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z2005-08-25- Luik Health Promotion Hooey
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last edited by BillSeitz on Oct 16, 2008 3:05 pm

[John Luik] says the [WHO]'s [Health Promotion] () policies are loaded with . Take, for example, one of the most extensive and publicized efforts in health promotion of all time, the [MrFit] (Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial) which was specifically designed to establish the truth of health promotion by showing that [Heart Disease] and [CanCer] could be reduced through reducing [Blood Pressure], [Cholesterol Level], and . After sixteen years of study, the intervention groups, which had received extensive assistance with exercise, changing diet and cessation, had results which were not significantly better than the group that had received none of these "health promotion" interventions. Indeed, the intervention group, despite lower rates of , actually had higher rates of lung cancer. What [MrFit] showed was precisely how interventions failed to reduce mortality from multifactoral diseases like cancer and heart disease. Nor was [MrFit] a scientific fluke. Consider the Study. Begun in 1950 as a longitudinal investigation of the causes of cardiovascular disease, some 5,209 men and women aged 30-59 were followed for 30 years on the assumption that those who were thinnest would have significantly lower risks for [Heart Disease]. But in 1979 when three of the study's lead researchers published their data it was found that for men the highest risk - that is the worst - was for the thinnest men; men who were 25-40% fatter than the ideal weight were living the longest. For women, mortality was elevated only for the very thin and the very fat. The recent Centers for Disease Control ([CDC]) study on and mortality produced similar results.


 




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