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Clinical Ecologists
A non-mainstream healthcare practitioner, who claims special expertise in diagnosing and treating “environmental disease”, a condition regarded as fictitious by most mainstream medical practitioners.
Agencies
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Environmental Medicine Specialists
Environmental medicine is a multidisciplinary field involving medicine, environmental science, chemistry and others, overlapping with environmental pathology. It may be viewed as the medical branch of the broader field of environmental health.
Resources
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See Some Examples
A soldiers' exposure to mustard gas in World War I and Agent Orange in Viet Nam, and citizens' exposure to cyanate in Bhopal, India after a chemical plant accident there, "all graphically illustrate that chemical sensitivity may be caused by a significant, acute exposure to toxic substances.
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The position paper of the American College of Physicians issued in 1989 stated: Clinical ecologists propose the existence of a unique illness in which multiple environmental chemicals, foods, drugs, and endogenous C, albica, and pesticides, as a result of exposure
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The court will not permit evidence evincing long term effects to a short-term exposure, for example to diesel exhaust, when there is no reliable scientific evidence to support such a theory.
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The level of arterial blood gas tests is often elevated for carbon monoxide in smokers but the degree of elevation is normal for a heavy smoker.
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Once expelled into the open environment, heavy metals may be inhaled, ingested, or absorbed into humans, animals, plants, and fungi, or they may be transformed and combined with other substances to create new compounds . . . but matter is neither created or destroyed – Isiac Neuton?
Where do heavy metals come from?
Potentially poisonous forms of mercury, lead, cadmium, arsenic, aluminum, copper, tin, tungsten, chromium, beryllium, and other elements are increasingly found in our post-industrial environment. Until the industrial revolution accelerated mining and pollution operations across the planet, most toxic heavy metals were buried deep underground, far from the concerns of simple human civilizations. As human industry expanded in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, toxic heavy metals were mined, smelted, and added to any number of products that released those metals directly into the environment. Leaded gasoline, for example, released lead directly into the air with every stroke of the combustion engine. Mercury fillings resulted in thousands of tons of mercury being expelled into the atmosphere as the bodies of those who passed away were cremated. Lead arsenate was also widely used as a pesticide on orchards and food crops across North America for much of the nineteenth century. |
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History of the Atomic Theory by Josh Kenney
A Deep Look into the Biology and Evolution of COVID-19
8:15 Viruses hijack and take over the host cells. bar•ri•er băr′ē-ər►
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