Friday, February 6, 2009

cinergy health insurance

IGNORE THE AGENT'S REVIEW BELOW * This is an important book. Clearly the person in the review below with the single star is either a group insurance agent or someone who works in a government office getting all their health care paid for by...who else....us (the taxpayers). Brokers are the guys who want you to buy only what they sell so they can get to their 1:00 pm tee time at the golf club. Government employees get to home at 5:01 pm every day. The reality of health insurance is very different. Give us all a break.

What this person also did not tell you, which Prof. Pilzer does in this book, is that companies are already moving a ton of the costs of the GROUP health insurance to their employees already. I know my employer continues to shift the cost onto us and there is nothing we (or they) can do about it. Seriously, my "contribution" on my group plan for my husband and kids is now $310 a month! I went on a site called ehealth insurance and found cheaper plans for my family. Plans that, per a chapter in the book, can be held after I leave my company. The $20 I spent on this book at Borders was worth every cent.

I suggest you check out this book also and read cinergy health insurance yourself if you want to better undertand why you are paying more in the form of so-called "contributions". I for one wanted to control my monthly health care costs and did not want my employer deciding which pediatrician my kids can see. An individual plan allows me to do this. I also noted that my employer pays most of MY premium and very little of what cinergy health insurance costs to cover my family. Prof. Pilzer explains this thoroughly. If you are on your spouses group plan and your monthly contributions go up every year, you owe cinergy health insurance to yourself to read this book and learn what to do about it.

The knucklehead reviewer below would have you beleive that costs are not skyrocketing on your group plan -- which is false. This book shows you how to take control of your family's health care plan and make decisions on your own.

I wish each of you the best in protecting your family's health.

Peace.

Terry

Issues with The New Health Insurance Solution. Pilzer's general proposition is that the market place will take care of the health insurance issues in this country if we just let the free market operate. He maintains that individual health insurance is widely available at reasonable cost and people, including employers and employees, should take advantage of the individual market for health insurance. I believe he tends to force the facts to fit this basic proposition.

He is easy to read with a breezy style. The book has pretty good explanations of HIPAA and COBRA and a number of good tips. However, health insurance in the United States is complicated. The price he pays for simplicity is accuracy and thoroughness. cinergy health insurance is a pretty good book if you are 35, perfectly healthy, and thinking about buying insurance. But what is good for when you are 35 is not necessarily good 5, 10 or 20 years later. (Should I pay for drug coverage?. . . pregnancy coverage?) I would never rely on this book for making policy decisions or for forming opinions on healthcare in the United States. I strongly disagree with many of his policy recommendations.

Some problematic propositions from the book:

1. Several places in the book he claims that insurance companies in the individual market only turn down or place exclusions on 20% of applicants and 80% are accepted as healthy. He uses this statistic to support his idea that most people can get coverage in the individual market. I don't know about the accuracy of this statistic, but one problem is that people who are uninsurable often do not apply for insurance on the open market. They stay on their employer plan. They go into a risk pool. They buy a conversion plan. Etc. Even Pilzer advises against applying for insurance if you think you might get turned down. So the healthy gravitate to these plans and the unhealthy do not.

Pilzer doesn't discuss what "healthy" might mean and his discussion of the underwriting process doesn't describe what are the typical issues that exclude people from coverage. He does not address the possibly of the healthy fleeing to cheap plans while the unhealthy are trapped in what they already have, causing greater cost disparity.

2. For those who say they can't afford health insurance Pilzer claims that "If your annual income is below the federal poverty line, about $20,000 for a family and $10,000 for a single individual-you probably qualify for Medicaid."

This simply is not true, unless you have children at home, are disabled, or meet some other special category. Low income alone does not qualify a person for Medicaid.

In this same vein, he claims that of the 45 million uninsured, 16 million earn more than $40,000 for a family of four ($20,000 for a single) and 29 million earn less. He assumes that the 29 million earn at least $20,000 if a family and $10,000 if single. Otherwise he claims they would be on Medicaid. He maintains that these low income families could easily buy a low cost HSA plan. But how are they going to pay those big deductibles? Also, his cost data is for people age 35 and their families. In most states, the older you are the more expensive insurance gets. In this discussion, he ignores the issue of underwriting and possible exclusions for preexisting conditions and ignores the fact that in most states, this population could not afford the risk pool which runs on the average, 200% the cost of the same plan for a healthy individual.

