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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 115

a. Hereditary complexes (genetic codes) from the parents as well as their ancestors.
Many hereditary predispositions are well known today through genetic research. It is already possible, through sophisticated laboratory examinations, to determine the diseases to which a particular individual is predisposed.
Established medicine has made great strides in this field. Various geneticists have come to the conclusion that certain genetic predispositions are factors in the manifestation of certain diseases. Of course, it is easier for established medicine to accept such a role of predispositions in the manifestation of chronic rather than acute disease. Inherent predisposition is exhibited under the stress of certain negative environmental factors in such diseases as diabetes, hypertension and coronary heart disease. A new term labeled "personal immunity" is introduced in the field of acute infectious disease by allopathic medicine in order to explain the "unreasonable" and "unexplained" fact that although many people may be infected by the same agent, they do not all manifest the expected disease. On the other hand "personal sensitivity" is used to explain the opposite phenomenon, namely the existence of hypersensitivity towards certain pathological agents.1-4
Alternative medicine and especially Homeopathy5 have long maintained that a predisposition is necessary for the manifestation of a disease.
Even today, established medicine makes no use of the concept of predisposition either therapeutically or in its research. As a result, drugs are prescribed to sensitive patients with devastating results.
The effects of primaquine, phenacetin, sulfonamides, furadantin and aspirin upon persons with a lack of G-6-PD enzyme are already well known. Unfortunately, there are also other drugs whose inappropriate use has led to the discovery of different genetic anomalies and consequently, predispositions. Such drugs include: isoniazid, succinyl choline, H2O2, anesthetic drugs, and anticoagulants.4
Perhaps the only cases dealing with such "sensitivities" that established medicine has taken into consideration are the tests given to patients for penicillin sensitization