butcher of Lyons .. though you know what impressed me? It was the tireless work of Beata and Serge Klarsfeld in bringing him to justice. Don't get me started either .. this is something that continues to appall me and should outrage every American, but people are all so apathetic. Don't forget too that our government, rather than try the Japanese war criminals who experimented on prisoners at the infamous Unit 731, chose to use their information to learn about germ warfare. Government collusion with medical attrocities has had a long and sordid history. Re: Digest Number 1230 > > In a message dated 10/21/04 9:21:55 PM Mountain Daylight Time, > SSRI medications writes: > > > > Hunt wrote a book Operation Paperclip about Nazi scientists, some of > > whom had participated in these gruesome medical experiments (the > > high-altitude ones, for example) who were brought over her by our government > > after World War II. > > Oh, gawd, we put a lot of those war criminals to work. The CIA learned their > dirty tricks from Reinhard Gehlen, the head of security for the Third Reich. > We also put Klaus Barbie on our payroll, and Bormann, too. Don't get > me started. LOL > > " Blind Reason " > a novel of pharmaceutical intrigue > Think your antidepressant is safe? Think again. It's > Unsafe At Any Dose > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 21, 2006 Report Share Posted February 21, 2006 Re: Least Favorite Scent. Valerian can be a real stinker.... But a tincture made from the root is less abrasive than one made from the absolute or oil. On the Litsea front. It can be a problem in simple blends. But when used in a blend of upwards of 50 different oils, or more, it can add just enough of a lift to keep it from turning into mud. I love it and use it a lot. But then I love citrus...... Another challenging oil is peppermint . It too, will benefit from a tincture. I have not met an oil that I do not use. Mostly it is in how I use it. Tinctures work best for me. So I keep a tincture of the most potent oils, so that I don't have to use them straight out of the bottle.. Or try and figure out a percentage while in the middle of a blend. L. __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2006 Report Share Posted February 23, 2006 Hi - Do I need to take a Pharmacy Tech course in order to take the PTCB in NYC? I have heard from some people that structured school education and/or the PTCB are not necessary to obtain a pharm tech job. Thanks, KC wrote: There are 6 messages in this issue. Topics in this digest: 1. i need help From: " Mrs Dionne Marie Fields " 2. Re: i need help From: Jeanetta Mastron 3. Re: i need help From: Jeanetta Mastron 4. Re: i need help From: cphtgenius@... 5. Re: i need help From: " Jeanetta Mastron CPhT BS Chemistry " 6. Re: i need help From: cphtgenius@... ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Message: 1 Date: Thu, 23 Feb 2006 03:49:54 -0000 From: " Mrs Dionne Marie Fields " Subject: i need help i currently work at a local drug store, and i need help with reading rx. do you no if there is a program i can use to train on at home(online or offline). thank you dionne ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Message: 2 Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 22:31:00 -0800 (PST) From: Jeanetta Mastron Subject: Re: i need help Dear Dionne, Start with Medical and Pharmaceutical Terminology Tutorials and lists from THIS site. Also I have my own Prescription Reading Tutorial that I created. I have listed sites that that can help you. In addition I have found that Rx Insider, for the small amount of money I think about $40, is good for Rx script reading of difficult scripts. I am not sure if it is good for beginners or not. But I suggest that you first learn the abbreviations for pharmacy and medical terminology before you spend your money. RxInsider has a sample tour that you can do to see if you want to pay for it. Remember books for $30 to $50 can teach you much and you do not need to pay $200 to $1500 just to learn something that a book can teach you with feedback from a FREE site. IF your state however requires education and graduation, then that is a different story. By all means go for and complete an accredited pharm tech program. This will cost you, as it should, because you would be paying for a full course- not just an overview that books and this site provide - and you would also be meeting the state requiements. Hopefully you would get hands on mock labs and an externship. Hope this helps you. Please let me know what you do chose to do Respectfully, Jeanetta Mastron CPhT BS Pharmacy Founder/Owner Mrs Dionne Marie Fields wrote: i currently work at a local drug store, and i need help with reading rx. do you no if there is a program i can use to train on at home(online or offline). thank you dionne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 23, 2006 Report Share Posted February 23, 2006 Dear Ki Chan, In the state of NY you do not have to take a structured course to become a technician, althought many schools are springing up in in NY state. You do not need PTCB as yet, but there is " talk " (for the near future). You do not need school to pass the 'current' PTCB exam. On the other hand I am a promoter of education and training (together). I believe you will make a much better technician with knowledge of basic pharmacology, calculations, law, ethics etc and the experience shared with you by the instructor and your hands on labs and on the job training of an externship. As the exam gets tougher (as it will and is) education will be necessary to pass it I am sure. This is my opinion, not official information from ptcb. Respectfully, Jeanetta Mastron CPhT BS Founder/Owner Ki Chan <ki_hugs@...> wrote: Hi - Do I need to take a Pharmacy Tech course in order to take the PTCB in NYC? I have heard from some people that structured school education and/or the PTCB are not necessary to obtain a pharm tech job. Thanks, KC wrote: There are 6 messages in this issue. Topics in this digest: 1. i need help From: " Mrs Dionne Marie Fields " 2. Re: i need help From: Jeanetta Mastron 3. Re: i need help From: Jeanetta Mastron 4. Re: i need help From: cphtgenius@... 