Eric

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Eric

Eric

@Paintdrjr

Southern New Jersey Katılım Haziran 2009
1.9K Takip Edilen156 Takipçiler
paracelsus
paracelsus@dogalmaxx·
(alfa-blokerler) ve DHT hormonunu yok eden, cinsel hayatı bitiren tehlikeli ilaçlara (Finasterid vb.) mahkum edilir. Bu yaklaşım dogmatik bir felakettir çünkü prostatit vakalarının %90'ından fazlası "abakteriyeldir" (ortada bir mikrop yoktur). Prostatit; bakteriyel bir ++
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paracelsus
paracelsus@dogalmaxx·
Ana akım üroloji, Prostatit'i (Prostat İltihabı) genellikle "gizli bir bakteri enfeksiyonu" veya "yaşlanmaya bağlı prostat büyümesinin (BPH) bir parçası" olarak değerlendirir. Hastalar aylarca, hatta yıllarca hiçbir işe yaramayan ağır antibiyotik kürlerine, kas gevşeticilere ++
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Andrew Panella
Andrew Panella@Longevity_EDU·
Big Pharma doesn't want you to know about this supplement. It lowers insulin resistance by up to 42% in 8 weeks. It's like a natural Ozempic and the mechanism is actually legit. Here's how Psyllium Husk helps fix insulin resistance (bookmark this): 🧵
Andrew Panella tweet media
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Manifest_Lord
Manifest_Lord@Manifest_Lord·
Dr. James pennebaker spent 30 years studying why some people recover from trauma and others don't. He found the same pattern in every person WHO healed. It had nothing to do with therapy or time. Medicine ignored it. His patients didn't. 🪡
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hunter
hunter@hxxntrr·
Your health insurance just denied your claim. Good. Now you can make them pay it They deny roughly 17% of all claims on first submission. Internal processing. No human reviewed your file. No doctor looked at your case An algorithm flagged it and the system auto-generated a denial letter because the default answer is no And it works. Because about 65% of people who get denied never appeal. They read "denied" and assume that's final UnitedHealth Group reported $22 billion in profit last year. That number doesn't happen by approving every claim that comes across the desk The appeal process exists because they're legally required to offer one. They're betting you won't use it Step 1: Read the denial letter word by word. It has to contain a specific reason code and the clinical basis for denial. This is required under the ACA If the letter doesn't include a specific clinical reason, that itself is a regulatory violation you can report to your state insurance commissioner Step 2: Call your insurance company and ask for the "clinical policy bulletin" they used to deny your claim. They have to give it to you It's the internal document that defines what qualifies for coverage. Read it carefully and find where your situation fits their own criteria Half the time the denial contradicts their own published guidelines Step 3: Get a letter from your doctor. Not a prescription pad note. A proper letter that specifically addresses every reason listed in the denial and explains why the treatment was medically necessary Have them reference the diagnosis code, the procedure code, and cite clinical guidelines supporting the treatment. Doctors write these constantly. Just ask Step 4: File a formal internal appeal. Every plan must offer at least one level under ACA Section 2719. You have 180 days from the denial date Include the doctor's letter, supporting medical records, and a cover letter that addresses each denial reason point by point The internal appeal goes to a different reviewer. Different person. Different assessment. Success rate on internal appeals: 40-60% depending on the denial type Step 5: If the internal appeal fails, file an external review This is where they really don't want you going. Under federal law you have the right to an independent third-party review. The external reviewer does not work for your insurance company Independent physician or panel with zero incentive to side with the insurer External review overturn rates: 40-72% depending on the state. In some states more than half of all external reviews force the insurance company to pay the full claim "i don't have time for all this" The denial letter took them 3 seconds to generate. Your appeal takes about 30 minutes and could be worth $5K-$200K depending on the procedure Insurance denies a $400 blood panel: most people eat it Insurance denies a $3K ER visit: some people call, get told no again, give up Insurance denies a $15K surgery: person assumes denied means denied Insurance denies a $50K cancer treatment: patient is too exhausted and scared to fight The insurance company sent the exact same form letter for all four. One algorithm. One default answer. One bet that you'll accept it A woman contacted us after her insurance denied a $23K spinal