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Pounds and Inches - Conclusion

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Article Index
Pounds and Inches
Foreward
The Nature of Obesity
The Treatment of Obesity
The Nature of HCG
Complicating Disorders
The Technique
The Duration of Treatment
Immunity to HCG
Gain Before Loss (Loading)
Starting Treatment
The Diet
Vegetarians
Faulty Dieting
First Days of Treatment
Fluctuations in Weight Loss
Dietary Errors
Other Reasons for a Gain
Unforeseen Interruptions of Treatment
Blood Sugar
The Ratio of Pounds to Inches
How to Administer HCG
Health Issues to Consider
The Skeptical Patient
Stabilization Phase (P3)
Losing More Weight
Plan of a Normal Course
Conclusion
Glossary
References
All Pages

The HCG + diet method can bring relief to every case of obesity, but the method is not simple. It is very time consuming and requires perfect cooperation between physician and patient. Each case must be handled individually, and the physician must have time to answer questions, allay fears and remove misunderstandings. He must also check the patient daily. When something goes wrong he must at once investigate until he finds the reason for any gain that may have occurred. In most cases it is useless to hand the patient a diet-sheet and let the nurse give him a "shot."

The method involves a highly complex bodily mechanism, and even though our theory may be wrong the physician must make himself some sort of picture of what is actually happening; otherwise he will not be able to deal with such difficulties as may arise during treatment.

I must beg those trying the method for the first time to adhere very strictly to the technique and the interpretations here outlined and thus treat a few hundred cases before embarking on experiments of their own, and until then refrain from introducing innovations, however thrilling they may seem. In a new method, innovations or departures from the original technique can only be usefully evaluated against a substantial background of experience with what is at the moment the orthodox procedure.

I have tried to cover all the problems that come to my mind. Yet a bewildering array of new questions keeps arising, and my interpretations are still fluid. In particular, I have never had an opportunity of conducting the laboratory investigations which are so necessary for a theoretical understanding of clinical observations, and I can only hope that those more fortunately placed will in time be able to fill this gap.

The problems of obesity are perhaps not so dramatic as the problems of cancer, or polio, but they often cause life long suffering. How many promising careers have been ruined by excessive fat; how many lives have been shortened. If some way -however cumbersome - can be found to cope effectively with this universal problem of modern civilized man, our world will be a happier place for countless fellow men and women.



 

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