Yeast Syndrome
In this video, John Parks Trowbridge spends about 32 minutes speaking on "Yeast Syndrome" at the 45th Annual Cancer Convention held on Labor Day weekend by the Cancer Control Society.
About Dr. John Parks Trowbridge
After graduating high school as an Eagle Scout and National Merit Scholar, Dr. John Parks Trowbridge MD pursued his education at prestigious institutions, including Stanford, where he studied Biological Sciences with graduate courses in immunology, biochemistry, and pharmacology, Case Western Reserve for medical school, and the Florida Institute of Technology Medical Research Institute for preventive medicine. He received graduate training in general and urological surgery from San Francisco and the University of Texas/Houston before establishing a general practice of medicine in Humble in 1978.
Throughout his career, Dr. John Parks Trowbridge MD has become an internationally recognized expert in several advanced anti-aging/longevity treatment strategies. He has authored several popular books and articles on topics such as The Yeast Syndrome, toxic heavy metals and chronic illness, heart disease, and arthritis treatments. Dr. John Parks Trowbridge MD is also a specialist in hormones and longevity medicine recognized by the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine, in heavy metal toxicology by the American Board of Clinical Metal Toxicology, and in arthritis and pain medicine by the American Board of Biological Reconstructive Medicine.
Dr. John Parks Trowbridge MD's primary passion is finding solutions for chronic conditions that have a detrimental impact on individuals' lives, resulting in disability, discomfort, and a lower quality of life. Over the last three decades, he has developed and refined elegant hormonal, nutritional, metabolic, and other treatment programs that have successfully restored vitality, comfort, activity, and appearance for thousands of his patients.
Transcription
Has everybody. What? OK. That was the awake test as I'm starting, first of all, Allstate, I'm a Houston refugee. So if we'll give pause to consider the four dozen people who have died in the last week and the hundred and fifty thousand buildings that have been damaged or destroyed, the flooding will continue. It will get worse. So please keep all of the Texans, Louisianans, Arkansas Indians and so on. Even up to Nashville in your prayers. The reason I'm so casually dressed is because 10 days ago, I left for Virginia for a scheduled meeting and couldn't get back. I guess, thank God. So I flew from Virginia here yesterday. So I have a question. How many of you would spend a hundred dollars a minute to hear me for the next 30 minutes? There he goes. A few. OK. Good. Cause basically I spend one hundred dollars a minute to be able to talk with you. So I'm going to make it worth my while and we'll make it worth your while as well. So buckle up. Hang on. And let's see if we can make this thing work. So Lorraine wanted to call it the syndrome. Fine. Whatever. I wanted to call it Death by Doctor. Can you blame those who simply don't know? And really, we're going to be talking about deep blood fungus, which is something I can 100 percent guarantee you you have not heard about. We're going to talk about explaining unexplained illnesses. Now, I would like to share with you Doug Hoffman, one of my wonderful friends, presented the science. You're gonna have a fun time with this lecture cause, you know, we're going to talk about how people suffer when doctors simply say, well, you just have to learn to live with it. Well, you know, you already live with it. You want to learn how to live without it. That would be the plan. What we don't know is pretty dangerous. You know, if you had diabetes in 1993, there was a problem. But in 24, Banting discovered insulin. In 1978, Trus came up with this idea about Candida. Albert, can some yeast associated with depression and other illnesses. In 2007, Simone. She said, hey, cancer's a fungus. You know, these people had been kind of nagging Edison saying maybe we don't know all the things that we need to know, but we should. And so what happens is we hop onto a medical merry go round because we go to doctors who deal with the organ rather than doctors who deal with the cause. And we feel very much like we were on a hamster wheel just