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•• Fresh Pressed Olive Oil, direct from small farms! Try a free $39 bottle for just $1 shipping at https://GetFreshDrDrew.com/ •• The House Judiciary Committee is investigating Pfizer for allegedly delaying COVID-19 vaccine testing to influence the 2020 presidential election. A former Pfizer scientist, Philip Dormitzer, reportedly claimed senior officials intentionally slowed clinical trials to avoid impacting the election outcome. Rep. Jim Jordan, committee chair, demanded documents and communications from Pfizer and CEO Albert Bourla, covering interactions with federal agencies like the FDA and CDC from March 2020 onward. Dormitzer later denied the claims, but the probe continues. Dr. Sabine Hazan is a gastroenterologist, researcher, and CEO of Progenabiome. She hosts the podcast Let's Talk Sh*t and authored Let's Talk Sh*t: Disease, Digestion and Fecal Transplants. A microbiome expert, she consults and speaks on gut health. More at https://x.com/SabinehazanMD and https://progenabiome.com Ian Miller is a writer for Outkick, focusing on science and sports. He authored Illusion of Control: COVID-19 and the Collapse of Expertise and Unmasked: The Global Failure of COVID Mask Mandates. He runs the Substack UNMASKED, ranked #43 in Health Politics. More at https://x.com/ianmSC 「 SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS 」 Find out more about the brands that make this show possible and get special discounts on Dr. Drew's favorite products at https://drdrew.com/sponsors • ACTIVE SKIN REPAIR - Repair skin faster with more of the molecule your body creates naturally! Hypochlorous (HOCl) is produced by white blood cells to support healing – and no sting. Get 20% off at https://drdrew.com/skinrepair • FATTY15 – The future of essential fatty acids is here! Strengthen your cells against age-related breakdown with Fatty15. Get 15% off a 90-day Starter Kit Subscription at https://drdrew.com/fatty15 • PALEOVALLEY - "Paleovalley has a wide variety of extraordinary products that are both healthful and delicious,” says Dr. Drew. "I am a huge fan of this brand and know you'll love it too!” Get 15% off your first order at https://drdrew.com/paleovalley • THE WELLNESS COMPANY - Counteract harmful spike proteins with TWC's Signature Series Spike Support Formula containing nattokinase and selenium. Learn more about TWC's supplements at https://twc.health/drew 「 MEDICAL NOTE 」 Portions of this program may examine countervailing views on important medical issues. Always consult your physician before making any decisions about your health. 「 ABOUT THE SHOW 」 Ask Dr. Drew is produced by Kaleb Nation (https://kalebnation.com) and Susan Pinsky (https://twitter.com/firstladyoflove). This show is for entertainment and/or informational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sabine Hazan, MD, is a pioneering gastroenterologist, microbiome researcher, and CEO of Progenabiome and Ventura Clinical Trials. She has over 20 years of experience and leadership in more than 300 clinical trials. Dr. Hazan was the first woman admitted to the University of Florida's Gastroenterology Fellowship. She is at the forefront of fecal microbiota transplantation […]
The McCullough Report with Dr. Peter McCullough – Diversity isn't just a cultural buzzword—it's essential for your gut health. Discover how the microbiome, the vast community of microorganisms in your body, plays a vital role in digestion, immunity, and even mental health. In this insightful interview, Dr. Sabine Hazan shares groundbreaking perspectives on how lifestyle and diet shape the balance of our internal ecosystem.
The McCullough Report with Dr. Peter McCullough – Diversity isn't just a cultural buzzword—it's essential for your gut health. Discover how the microbiome, the vast community of microorganisms in your body, plays a vital role in digestion, immunity, and even mental health. In this insightful interview, Dr. Sabine Hazan shares groundbreaking perspectives on how lifestyle and diet shape the balance of our internal ecosystem.
