Jim the Druggist

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Avoid Swine flu without the NEEDLE

        While the government screws around trying to decide if you need one or two            
        vaccinations to prevent the swine flu, new information has come forward that
        indicates that a simple vitamin will do the job.


       The vitamin is vitamin-D.

       Vitamin -D is actually a hormone.  It helps the DNA in our bodies replicate.
       If the DNA in our bodies is replicating correctly then viruses have a much harder
       time taking over the cells of our bodies.


      Also, “How vitamin D might protect against influenza infection is not fully
      understood. However new research suggests that vitamin D induces the production
      of antimicrobial substances in the body that possess neutralizing activity against
      a variety of infectious agents including influenza virus” (Doss, 2009)


   Dr John Cannell, MD, President of Vitamin D Council sent me the following email:

    September 17, 2009
 
       I’m writing to alert readers to a crucial email from a physician who has evidence vitamin D is protective
       against H1N1 and to ask you, the reader, to contact your representatives in Washington to help protect
      Americans, especially children, from H1N1 before winter comes.
 

                Dear Dr. Cannell:
 
                Your recent newsletters and video about Swine flu (H1N1) prompted me to convey our
                recent experience with an H1N1 outbreak at Central Wisconsin Center (CWC).
                Unfortunately, the state epidemiologist was not interested in studying it further so
                I pass it on to you since I think it is noteworthy.

                CWC is a long-term care facility for people with developmental disabilities, home for approx.
                275 people with approx. 800 staff. Serum 25-OHD has been monitored in virtually all residents
                for several years and patients supplemented with vitamin D.

 
                In June, 2009, at the time of the well-publicized Wisconsin spike in H1N1 cases, two residents
                developed influenza-like illness (ILI) and had positive tests for H1N1: one was a long-term resident;
                the other, a child, was transferred to us with what was later proven to be H1N1.
 
                On the other hand, 60 staff members developed ILI or were documented to have H1N1: of 17
                tested for ILI, eight were positive. An additional 43 staff members called in sick with ILI.
                (Approx. 11-12 staff developed ILI after working on the unit where the child was given care,
                several of whom had positive H1N1 tests.)

 
                So, it is rather remarkable that only two residents of 275 developed ILI, one of which did not
                develop it here, while 103 of 800 staff members had ILI. It appears that the spread of H1N1 was
                not from staff-to-resident but from resident-to-staff (most obvious in the imported case) and between
                staff, implying that staff were susceptible and our residents protected.
 

 
                Sincerely,
                Norris Glick, MD
                Central Wisconsin Center
                Madison, WI

 
        Dear Dr. Glick:
 
      This is the first hard data that I am aware of concerning H1N1 and vitamin D. It appears vitamin D is incredibly      
       protective against H1N1. Dr. Carlos Carmago at Mass General ran the numbers in an email to me. Even if one
       excludes 43 staff members who called in sick with influenza, 0.73% of residents were affected, as compared to
       7.5% of staff. This 10-fold difference was statistically significant (P<0.001). That is, the chance that this was a
       chance occurrence is one less than one in a thousand.

       Second, if you read my last newsletter, you will see that children with neurological impairments, like the patients
       at your hospital, have accounted for 2/3 of the childhood deaths for H1N1 so far in the USA. That is, the CDC
       knows, because they reported it, that patients with neurological impairments are more likely to die from H1N1.
 
      The problem is that I cannot get anyone in authority at the CDC or the NIH to listen. I need readers to email or
      call their senators and congresspersons in Washington.
 
      Ask your senator or congressperson to contact the CDC and NIH to complain about CDC and NIH inaction
      on Vitamin D and H1N1. Also, ask your senators and representative to demand congressional hearings on
      Vitamin D and H1N1, before it is too late. Here is the link below, just click it and follow instructions to contact
      your own representatives.
 
      http://www.usa.gov/Contact/Elected.shtml

 
       John Cannell, MD
       President
       Vitamin D Council   www.vitamindcouncil.org
       585 Leff Street
       San Luis Obispo, CA 93422


        Canada started a study of the relation of Vitamin-D and influenza last year.  And
       researchers as far back as the 1940’s have suspected the low vitamin-D levels 
       could make people more susceptible to the flu.       

 

          So take you vitamin D pills or go to the tanning salon, or if you live in the south just 
      lay in the sun for 15 minutes a day and increase your vitamin-D level and decrease 
      your chances of getting the FLU!

 






 


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