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has a selection of reports and articles, which are strongly supportive of Hafer's theories and which you can click on to read below.
These are all written independently of one another, yet all point in one direction: they all suggest that there are a myriad of health risks associated with a high intake of phosphates.
Excerpts from a report by German paediatrician, Dr
Ursula Klemm: Dr Klemm thought it unlikely that Hafer's recommendations would help children with ADD/ADHD. However, she was persuaded
to trial the diet in her clinic and was astounded by the results.
An extract from a research report by Dr
Roy-Feiler: Two psychiatrists did some tests in order to discover if children were affected by the high intake of phosphate.
In a double-blind test one group of children were given phosphate-rich food, the second group was given foods low in phosphate.
The results were impressive - those children who had consumed high levels of phosphate in their diet had displayed violent and threatening behaviour.
Extracts from a news article in The Age(Melbourne, Australia):
The article reveals that researchers now suspect that there is a link between
the high consumption of soft drinks and the high incidence of osteoporosis and tooth decay in young people. Phosphoric acid is used in many soft drinks, and particularly in cola drinks.
Hertha Hafer had already recognised this link in her early research studies.
Dr. Lendon H. Smith, MD, a US paediatrician, has always maintained that certain foods play a major role in causing problem behaviour and other ailments.
For example, Smith suggests that allergies, alcoholism, insomnia, hyperactivity in children and a host of other problems are the result of enzyme disturbances.
As Dr Smith writes, "With suitable blood and hair tests I found that all hyper kids were low in calcium and magnesium, despite excessive consumption of dairy products. They were not absorbing the nutrients they needed to correct their 'neurological' problem."
Like Hafer, Smith argues that all these conditions can be managed by making changes to the diet.
We highly recommended that you read this long but very interesting article
ADHD and ADD. The Hyperactive Child.
South
Australian farmer Percy Weston's book
Cancer: Cause & Cure is remarkable for its findings and strongly supportive of Hafer's theories: Weston spent a lifetime researching the health risks of super-phosphorus on humans and livestock.
He devised a low-phosphate diet, very similar to Hafer's.
The article Cut out Dairy for Autistic Children - published in THE AUSTRALIAN November 14, 2002 - quotes Paul Shattock from the University of Sunderland's autism research unit in Britain who suggests that dairy consumption is linked to autism and other mental disorders.
A brief report titled Born
to be Wild appeared in THE
WEST AUSTRALIAN newspaper on the subject of research at the University
of Chicago which revealed an anomaly in the saliva of children with a
history of juvenile delinquency.
A report on the Mental
Health of Australian Children (5KB),
released in November 2000, revealed that fifteen percent of Australian
teenagers suffer from some form of mental illness, of which the most common
forms were Attention Deficit Disorder (11.2% of children affected and
almost 20% of boys aged between 6 and 16), Depressive Disorder (3%) and
Conduct Disorder (3%). These are all conditions in which Hafer considers
phosphate intoxication to be a major causative factor.
As far as we are aware, Hafer was the first researcher to appreciate that
ADD/ADHD is a lifelong condition, that there is a genetic factor involved
and that children affected by ADD/ADHD are at increased risk to a number
of other very serious conditions, including asthma and allergic conditions,
osteoporosis particularly in the case of girls, substance abuse
including alcoholism, juvenile delinquency, adult criminality, depression,
accident proneness and suicide. From a major longitudinal study of 450
families over 15 years conducted under the auspices of the Australian
Institute of Family Studies (8KB) comes
clear confirmation of her argument.
Recent research reported in The
Lancet (8KB) indicates that we
may be close to the development of a brain scan that could make possible
the precise diagnosis of ADD/ADHD by detecting, and measuring precisely,
biochemical abnormalities in the brains of ADD/ADHD sufferers. Such a
diagnostic tool could finally resolve the arguments which rage about the
over-diagnosis or under-diagnosis of ADD; it could also potentially make
it possible to measure the relative effectiveness of various forms of
treatment and management, including Hertha Hafer's diet therapy.
Research into the effectiveness of stimulant
medication (10KB) - commonly Ritalin
or Dexamphetamine - to control ADD/ADHD, conducted at the University of
Queensland, Australia, seems to suggest that less than fifty percent of
children derive benefit from these medications. The research team is investigating
a system of single patient trials for use in general practice to improve
decision-making about long-term medications for chronic conditions.
The book Taking
Control of Multiple Sclerosis (16KB),
by West Australian Professor of Medicine George Jelinek MD, lends some
very interesting circumstantial support to Hafer's theories. There are
intriguing parallels - as well as significant differences - between Multiple
Sclerosis (MS) and ADD/ADHD. These are summarised for your information.
Of particular interest is Jelinek's claim that the progression of MS
can be slowed significantly, quite possibly halted in very many cases,
by strict observance of the diet he recommends. Furthermore, his diet (which is based on Roy Swank's ms-diet)
has a lot in common with Hafer's. This book also reveals how the medical
profession has largely chosen to turn a blind eye to very promising research
into dietary control and doggedly pursued drug oriented solutions, even
though to date, in most cases, dietary management appears to be more promising
than the available medications.
A study from birth to age six of 2,888 babies born between 1989 and 1992
revealed that the babies which were fed formula had a much higher risk
of developing Respiratory Problems, Allergies and Sleep Disorders (5KB)
in the first six years of life. A check of formulas for babies
on sale in Western Australia reveals that they have a much higher phosphorus
content than breast milk, up to five times higher. The findings of this
study do not prove Hafer's theory on the connection between excessive
intake of phosphorus and the incidence of ADD/ADHD, asthma, allergic
conditions and sleep disorders but they are entirely consistent with her
claims.
In a 1922 lecture entitled The Human Being in Body, Soul and Spirit Rudolf Steiner (1861-1925), Austrian philosopher and founder of Anthroposophy and Waldorf Schools, takes a look at the link between the excessive consumption of phosphate and uncontrollable human behaviour. Although his comments are based on pure (unscientific) speculation, even defying the laws of chemistry, his conclusions are nonetheless remarkable: "When excessive phosphorus levels reach our head, we will not only be fidgety and nervous but we will actually throw fits and go raving mad." To many, Steiner's writings have enormous relevance to the healing arts. 55 years later Hertha Hafer was to provide solid scientific evidence for Steiner's theoretical speculation.
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