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A New Model For Health And Disease – Page 162

ders and systemic diseases, results from a degeneration related to frequent and excessive use of allopathic drugs and vaccinations.
How else can one explain the tremendous increase in degenerative diseases in the West as compared to underdeveloped or developing countries that have not yet seen the menace of these diseases?
Cancer (neoplasms) account for roughly twice as many deaths in the developed countries as in developing countries and for about one-tenth of the total mortality rate; they account for 19% of the deaths in the developed countries and only 6% of deaths in the developing countries.
50% of the deaths in Europe are estimated to occur from diseases of the circulatory system and certain degenerative diseases, and a further 17% of deaths are due to neoplasms.
It is more than obvious from the statistics* compiled by the World Health Organization (WHO) that developed countries like the U.S., Canada, Belgium and England have a cancer mortality rate ranging from 13% to 16%, while the underdeveloped countries like El Salvador, Honduras, Peru, etc., have a rate ranging between 3% and 5%. As countries "develop" and make "better health coverage" accessible, the percentage of degeneration increases. One may tend to attribute such degen¬erative diseases to the anxiety and stress produced by modern technology in our lives. This is not true as seen from the mortality statistics of Western Communist countries where it is known that there is far less anxiety from competition since everyone’s source of livelihood is virtually assured by the government. ^Statistics of death rates from cancer in percentages111213