Support your health journey with our private practice! Explore comprehensive lab testing, functional assessments, and expert guidance for your wellness journey. Find exclusive offers for podcast listeners at nutritionwithjudy.com/podcast. _____Dr. Sabine and I discuss the critical role of the gut microbiome, the controversy surrounding vaccines and antibiotics, and the importance of resilience in maintaining overall well-being. We also explore how diet, stress, and environmental factors impact immunity and chronic disease. Make sure to listen to the full interview to learn more.Dr. Sabine Hazan is a gastroenterologist, microbiome researcher, and founder of a genetic sequencing research laboratory focused on the gut microbiome. With over 20 years of experience in clinical trials, she is a leading expert on fecal microbiota transplants and the impact of gut bacteria on various diseases. Dr. Hazan is also the author of Let's Talk Sh!t, a book that explores the connection between gut health and overall wellness.We discuss the following:All about Dr. Sabine HazanGut microbiome's role in immunity and chronic illnessThoughts on antibiotics for LymeBifidobacteria in gut health and resilienceFactors that harm the microbiome, including stress, antibiotics, and alcoholProbiotics on gut health and their role in children after antibiotic useFiber, carnivore diet, and gut microbiomeImpact of stress on gut health and immunityHow the pandemic affected public trust in medicineAlkaline water and its impact on digestionWhere to find Dr. Sabine Hazan_____EPISODE RESOURCESWebsiteXInstagramLet's Talk Sh!t bookPublications_____WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
Sabine Hazan, MD, is a gastroenterologist, microbiome researcher, and CEO of Progenabiome and Ventura Clinical Trials. With over 20 years of experience, she has overseen 300+ clinical trials and pioneered studies on the gut microbiome's role in health. She is the first woman to be admitted to the University of Florida's Gastroenterology Fellowship. She is […]
LINKS: Dr. Sabine Hazan sur Twitter/X : https://x.com/SabinehazanMD Travail de recherche du Dr. Sabine Hazan : https://progenabiome.com WATCH THE VIDEO: YouTube: https://youtu.be/WtlN-d6UOhU
This week, we welcome Dr. Sabine Hazan to The Hamilton Review! In this conversation, Dr. Hazan discusses how the microbiome can dramatically impact human health. Enjoy this conversation! Dr. Sabine Hazan has over 22 years of experience in clinical trials and is the Founder and CEO at both Ventura Clinical Trials and Malibu Specialty Center. As Principal Investigator, Dr. Hazan personally oversees clinical trials for high profile studies on diseases such as Hepatitis C, Hypercholesterolemia, and Pancreatic Cancer. Her companies are leaders in Cardiovascular studies, Endocrine disorders, Infectious Diseases, Skin disorders and Gastrointestinal diseases and employ cutting edge technology and research practices to provide the best quality in drug therapy research. The first woman ever accepted into the University of Florida as a Clinical Gastroenterology Fellow, Dr. Sabine Hazan is a pioneer in the medical field. Board certified in Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Internal Medicine, Dr. Hazan has published articles in numerous prestigious medical journals, including theJournal of Duval County Medical Association and Gastroenterology, and won several awards, such as the Best Fellow Scientific Presentation and Dean's Research Award awarded by University of Florida. In addition, Dr. Sabine Hazan is an acclaimed speaker and presented symposiums for influential medical organizations like the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy and Astra Merk, Inc. Dr. Sabine Hazan is the former Chief of Medicine at Community Memorial Hospital and an active consultant for CRG. She currently retains medical licenses in three states (California, Florida, and New York). How to contact Dr. Sabine Hazan: Dr. Sabine Hazan website How to contact Dr. Bob: Dr. Bob on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UChztMVtPCLJkiXvv7H5tpDQ Dr. Bob on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drroberthamilton/ Dr. Bob on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bob.hamilton.1656 Dr. Bob's Seven Secrets Of The Newborn website: https://7secretsofthenewborn.com/ Dr. Bob's website: https://roberthamiltonmd.com/ Pacific Ocean Pediatrics: http://www.pacificoceanpediatrics.com/
What happens when a hypothesis is no longer accepted? Have people interfered with science? How important will gut health be going forward, and what can we do to improve it? Can you help ‘Save the Bif'? Read the write-up at: https://www.ukcolumn.org/video/gut-feelings-the-abdominal-brain-with-dr-sabine-hazan-consultant-gastroenterologist-part-2
