Does your family have a history of cancer?

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I am currently seeing a lot of new mainstream posts regarding blood types and health, specifically cancer-related. As expected, those articles focus on ABO types and not the rare Rh negative blood factor.

Here once again is an excerpt from our own study:

RhD negative men more often reported certain mental health disorders including panic disorders, antisocial personality disorders and attention deficits, ticks, fasciculation, thyroiditis, immunity disorders, allergies, especially skin allergies, excessive bleedings, anemia, osteoporosis, liver disease, infectious diseases and acute diarrhea diseases, while they less often reported gall bladder attacks, coeliac disease, maldigestion, malabsobtion, warts, some types of cancers and prostate hypertrophy. 

RhD negative women reported more frequently psoriasis, constipation and diarrheas, ischemic diseases, type 2 diabetes, some types of cancers, lymphatic nodes swelling, vitamin B deficiency, thrombosis, tonsil stones, too high sex desire, precocious puberty, urinary tract infections, scoliosis and they less often reported hearing loss, weight loss, hypoglycemia, glaucoma, fasciculation and warts. 

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4619848/

Jimmy Carter is currently trending as many believe his life is about to end. His blood type is A negative.

He has an extensive family history of cancer, including both of his parents and all three of his siblings.

My advice on the subject matter is very general: Don’t assume that what others do won’t affect you worse than them.

Don’t view the studies as a curse, but rather warning signs and alerts.

Jimmy Carter is currently 98 years old. Jimmy Carter was not a drinker, and had the White House emptied of spirits during his time there.

He did have brain cancer a few years ago, but was already in his 90s at the time.

Much had been written about his brother Billy back in the days. By 1979, he drank half a gallon of vodka and whiskey a day.

His sister Gloria was a smoker, but quit a few years before her early death.

The negative effect of smoking on health (estimated on the basis of the self-rated number of common viral and bacterial diseases in the past year) was much stronger in RhD-negative than RhD-positive subjects

https://www.rhesusnegative.net/staynegative/higher-cancer-risks-rh-negatives-can-prevent/

I used to wonder why in my own family, people tend to die in their 60s or make it well into the 90s and looking back, the difference appears to be lifestyles.

Please leave a comment about your own family, yourself and what you have learned over the years.

How healthy are you?

What if any bad habits do you have? What type of food consumption or exposure to anything else do you think may or may not have affected your health? Was there ever a turning point where you were going through a very unhealthy phase, but turned things around completely?

Also, do not forget the impact of mental health and stress.

Many Rh negatives I know went through tough times in all areas of life and made significant changes, especially in areas of bad marriages and toxic relationships.

Let’s learn from each other.

Thank you in advance for your comments!

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2 Comments

  1. Elizabeth McKay-Campion March 15, 2023 Reply
  2. Michelle March 15, 2023 Reply

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