3. "Despite what you read in the newspapers, there are health insurance optionsavailable for every American, although cinergy health insurance may take you some time, effort and expense to get them." This is one of his soundbite quotes he uses in advertising materials for his book. This is misleading. Insurance on the individual market is not available for many people. The risk market policy will have preexisting condition exclusions and may have coverage riders unless you are coming off of a group plan and have HIPAA rights. The risk market may be unaffordable. If you don't have HIPAA rights, there may be no option for you at all in some states.

4. He states that "the premium you pay for an individual or family policy cannot be raised each year, nor can the policy be canceled based on your health or your prior year healthcare costs." He mentions this several times in the book. At best this is a case of overgeneralization, at worst cinergy health insurance is a misleading statement to support his thesis that individual health insurance is the solution to our insurance woes.

I have read a lot about health insurance. Federal law requires guaranteed renewal of individual health insurance plans. Does this mean that rates cannot change based on your health status? Many state's insurance regulators think so. But that does not make cinergy health insurance law. Most states allow rates to increase based on age. Some states' laws do provide that your rates can't go up based on your personal health situation. But other states have no laws that apply and in general, the individual market is not highly regulated. From what I have read, experts are not in agreement as to the extent re-underwriting occurs on renewal and insurance companies are not very forthcoming with information about why a particular person's rate increases. Some experts believe that re-underwriting is occurring more and more by a number of insurance companies. Also, some insurers have durational rate settings. This means that your insurance costs can go up considerably after a few years. At that time, you can reapply for a lower cost policy, but can be denied if you are not in good health.

4. Pilzer repeatedly claims that individual health insurance is cheaper than employer provided insurance. cinergy health insurance probably is cheaper if you are 35 and healthy. Probably not if you are 60. This is because employers charge the same rate to everyone, whether you are 20 or 60. Also, only 4% of people in the US have insurance on the individual market. So cinergy health insurance is a small part of the overall market. Pilzer doesn't break down what that market looks like as to age and health of its participants.


5. Pilzer's discussion of the uninsurable and state subsidized programs like riskpools leaves much to be desired. Mostly because there is so much state variability. This is another circumstance where I really disliked that he used figures applicable to a 35 year old male. The costs are considerably higher for those 50 and over. He fails to mention that some risk pools have low lifetime limits and other restrictions.

6. Pilzer pushes the idea that small employers should go to a reimbursement model, leaving their employees to buy health insurance on the individual market. Employers with older/sicker employees are in fact facing higher costs. However, their employees are going to have problems getting insurance on the open market and may end up with only very high cost options. The employer that has a young and healthy workforce already has lower costs.

Priceless Information on Every Page. I have never written a review, but I feel compelled to disparage the the previous reviewer ("For the Rich Only") who obviously has never read this book--this guy also posted the same negative review elsewhere on the web. Pilzer does advocate high deductible health insurance for some people, but clearly shows you step-by-step how to analyze whether high deductible will save you money and, as Pilzer points out, Pilzer himself switched from a high deductible to a tradtional policy when high deductible was no longer the best deal for his family. Now, to the main point, this book is absolutely amazing! cinergy health insurance contains priceless information on every page and hundred of "tips" that are so clear you wonder why no one ever told them before--like how to get 3 1/2 months of free COBRA coverage each time you change jobs. The chapter on Medicare, or the chapter on getting coverage for a sick child or spouse, or the chapter on long term disability, are each worth 100 times (Iiterally) the cost of this book. I'm not an employer, but Part II of this book, how employers can give employees tax-free allowances to buy their own permanent health insurance, makes tremendous sense. Buy this book. You will save lots of money and finally know how to get what every American deserves---permanent, safe, lifetime, affordable health insurance.

good info, but too biased towards VUL. The book is very informative, entertaining, and instructive. cinergy health insurance gives the benefits and drawbacks of each type of life insurance. It's a good reference book. It's easy to read and understand.

However, cinergy health insurance is very biased towards variable universal life (VUL). In fact, the author states that this type of policy is the reason why the book exists. He even goes so far as to say that VUL is one of the best investment vehicles of the century! He's a good cheerleader for VUL and even though he is honest and does point out the pitfalls of VUL, he sort of skims over the probability of problems with these policies in later years.