The gut microbiome plays a key role in our overall health and well-being. Researchers are now beginning to understand just how massive a part it plays. One such researcher is Dr. Sabine Hazan. a gastroenterologist and microbiome expert whose work has shown the connection between gut health and disease. She discusses the complexities of gut health and what we can do to manage and optimize health. Dr. Hazan has published articles in numerous prestigious medical journals, and is the Series Editor on the microbiome for Practical Gastroenterology, a peer-reviewed journal. She is the CEO of Ventura Clinical Trials, where she has 20+ years experience leading clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues and has done over 300 clinical trials for pharmaceutical companies. She is also the founder & CEO of Progenabiome, a genetic sequencing research laboratory. She leads 35+ studies investigating the role of the gut flora in various diseases. Since March, 2020, Dr. Hazan has been at the forefront of COVID-19 research. Through their study exploring the role of the gut flora in COVID-19, Progenabiome became the first lab worldwide to detect SARS-CoV-2 from patient fecal samples by whole genome sequencing, and the lab that showed a susceptibility marker for COVID in the microbiome. Dr. Hazan is mastering familial fecal transplant showing hope for kids with Autism. She created The Malibu Microbiome meeting where physicians who perform fecal transplant can discuss their findings freely. She is a coauthor of, Let's Talk Shit: Disease, Digestion and Fecal Transplants. Follow CYACYL: Website: www.cyacyl.com Digital: www.cyacyl.com/digital Upcoming shows: www.cyacyl.com/shows Facebook: www.facebook.com/changeyourattitudechangeyourlife Music: www.purple-planet.com
How important is gut health? Did you know you have two brains, and they are intrinsically linked? One is in your abdomen. What effect has ‘Covid-19' had on the gut? How vital is your microbiome to your immunity? Do probiotics work, or are they a scam? Why did Dr Hazan's successful protocols for the treatment of ‘Covid-19' get withdrawn in favour of a ‘vaccine'? Read the full write up: https://www.ukcolumn.org/video/gut-feelings-the-abdominal-brain-with-dr-sabine-hazan-consultant-gastroenterologist-part-1
Dr. Sabine Hazan recently testified in front of Congress about the suppression and censorship of her research on COVID-19 treatments such as Ivermectin, and vitamin protocols which included D, C, and Zinc. She details her struggles with getting research approved and published, shedding light on the broader issues of scientific integrity and transparency within the medical community. Dr. Hazan emphasized the undue influence of pharmaceutical interests on regulatory processes and the challenges this poses to unbiased, independent research. She advocates for reforms that support scientific freedom and ensures that public health decisions are informed by thorough, impartial scientific inquiry.Dr. Sabine Hazan is a pioneer in the fields of gastroenterology and microbiome research. She has been doing clinical trials for drug companies over thirty years while also running an extremely successful medical practice. Finding Sabine:https://progenabiome.com/COVID Cartel Round table - Dr. Sabine Hazan Presentationhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iy5GxZCnrYQProgenabiome Research Publicationshttps://progenabiome.com/publicationsSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Ever wonder why your gut feeling is more than just a hunch? John is joined by Dr. Sabine Hazan, a pioneer in gut health who's connecting the dots between your gut biome, autism, and even COVID-19. Tune in and discover why the gut biome might just be the secret weapon you didn't know you needed. Shownotes 00:01:24 - Dr Sabine Hazan's Background 00:10:03 - Dr Sabine Hazan's Research 00:15:01 - How the Microbiome Works 00:28:55 - Microbiome and COVID-19 00:44:37 - Bifida Bacteria's Role in COVID-19 You can't out-train a crappy diet. Three comprehensive nutrition programs crafted by NFL pro John Welbourn prescribing daily custom macros for your personal body goals - START TODAY Check out what we do: Training Nutrition Knowledge Click on the link to see the companies we use and support
In this deep and revealing conversation, I speak with Dr. Sabine Hazan, a pioneer in the field of microbiome research and the author of "Let's Talk Sh*t." Dr. Hazan shares her groundbreaking insights into the world of gut health, the role of fecal transplants in treating diseases, and how our microbiome might hold the key to fighting pandemics like COVID-19. This episode is an eye-opener for anyone interested in understanding the profound impact of gut health on overall well-being. Sponsors: Jenni Kayne: Find your forever pieces @jennikayne and get 15% off with promo code REECE15 at jennikayne.com/home! #jennikaynepartner OneSkin: Get 15% off OneSkin with the code REECE at https://www.oneskin.co/ #oneskinpod Timeline: Timeline is offering 10% off your first order of Mitopure. Go to timelinenutrition.com/GABBY and use code GABBY to get 10% off your order. LolaVie: Get 15% off LolaVie with code GABBY at https://www.lolavie.com/GABBY! #lolaviepod Fatty15 is on a mission to replenish your C15 levels and restore your long-term health. You can get an additional 15% off their 90-day subscription Starter Kit by going to fatty15.com/GABBY and using code GABBY at checkout for an additional 15% off your first order. Main Sections & Timecodes: Introduction to Dr. Sabine Hazan and her work in gut health Gabby introduces Dr. Hazan, highlighting her groundbreaking work in microbiome research, clinical trials, and her book, "Let's Talk Sh*t." The Link Between Gut Health and Diseases [00:00:00 - 00:10:00] Dr. Hazan explains how gut health is connected to a wide range of diseases, from autism to Alzheimer's, and how fecal transplants are being used to treat these conditions. Fecal Transplants and Their Impact [00:10:01 - 00:20:00] A deep dive into the science and application of fecal transplants, including how they work, who might benefit from them, and the potential risks. COVID-19 and the Microbiome [00:20:01 - 00:35:00] Dr. Hazan discusses her research during the COVID-19 pandemic, including how she found COVID-19 in the stools of patients and what this means for understanding the virus. The Role of Diet and Supplements in Maintaining Gut Health [00:35:01 - 00:50:00] Practical advice on how to support your microbiome through diet and supplements. Dr. Hazan emphasizes the importance of a balanced diet rich in diverse nutrients and the role of specific supplements, such as vitamin D and probiotics, in promoting gut health. The Future of Microbiome Research [00:50:01 - 01:05:00] Gabby and Dr. Hazan discuss the future of microbiome research, including the potential for new treatments based on gut health and the challenges of bringing these treatments to the mainstream. COVID-19's Impact on the Gut Microbiome [01:20:01 - 01:35:00] Dr. Hazan discusses her research findings on the relationship between COVID-19 and gut health, including the long-term effects the virus may have on the microbiome and overall health. She also talks about how gut health could influence the severity and recovery from COVID-19. Ethical Considerations in Microbiome Research [01:35:01 - 01:50:00] The conversation shifts to the ethical challenges in microbiome research, particularly concerning fecal transplants and personalized medicine. The Future of Microbiome-Based Therapies [01:50:01 - 02:05:00] Dr. Hazan shares her vision for the future of medicine, where treatments are increasingly personalized and tailored to individual microbiomes. More from Dr. Sabine Hazan Dr. Sabine Hazan's book, "Let's Talk Sh*t": A comprehensive guide to understanding the microbiome and its impact on health. Everything Gabby Reece: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@GabbyReece Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gabbyreece/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@gabbyreeceofficial Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/OfficialGabrielleReece/ Gabby Reece Website - https://gabriellereece.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
View Part 1 here: https://youtube.com/live/VCJdne9xgqgDr. Sabine Hazan returns to the Zone to discuss various aspects of the microbiome and its impact on health. During her conversation with Dr. Osborne, they explore topics such as fecal transplants, inflammatory bowel disease, and the differences in microbiomes between individuals.They also discuss the effects of cesarean section versus vaginal birth on the newborn's microbiome and the potential implications of imbalances in the overall microbiome of the planet. The conversation highlights the need for more research and funding in the field of microbiome studies. They discuss the potential benefits of fecal transplants for various conditions, including inflammatory bowel disease and autism.Some of Dr. Hazan's work discussed in this interview is posted below:Vitamin C improves gut Bifidobacteria in humans https://www.futuremedicine.com/doi/full/10.2217/fmb-2022-0209?rfr_dat=cr_pub++0pubmed&url_ver=Z39.88-2003&rfr_id=ori%3Arid%3Acrossref.orgDetection of SARS-CoV-2 from patient fecal samples by whole genome sequencing https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7846909/Microbiome-Based Hypothesis on Ivermectin's Mechanism in COVID-19: Ivermectin Feeds Bifidobacteria to Boost Immunity. https://pesquisa.bvsalud.org/global-literature-on-novel-coronavirus-2019-ncov/resource/en/covidwho-1963494Lost microbes of COVID-19: Bifidobacterium, Faecalibacterium depletion and decreased microbiome diversity associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection severity. https://pesquisa.bvsalud.org/global-literature-on-novel-coronavirus-2019-ncov/resource/en/covidwho-1816751Effectiveness of ivermectin-based multidrug therapy in severely hypoxic, ambulatory COVID-19 patients https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8826831/To connect with Dr. Osborne visit:On the web: https://drpeterosborne.