Dr. Nicholas Gonzalez, Renowned New York City Physician, Talks About Health Risks from Electromagnetic Fields // Childhood cancer rate soars in Northern California counties // Napa explores reasons for high cancer rates // Malignant brain tumors most common cause of cancer deaths in adolescents and young adults //
Hmm! I wonder if there is a connection between the increasing levels of cancer — especially brain cancer, especially in Napa County, and especially among children and adolescents — and what Dr. Nicolas Gonzales has to say? It is good to see that doctors are now catching on with what I have been saying for over the last ten years. ;)
paul
EMF Refugee
Dr. Nicholas Gonzalez, Renowned New York City Physician, Talks About Health Risks from Electromagnetic Fields
"...There is no question that the proliferation of EMF activity in the environment is creating havoc among patients, among healthy people who then become patients. There is no question that it has led, I believe, or at least contributed to the increase in cancer rates. I was talking to a friend of mine, who is a physician, just this morning. I was talking about the explosion of cancer in children. Childhood cancer is exploding exponentially, not linearly, but exponentially. Well, why is that? Well, all these kids are on little devices. I watched my wife's nephew; he's eight years old. The guy is superb. He's been on a computer since he was three years old. My neighbor has a two-year-old, three-year-old baby... child. He's on a computer. (Unintelligible). They grow up with that. And they are on these hours a day. I didn't grow up with that. I grew up in the old days when you took your bicycle out in the dirt. Now they have all this computer technology with all these EMFs they are being exposed to. And then people wonder why brain cancer levels are increasing, why are these rare cancers increasing in children? Of course it is increasing. Yes, it is a complicated issue. It's the increased pollution. Pollution isn't getting better; it's getting worse. The quality of the food for the average person who doesn't eat organically is not getting better; it is getting worse. GMOs are a nightmare that didn't exist 15 years ago. GMO foods I believe are toxic. And then you get the whole EMF thing which is like this hidden mystery that no one is addressing — even people in the alternative world tend to ignore it. It is no longer enough to eat organically, and do your carrot juice, and take your supplements, and do your detoxification. Great! But what are you going to do about about EMFs if you are living above a router which is giving you enough electricity to send a rocket to the moon? It's a real serious issue...."
Childhood cancer rate soars in Northern California counties
PALO ALTO, California – California’s upward trend in the rates of new cancer diagnoses of children and youth up to age 19 closely mirrors that of the nation, but in a number of Northern California counties, rates have risen precipitously between 2000-2004 and 2008-2012, according to Kidsdata.org of the Lucile Packard Foundation for Children’s Health.
In Napa and Marin counties (near San Francisco), rates rose by 69 percent and 58 percent, to reach 22.8 and 21.5 per 100,000, respectively—the highest in the state.
Read more: http://globalnation. inquirer.net/129004/childhood- cancer-rate-soars-in-northern- california-counties# ixzz43NWazGAc
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Napa explores reasons for high cancer rates
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BARRY EBERLING beberling@napanews.com
- Feb 27, 2016
In addition, the group Kidsdata.org reported Napa County from 2008-2012 had 22.8 cancer incidents per 100,000 children, the highest rate in the state. That compares to the statewide rate of 17.5 and marks an increase from the county’s 2002-2004 rate of 13.5.
The county will look at whether this rise in local childhood cancers is a trend or a statistical anomaly. Marin, Sonoma, Sacramento and San Mateo counties also saw significant increases.
- Feb 27, 2016
In addition, the group Kidsdata.org reported Napa County from 2008-2012 had 22.8 cancer incidents per 100,000 children, the highest rate in the state. That compares to the statewide rate of 17.5 and marks an increase from the county’s 2002-2004 rate of 13.5.
The county will look at whether this rise in local childhood cancers is a trend or a statistical anomaly. Marin, Sonoma, Sacramento and San Mateo counties also saw significant increases.
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