They’re having a big laugh at your expense while they rob you and the rest of the country blind.
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They’re having a big laugh at your expense while they rob you and the rest of the country blind.
With measles cases spiking all across the country, Dr. Mehmet Oz went on CNN to say he really wants you to get the measles vaccine. Really!
With measles cases spiking all across the country, Dr. Mehmet Oz went on CNN to say he really wants you to get the measles vaccine. Really!
Normally, having the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services administrator remind people that vaccines are beneficial would not be notable. However, since Oz, along with Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has been howling about how vaccines are deadly scams for years now, this is, regrettably, newsworthy.
So, Oz is now reduced to begging people to get vaccinated for something that, for decades, everyone routinely got vaccinated for.
“Take the vaccine, please. We have a solution for our problem,” he said.
CMS Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz joins Dana Bash to discuss the Trump administration’s efforts to lower prescription drug prices. Bash also p
Dr Mehmet Cengiz Oz has dual US/Turkish citizenship. He spent part of his childhood in Turkey and even completed mandatory military service with the Turkish army. He never served America in any capacity other than as a parasitic quack. Also he was once banned from publishing in a medical journal for reasons of “academic dishonesty”. Maybe he should be deported to his parents home country.
The scientific community has found that approximately half of the medical advice provided by Dr. Oz lacks scientific grounding or is directly contradicted by research.
Independent studies and expert reviews highlight the following regarding his accuracy:
Evidence Support: A major study published in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) found that only 46% of his recommendations were supported by evidence.
Scientific Contradictions: About 15% of the advice given on The Dr. Oz Show directly contradicted published scientific evidence in medical journals.
Believability of Claims: When researchers applied a stricter threshold for "believable" evidence, only 21% to 33% of his claims met the standard.
Focus on Supplements: Many of his most criticized claims involved "miracle" weight-loss supplements and alternative therapies like homeopathy, which often lack rigorous clinical backing.
Omission of Risks: His recommendations rarely included information about potential side effects (less than 10% of the time) or the actual magnitude of the health benefits
Dr Oz and RFK Jr coming together to cause so, so many unnecessary deaths of Americans.