All that is required to effect significant improvement in asthma is a small dose of benign intestinal worms.
‘Helminthic Therapy‘, as it is called, is entirely safe, and one dose is effective for an average of five years.
However, medicine is going through a period of parasite paranoia at the present time, so doctors are ignoring the evidence and denying patients this very simple and natural preventive/treatment option, offering, instead, a range of pharmaceuticals which, in many cases, have devastating long term consequences; surgery; and, now, an electrical stimulation technique in which an electrode is inserted under the skin of the neck into the tissue surrounding the carotid artery and vagus nerve and used to deliver electric shocks of up to 12 volts.
A small but growing number of asthma sufferers are turning their backs on these modern medical options and choosing to place their health in the hands of a few of the gut worms which had effectively protected humans from asthma for millennia, until we interrupted their life cycle by donning shoes and deffaecating in toilets.
The first group of pioneers who obtained their worms from Autoimmune Therapies have reported an average response rate of 83 per cent, and an average degree of improvement of 4 on a 5-point scale – a significant reduction in symptoms, which became evident from an average 4.8 months after the worms were reintroduced.
I don’t have asthma myself, but have acquired a small colony of hookworm to treat overwhelming food intolerance and chronic fatigue, both of which are responding remarkably well to this approach. Having had my worms for several months I am now completely unaware of their presence, except for the huge improvement in my health, for which I am constantly thankful. If I did have asthma, there is no way that I would subject myself to any of the medical treatments currently on offer, when such a simple, natural and safe option is available.
NB: This post is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment.
Pingback: Asthma drug treatments in the dock – again | Gut Buddies