Toxic World, Challenges
In this video, Doris Rapp spends about 28 minutes speaking on "Toxic World, Challenges" at the 38th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
About Doris Rapp
DORIS RAPP, M.D. received her B.A. Degree, magna cum laude and M.A. from the University of Buffalo, New York and her M.D. from New York University Bellevue Medical Center in 1955. Then she completed 3 years of Pediatric Training at Children’s Hospital of Buffalo, followed by an Allergy and Immunology Fellowship.
Dr. Rapp is Board Certified in Pediatrics and Pediatric Allergy and is now a Clinical Assistant Professor (Emeritus) of Pediatrics at The State University of New York at Buffalo. She practiced Traditional Allergy for 18 years and then, after learning about Environmental Medicine in 1975, began to incorporate these principles and other Alternative Therapies into her Pediatric Allergy Practice.
She has published over 30 medical articles, authored chapters in medical texts and written over 7 “how to” books for the public about Allergy. She has also produced educational audio tapes. Her DVD’s clearly demonstrate the dramatic physical and behavioral changes that can be produced using the more precise Provocation/Neutralization Method of Allergy Testing. This newer technique shows cause and effect relationships in a few minutes, quickly relieving symptoms.
Her most well known book is the New York Times best seller, Is This Your Child?, followed by Is This Your Child’s World? Her latest, Our Toxic World – A Wake Up Call, tells what makes so many ill, in so many ways, and explains what to do about it. Dr. Rapp also has a new book coming out in the next few weeks titled 32 Tips That Could Save Your Life. For details, see www.drrapp.com.
She may be contacted through her websites at www.greenhealthmedia.com or www.drrapp.com and e-mail [email protected].
Transcription
I wish to thank Frank.
And I wish to thank the.
Can you believe it? I just blacked on her name. Lorraine. Have thought of her last name, but not of first. At any rate, let's start right at the beginning. We have some terrible challenges in our world today. I'd like to emphasize the positive things that we can do. But we have to face reality. The average unborn child is now has been shown to have two hundred and eighty seven toxic chemicals in their blood at birth. These chemical damage the brain and the nervous system. So we're going to have more children with birth defects and developmental delays. This these chemicals will damage the endocrine systems. So we're going to have more diabetes in children. More thyroid disease, more adrenal disease. These chemicals damage the reproductive system in particularly the males. And if the mother eats a lot of plastic from storing food in plastic when she's pregnant with the little boy, the little boy is going to have undescended testicles, a smaller penis, and changes in his sexuality. Should we be concerned? I think we should be very, very concerned about what we are doing to the next generation. We we immediately after birth, we give the baby a vaccination that isn't really needed. Then the next thing we do is we give them a genetically engineered formula because many mothers don't breastfeed. But even if the mother breastfeeds the two hundred and eighty seven chemicals that are found in the baby are concentrated tenfold in that mother's breast milk. So unless she has been informed to clean her body up, she is going to have all these chemicals in her body. And she's and she's actually marinating her unborn child in the uterus and all in this chemical solution. And we don't do anything to educate young couples about how to prevent all these illnesses. We don't tell them how to have a healthy child. If a man, it takes about sixty five days for sperm to develop. If a man uses chem lawn on this on the on the lawn nearby, within sixty five days of when he conceives a child, his sperm may not be normal and he may have a defective baby. If a mother is exposed to chemicals within the first three months of her pregnancy, she has a 70 percent chance of having a baby with him, having a miscarriage, a stillborn or a birth defective baby.
Should we. Should we educate people about this? We are doing our jobs. We aren't taking care of the unborn. We aren't taking care of the children properly after they get here.