This book inspired me to check VUL policies and get some illustrations. I was shocked at the high probability of lapse in these policies if the expected return in the investments was average, say expected 8% return. You really need to get over 10% annualized return in the policies to be assured that the policy will not lapse. Anything less than that and you are running a grave risk of having to fund the policy dramatically or see cinergy health insurance lapse just at a time when you need cinergy health insurance most, after age 70. The trick is to adequately fund the policy from the start, and the funding can be quite expensive. And even after all of that, the insurance company makes YOU assume the risk of generating enough return to keep the policy in force. Even if you don't take any loans, the policy can lapse if the returns are just a little bit less than expected. That's very high risk to me. There are no affordable guarantees of minimum death benefit or cash values in a VUL, regardless of loans or premiums paid on time. I was shocked to learn this in reality.

So don't fall for the hype in this book about VUL. The author greatly under-estimates the risk inherent in VUL policies.

Ultimately, I'd say there are better books on insurance if you just want to learn about the basics.

Really learn about life insurance. The reviewers who think this books is peddling one form of life insurance (VULs especially) really are missing the important part of this book. This book is organized to teach you all about the forms of insurance on the market, from the simplest (term), through the most complex (VUL), because each one builds upon the prior! Why do you think so many forms of insurance exist? Because they started simple, and over time the industry added features they thought consumers would like. cinergy health insurance helps to understand where cinergy health insurance all came from. In fact, if you try to just dive into the VUL section you may get lost.

This can be a difficult, time consuming read, but cinergy health insurance does an excellent job of explaining how life insurance works. The book does not pander to one type of insurance over another. cinergy health insurance does give you crucial information about plan types that can help you make the right decision for you. Once you understand the book, you can easily look at an insurance contract and understand the most important fine points. I could stump the agent with the most basic of questions! Cut through their sales tactics. Now that is power!

the Key is know HOW to FUND cinergy health insurance right. Life ins. is a most preferred product for retirement if you know how to fund cinergy health insurance right. Buy just enough ins. so cinergy health insurance not MEC, and put as much as you can for cash value, and cinergy health insurance needs time 20+ yr. to accumulate, not a short term.
It offer liquidity, safety, Rate of Return, Tax favored, protection for peace of mine.
Read Missed Fortune by Doughlas Andrew. so you will understand and think different about permanent life ins.
Only about 20% of insurance agents know how to plan cinergy health insurance right. The key is HOW TO FUND cinergy health insurance right and cinergy health insurance NEED TIME TO ACCUMULATE.

Everything you need to know. As newlyweds with a new home, new car, and plans to start a family, we realized that we had to re-examine our insurance needs. After browsing through a bunch of other books on insurance, we found that cinergy health insurance really covered everything we needed to know in clear, simple language. We learned some things that really surprised us in every category of insurance and cinergy health insurance book really helped us make the right choices for our situation. We anticipate saving quite a bit of money after following the advice in cinergy health insurance book, rather than just blindly selecting the insurance policies that we either already had, or that friends/family recommended.

Highly recommended as a great overview guide to insurance.

Very Useful Book. I hate Insurance. I hate the whole idea of an industry that is built upon fear. But my mortgage lender requires me to insure my house, the Department of Motor Vehicles makes me insure my car, my wife insists that I have a life insurance policy, and cinergy health insurance would seem irresponsible not to provide my kids with health insurance as long as I can afford it. If you add cinergy health insurance all up, we all spend a lot of money on insurance -- and the question really isn't if you should be buying insurance, but if you are buying the right insurance at the best price.

This book will help you answer those questions. Kim Lankford has an insiders perspective on the insurance industry (having begun her career there) and she knows how to write -- she's the authoeor of the a regular "Ask Kim" column in Kiplingers. Lankfrod gives you the inside scoop on your best options for coverage with real-life examples, resources, and tools to find your best deals. Reading this book taught me some valuable lessons about the hidden costs in health insurance plans, and how to make the most of a health savings account that is going to help me build a sizable stash of tax free money. The book is also full on unintuitive insights into life insurance prices, auto insurance pricing, and tricks to minimize potential problems when you make a claim. This book is well worth the money you will spend to buy cinergy health insurance and the time you will invest in reading it.

