Chemo is poison, by design. It’s descended from deadly mustard gas first used against soldiers in World War I.
Studies as far back as the 1970s have linked increased rates of certain cancers to nurses and physicians. Occupational-health experts believe that’s because when nurses, pharmacists, technicians and, increasingly, even Veterinarians mix and deliver the Drugs, accidental spills, sprays and punctures put them in close, frequent contact with hazardous drugs.
A new study from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) — 10 years in the making and the largest to date — confirms that chemo continues to contaminate the work spaces where it’s used and in some cases is still being found in the urine of those who handle it, despite knowledge of safety precautions. Chemo agents have been classified as hazardous by OSHA since the mid-1980s. Hazardous drugs are those known or suspected to cause cancer, miscarriages, birth defects or other serious health consequences.
If veterinarians get cancer just by being exposed to these drugs, do you really want to put them in your dog’s body?
Mike Adams from Natural News TV explains in the video below.
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