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California doctor reveals the 10 big ‘lies’ the medical community tells patients

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A California doctor wants people to know that, from his perspective and experience, the medical community isn’t always telling patients the truth.

Dr. Robert Lufkin, a physician and father of two young children, was diagnosed with the same four chronic illnesses that took his father’s life.

Inspired by his own struggles with healthcare, Lufkin decided to write a book exposing the “medical lies” that are contributing to the collapse of the medical system. Risk of chronic disease In the United States, some of these are things he himself taught as a professor at UCLA and USC.

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While Lufkin is critical of the medical community, he noted that he is still a part of it.

“I have authored hundreds of peer-reviewed articles and 10 textbooks, and I have had the honor and privilege of mentoring physicians and other professionals. Healthcare Professionals“Not just seeing patients,” Lufkin said in an interview with Fox News Digital.

Dr. Robert Lufkin, pictured left, was diagnosed with four chronic illnesses, which prompted him to write a book called “The Lies They Taught Me in Medical School.” (Dr. Robert Lufkin/iStock)

Lufkin said his diagnosis was an “opening up” to flaws in the health care system.

First, he developed a type of arthritis called gout.

“Next, I Developed high blood pressureThat’s the case for almost half of adults,” he said.

“If we don’t address the metabolic causes, the disease will continue to get worse.”

Then he developed prediabetes, followed by dyslipidemia, “which is a type of abnormal blood lipids.”

The doctor said he is actually a “big fan” of Western medicine in general, saying “I think it has changed our lives and made the world a better place,” but that the 21st century presents challenges with “new kinds of diseases.”

Dr. Robert Lufkin

Dr Robert Lufkin, a physician and father of two, says Western medicine has “made the world a better place”, but warns of the spread of misinformation. (Dr. Robert Lufkin)

“The disease has been there before, but it’s now exploding,” he said.

These include obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure and cancer. Cardiovascular diseaseDementia can also lead to Alzheimer’s disease and mental illness, Lufkin said.

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“Currently, up to 80 percent of our resources are spent on these chronic diseases.”

The problem, the doctor says, is that the measures that were so effective in the 20th century – medicine and surgery – may be life-saving at this very moment.

However, they address the symptoms of chronic diseases and not the underlying causes.

"Lies I was taught in medical school"

In his book, “Lies They Taught Me in Medical School,” Lufkin argues that medical professionals tend to spread 10 major misconceptions. (Dr. Robert Lufkin)

“Most of these diseases have a common metabolic cause,” Lufkin says.

“Unless you address the metabolic causes, drugs and surgery won’t fix it. The disease will just continue to get worse.”

“10 Lies”

In his book “The Lies I Taught in Medical School,” Lufkin writes: Medical Professionals Tends to spread 10 falsehoods.

He includes separate chapters in the book enumerating these situations and labelling them as:

1. Metabolism myth: “Metabolism is simply how your body digests food.”

2. Obesity myth: “All I need to do to lose weight is exercise more and eat less”

3. Diabetes myth: “Sugar is harmless except for causing weight gain and tooth decay”

4. The fatty liver myth: “There is no cure for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease”

5. High blood pressure myth: “The best way to treat high blood pressure is with medication”

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6. Cardiovascular disease myth: “Statins are a good option for preventing heart disease”

7. Cancer myth: “Most cancers are caused by accumulated DNA damage”

8. The Alzheimer’s Myth: “Alzheimer’s is a progressive, incurable disease caused by the accumulation of beta-amyloid.”

9. Mental health myth: “Your metabolism has little effect on your mental health”

10. Longevity Myth: “Aging is the inevitable result of accumulated wear and tear.”

“Each chapter takes a chronic disease that affects life expectancy and tells us what the lies are and what the truth is,” Lufkin said.

The doctor then Healthier lifestyle choices.

Healthy Living

In his book, Dr. Lufkin also offers recommendations for healthy lifestyle choices that can help prevent disease. (iStock)

“We talk about nutrition, sleep, exercise, stress and how we can create our own lifestyle to cure these diseases,” he said.