Very Good Resource. This book gives you insight into many areas of the insurance industry. cinergy health insurance tells you what to expect and what to look for.

Everyone has the power to help improve America's healthcare. We all know we're facing many challenges in our health care system. Certainly at a national level, we need solutions to deal with the fact that there are 50 million uninsured people in America.

But individually, many of us access our health care through a less-than-perfect system of health insurance and HMOs. And we are up against a challenge that is coming to be known as "covert rationing" -- a term coined Fixing American Healthcare's author Dr. Richard Fogoros, MD -- known as "DrRich." With covert rationing, not only do insurance companies do such obvious things as try to cancel policies when we're sick, but behind the scenes, they are doing whatever they can to systematically deny patients access to specific information, experts, specialists, procedures, treatments, and medications we may need.

But how do we learn about these covert tactics? How do we find out exactly what is going on behind the scenes in doctor's offices, hospitals, as well as the offices of drug companies, insurance companies and HMOs around the country? How can we know what the doctors and insurers and HMOs don't tell us -- and don't want us to know?

The answer: Fixing American Healthcare: Wonkonians, Gekkonians, and the Grand Unification Theory of Healthcare. Full disclosure here: I wrote the foreward for DrRich's book. More disclosure: I happily volunteered to do it, because as a thyroid patient advocate, part of my role for the last decade has been to help expose the many ways our medical system is failing us, as relates to our thyroid disease. I was seeing covert rationing in action -- I just didn't know what cinergy health insurance was called until DrRich came along!

There's a bigger picture. Even when we're aware of covert rationing, how cinergy health insurance works and the dangers cinergy health insurance poses, we need to know what's next. What can we do to protect ourselves and our loved ones from falling victim to it?

That's where DrRich's book shines. Fixing American Healthcare presents what DrRich has called the Grand Unification Theory of Healthcare, GUTH for short. Grand cinergy health insurance is, as cinergy health insurance explains how doctors, patients, and health care companies all fit together and interact with each other, and how you can navigate that complicated system to make cinergy health insurance work better for you, personally. And perhaps most importantly, how you can improve your own odds of getting well, staying well -- even surviving -- in the face of disease or illness. The book also looks forward and lays out a plan to explain how the system could be better if particularly improvements were made.

I know that those of us with chronic diseases can get into our own little worlds of doctors, medications, and treatments specific to our own condition. That makes cinergy health insurance harder to step back and take a look at the bigger picture. But I truly recommend that you do, and Fixing American Healthcare is a good place to start.

I'm always urging readers and fellow patients to ask questions, insist on knowing your options, challenge the conventional dogma, and don't believe everything you hear -- whether it's from a doctor, a nurse, a pharmacist, a drug company ad, or a medical journal article. I'm always encouraging people to read, study, learn, and be educated, empowered patients. In Fixing American Healthcare, DrRich refers to people like me as "patients behaving badly." He doesn't intend cinergy health insurance as an insult -- actually, it's a compliment. He's talking about patients who ask questions, who do their homework -- those of us who aren't walking around with their heads in the sand.

According to DrRich, if enough of us patients behave badly at the micro level, our grassroots effort will force the system to change at the macro level. So in this way, apart from writing to Congress, or voting for whichever Presidential candidate you think can save America's health care system, we may be able to have an impact on American's health care system.

So the best part is that each and every one of us is part of the solution -- in fact, the solution relies on us.

Whether you are concerned about the care about the quality of your own health care, or the status of health care in America -- or both -- a wonderful first step in your education is reading Dr. Rich Fogoros' Fixing American Healthcare.

Thought provoking. Dr. Fogoros foregoes the usual cliches seen in proposing health care fixes. His analysis of our current system, including how we got here, is very insightful, and rings true to someone working in healthcare. American healthcare is very complex and won't be fixed in a sweeping reform, especially by the government, so cinergy health insurance is difficult to propose changes in a scientific way, but he backs up his proposals with sufficient anecdotes and facts to make them plausible. A must read for someone interested in the future of our healthcare.

On target, but simplistic. Dr. Fogoros overarching message, that rationing exists already and must be openly addressed by any reform proposal is dead-on. When demand exceeds supply, as any high-school economics student will tell you, rationing occurs.

