Autism with Rhonda » The Journey: Home from Autism: "7 years of hands-on work with my son: my game that taught him to talk again, the diet that my doctor called a ‘Behavior Modifying Diet, the writing program that taught him to pretend, links we love, recipes, recommendations and SO much more!
292 pages cover everything: beginning when my son was mercury poisoned at two by an immunization and ending with him no longer qualifying for services at school at ten years old. What triggers Autism? What / Who can help and Why!
7,000 hours of logged research: the things that I discovered that changed the way I look at medicine, life, health and (most of all) people with auto-immune disorders. My journey is on education and positive awareness: From Suspicion to Success!"
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Monday, January 4, 2010
Prospects rosy for adult stem-cell treatments
The past decade spelled success in research with adult stem cells.
The one area in stem-cell research where there have been no successful treatments is research on human embryos, which involves killing a tiny human being. Dr. David Prentice of the Family Research Council tells OneNewsNow there has been progress in a related field, that of induced pluripotent stem cells that can be developed by taking, for example, skin cells and adding a few genes and reprogramming the cell so it looks and acts like an embryonic stem cell.
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The one area in stem-cell research where there have been no successful treatments is research on human embryos, which involves killing a tiny human being. Dr. David Prentice of the Family Research Council tells OneNewsNow there has been progress in a related field, that of induced pluripotent stem cells that can be developed by taking, for example, skin cells and adding a few genes and reprogramming the cell so it looks and acts like an embryonic stem cell.
Read Entire Article
Labels:
breakthroughs,
cancer,
health,
medicine,
researchers,
stem cell
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