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DoctorPeterOsborne/Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/docosborne/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drosborneTwitter: https://twitter.com/glutenology*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This video is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. It is strictly intended for educational purposes only. Additionally, this information is not intended to replace the advice of your physician. Dr. Peter Osborne is one of the most sought after alternative and nutritional experts in the world. A Diplomate with the American Clinical Board of Nutrition, a graduate of Texas Chiropractic College, and a doctor of pastoral science, Dr. Osborne is one of the world's leading authorities on gluten, nutrition, and natural health. He is the founder GlutenFreeSociety.org, one of the world's largest informational sites on gluten sensitivity. In addition, he is the author of the best selling book, No Grain No Pain, published by Touchstone (Simon & Schuster). His work has been featured by PBS, Netflix, Amazon, Fox, and many other nationally recognized outlets. For more information, visit us at https://www.glutenfreesociety.org/ or call 281-903-7527
In this episode of Hart2Heart with Dr. Mike Hart, Dr. Hart sits down with Dr. Sabine Hazan, a leading gastroenterologist and gut microbiome researcher, to discuss the complexities of gut health. Dr. Hazan sheds light on the connection between gut health and chronic diseases, the impact of diet and stress on the microbiome, and the role of probiotics and prebiotics. She also provides practical insights into managing and optimizing gut health, highlighting her groundbreaking work in the field of gut microbiome research. Guest Bio and Links: As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues. Dr. Hazan is a top clinical investigator for multiple pharmaceutical companies and also acts as the series editor of Practical Gastroenterology on the Microbiome, a peer-reviewed journal that reaches 18,000 gastroenterologists. Listeners can learn more about Dr. Sabine Hazan at https://progenabiome.com/ and on IG @dr.sabinehazan Resources: MALIBU MICROBIOME MEETING | AUGUST 10-11, 2024 Let's Talk Sh!t - The Book Show Notes: (0:00) Welcome back to the Hart2Heart with Dr. Mike Hart. Dr Hart introduces today's guest, Dr. Sabine Hazan (5:00) The origins of microbiome research (8:00) Benefits of bifidobacterium (14:00) How corn has been altered over the years (15:00) Ways to improve gut health (17:00) Antibiotics and their impact on gut health (22:00) Reasons to introduce colostrum (27:00) Benefits of prebiotics for gut health (31:00) “I really want to encourage people to develop that relationship between the patient and the doctor. If we make it: ‘everybody take this', then we're going to again, globalize the microbiome. It should really be personalized.” (32:00) Using food diaries to eliminate foods from the diet (38:00) Potential benefits of BPC 157 (40:00) Types of fiber for gut health (45:00) Colonoscopies: what they are, when to get them and why! (50:20) Details on Dr. Hazan's Malibu Microbiome Meeting --- Dr. Mike Hart is a Cannabis Physician and Lifestyle Strategist. In April 2014, Dr. Hart became the first physician in London, Ontario to open a cannabis clinic. While Dr. Hart continues to treat patients at his clinic, his primary focus has shifted to correcting the medical cannabis educational gap that exists in the medical community. Connect on social with Dr. Mike Hart: Social Links: Instagram: @drmikehart Twitter: @drmikehart Facebook: @drmikehart
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What this show turned into was God reminding me that there is a reason he had me work in big data and ad tech. We talk about the signs of pure hatred in the elites as they try to censor and shut us up. But then, we get into the infrastructure they have built, including having MIT do things for them., We will go through a Wired article that details how they use ad tech to track us. However, Wired misses the lead. I will show that they are using ad tech to target individuals. And of course, they are using it to censor us. We hear powerful testimony from Dr. Hazen and the censorship that she experienced while trying to save lives during Covid.What does God's Word say? Exodus 4:10-12 10 Moses said to the Lord, “Pardon your servant, Lord. I have never been eloquent, neither in the past nor since you have spoken to your servant. I am slow of speech and tongue.”11 The Lord said to him, “Who gave human beings their mouths? Who makes them deaf or mute? Who gives them sight or makes them blind? Is it not I, the Lord? 12 Now go; I will help you speak and will teach you what to say.”Luke 21:14-15 14 But make up your mind not to worry beforehand how you will defend yourselves. 