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Geographical and Cultural Rankings on BPH and PCa

From: Air2020 <Air2020@aol.com>
To: <pralt-discuss@prostate90.com>
Date: Sunday, December 07, 1997 6:43 AM
Subject: PROSTATE: ranking

Is there a geographical or cultural ranking on BPH and PCa ?


From: "LARRY CLAPP" <lclapp@prostate90.com>
To: <pralt-discuss@prostate90.com>
Subject: Re: PROSTATE: ranking
Date: Sun, 7 Dec 1997 11:02:32 -0800

There are no geographical or cultural rankings for BPH and PCa that I am aware of, but you could construct one from the proliferation of studies that find no significant prostate problems in most non developed cultures. Yet when these men relocate to developed countries they quickly join the statistical average of their new neighbors.

There are obvious aspects of "developed" cultures that seem to explain this: cellular acidity from: nutrition, up-tight life style, and toxins from food, water, pesticides, environment, parasites and dental. These are relatively easy to change. My book is about making these changes so that prostate or other problems can not live in your body.

Larry Clapp, Ph.D., J.D.


Date: Sun, 07 Dec 1997 19:45:49 -0700
From: Leo Karl <leokarl@chaffee.net>
To: pralt-discuss@prostate90.com
Subject: Re: PROSTATE: ranking

An interesting question!

I read somewhere, can't site the source just now, that blacks are considerably more prone to PC than caucasians. Also that asians are considerably less prone. One could speculate about diet in both cases.

Leo

[Note from Website Editor: These references with sources are noted in Prostate Health in 90 Days Without Drugs or Surgery, on pages 27-29].

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