5. Re: i need help From: " Jeanetta Mastron CPhT BS Chemistry " 6. Re: i need help From: cphtgenius@... ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Message: 1 Date: Thu, 23 Feb 2006 03:49:54 -0000 From: " Mrs Dionne Marie Fields " Subject: i need help i currently work at a local drug store, and i need help with reading rx. do you no if there is a program i can use to train on at home(online or offline). thank you dionne ________________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Message: 2 Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2006 22:31:00 -0800 (PST) From: Jeanetta Mastron Subject: Re: i need help Dear Dionne, Start with Medical and Pharmaceutical Terminology Tutorials and lists from THIS site. Also I have my own Prescription Reading Tutorial that I created. I have listed sites that that can help you. In addition I have found that Rx Insider, for the small amount of money I think about $40, is good for Rx script reading of difficult scripts. I am not sure if it is good for beginners or not. But I suggest that you first learn the abbreviations for pharmacy and medical terminology before you spend your money. RxInsider has a sample tour that you can do to see if you want to pay for it. Remember books for $30 to $50 can teach you much and you do not need to pay $200 to $1500 just to learn something that a book can teach you with feedback from a FREE site. IF your state however requires education and graduation, then that is a different story. By all means go for and complete an accredited pharm tech program. This will cost you, as it should, because you would be paying for a full course- not just an overview that books and this site provide - and you would also be meeting the state requiements. Hopefully you would get hands on mock labs and an externship. Hope this helps you. Please let me know what you do chose to do Respectfully, Jeanetta Mastron CPhT BS Pharmacy Founder/Owner Mrs Dionne Marie Fields wrote: i currently work at a local drug store, and i need help with reading rx. do you no if there is a program i can use to train on at home(online or offline). thank you dionne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 25, 2006 Report Share Posted February 25, 2006 Dear Ki Chan, I found this link a long time ago but I did not save it. Today I found it again. I do not know how good the school is but for $247 for online learning out of New York you may consider it: http://virtualinstitute.coursehost.com/Groups/Config/Home2.asp?LID=1 & ky=d_BPDiQV\ RgHzDiPRUmf_DgHzF3TOH2Hz The link worked for me, but if it does not work I will do a tiny url on it. From the listed topics of discussion to be learned I would say it sounds good. Not too many programs teach about 'returns " . Let me know what program you choose and how it works our for you. Remember to pass PTCB you do not have to go to school But to be the BEST tech you can be school/formal education is always a top priority. Personally I wish school was mandatory with a national min standard of education for all states and techs and theexam was reflective of the formal education with a practical exam counterpart. In other words " harder! Wishing you well, Please stay in touch. I hope this helps you out. Respectfully, Jeanetta Mastron CPhT BS Founder/Owner > Hi - > > Do I need to take a Pharmacy Tech course in order to take the PTCB in NYC? I have heard from some people that structured school education and/or the PTCB are not necessary to obtain a pharm tech job. > > Thanks, > KC > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 5, 2006 Report Share Posted December 5, 2006 I see where you're coming from Bonnie, about progesterone levels falling off at young ages. I'm familiar with the concept because similarly, HGH released can be suppressed ast young ages by a high-carb diet, and we see a lot of that. But the wording of your post indicates you are equating SomaLife gHP with hormone, which it is NOT; it only maintains hormonal release at about 100% of what you'd release yourself at about 22 years of age give or take. So, in our early 40's, because we only release about 2/3 of the HGH we did at 22, many people start practicing anti-aging with SomaLife gHP so we can plateau off the aging process at a more youthful age than by starting later Ideally, anti-aging should begin as a young adult, and in fact many people are taking some of those steps with antioxidants and other health programs; they just don't know about the HGH link to aging. Back to your progesterone point, I think that the occurrence of absolute levels of progesterone falling in young people is not nearly as commonplace as estrogen dominance due to weight, would you agree? At least, we haven't established that addressing falling HGH levels and metabolic syndrome with HGH or SomaLife gHP would NOT address progresterone levels as well and it does normalize the rest of the hormones as one becomes more youthful. This information might be of value to people who were normal weight and healthy at 20 and wonder at 38 or 45 what the heck went wrong. Duncan On 6 Dec 2006 at 2:50, Coconut Oil wrote: > Duncan - Human Growth Hormone > Posted by: " Bonnie Cole " bonnieview@... anunnakica > Date: Tue Dec 5, 2006 11:00 am ((PST)) > > Duncan: > > I think HGH is better suited to much older people, like say late 50's > and above when this hormone fades away. In the meantime, (before HGH > gets Low), Progesterone is an important hormone to supplement with IF > you are deficient. And what women aren't after middle-age when > ovulation has ceased. > > Saliva Testing will let you know when Progesterone is needed and > oftentimes, this is needed as young as 40, if you're plagued with > symptoms. > > I just wanted to mention that because we don't want people to > supplement with HGH when their levels are still in a good place. > > Jump in here and correct me if I'm way off base. > > Thanks, > Bonnie Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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