Beyond that, however, I found little else compelling in his treatise for reform. Much of what was presented was presented without reference or support. More could have been done to develop his position had he provided historical perspective, point and counterpoint arguments, or even more germane anecdotal stories concerning the current state of healthcare.

Instead, I found his positions to be shallow and poorly developed. "Redefining Healthcare" by Porter and Teisberg is a much richer (and more academic) book, while Halvorson's "Healthcare Reform Now!" and Gratzer's "The Cure" provide much more detailed insight's into healthcare woes without reading like a new car owner's manual. I love cinergy health insurance .

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Why a Bird Flu Pandemic Will Overwhelm Our Healthcare System

If you think our healthcare system has problems now, how do you think it will fare in the event of a bird flu pandemic? Avian influenza is currently not spread by person-to-person contact. Since 2003, 165 people worldwide have contacted bird flu and about 88 of those people have died. Those individuals all had close contact with infected birds. Scientists fear that it is only a matter of time before the virus mutates into a form that can be spread by human contact. When that happens it could spread around the world within weeks or months. Governments around the world are scrambling to find solutions to prevent that from happening. Antivirals such as Tamiflu are being stockpiled. Current inventory may only cover about 20% of the population or less. If a pandemic breaks out, those stockpiles would quickly dwindle. New antivirals would take 6 months to get into high volume production and distributed to those who need it.

In the event of an influenza pandemic, our healthcare system will be stretched to the limit. If we examine the numbers we can see the frightening scenario. Based on a “mild” pandemic this is what we are looking at:

Population of the United States: 295,000,000
10-20% of the population becomes ill: 29,500,000-59,000,000
Percentage of people requiring hospitalization 10% 2,950,000
Number of hospital beds nationwide: 955,768
Number of ventilators nationwide: 100,000

Some of those numbers may be conservative. The percentage of the population that becomes ill could be 30-50%. The number of available hospital beds would go unchanged. Now lets factor in the following facts. Hospitals would not be sitting empty just waiting for flu patients, many are already fill to capacity with everyday illnesses, cancer patients, new babies, and heart attack patients. Those would not go away, they would continue. Doctors offices, hospital emergency rooms and urgent care centers would be filled to capacity with people who are worried they have the flu overwhelming the staff and the need for lab results.

Those needing hospitalization would flood local hospitals that would have nowhere to put them. Most hospitals have very limited space for isolating patients that may be required in the case of influenza. Ventilators are in short supply to begin with and only those most likely to live would be given access. At some point hospitals would need to turn away all but the sickest patients. As in the 1918 influenza, public buildings would have to be open up for additional hospital wards to take care of the ill.

Are there even going to be enough healthcare workers to care for the sick? Many healthcare workers and first responders may stay home out of fear patients may infect them. A percentage will be out sick themselves or caring for family members who are ill. Even if they are not ill, they may need to stay home to take care of children because schools are closed.

There is no surge capacity for supplies such as syringes, IV bags, masks and antiviral drugs. Everything is based on just-in-time delivery. Because supplies of vaccines and antiviral drugs will be inadequate, large numbers of deaths will occur.

Hospitals around the nation are not set up to handle the capacity needed for an influenza pandemic and will be overwhelmed. Serious advanced planning is needed now to handle this potential pandemic crisis.

Cure Your Headache – Without Pills and Drugs

Acupressure has many applications in the management of pain and illness. For chronic headache sufferers, this provides a powerful alternative to taking bottles of painkillers which can lead to serious side effects, addiction and decreased effectiveness over time. A drug-free approach to creating better health and wellness, acupressure is definitely something worth considering if you are experiencing any number of chronic pain issues.

Drawing on centuries of Chinese medical knowledge, acupressure is just one form of numerous bodywork approaches that concentrate on the body’s vital energy flow. Pain and illness is viewed in terms of energy blockage, and using acupressure to resolve this results in both alleviating the symptoms present, and promoting good health overall. By simply applying pressure to specific areas, you can stimulate or relax the related organs or muscles, bringing much needed relief.

Thus, acupressure stimulates your body’s self curative abilities, which is opposed to common painkillers. Acupressure is one of the safest and most effective ways known to control and cure headaches. You do not need any previous knowledge about massage, nor be a medical professional in order to utilize acupressure.