15 For I will give you words and wisdom that none of your adversaries will be able to resist or contradict.Luke 12:11-12 11 “When you are brought before synagogues, rulers and authorities, do not worry about how you will defend yourselves or what you will say, 12 for the Holy Spirit will teach you at that time what you should say.”Jeremiah 1:9 Then the Lord reached out his hand and touched my mouth and said to me, “I have put my words in your mouth.Psalm 32:8 I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go; I will counsel you with my loving eye on you.Episode 1,456 Links:Dr. Sabine Hazan on How Her Clinical Trials on COVID Early Treatment Were Sabotaged During the PandemicDr. Sabine Hazan's Bio is incredibleLiberty University fined record $14 million for campus safety law violationsSend The Police To Intimidate You Neighbor For “WrongSpeak,” Get $2,000 From Taxpayers in “State” [Read: Separate Country] of Washington How the Government Used ‘Track F' to Fund Censorship Tools: Report; The National Science Foundation spent $39 million on Track F, a program related to censoring, suppressing Americans' speech, says a new report.CDC discloses they have at least a dozen medical industry LOBBYING GROUPS, officially SERVING alongside 15 voting members, on ACIP, the supposedly independent vaccine board that just approved the 9th booster shot. CDC list of the ACIP board:4Patriots https://4Patriots.com/Todd Stay connected when the power goes out and get free shipping on orders over $97. Alan's Soaps https://alanssoaps.com/TODD Use coupon code ‘TODD' to save an additional 10% off the bundle price. Bioptimizers https://bioptimizers.com/todd Use promo code TODD for 10% of your order and get up to 2 travel size bottles of Magnesium Breakthrough free. Bonefrog https://bonefrogcoffee.com/todd Use code TODD at checkout to receive 10% off your first purchase and 15% on subscriptions. Bulwark Capital Bulwark Capital Management (bulwarkcapitalmgmt.com) Call 866-779-RISK or visit online to get their FREE Common Cents Investing Guide. GreenHaven Interactive Digital Marketing https://greenhaveninteractive.com Your Worldclass Website Will Get Found on Google! Liver Health https://GetLiverHelp.com/Todd Try Liver Health Formula today and claim your FREE bottle of Nano Powered Omega 3 and bonus gift.
Thank you for tuning in for another episode of Life's Best Medicine. Dr. Sabine Hazan has always been dedicated to understanding life. She sought a career in medicine and was accepted to medical school based on outstanding research on obesity conducted as an undergraduate. She completed her residency at the University of Miami during the peak of the HIV epidemic, treating extremely ill patients at Jackson Memorial Hospital and in the local jail. There, she was awarded two prizes for her research. After completing her residency, Dr. Hazan became the first woman gastroenterology fellow at the University of Florida. During her extensive clinical trial experience, Dr. Hazan observed how dramatically the microbiome can impact human health. Dr. Hazan is a firm believer that disease can only be understood through precision medicine by focusing on the individual and the changes within. Much like each person has unique fingerprints, no two people have the same microbiome. In this episode, Brian and Sabine discuss inherited microbiome and versus inherited genes, the tendency of Western Medicine to over-treat with antibiotics, the great diversity of microbiomes amongst the various people groups in the world, how Ivermectin can be used to promote increase in bifidobacteria in the gut, some potential drawbacks to probiotic foods, how stress affects our physical health, hormonal changes and the microbiome, raw milk, the place of sugar in the human diet from a microbiome perspective, vitamins C, D and zinc, medical ethics standards in research studies in the United States, bone broth, apple cider vinegar, and how to be a smart consumer when it comes to your food. Thank you for listening. Have a blessed day and stay healthy! Links: Dr. Sabine Hazen: ProgenaBiome Biome Boosters Microbiome Research Foundation Dr. Brian Lenzkes: Website Low Carb MD Podcast HLTH Code: HLTH Code Promo Code: METHEALTH HLTH Code Website Keto Mojo: Keto Mojo
Many people consume probiotic-containing foods to strengthen or revitalize their gut flora and potentially reduce gastrointestinal symptoms like gas and bloating. But do these foods actually contain the strains and amounts of good bacteria that is expected from what is printed on the label? We welcome Dr. Sabine Hazan, a gastroenterologist and microbiome expert from Ventura, CA, to discuss her findings from a recent study she presented at the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) Annual Scientific Meeting. The study analyzed 26 commercially available probiotic-containing foods to determine the presence and abundance of Bifidobacteria and other microbes and compare them to expected ingredients. Her findings–and–tips for consuming probiotic foods may surprise you.