In the excerpt below, Lufkin describes the first two of these “lies.”

Read an excerpt from “The Lies I Taught in Medical School”

The obesity myth: “A calorie is just a calorie”

Dr. Robert Lufkin: We are now the worst in the world. The obesity epidemic Historically, the highest rates of obesity are among adults over the age of 20. Statistics show that 42.5% of adults over the age of 20 are obese, and 73.6% are at least overweight.

Today, nearly half of Americans are obese, and most of them are overweight. Obesity is unhealthy and a sign of metabolic dysfunction that can manifest as high blood pressure, diabetes, heart attack, stroke, Alzheimer’s, cancer and other chronic diseases.

“We are currently experiencing the worst global obesity epidemic in history.”

Our understanding of the causes of this epidemic and its treatment is based on the simple lie that “a calorie is a calorie,” implying that obesity is caused by eating too many calories.

Doctor and man

“Obesity is unhealthy and a symptom of metabolic dysfunction that can manifest as high blood pressure, diabetes, heart attack, stroke, Alzheimer’s, cancer and other chronic diseases,” one doctor writes in his book. (iStock)

As a physician, I know from personal experience that anyone can gain weight and fat simply by taking too much insulin, and we see this in both type 1 and type 2 diabetics as soon as they start taking too much insulin. As a medicine.

In other words, calories are necessary, but not enough to cause obesity. Insulin is necessary. Obesity is not just a calorie problem, it’s an insulin problem.

If all foods stimulated insulin in the same way, calories would be just calories — that’s not a lie — but not all foods stimulate insulin in the same way.

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The truth here is that what matters most for losing (or gaining) weight isn’t the number of calories you eat, but the type of calories that affect your insulin levels and tell your body to store energy as fat.

As any rancher knows, to fatten up animals, all you need to do is feed them loads of refined carbohydrates that activate insulin and store energy as fat.

Feeding livestock high in fats does not have the same effect.

Diabetes myth: “Sugar is harmless except for causing weight gain and tooth decay”

We are currently at the beginning of the worst Diabetes epidemic It’s the most serious problem the world has ever known: 10% of American adults have type 2 diabetes and about 38% are prediabetic. This means that for the first time in history, 48% of the population, or almost half, suffer from the same metabolic disease.

Diabetic blood glucose meter

“We are currently at the beginning of the worst diabetes epidemic in the history of the world,” Dr. Robert Lufkin writes in a new book. (iStock)

Diabetes Lies: The Best Way to Treat It Type 2 diabetes It’s insulin.

When you administer insulin, it helps counter the immediate effects of excess glucose in the blood by telling cells to remove the blood sugar and store it as fat.

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However, it also increases insulin levels throughout the body, worsening insulin resistance, which is the underlying cause of type 2 diabetes. Furthermore, elevated insulin levels contribute to other chronic diseases.

“Many people would rather take medicines or injections than make lifestyle changes.”

Unfortunately, our healthcare system is optimized to give prescriptions for insulin and other medications to manage type 2 diabetes, rather than teaching people how to reverse diabetes through nutritional changes to avoid the causes.

To be fair, many people prefer to take pills or injections instead. Change your lifestyleHowever, most people don’t realize just how powerful and effective lifestyle choices can be.

Additionally, evidence suggests that simply improving blood sugar control with medications such as insulin or pills may not prevent some of the long-term complications faced by all of these patients.

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There are financial incentives, too: Sales of insulin and other diabetes medications reached $23 billion in 2013, according to data from drug market research firm IMS Health.

This was more than the combined revenue of the National Football League, Major League Baseball and the National Basketball Association.

Excerpted with permission from the new publication “The lies I told in medical school” (BenBella Books, Inc.), Author: Robert Lufkin, PhD, Copyright © 2024 by Robert Lufkin, PhD. All rights reserved.

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