Meet the scientist who may prove that HHV-6 is the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome virus
Bhupesh Prusty earns Young Investigator Award for Excellence in Basic Science
https://hhv-6foundation.org/uncategorized/prusty_award
Tweet
If you have Amazon Prime or Kindle Unlimited you can immediately begin reading this book about HHV-6, the AIDS, CFS and Alzheimer's virus.
If you have Amazon Prime or Kindle Unlimited, you can immediately begin reading The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Epidemic Cover-up and you will soon understand why the facts about the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome epidemic have been hidden from the public for almost four decades.
https://hhv-6foundation.org/uncategorized/prusty_award
Tweet
If you have Amazon Prime or Kindle Unlimited you can immediately begin reading this book about HHV-6, the AIDS, CFS and Alzheimer's virus.
If you have Amazon Prime or Kindle Unlimited, you can immediately begin reading The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Epidemic Cover-up and you will soon understand why the facts about the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome epidemic have been hidden from the public for almost four decades.
If you want to know the truth about the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome epidemic, you need to discover the reporting of Neenyah Ostrom.
For a decade, starting in 1988, Ostrom reported on Chronic Fatigue Syndrome for a newspaper called New York Native. What her reporting uncovered about the true nature of the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome epidemic will shock you.
In The Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Epidemic Cover-up, Charles Ortleb recounts his newspaper's struggle to get the medical and political establishment to pay attention to Ostrom's pioneering investigative reporting on Chronic Fatigue Syndrome.
By the time you finish Ortleb's stunning memoir, you will understand why the Centers for Disease Control has been unwilling to tell the public the truth about Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. The CDC does not want the public to know that Chronic Fatigue Syndrome is a transmissible illness linked to a virus called HHV-6 that affects every system in the body. They have covered up the illness for so many decades that the neglected virus is totally out of control. Now it is causing a long list of other illnesses and many cancers.
Nobody in the world covered the emergence of HHV-6 and its link to Chronic Fatigue Syndrome more than Neenyah Ostrom. Ostrom's decade of reporting on HHV-6 was recently vindicated by this statement from scientists at the University of Wurzburg: "While HHV-6 was long believed to have no negative impact on human health, scientists today increasingly suspect the virus of causing various diseases such as multiple sclerosis or chronic fatigue syndrome. Recent studies even suggest that HHV-6 might play a role in the pathogenesis of several diseases of the central nervous system such as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression or Alzheimer's."
The big question about Neenyah Ostrom and New York Native is this: How many lives would have been saved if the scientific establishment and the mainstream media had paid more attention to Neenyah Ostrom's reporting on HHV-6 and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome in New York Native?
One day, if there is any justice in the world, the CDC and the medical establishment will apologize for not paying attention to Neenyah Ostrom's groundbreaking work on Chronic Fatigue Syndrome that Charles Ortleb published in New York Native. That would be a fitting end to one of journalism's greatest David and Goliath stories.
Purchase the book in Canada
Purchase the book in Mexico
Purchase the book in the United Kingdom
Purchase the book in Germany
Purchase the book in France
Purchase the book in the Netherlands
Purchase the book in Spain
Purchase the book in Australia
Purchase the book in Japan
Purchase the book in India
Purchase the book in Mexico
Purchase the book in the United Kingdom
Purchase the book in Germany
Purchase the book in France
Purchase the book in the Netherlands
Purchase the book in Spain
Purchase the book in Australia
Purchase the book in Japan
Purchase the book in India
The HHV-6 University Report by rubiconmedia on Scribd