| While that may be the dominant theory it doesn't appear to be true. I follow a doctor out of NJ who uses dietary intervention to successfully treat a lot of diseases most doctors will say are "incurable", including ulcerative colitis, IBS, lupus, psoriasis, rheumatoid arthritis, and diabetes (the adult onset type). He has an entire newsletter devoted to the following: Inflammatory Bowel Disease – Aggresive dietary modifications hold key to relief and recovery. Irritable Bowel Syndrome – Recovery requires adherence to high–nutrient, fiber–rich diet. Nutritional and Dietary Protocols for IBD – These nutritional basics have helped hundreds of patients. A Crohn's Success Story – IBD patient makes recovery even after two surgeries. Specific Carbohydrate Diet – Lack of scientific support and low success rate on this diet. Eat For Health Recipes – The highest scoring recipes from Dr. Fuhrman's newest book. https://www.drfuhrman.com/members/NewsletterDownload.aspx?is... He shows (with references to back every claim, as with all of his writing) that these diseases DEFINITELY have a LOT to do with what is eaten. The newsletter is $7. I wish it were free for as important as I feel this issue is. I would hope that before you continue to make such definite, and possibly dangerous claims, that you would fork over the money to at least make sure you're not helping to send people down the path of needless pain and suffering. |
Things that would make me more sceptical of your claims would include:
1. A glossy website with slick before/after photos that appears to be primarily an advertisement for your (expensive) courses.
2. Putting all of your evidence in a non-peer reviewed newsletter that you then charge $7 / month for. He's clearly heard of journals (he's even published in some of them, although none of them particularly prestigious) so why isn't he using them?
3. The invention of bogus mathematical equations to "back up" your claims (Health = Nutrients/Calories... please).
4. Any claim to be able to cure a wide variety of unrelated illnesses with a simple treatment (cf. allergies, asthma, acne, autoimmune disease (!), chronic fatigue syndrome, depression, diabetes, migraines, and, somewhat mysteriously, "others").
5. Any association at all with Mehmet Oz.
This guy doesn't even begin to pass the smell test.