procedure. She'd been in pain for 8 months and assumed the denial was final We filed the internal appeal with her surgeon's letter and clinical guidelines proving the procedure met their own coverage criteria word for word. Denied again Filed external review with the state. Independent reviewer overturned it in 14 days. Insurance paid the full $23K She spent 8 months in pain because she believed a form letter Same claim. Same procedure. Same insurance plan. One person accepted the denial. The other appealed twice. $23K difference The insurance industry has a line item in their financial models for "claims denied that won't be appealed." You are a data point on a spreadsheet and they've already calculated the percentage of you that will give up Don't be the percentage (i fix credit and build capital stacks. this one costs you nothing but 30 minutes. appeal every denial. link in bio for the credit side)
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Rimsha Bhardwaj
Rimsha Bhardwaj@heyrimsha·
If your laptop got stolen tomorrow your entire life would be on someone else's desk by Monday. Tax returns. Client files. Saved passwords. Years of photos. All of it unencrypted and wide open. Here is how to bulletproof it in 25 minutes: ↓
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Eric
Eric@Paintdrjr·
@markkaplan20 @ProfTimNoakes Very interesting and surprising information. I was diagnosed as hypothyroid 13 years ago and never knew it was a risk factor for heart disease. Did you do anything about your hypothyroidism beyond taking thyroid medication?
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Mark Kaplan
Mark Kaplan@markkaplan20·
I have 12 years of blood work. 7 panels. Every result. Every flag. All leading up to my heart attack at 52. They flagged one marker every single time. LDL cholesterol. The only one they cared about. They missed a different marker flagged 4 times. A marker Dr. Broda Barnes called "the riddle of heart attacks" in 1976. Let me show you what they saw, what they missed, and what nearly killed me. 🧵
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Foundation Father | M.A. Franklin
Foundation Father | M.A. Franklin@FoundationDads·
Sir John Glubb, a British Lieutenant General, spent 36 years commanding armies in the Middle East. He studied every major empire in recorded history and found something he didn't expect. Every single empire (Assyria, Persia, Rome, the Arabs, the Ottomans, Spain, Britain) lasted about the same length of time. 250 years. And they all died the same way. (thread) 🧵
Foundation Father | M.A. Franklin tweet media
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LongevityLab
LongevityLab@LxngevityLab·
The first scientist to ever reverse human aging just dropped the craziest interview on the internet. Here are 8 facts David Sinclair revealed about aging that will leave you speechless (THREAD): 1. Cancer & Alzheimer's are symptoms of the same disease.
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Manifest_Lord
Manifest_Lord@Manifest_Lord·
They tried to vanish the R=(WxC)+T formula forever. It's so effective that anything can be solved in just 30 minutes. -Thread- 🧵
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Eric retweetledi
Kenny Yu: Father killed in North York Gen Hospital
My father Peter Yu died in NORTH YORK GENERAL HOSPITAL of Toronto Canada on Sep 28 due to **unhandled cardiac tamponade** for over 72 hours. No telemetry. No oxygen. he died in an empty ward with no one attended. The doctors and the hopstials have no answers and they’re still rightfully harming people everyday!! No one told my mom he was that severe until we learnt from the medical records. My mom collapsed on the road to the hospital in a morning when she heard my father passed. Up to date no mainstream media has covered. Evidence folder : drive.google.com/drive/folders/…
Kenny Yu: Father killed in North York Gen Hospital tweet media
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Peter Clack
Peter Clack@PeterDClack·
Everything meaningful humans ever accomplished: music, architecture, agriculture, technology, science, the pyramids; all occurred in the current Holocene interglacial warm period. Some humans believe we can change the world permanently. The next ice age will show that folly. I've been highlighting these massive natural swings during the Holocene on orbital timescales. CO₂ may be a factor but not the cause. This gives a strong foundation for comparing the Holocene's shorter climate rollercoaster rides, like the Roman and Medieval warm periods - with booming agriculture and expanding empires. The Little Ice Age was a harsh counterpoint, bringing famines and societal strains across Europe. All the while, CO₂ was steady around 270 to 285 ppm. These dramatic ups and downs happened purely on natural variability—solar output, volcanic aerosols