In clinical drug trials, up to half of patients taking a placebo (ex. sugar pill) can show remarkable improvement. That's why offering mountains of anecdotal evidence to a physician often gets you an impatient stare. Given that the non-medical procedure you are proposing is not without emotional cost to the child, wouldn't it be better to clinically verify it before selling it for profit?
In clinical drug trials, up to half of patients taking a placebo (ex. sugar pill) can show remarkable improvement. That's why offering mountains of anecdotal evidence to a physician often gets you an impatient stare. Given that the non-medical procedure you are proposing is not without emotional cost to a child, wouldn't it be better to clinically verify it before selling it for profit?
@pkasna We thought it would be beneficial for people to see part of the video before making a purchase. On Amazon, they have a similar feature "Look Inside". It allows potential consumers to read a few pages of a book before making a purchase.
@GAPSyndrome Thank you for your honesty. You are running a business; GAPS is a trademarked acronym. This points to a glaring conflict of interest. Your proposed treatment requires objective clinical study. Your objectivity is impossible because you are invested in the outcome: a negative conclusion threatens your DVD, book and supplements sales. I suggest that you freely upload your dvd and books onto archive.org and re-direct your efforts towards running clinical trials for peer-review.
@pkasna Everybody's got an opinion, don't they? Kudos for the work you're doing, GAPS. Whenever pkasna comes up with a way to heal the sick, he/she can decide how to run his/her business.
I am an occupational therapist, have been working with autistic children for 25 years and have studied nutrition for 25 years also. I listened to 5 hours of her lecture and she is dead on and I'm recommending her book to parents.
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In clinical drug trials, up to half of patients taking a placebo (ex. sugar pill) can show remarkable improvement. That's why offering mountains of anecdotal evidence to a physician often gets you an impatient stare. Given that the non-medical procedure you are proposing is not without emotional cost to the child, wouldn't it be better to clinically verify it before selling it for profit?
pkasna 1 year ago
In clinical drug trials, up to half of patients taking a placebo (ex. sugar pill) can show remarkable improvement. That's why offering mountains of anecdotal evidence to a physician often gets you an impatient stare. Given that the non-medical procedure you are proposing is not without emotional cost to a child, wouldn't it be better to clinically verify it before selling it for profit?
pkasna 1 year ago
Why in god's name should this video be cut off at one minute and ten seconds? Boggles the mind. Oh wait. We have to buy the dvd. I get it.
pkasna 1 year ago
@pkasna We thought it would be beneficial for people to see part of the video before making a purchase. On Amazon, they have a similar feature "Look Inside". It allows potential consumers to read a few pages of a book before making a purchase.
GAPSyndrome 1 year ago
@GAPSyndrome Thank you for your honesty. You are running a business; GAPS is a trademarked acronym. This points to a glaring conflict of interest. Your proposed treatment requires objective clinical study. Your objectivity is impossible because you are invested in the outcome: a negative conclusion threatens your DVD, book and supplements sales. I suggest that you freely upload your dvd and books onto archive.org and re-direct your efforts towards running clinical trials for peer-review.
pkasna 1 year ago
@pkasna Everybody's got an opinion, don't they? Kudos for the work you're doing, GAPS. Whenever pkasna comes up with a way to heal the sick, he/she can decide how to run his/her business.
sevenjeny3 1 year ago
I am an occupational therapist, have been working with autistic children for 25 years and have studied nutrition for 25 years also. I listened to 5 hours of her lecture and she is dead on and I'm recommending her book to parents.
Mcphersongirl 2 years ago 2
Thanks for your comment! I'm sure your patients are lucky to be working with a great OT like you!
GAPSyndrome 2 years ago