Barbara O'Neill will answer our questions.
Dr. Barbara O’Neill
is a medical doctor, nutritionist, and a health teacher. One of the best diabetes specialists.
Her professional experience spans more than 30 years.
Remember, the Truth is simple, don't listen to anyone: you can cure diabetes and stabilize your blood sugar once and for all, at any age, at any stage of the disease
A program has been launched in the United States that allows everyone to get the product at a special price!
A month ago, the national program "US without diabetes" was launched, which seems to combat diabetes and its complications. We have been asked many questions, so today we are talking to the curator of the program, Dr. Barbara O’Neill. Barbara O'Neill led the program and was involved in its development, supervising the process. We remind you that the official program has just begun. According to Decree No. 5896, the program provides that every citizen can get the new diabetes product at a reduced price. Delivery takes place throughout the US.
Journalist: Hello, Barbara, where does the need for a national program financed by the government come from? Are regular medical facilities no longer able to treat diabetics??
Hello, the health system is too bureaucratic. It is a huge mechanism with many problems. Of course, conventional medical facilities treat diabetics. Unfortunately, they mainly focus on maintaining the body's stability and combating the effects of the disease. It must be understood, however, that special diets, insulin, and medications only give the distant idea of a normal life. However, the disease itself is not treated. The diabetic continues to die slowly.
As a result, many patients do not receive adequate treatment and help. This is because diabetes is a disease that cannot be underestimated in any case, especially if it is compared to cancerous tumors in terms of mortality.
Journalist: Do you think cancer and diabetes can be compared in terms of mortality rates?
I don't know if they can be compared, but they are also very similar if we look at the mortality rates. The only difference is that diabetes kills much more slowly. The mortality rate, however, for diabetics differs little from that of cancer deaths. And while a patient with a malignant tumor is actively treated and fights for life, diabetics are mainly limited to special diets and insulin injections. Even in the case of treatment, in most cases we cannot say that everything is done well, as recent events have shown.
The rapid increase in the number of patients worldwide increases the number of deaths.
Journalist: How does diabetes kill? With cancer it is clear, but how does diabetes kill?
Dr. Barbara O’Neill:
First of all, there are the classic complications of diabetes: diabetic coma, limb necrosis, gangrene, vision loss, impotence, ketoacidosis and hypoglycemia. They usually occur in diabetes and very often their consequences are fatal. But let's analyze the complications of diabetes in more detail:
Consequences: loss of consciousness, damage to major organs and death
Consequences: loss of sensitivity, high blood sugar levels in a short time, lack of reaction to light, drowsiness and seizures. In the case of an extreme form of the disease, the patient falls into a coma.
Consequences: loss of senses, damage to the respiratory organs, drop in blood pressure and damage to the kidneys. Plus kidney failure
Journalist: Does the list end here?
Consequences: loss of senses, damage to the respiratory organs, drop in blood pressure and damage to the kidneys. Plus kidney failure
It is only part of the complications that can appear immediately, a few months after the disease develops. In 2-3 years, other complications may occur, such as:
1. Retinopathy: damage to the retina that can later lead to hemorrhage and retinal detachment. over time, this can lead to vision loss. Retinopathy is very common in people with type 2 diabetes. The patient loses sight completely.