Testimonials
In June of 2003, the World Health Organization (WHO) released a statement estimating that, of American children born in the year 2000, one in three will develop diabetes by the age of fifty. Diabetes is already the 6th leading cause of death in America and over 200,000 people die each year in the USA of complications of diabetes.
A 1998 WHO study estimated that, by 2025, the number of diabetics in the USA will have increased from 14 million to 22 million, in China; from 16 million to 38 million and in India; from 19 million to 57 million, a staggering 195% increase!
And diabetes is just an example. Uncontrolled glucose and insulin also contribute to heart disease, arthritis, osteoporosis and cancer.
- Dr. Ron Rosedale, MD, The International Centre for Metabolic and Longevity Medicine, Broomfield, CO, USA
I sent off for your book and it has become my bible. It is written in layman's language and I re-read it every few weeks. As I go along I am picking up new tips all the time. I have more good days than bad days now and when I have a bad day I am able to work out why. Along the way I have found out that caffeine has caused the 30 years of bad headaches ( I haven't had any since I went caffeine free in May, apart from one cup of tea a week after I stopped and I ended up with a 24 hour migraine!), and potatoes leave me comatose about 1/2 hour after a meal.
- Linda McWilliam
I read [Hypoglycemia: The Other Sugar Disease] on my last business trip. It is great. Well written and lots of really good facts. I thought I knew it all, but I learned a number of new things from your book. I hope it does well for you. Congratulations on a great book.
- Ann Rockley, Author,Managing Enterprise Content: A Unified Content Strategy