blanketing the planet and oceanic and atmospheric circulation flips—without needing CO₂ to budge. Contrast the Holocene regional jumps of 0.5 to 1 degree versus full glacial-interglacial jumps of 4 to 6 degrees globally. The former are just white noise in a longer-term cooling trend after the Holocene thermal maximum (9,000 - 5,000 years ago) but they still packed real punches. Greenland ice cores show Medieval temperature peaks rival or exceed recent decades in the North Atlantic. Tree rings and stalagmites capture the frigid cold swings of the Little Ice Age in Europe. Warmth delivered prosperity, with Roman vineyards in Britain or Viking farms on Greenland. Cold led to hardship, with the Thames freezing and crop failures, triggering migration wars. Modern warmth supports billions better than any previous cold snaps ever could. Why do we celebrate ancient warm eras as golden ages but frame today's milder shifts as catastrophic? Natural precedent shows warmth isn't inherently destructive—the only real changes come from adaptation and scale. Humans are marvelously adaptive. The rest of the world is already adapted via evolution. Shorter-term Holocene fluctuations like the Roman (250 BC-AD 400) and Medieval warm periods (950-1250) and Little Ice Age (1400-1850) are fascinating when stacked against the grander vision of orbital-driven interglacial cycles. They highlight how Earth's climate has always been dynamic on multiple timescales, with warm spells and cold snaps occurring naturally, mostly without major CO₂ shifts. Ice core dat shows atmospheric CO₂ levels have been remarkably stable throughout, hovering around 270 to 285 ppm. CO₂ was essentially flat at 280 ppm during the Roman and Medieval periods, similar to the early Holocene baseline. Even through the protracted cold of the Little Ice Age, with its Thames frost fairs, advancing Alpine glaciers and crop failures, CO₂ didn't drop significantly—it remained in the same narrow range. These warm periods were not driven by rising CO₂ levels. It was other factors, like solar variability, volcanic activity influencing aerosols, ocean circulation shifts (Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation) and other natural variability. By contrast, the broader Holocene picture shows we are in a gradual long-term cooling trend after the earlier much warmer Holocene Optimum. Temperatures then were often 0.5 to 1 degree warmer globally than the pre-industrial baseline. Regional proxies capture those large-scale blips superimposed on an overall slow decline. The Roman and Medieval periods were relatively sudden highs, the Little Ice Age a deeper low (the coldest times of the Holocene for parts of the Northern Hemisphere). Modern warming coincides with CO₂ rising from 280 ppm to over 420 ppm now. Past warm periods supported thriving societies, Roman agricultural expansion and Viking settlements in Greenland in the Medieval warm period. These were regional in many cases though stronger in the North Atlantic and Europe. Nor did the planet have today's populations, urban infrastructure or modern biodiversity.
Peter Clack tweet media
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Mickey Kaus
Mickey Kaus@kausmickey·
My strong guess is the cutoff of poorer Americans from free NFL telecasts has done more to damage social equality (and community) than all the billionaire-creation of the 21st century. The billionaires spend $, cocoon themselves with 100 ft. hedges. Doesn't directly affect millions of citizens' lives the way this does.
Dan Rogers@DannyPhantom24

This is a letter my uncle wrote to the NFL. I know many fans feel this same sentiment.

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Babak Taghvaee - The Crisis Watch
Babak Taghvaee - The Crisis Watch@BabakTaghvaee1·
#Breaking: The Islamic Regime of #Iran has decided to begin mass executions of arrested protesters. Executions are set to start on Wednesday. The names of some protesters scheduled for execution have already been announced. One of them is Erfan Soltani, who is to be executed in Karaj. He was arrested on January 9 and is scheduled to be executed on January 14. He was allowed to meet his family today for the final time, for just 10 minutes. There are hundreds of other protesters reportedly planned for mass execution. If this regime is not overthrown, this number could rise to thousands. The regime has officially admitted to arresting more than 10,000 protesters, though the real number may be three to four times higher. #IranProtests
Babak Taghvaee - The Crisis Watch tweet media
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Muy.Mona/🇪🇸💚
Muy.Mona/🇪🇸💚@Capitana_espana·
Sábado 10 de enero de 2026. Una noche más les cortan la luz. Multitudes inundan la plaza Ponak en Teherán COMPARTE. ES LA ÚNICA FORMA DE AYUDARLES🙏
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