martes, 15 de enero de 2019

The Opioid Crisis Solution? New Japanese Painkiller Has Patients Rejoicing

Doctors and patients alike are rejoicing as a brand new painkiller is set to US market this week.

As the opioid crisis ravages patients and their families across the country, people who suffer from chronic pain are rapidly turning to alternative solutions.


 
Fortunately, there is now a natural and non-addictive solution that has doctors astonished at the results they are getting for their patients.

But they fear drug companies will try to keep it out of patients hands as it erodes their huge profits from opioid-based drugs.


 

It is now available without a prescription in the US on a trial basis. Patients who’ve suffered for years with aching joints are encouraged to get in on this trial while there is still availability of this breakthrough formula.

Click now to see the science behind it, why it’s worked so well in Japan for decades, and how Big Pharma will try to keep it away from their customers in the near future right now. Click here for more information.

For a healthier you!

Sandy DeRose

















 

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Nonfractionability The first attempt at a general living systems theory for explaining the nature of life was in 1978, by American biologist James Grier Miller. Robert Rosen (1991) built on this by defining a system component as "a unit of organization; a part with a function, i.e., a definite relation between part and whole." From this and other starting concepts, he developed a "relational theory of systems" that attempts to explain the special properties of life. Specifically, he identified the "nonfractionability of components in an organism" as the fundamental difference between living systems and "biological machines

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