Why don't all doctors know about Candida? 
Let me address this question from my own personal professional 
experience.  In my training in medical school and then in family 
practice, we were taught that Candida can become widespread and damaging
 only in those patients who are severely compromised, such as terminal 
cancer, liver transplant or AIDS patients.  This simply isn’t true.  
Many clinicians with experience in Candida treatment estimate that the 
majority of people in industrialized countries suffer from excess yeast.
What is preventing Candida from being recognized?  Here are some factors:
- The symptoms of Candida 
overgrowth      develop slowly as a changing picture over years, so 
causes and effects are      not obvious if one is not trained to look 
for them.  In medicine, we are too often      guilty of seeking
 oversimplified explanations for diseases (for example,      asthma is 
treated as if it were just an inflammatory disease, depression      is 
treated as if it were just a disorder in neurotransmitters, allergy is  
    treated as if it were simply a predisposed genetic condition), 
rather than      looking deeper for the overall disorder in the body 
that is causing the disease.  This oversimplified approach to      
disease does not help the physician understand a disease like Candida   
   overgrowth, which has subtle symptoms in multiple organ systems that 
     worsen very gradually.  To the      physician who is unfamiliar 
with Candida, its broad array of symptoms will      seem like a group of totally unrelated problems.
 
 
- Candida is so common that it’s likely      your own doctor has it. 
 It’s      hard to pin down what’s wrong with your patients when you 
yourself may be      suffering with similar things but can’t figure out 
what the cause is.  Also, it’s harder to distinguish      an illness as 
truly abnormal when so many people have it and the illness      doesn’t 
have any single definite identifying symptom.
 
 
- There are no reliable lab tests to      diagnose Candida. 
 Because yeast      invade tissues of the body and actually form 
branches among and around      cells (rather than floating around 
loosely in the blood or other areas),      culture tests, tissue 
collections and blood or urine tests are not      accurate enough to 
gauge the extent of disease Candida may be      causing.  However, 
because the      symptoms and signs of Candida are predictable, one can 
fairly accurately      determine if a person has Candida overgrowth by 
using the lists of      tell-tale risk factors and symptoms
 listed above.  Medical professionals use this      same type of 
approach — called “clinical diagnosis” — to diagnosis      illnesses 
such as migraine headaches, Parkinson’s disease, depression and      
many other illnesses for which there is no single definitive lab test.
 
 
- Candida is very hard to kill, and      almost none of the treatments work well. 
 This is equally true for prescription medicines,      over-the-counter 
remedies and natural medicines.  Because most clinicians do not know an 
effective      treatment, there is little enthusiasm about promoting 
knowledge of      Candida.  This problem is      compounded by the fact 
that our medical culture has become very skewed      towards 
prescription drug treatment, rather than towards restoring normal      
physiology.  There is even an      incorrect notion among many doctors 
and patients that the only really      effective medications for any 
illness are prescription medications.  The reality is that there are    
  certain medicinal molecules which are found in nature (usually in 
plants)      that can’t be synthesized or successfully altered in a 
laboratory.  For certain illnesses, these      natural compounds work 
better than any current prescription medicines.
 
 
- Similar to the point just made, modern      medical practice has become focused on symptom treatment, rather than correction of      underlying abnormalities.  One can treat the symptoms of      Candida forever, but major improvement never comes until the fungus is      killed.
 
 
- Within the medical profession, many      doctors fear doing something different from what other doctors do. 
 And treating Candida is clearly      different.  This fear stifles     
 innovation, the drive to try something new in the face of a significant
      problem that is not being solved with current methods.
 
 
- There is a lack of true progress 
in      medical knowledge in general, making it more difficult for 
doctors to find      relevant information on Candida.       The
 large volume of published studies appearing every month in      medical
 journals gives the impression that important medical discoveries      
are indeed occurring.  In      actuality, however, most of those studies
 are statistical comparisons of      the action of patented synthetic 
drugs, sponsored by hopeful drug      manufacturers.  The results of    
  these studies are habitually unimpressive.  Very little is published 
that is true scientific      medical progress.  Further,      major 
medical studies are published in journals which usually carry large     
 advertisements from drug manufacturers for which the journal publishers
      have collected large sums of money.       This puts the journal 
editors in a position where they are clearly      no longer able to be 
objective in what they choose to publish (for      example, just one 
study showing red yeast rice to be nearly as effective      in lowering 
cholesterol as the much more expensive and side effect-laden      
statins would decimate the advertising income of a major medical 
journal).
 
 
- Treating Candida has to do with diet problems and diet change, and some people mistakenly feel that changing their way of eating would be too hard or that they would miss certain foods too much. (This sentiment is only expressed by people who are thinking about doing a Candida program, or by those who have tried an ineffective program. People who have done the Candida program presented here almost never feel that way.)
 
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