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Mike Adams: How to discover a new career helping others get healthy

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insider(NewsTarget Insider)

 

NewsTarget Insider Alert (www.NewsTarget.com)

Online reports / book announcements

 

Dear readers,

 

Have you ever thought about making a living by helping others improve

their health? There's a revolution happening in public health today, and

it involves " health counseling, " or teaching people how to make better

decisions in food, nutrition and lifestyles that enhance health, prevent

degenerative disease, boost cognitive function and greatly improve

quality of life (among other benefits).

 

There's an innovative school that's leading this revolution right now.

It's teaching people from all across North America (and Europe, too) how

to become nutrition-oriented health counselors, and these graduates are

finding new career success in coaching family, friends, clients and even

Hollywood celebrities on how to dramatically improve their health

results by making informed decisions about food, nutrition and

lifestyles.

 

The school is called the Institute For Integrative Nutrition, and it's

based in New York City, where students from all over the world meet for

one weekend a month to learn a wealth of information about health

transformation, nutritional therapies and how to create a successful,

abundant career as a health counselor. When the students aren't in New

York City, they're learning via distance classes on the internet and

engaging in self-study projects. It's an innovative, empowering learning

system that already has thousands of graduates and countless success

stories.

 

If you're interested in learning more about this school, visit the

website:

http://www.integrativenutrition.com ,

or call 212-730-5433, then press 1 from the main menu to speak to an

enrollment counselor.

 

Why I'm excited about this school

I'm genuinely enthused about the Institute for Integrative Nutrition

because this school's philosophy about health aligns almost perfectly

with what I've been teaching readers over the last few years: disease

prevention, healing with foods, superfood nutrients, trusting nature's

medicine, empowering the patient, living in harmony with the

environment, eating in tune with the seasons, exploring the healing

foods of world cultures, and so on.

 

I've also been on the lookout for some kind of career opportunity for

readers who want to shift their careers into natural health, but

aren't sure how to make a living from it. For many people, the Institute

for Integrative Nutrition may be the perfect answer. It allows you to

learn life-changing skills and knowledge that you can share with others

while earning a healthy living. The Institute even teaches students how

to organize and launch their own health counseling business. So even if

you don't consider yourself to be " entrepreneurial, " there's a success

template that other graduates have already used, with proven know-how

that teaches you how to launch your health counseling services in your

own city or town.

 

And here's another interesting tidbit that we haven't publicly announced

before: NewsTarget is exploring a way to connect readers with these

health counselors. In time, we plan to promote this health counseling

service to help solve one of the most common questions I hear from

readers, which is, " My doctor doesn't understand nutrition. Who can I

talk to instead? "

 

Until now, we haven't had a good answer for that, but thanks to the

Institute for Integrative Nutrition, we may be able to tap into a huge

resource of graduates, located in major cities across North America and

Europe, who are actively working as health counselors or coaches.

 

The future of health care

The planning and structure of this system will take some time to work

out, of course, but we want to see this system of health coaching

succeed. That's because today's model of medicine is broken -- it only

waits for people to become diseased, then it offers diagnosis and

treatment. That won't keep the population healthy in the long term. For

our civilization to have any real future, we need to have a system of

medicine based on keeping people healthy through education and

empowerment. And that means teaching people how to maintain their health

and prevent disease through foods, nutrition and healthy lifestyle

choices.

 

That's the real future of health care, I believe, and the Institute for

Integrative Nutrition is pioneering a model of education and knowledge

replication that has enormous implications for the future of public

health. They're not the only ones doing it, of course -- there are other

noteworthy learning institutions having great success in teaching the

principles of natural health and nutrition -- but they're certainly one

of the best.

 

It's interesting, by the way, to note that eight years of conventional

medical education doesn't even compare with the nutritional knowledge

students learn in ten months at this institute. With typical medical

schools teaching no more than one clock hour of nutrition in four years

of study, it is no exaggeration to say that students learn more about

nutrition in one weekend at the Institute for Integrative Nutrition than

doctors learn in four years of medical school. (That's my statement, not

theirs.) It doesn't mean that doctors aren't capable of learning

nutrition -- they certainly are among the smartest people in society --

it's just that conventional medicine doesn't believe there's any value

in teaching nutrition. Why bother with healing foods when they have all

these drugs to treat people with, anyway?

 

Doctors even fail to treat digestive disorders with nutrition, believe

it or not. Even when poor food choice is clearly causing discomfort or

disease in a patient, most doctors still don't consider nutritional

therapies to be of any value. They merely prescribe more drugs or

surgery and send the patients back home to suffer the long-term

consequences.

 

Nutrition offers a far more effective approach to lasting health. I'm

not saying that Institute for Integrative Nutrition students replace

doctors, because clearly they do not (doctors are very useful for

diagnosing and treating acute medical disorders, among other things),

but nutrition counselors fill the gaps that doctors can't -- teaching

people how to live healthy day to day in a way that prevents

degenerative conditions from becoming acute medical emergencies in the

first place.

 

Remember: even the World Health Organization says that 70 percent of all

cancers can be prevented through simple dietary and lifestyle changes (I

think the number is actually more like 90 percent), but doctors aren't

usually teaching patients how to make those lifestyle changes. It takes

a health coach or health counselor to sit down with people and show them

how to make better decisions that positively impact their health

outcome.

 

So check out the Institute for Integrative Nutrition if you're

interested in being part of this revolution in medicine and health. I

believe this kind of education and coaching represents the future of

public health, and those who choose to be part of it will experience

tremendous abundance and personal satisfaction.

 

Note: We earn nothing from this, of course. The Institute has not paid

us to publicize their program, nor do we earn any commissions on student

admission fees. We do, however, wholly support the success of this

school and its students. It's a blessing for us all that such an

organization exists and continues to prosper, and I want to help it

succeed even more!

 

To your health,

- Mike Adams

Consumer health advocate

 

P.S. Even if you aren't personally interested in becoming a nutrition

counselor, you may know someone else who would love to learn about this.

Feel free to forward this email to them.

 

www.NewsTarget.com.

 

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" It's interesting, by the way, to note that eight years of conventional

medical education doesn't even compare with the nutritional knowledge

students learn in ten months at this institute "

 

I have no doubts that is true and much is the shame isn't it?

 

Tony

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