Saturday, March 4, 2023

The hospital that cured DIABETES in 71,512 people

Hello ,

A rogue doctor and researcher at Newcastle University cured diabetes in 71,512 people, lowering their glycemia in less than 5 seconds: 

Look at what he is doing

People fly to his UK hospital from all over the world - but now, for the first time, you can do this from home!

The doctor explains: "If you target the root cause of pancreatic disorders, diabetes will be a thing of the past; it's just a matter of activating a little-known reversing switch in our bodies."

Both men and women responded to this remedy and age is not an issue either.

The effect is all the more spectacular the longer you have diabetes.

Learn About the Root Cause of Diabetes in This Revealing Short Documentary

Be well, 

Dawn












In palaeontology, with only comparative anatomy (morphology) from fossils as evidence, the concept of a chronospecies can be applied. During anagenesis (evolution, not necessarily involving branching), palaeontologists seek to identify a sequence of species, each one derived from the phyletically extinct one before through continuous, slow and more or less uniform change. In such a time sequence, palaeontologists assess how much change is required for a morphologically distinct form to be considered a different species from its ancestors.[49][50][51][52] Viral quasispecies Main article: Viral quasispecies Viruses have enormous populations, are doubtfully living since they consist of little more than a string of DNA or RNA in a protein coat, and mutate rapidly. All of these factors make conventional species concepts largely inapplicable.[53] A viral quasispecies is a group of genotypes related by similar mutations, competing within a highly mutagenic environment, and hence governed by a mutation–selection balance. It is predicted that a viral quasispecies at a low but evolutionarily neutral and highly connected (that is, flat) region in the fitness landscape will outcompete a quasispecies located at a higher but narrower fitness peak in which the surrounding mutants are unfit, "the quasispecies effect" or the "survival of the flattest". There is no suggestion that a viral quasispecies resembles a traditional biological species.[54][55][56] The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses has since 1962 d












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