Because of the simplicity, safety and effectiveness of the acupressure, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends it for pain relief. You can practice acupressure on yourself, family member or a friend. You can use the pressure points when a problem first becomes evident, and prevent the development of the headache, or reduce its severity.

By listening to your body’s pain signals, you can take the appropriate action to avoid pain and discomfort. It makes sense to take preventive measures rather than have to deal with the aftermath of a full blown headache, which can disrupt your routine and leave you exhausted.

Just by using one or two acupressure points can be remarkably effective for getting relief from headaches. In addition to that, acupressure is a treatment you can take with you everywhere you go, and it is easy and effortless to apply. For frequent and chronic headache sufferers acupressure may offer a whole new way of life.

The Best Colon Cancer Treatment Options

Among the most spread cancers, colon cancer usually occurs in men and women over the age of 50. The main causes of colon cancer are related to the patient’s diet: very low in fiber and high in fat and calories. By keeping a healthy life style and good eating habits, you can prevent developing cancer of the colon even before this becomes a problem. You might also want to try and check your family history for cases of colon cancer and adopt a healthier diet in order to make sure you will avoid this problem in the future.

Colon cancer treatments are varied and you can choose from a series of traditional and alternative methods of dealing with this condition. Surgery is often the number one choice – the surgeon removes the tumors on the colon, even if the cancer cells are spread beyond the colon itself. This ensures less problems in the future of the patient’s life, reducing chances of bowel problems or internal bleeding. Colon cancer surgery is usually categorized in four main areas: rectum resection, radio frequency ablation, colostomy and colon resection. The surgeon will determine which method is best suited for each individual patient. Detecting cancer at a very early stage is important, as the problem can be corrected in a decisive and final manner. By using a polypectomy, the surgeon will remove suspicious polyps in order to minimize chances of the disease. Local excision may also be used in early stages, in order to remove the cancer cells. After surgery, your hospital should provide you with ongoing support in order to ensure a fast and efficient recovery.

Intra arterial chemotherapy is another treatment worth consideration. This treatment targets tumors by delivering a powerful dose of chemotherapy. Primary systemic chemotherapy is often used before a surgical procedure in order to destroy a large majority of cancer cells. Systemic therapy is usually used with metastatic cancer, while the third method, adjuvant chemotherapy, targets any cancer cells that might have been left over after surgery. All three chemotherapy procedures are delivered through the hepatic artery and are an option if the cancer has spread to the liver.

Another choice comes from chemoembolization treatment. In addition to being delivered intra arterially, this type of treatment blocks the blood flow to the areas affected by cancer. It traps the chemotherapy drugs in the area of the tumor, thus ensuring that they work efficiently and on target.

Lung Cancer - the Truth, the Story

Lung cancer has now become the deadliest of all forms of cancer in many developed countries including the USA where about 170,000 people die from the disease each year. Worldwide this type of cancer kills an estimated 3.5 million people a year; a startling statistic when you consider it's largely preventable.

More than one billion people worldwide are smokers even though nine out of ten lung cancer deaths are caused by smoking. By the year 2020 it's estimated that as many as ten million people a year will die of smoking related diseases unless radical action is taken to curb the advance of the mega-bucks tobacco industry into Third World countries. About three quarters of those ten million deaths will be in developing nations.

Lung Cancer in the developing world

The good news for richer countries is that public health messages seem to be hitting home and lung cancer deaths are starting to decline. The bad news is that if you started smoking 40 years ago (before the dangers were widely known) and you are diagnosed with lung cancer today, you have only a slim chance of surviving more than a year. Lung cancer is rarely detected in its early stages but when it is, the prognosis is good with speedy and appropriate treatment. That is why campaigners are demanding more funding for early detection and research into new and better treatments. But the disease currently receives far less funding in developed countries than other forms of cancer which elicit public sympathy (such as breast and prostate cancer.)

Lung Cancer and passive smoking

There is a certain stigma attached to lung cancer and an attitude that the patient probably brought it on themselves. That is particularly hard for those who started smoking without knowing the health risks and for victims of passive smoking.

