Header image  
We Deliver Health  
line decor
  HOME  ::  
line decor
   
 
Whole Care

Whole Care is a common sense overhaul to health care delivery. Do we need an overhaul?

The first thing to recognize is that the phrase "health care" is a marketing spin.

Think about it: our health care system, including hospitals, insurance companies, and even doctors do nothing for you when you're healthy. You only use their services when you're sick. They deliver sickness care. Excepting emergency care, the sickness provider network is solely for sick people.

Sickness Care versus Health Care

Why is this an issue?

This is where the common sense part comes in. Healthy people don't need sickness care. In other words, investing in health saves sickness dollars.

Sickness care services rarely if ever resolve health issues. Sickness care is exclusively dedicated to abolishing symptoms. Symptoms usually occur because an underlying health issue needs to be resolved. Abolishing the symptom, without regard to the underlying health issue compounds the problem, and ultimately the expense.

Sickness care practices entirely disregard health. This is really bad.

Health care that resolves the underlying cause of sickness is always superior to symptomatic treatment. Eliminating cause enables more permanent treatment results.. Patients avoid side effects. Disease costs go down.

Whole Care is health care. It's that simple.

Great Unused Technology

Over the last 20 years, there have been truly astounding advances in true health care. These advances don't reach you because they won't make big dollars for anybody -- so there's no motivation to deploy them.

We respect that this is very different from what you're used to hearing. We were skeptical too until we committed to understanding the real differences in sickness versus health care. We investigated many technologies both scientifically and in practice.

Needless to say, we were surprised. Health care results we observed weren't just better than the corresponding sickness care alternatives. The differences were huge both in performance and cost.

A Practical Example

This section explicitly illustrates why sickness care just isn't good enough anymore. Sickness care technology is at least decade behind true health care technology.

Here is an comparison of the sickness care version and the health care for a disease that affects 15% of Americans over 40:

  Health Care Sickness Care
Treatment Expel gall stones with food Surgically remove gall bladder
Cost $10 $2500
Side effects 1 day of diarrhea Permanently damaged fat digestion, increased risk of lipid (fat) metabolic disorders including diabetes and cancer.
Recovery Time 1 day 1-2 Weeks
Recurrence Possiblity Yes - gall baldder still exists. Repeat flush. No. Gall bladder completely removed.
Causal Resolution

Partial

Gall stone formation is a symptom of dietary and often lipid metabolism dysfunction. A procedure that purges gall stones doesn't fix the tendency for stones to form.

Diet must be adjusted to include foods that dissolve gall stones, or prevent their formation. Cause is unresolved, but at least the digestive organ is still in place. It is easy to repeat the flush if symptoms recur.

 

Disastrously No

Gall bladder removal eliminates all symptoms permanently, but does not fix the problem because the liver still produces stones so the cause remains intact.

Absent the ability to store bile, the patient's digestion is permanently damaged. Bile enables fat digestion. Fats are both essential and unavoidable in our diet. Poor fat digestion is a cofactor in many diseases.

Treatment Facility At Home Hospital or outpatient facility
Results

If you happen to be in the 15% of Americans, your best treatment choice should be pretty clear.

Sanity dictates that you won't want to have an organ chopped out when there's another choice.

Try it yourself

If you'd like more detail about Gall Baldder Disease, visit the National Institute for Health links: National Digestive Diseases Information Clearinghouse (NDDIC) for medical explanations of gall bladder disease.

These articles illustrate how we are misled into unnecessary, debilitating, and expensive procedures with misinformation. We posted a critical review of the NDDIC article here.

This obvious example enables any reader to see if we're telling the truth. Anybody can find the truth for themselves. Over ten thousand of people achieved similar results with the the $10 procedure.

A liver flush often helps people feel better. Even if you don't have gall bladder disease, flushing can improve your health. LIterally cleaning the pipes enables the liver and gall bladder to do their job better. This therapy improves digestion and this in turn improves the health of the entire body.

The numbers don't lie. Approximately 15% of Americans will get gall bladder disease. This amounts to 500,000 unnecessary and avoidable surgery every year. Each surgery costs about $2500 amounting to an annual pricetag of $1.25 Billion dollars.

You pay these dollars as health insurance

Here is more information regarding Gall Bladder Disease.

Sanity Check

Agreeing to unnecessary organ removal is borderline insane, especially when there is an easy, safe, inexpensive alternative that gives superior results at home.

The alert reader will wonder just how many other diseases can be successfully treated with health care technology.

Whole Care integrates many health technologies that aid recovery from Diabetes, Heart Disease, Cancer and others. Most of the time, health care is irrefutably better than sickness care that employs a destructive or irreversible procedure.

Whole Care uses Health Technology first and Sickness Technology as a backup. It is the right thing to do.

Video Library
If you'd like more information about true health care with Whole Care, we invite you visit our video library.
 
 
 
       
t="web hit counter" border="0">