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  1. Oct 14, 2020 · It's difficult to out-Oz Dr. Oz, America's Quack, who has raked in giant piles of money by promoting pseudoscience on his TV show. But at least one person comes perilously close: Dr. Mark Hyman. Hyman is the "Dr. Oz" of nutrition. He embraces legitimate science if and only if it suits his bottom line.

  2. Feb 15, 2018 · We’ve met Dr. Hyman before many times. For instance, he has argued for turning back the clock and relying on anecdotal medicine instead of scientific medicine and has mangled cancer research and systems biology to justify “functional medicine.”

  3. This string of chats on Mark Hyman and FH is REVEALING! I signed up to be "put on the wait list" and received access, with a five day period or I LOSE my slot, in just one business day! That tells me that a LOT of people are steering clear of this. Is it a scam?

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  5. Mar 23, 2018 · March 23, 2018. Let's face it, health information can be confusing — especially when it comes to nutrition. Mark Hyman, MD, Director of Functional Medicine, sheds light on topics from sugar and artificial sweeteners to coconut oil and olive oil & more. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Podcast Addict | Spotify | Buzzsprout.

    • Alejandro Junger
    • Aseem Malhotra
    • Aviva Romm
    • Ben Greenfield
    • David “Avocado” Wolfe
    • David Perlmutter
    • Dave Asprey – Bulletproof Executive
    • Dwight Lundel
    • Eric Berg
    • Erin Elizabeth

    Doctor to celebrities like Gwyneth Paltrow and author of Clean: A Revolutionary Program to Restore the Body’s Natural Ability to Heal Itself, Alejandro Junger is a big fan of detox diets and a good snake oil salesman. His “Clean” 21-day program will cost you $475 in useless supplements and shakes. He preys on fear and convinces many that they are c...

    Aseem Malhotra is author of the Pioppi Diet, a low-carb high fat diet, that tells the reader they’ve been lied to about saturated fats, that dietary guidelines made us fat and sick, and that carbohydrates are evil. Angry Chef Anthony Warnerhas a good interpretation about the absurdity of this narrative: It’s a bizarre and ahistorical conspiracy the...

    Aviva Romm is an integrative physician, midwife, and herbalist. She strongly defends goop doctors and their practices, contributes to the misinformation on the goop website, and like other goop doctors, her advice is not evidence-based. Her website and Facebook page targets pregnant women, busy (and tired) women, and parents. She sells her line of ...

    Ben Greenfield is a successful marketing guru of hyped-up health products. But he goes beyond promoting nutrition and health products and advice that have no robust scientific grounding. . . by many accounts some of his advice could be dangerous if followed. Unfortunately he has a wide influence as author of 13 books, and, according to his website,...

    This pseudoscience peddler has a thing for names – beyond using “avocado” as his middle name (which places him above David Perlmutter on my list), he calls himself “the rock star and Indiana Jones of the superfoods and longevity universe.” If that is not enough to get your pseudoscience spidey senses tingling, there is plenty more. His stories and ...

    Overview:Grain Brain, along with Wheat Belly, is a popular diet based on the premise that wheat and other grains are responsible for a myriad of health problems. The books urge readers to eliminate wheat to lose weight and prevent disease. Problems with Grain Brain: There is no good evidence that wheat causes disease or weight gain, but actually ve...

    Dave Asprey, the bulletproof executive, is an entrepreneur, blogger, and paleo proponent who is good at selling things but doesn’t know much about health or nutrition (but tries to sound sciency by citing cherry picked studies to back up his dubious claims). His main claim to fame is Bulletproof® coffee, which I wrote about here. Claims for bulletp...

    You may have seen a viral post “World Renowned Heart Surgeon Speaks Out On What Really Causes Heart Disease.” In the post Lundell proclaims that decades of research and guidelines for heart disease prevention are wrong (the “we’ve been lied to” narrative that is so popular . . .) , and the he has the answer in his books “The Cure for Heart Disease”...

    Eric Berg is a popular health and wellness “expert” (actually a chiropractor who has ventured beyond his realm of expertise). He has a website and many videos promoting unscientific health advice, and books including The 7 Principles of Fat Burning: Get Healthy, Lose Weight, and Keep it Off! and Dr. Berg’s Body Shapes Diets. Some of his bogus healt...

    Erin describes herself as Dr. Mercola‘s better half, so this should make you doubt before you trust her advice. Erin’s information and Health Nut News website is well described by Stephanie M. Lee in this article(excerpt below). “Erin Elizabeth is a self-described journalist and the creator of Health Nut News, which, at three years old, has over 44...

    • 16 min
  6. Mark Hyman (doctor) Mark Adam Hyman (born November 22, 1959) [citation needed] is an American physician and author. [1] [2] [3] He is the founder and medical director of The UltraWellness Center and was a columnist for The Huffington Post. [4] [5] Hyman was a regular contributor to the Katie Couric Show until the show's cancellation in 2013. [6]

  7. Sep 1, 2022 · Here's how it works: Week 1: You get rid of processed food, sugar, refined carbs, alcohol, and caffeine. Weeks 2 to 4: You also cut out wheat, dairy, and eggs. The diet plan claims that here you ...

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