The Disease Delusion Flashcards
The author states that “so-called diseases” are dysfunctions of each individual’s physiological
functioning: they are due to varied causes, and they demand treatment approaches as different from
one another as there are individuals.
T
According to the author, the incidence of chronic diseases is on the rise, with the incidence of
arthritis, hypertension, and chronic fatigue syndrome taking up more time in the doctor’s office each
year.
T
The quarter century from 1985 through 2010 saw a dramatic increase in the number of individuals
diagnosed with diabetes, COPD, cardiovascular disease, stroke, and depression
T
In 2014, nearly half of the adults in the United States suffered from at least one chronic disease.
T
A study published in 2012 identified the factors that lead to the “global burden of disease.” The
study covering the years from 1990 through 2010 used a measure called the disability-adjusted life
year, or DALY.
T
Medical schools offer little education on how to manage and even prevent chronic illnesses.
T
Drugs used for chronic illnesses do not help an individual; they manage major symptoms or a set of
symptoms. Over time, the symptoms become worse, with the outcome of treatment not being a
return to good health, but rather an increased disability and a diminished quality of life.
T
Polypharmacy is defined as a single drug to treat many symptoms of an illness or disease
F
Many patients actually become well when taking medications for their illnesses due to the benefits
of the drugs and limited adverse reactions of a drug or drugs combined together.
F
The author states we are hard-wired to develop chronic disease as a result of faulty genes from our
parents and grandparents
F
The BRCA gene and the incidence of developing breast cancer have decreased from 85 percent in
1940 to 24 percent in 2013. The author states it is not the gene that changed, it is instead the
environment influencing the gene’s expression that has changed.
F
Research continues to demonstrate that only about 70 percent of chronic diseases result from
inheritance, while at least 30 percent were shown to come from something else—namely, from the
influence of the environment, diet, and lifestyle on genetic expression.
F
The total number of genes in the human genome is approximately 100,000, with more than 1 million
variants called single nucleotide polymorphisms [SNPs] in the human body.
F
Dr. Roger Williams suggested that the recommended dietary allowance [RDA] levels of nutrients
established by the FDA were more than adequate to cover the largest percentage of the population.
F
Dr. Linus Pauling coined the term “orthomolecular” and titled a paper “Orthomolecular Psychiatry,”
proposing that certain forms of mental illness were the result of an alteration in the patient’s
metabolism, which Dr. Pauling believed resulted from insufficient nutrient intake.
T
Autism has increased in the past 50 years from one confirmed case in 8,000 to one case in 50,
according to the CDC in 2012. The author poses the question: Is it just better detection, or are more
children being affected, or both?
T
According to Dr. Michael Stone, autistic spectrum disorder [ASD], while unique in the presentation
of symptoms for each child, shares a common range of environmental factors, including diet,
lifestyle, and therapies that may increase or decrease the genetic expression of characteristics that
are termed autism.
T
The ApoE4 gene associated with Alzheimer’s disease does not create the disease by itself; rather, it
describes an increased susceptibility to the disease as a result of the individual’s lifestyle and diet,
which have the greatest effect.
T
In a study published in 2005 in the New England Journal of Medicine, it was suggested that given
the chronic disease problems in children in the USA, the greatest possibility exists that the current
generation of children will be the first in history to have a shorter life span than their parents.
T
The inhabitants of the island of Ikaria live well into their nineties. The author says their good health
and the fact that they avoid chronic disease are the result of their diet of fresh food, exercise, and
good lifestyle.
T
The Ikarian people seem to have stronger genes than many populations, for as they move to other
locations, they appear to be protected from developing the chronic diseases of the countries to which
they move.
F
Dr. Bland coins the term “thrifty” in relation to the Pima Indians genes. He states: If anything, the
Pima Indians over centuries and out of a necessity to survive starvation developed the ability to
“hold on to food calories.”
T
The seven core processes are: Assimilation & Elimination, Detoxification, Defense, Cellular
Communications, Cellular Transport, Energy, and Structure.
T
Biomarkers measure characteristics that are known to be associated with specific physiological
processes and that can thus signal health or disease.
T
Enteric microflora belong to one of three families of bacteria—symbiotic, commensal, or parasitic,
with both symbiotic and commensal bacteria living in harmony with our bodies.
T