Thanks to government regulation and public education the long term picture regarding the reduction of lung cancer deaths in wealthier corners of the world is fairly optimistic. Not so for poorer countries which are the new targets of the tobacco moguls. Tired of being taken to court and hampered by advertising controls in countries like the USA and UK, cigarette manufacturers are now setting their sights on developing nations and governments which are easily lured by the promise of sizeable inward investment.

Cancer Curing Brain Theory Concept

As I continue my theory on curing cancer I wish to further CYA my position. I am not a medical doctor, thank god actually, because the malpractice insurance would drive me nuts. Also since I am not in the medical field at all you cannot sue me for this idea, concept of mine. Now then continuing Part III.

Chemo that is directly induced where needed might work, but we have better technology now and could use specific fluid dynamic beams of energy or radiation pointed at the exact source and area or even non-evasive light. Now then here is some additional information: it is now possible to send thoughts by fax through three-dimensional spatial representation of the brain in hologram video. We have hologram faxing available and Brain Surgeons are using this to show damage in the brain. The guy who thought of it had my friend in Malibu working for his company in LA. Now they can transmit this data by fax, three-dimensional faxing, like sending a cad cam design computer, but you can now fax it with special machinery.

Now we maybe able to use this same idea to send a thought. This relates to my theory of cancer curing so follow along. Wow, eventually the devise would be very small the size of a dime or so to send and receive data or thoughts by way of this devise, this is way in the future, but it could be available to the common man in 20 years or so. Now before this technology gets this small and nano-tech achieves these seemingly impossible feats we can use the basic concept to record a thought for my cancer experiment.

Now just think about this for a second. There have been cancer survivors with very positive thought patterns and attitudes and part of the reason they lived and others died may have been just that. We must mirror these thoughts of strength, character and attitude and place these thought patterns in those who do not have them. We can look into the thought patterns of many cancer survivors and take those and average them and mimic them and place them in the patients. Duplicate them with TMS through fMRI scanning and send those impulses to those areas of the brain of the patient.

Strong patients will be best since those thought patterns can converge. All we have to do is isolate the things I have discussed before in my many articles and in my brain research with regards to the 10,000 chemicals of the brain 2000 interacting at any one time and 200 prevalent. Take the ten strongest components of the 200 and experiment with them. What we are looking for in those miraculous cases, why did they survive, what makes them different, why do some die and others live? We look at the brain areas which light up and release the cancer fighting biological components in each strong willed survivor. We find common ground and record it, then hook a machine up to stimulate those parts of the brain in the other cancer fighting folks.

First we try the first experiment by placing thought of one persons brain into that of another, and yes as strange as this sounds I do believe it is totally possible and as the future marches on, very probable. This experiment to prove my hypothesis takes two people from the same mom, preferably brothers or sisters of the same mom and dad and hopefully born within a short time frame (2-3 years). Grew up and were nurtured by the same parents. Similar birth dates. Twins would also be good for this. To prove my experiment first; You separate the twins by 4000 miles but both at the same altitude preferably sea level. Similar longitude with similar magnetic pulls and similar gravity pull of the Earth; this will make sure that the oxygen level in the brain is similar and it will be a non-artificial environment, not a clean room.

Next; You then hook up a brain scanner that records a thought, a complex one, simple one first time. Then record where in the brain the energy is located in sequence during the thought. This is done all the time. It will take a controlled thought and focused thought at first. Next you send the digital thought sequences to the other coast. You could also fax that three-dimensional model to the East Coast or Pacific side or where you are, and hook up the data and the model to the brother or sister. And recreate the exact impulses where they occurred in the last person on the west coast or East Coast. Provided the diets are similar and the intake is similar, oxygen level, basic genetics are similar, you should have it. The same basic thought. Recorded transferred and sent and then duplicated, Thought transfer.

Now that would be a worthy accomplishment in itself but the possibilities for cancer fighting would be amazing indeed. Now obviously you do not reveal the thought to the other person, let them tell you what the thought is or was. A thought is recorded and therefore timeless. Thoughts can travel through time at least we can travel thoughts to the future. Just like knowledge. Or at least this has been theorized by many including Einstein. Now for my experiment once concept of thought transfer is proven: Now after this is done, you take a cancer survivors abilities of focusing in their own your body, mimic the diet and intake of that person with the patient anywhere in the world.