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Cambridge Family Health Natural Solutions For A Better Life
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Flu Prevention Protocols
Welcome to the world's most victorious flu-fighting strategies!
Public health officials expect about 36,000 people to die from pneumonia related to influenza this season in the USA. The keys to prevention all involve feeding the immune system what it needs.
Most of our people who die from the flu are our elders - worn out and weakened by life, unable to coax their immune systems into gearing up again for another round.
In my 30 years of health studies, I have found that virtually all conditions
our elders face have their roots in nutritional deficiencies. The aging
process can be quickened ten-fold when there are insufficient nutritional
reserves. Antioxidants play keys roles in the rate of aging, and the quality
of organ function, but there are numerous other vital factors to ensure
healthy aging. I have created a special section on elders and nursing home residents for your review, and I am in the process of authoring the book,
"What Every Elder Needs to Know About the Flu".
The flu is powerful enough to put many people out of action
for days, weeks or months.
The key to the length and strength of illness,
you will find, has to do with the competency of our immune system. When
our immune system has everything it needs to do its job, the severity
and duration of illness is markedly reduced.
Most strategists would agree
that the most efficient way to win a battle is to prevent it from happening
in the first place. Once a battle has begun, there are losses. Our immune
system is constantly monitoring the horizon - determining what's out there,
how many, and how fast they're coming. It is always strategizing the most
efficient ways to limit the losses, and it is in constant communication
within our bodies, determining what to create, and mobilize, to be successful.
Flu Prevention Protocols
are the result of my 30 years of study, and 20 years of clinical applications.
They comprise everything the body needs to mount healthy immune response
to not only the influenza virus, but also the host of other viral and bacterial infections which cause flu-like symptoms.