Distinguished medical lecturer coming to PI

18 years ago

    PRESQUE ISLE, Maine – Do you or your child suffer from chronic infections, low energy, cancer, diabetes, fibromyalgia, asthma, allergies, hyperactive disorders, depression, HIV, etc.?
More and more families are now entering into crisis health situations that just a few decades ago were non-existent, or occurring mainly in the elderly.
    What was discovered under the lens of a microscope has opened the scientific eyes to a global view of hope, health and blessings to a very sick world.
On Monday, May 7 at 7 p.m., the county will be offered a peek at the impact that micronutrition is having upon some of those in Aroostook County to as far as its effects on 300 orphanages worldwide.
Dr. Reginald McDaniel MD, health science director of Mannarelief Ministries, former director of pathology and medical director at Dallas-Fort Worth Medical Center and distinguished lecturer, will encourage attendees May 7 at the University of Maine at Presque Isle Campus Center at 7 p.m.
He will be sharing what our bodies need in order to be healthy and why. The common American diet is only able to receive two of the eight necessary glyconutrients to maintain health. Research has proven that without these nutrients, disease and/or chronic illness will occur. Four out of the last eight Nobel Prizes in Pathology have been awarded for research in the area of these micronutrients called Glyconutrients.
McDaniel devotes his attention to these Glyconutrients and how they restore health for numerous health conditions by giving back the body the proper tools so it (the body) can do what God intended our bodies to do … to heal and be healthy.
McDaniel and the scientific community are taking this discovery along the road to reach the public. On this journey is a mission to get micronutrients to children through a ministry called Mannarelief. Children, whose parents possibly may never be able to afford the products, may qualify to be able to receive them. McDaniel will share with the general public and health professionals micronutritional impact on various disease conditions.
While in Aroostook County, McDaniel will also be conducting continuous medical education for doctors and health care professionals at The Aroostook Medical Center and Cary Medical Center.