Friday, May 25, 2012

Fejfar Law and Medicine Articles Blog: The Yahoo Helath Article on Calcium and Heart Fail...

Fejfar Law and Medicine Articles Blog: The Yahoo Helath Article on Calcium and Heart Fail...: The Yahoo Health article by Lisa Collier Cool, which appeared on Yahoo News on May 24, 2012, which deals with calcium consumption and heart ...

The Yahoo Helath Article on Calcium and Heart Failure

The Yahoo Health article by Lisa Collier Cool, which appeared on Yahoo News on May 24, 2012, which deals with calcium consumption and heart disease, is fatally flawed.   It appears that Collier compiled a number of old studies, and upon this, has asserted that there is a higher risk of getting a heart attack if a person takes calcium pills as apposed to taking none at all.   Now here are the flaws in her article:

1.    The standard deviation in the studies have not been disclosed.    Any standard deviation higher than
             .0001%  is invalid.   Many researchers have been caught using standard deviations higher than
               1 or 100% which are totally invalid.   At a standard deviation of  1 or 100% all of the data is
               excluded.

2.     Assuming a study group of  1,000, as cited in the article, with 6 heart attacks per, 1,000,
                then a person has only a   .6% chance of getting a heart attack when using calcium.

3.     Assuming a study group of  30,000, as cited in the article, with 6 heart attacks per,
              30,000, then a person has only a .02% chance of getting a heart attack when using calcium.

4.    As to the bone fracture statistic, we do not know the circumstances surrounding the fracture.
       For example, falling off a staircase from 15 feet down to concrete is a much different
       situation than simply slipping and falling on a sidewalk.

5.    We do not know if the 6 persons smoked cigarettes or not.   Smoking cigarettes is thought
          to be a significant cause of heart attacks, etc.

6.     We do not know the ages of the 6 persons, each could be in their 90's in terms of age,
              when it is much more likely to die of a heart attack.

7.    We do not know the diet for each person.   Malnutrition can be a cause of heart failure

8.   We do not know that amount of calcium supplement tablets that each person was taking.

Given the foregoing,  the article that Ms. Collier is flawed and should not be taken seriously.

Friday, January 13, 2012

Health and Drinking Water


Drinking Water quality in the United States is very uneven. In fact, in many areas there may even be natural toxics which adversely affect drinking water quality. Also, cyanide from cyanide rendering plants, in rivers, lakes, streams and underground springs and aquifers, can poison drinking water. And, acid rain from burning high sulpher coal which puts sulpheric acid into lakes, rivers, streams, and ground water. Water quality can also be adversely affected by agricultural run off such as herbicides, pesticides, and fertilizer. The long term solution to this problem is to regulate pollution which affects water quality. The short term solution is to put a good water filter on you kitchen drinking water faucet. The Pur Water Filter System is affordable and works well. You install the Pure Water Filter attachment onto your kitchen water faucet and then you need to change the filter about once a month for best results. The Pur attachment costs about $30 and the filters are about $10 each. A p[hoto of the Pur Water Filter is shown above.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Fejfar Law and Medicine Articles Blog: Ether in Drinking Water and Air is a Potential Se...

Fejfar Law and Medicine Articles Blog: Ether in Drinking Water and Air is a Potential Se...: "I am putting forth a theory that Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, and other areas in America and the Earth may be subject to a serious health..."

Ether in Drinking Water and Air is a Potential Serious Health Problem

I am putting forth a theory that Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, and other areas in America and the Earth may be subject to a serious health risk involving Ether in the environment. Here is my theory:
1. Cynad Powder as natural deposits near river, stream or lake water, and or,
Cyanide industrial wastes dumped into lakes, rivers, and streams.

2. Cyanid combined with H2O, Water, produces Liquid Cyanide.

3. Liquid Cyanide combined with wood in water creates Methyl Alchohol,
that is, wood alchohol, which is a serious poison.

4. Methyl Alchohol in drinking water combined with salt water naturally occurring in
some rivers and lakes, and or, salt water in the human blood stream, combines
to create the anaesthetic, Ether. Ether in water can cause, death, a coma, loss of
consciousness, and numbness in the extremeties.

5. When this water evaporates and becomes fog or snow, then methyl choloride gas is
produced and air borne Ether gas.

6. When the sunlight hits methyl chloride gas in a significant way, this combines to
produce Cyanide gas in the air which is a deadly poison.

It may be that caffeine is an antidote to the above by turning the water into sugar. But this may then produce diabetes in persons. It may be that Ether in drinking water and the air is what produces numbness in the extremities in many people, not diabetes.

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Fejfar Law and Medicine Articles Blog: Weight Standards for Men and Women in the United S...

Fejfar Law and Medicine Articles Blog: Weight Standards for Men and Women in the United S...: "The weight standards used by doctors in the United States are totally irrational. It appears that the 'normative' standard that they are usi..."

Weight Standards for Men and Women in the United States

The weight standards used by doctors in the United States are totally irrational. It appears that the "normative" standard that they are using is not normative at all. If they are taking an average of any group, this is not statistically valid. Even if they are taking an average of an ethnic group, this is not statistically valid. For example, Czechs, Germans, Latvians, etc., in the United States have Viking blood, and the men tend to be over 6' 5" tall, and they are big boned. The studied of men for weight do not account for bone size and bone density. The weight studies do not account for muscalature versus fat. For example, a professional athlete, who has virtually no body fat, who weighs 275 pounds, can be wrongfully, diagnosed as grossly obese. For example, when I was just out of law school, and was working out at the gym, lifting weights, swimming, and jumping rope, three time a week, as a 6' 5" male, my doctor told me that I should lose 10 pounds. This is absolutely ridiculous. Now, what I think is really going on is that these alleged studies are based on studies or models that are totally irrational. For example, it may be that American weight standards after World War II are based on a study of the weights of Japanese prisoners of war, who are small in stature, and who had been on starvation rations in an American Prisoner of War Camp for at least 6 months. The pre-World War II weight standards for Officers (college educated men) show that a 6' 5" male, officer, should weight between 350 and 450 pounds. See, for example, the weight of General Schwartkopf from the Gulf War. I have also heard that the Clinton weight standards were put togather by Hilary Clinton, and that the weight standards for men are based upon the weight of women. Apparently, the misogonsita (male hater) Hilllary Clinton was doing everything she could to torture and destroy American men. Finally, to the extent any seemingly valid studies have been done, they have probably been done with irrational standard deviations above .01% .