This here, is an imp reason why India never get its right in #healthcare. Extreme fanatics like Ms Deepa is always there, effortlessley moving the topic away from science, spewing poison in general, bcoz she and her likes have nothing constructive to contribute to society. 1/3
They take a science moment and turn it to one which has more hate mongering potential, example religion and bring down the good work contributed by others. Who is this lady to proclaim #Ayurveda as #Hindu. Stupid. It is Indian. I'm a doctor from Kerala, but I'm Indian first. 2/3
You are a fool if you did not know that the biggest and largest Ayurveda based industry and practice especially ancient tradititional family business that operate in India and abroad are mostly Christian and Muslim if you did not know about it. Hypocritical bigot. 3/3
Putting a screen shot (before she deletes and blocks) of the nationalistic fear monger Ms Deepa working as #Ayurveda doc who peddles pseudoscience along with religion to get into hearts and minds of people to provide them WRONG health care.
@deepadoc please take a moment, check link in my profile& yours. Mine links to my professional, published #scientific work while yours link to your unprofessional and #pseudoscience mongering social FB page! The irony of who needs a mirror! @drcheruvarun@pash22@prat1112001
4/4
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The most powerful 'treatment' for non-alcohol related fatty liver (and also the best for longevity and even beating recurrence of cancer as per a new NEJM study)
1/13
Good morning. Here is a weekend breakfast special. This post is for general population/ public, not for highly active athletes, body builders and powerlifters.
1/15
A probiotics company called GoodBug that sells a variety of products containing various strains of bacteria with claims that their products promote weight loss, reduce PCOD symptoms, "cleanse the gut," improve IBS and "balance" hormones. They are lying.
Here is how...
2/15
Their products claims are based on "fictional" data, weak science or possible falsification of data. This is classically: "fringe science."
"Ideas that challenge established scientific views, considered unproven or speculative. Encompass theories that deviate significantly from mainstream science, lack empirical evidence, based on flawed premises."
3/15
Akin to other nutraceutical companies, the products display terms like "SCIENCE," "EVIDENCE," "SCIENTIFIC," etc... without actually providing any data to back those claims. Some do provide data, but mostly preclinical studies and never solid human studies that are rigorous.