Lisa has a microbiome chat with a leading GI researcher, Dr. Sabine Hazan. Lisa and Dr. Sabine Hazan talk about the risks of lacking certain types of bacteria in the gut and what it says about your overall health. WEBSITE: https://progenabiome.com/ INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/dr.sabinehazan/ FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/sabine.hazan1 X: @SabinehazanMD EPISODE SPONSOR: https://www.ralstonfamilyfarms.com/ EPISODE SPONSOR: https://www.davidsburgers.com/ EPISODE SPONSOR: https://www.akelscarpetone.com/ EPISODE SPONSOR: https://compoundingatcornerstone.com/ LISA'S LINKS: Lisa Fischer Said Academy: https://lisafischersaid.com/academy/ Website: lisafischersaid.com For more information on group intermittent fasting coaching with Lisa, email fasting@lisafischersaid.com For more information on one-on-one or group health coaching with Lisa, email healthcoaching@lisafischersaid.com Podcast produced by clantoncreative.com
In this week's episode I speak with Dr. Sabine Hazan about all things gut and poop related. Dr. Hazan is an expert and has years of experience researching the Microbiome and performing fecal transplantation in order to help those with various gut related issues. Her research is on going and she made some incredible discoveries early on during Covid. So many people have gut issues, gut health is probably one of the most talked about health topics. You definitely want to hear what Dr. Hazan has to say Joining me for the first time for a Torah extro is my friend LIllian Aharon who when I mentioned that I was covering this topic immediately started speaking to me about what the Rambam says, so I turned it around and said please come on and tell everyone.- - - - -YouTube: https://youtu.be/wmyBBAIpde0- - - - -Links:- Dr. Hazan:https://progenabiome.com@SabineHazanMD on XInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/dr.sabinehazan?igsh=c3gxeHY2Z2szdGRm- Designer Shit:https://www.instagram.com/designershtdocumentary?igsh=MzJ0anltNzRuaThvhttps://www.designershitdocumentary.com/about-the-film- Lillian Aharon:https://Asideofsunlight.com- - - - - Holy Health Podcast:Email: Holyhealthpodcast@gmail.comInstagram: @holy_healthpodcastwwwwHolyhealthpodcast.comHoly Health Official Podcast:https://www.buzzsprout.com/589555/9876240Holy Health YouTube Account:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCrYPOvFawrjhH_2U7r61M2QMusach Haguf:Instagram: @musachhaguf- - - - -This podcast has been edited by Yakir Abelow of 'YA Joker productions'For more information contact:https://wa.me/c/972586918089Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ya_jokerproductions/
Is lyme disease really a naturally-occuring tick-borne illness? An anonymous whistleblower alleges a US military coverup of the development and release of crystallized mycoplasma, a lab-engineered bioweapon, on episode 139 of the Far Out with Faust podcast.*please see DISCLAIMER below*Hear his harrowing personal story, including a deep-dive into the possible truth behind not only lyme disease, but a host of modern, debilitating human ailments. Backed by historical evidence and data, he shares shocking revelations detailing real-life medical experimentation on an unsuspecting human population.Stay tuned till the end, when Faust and his guest walk through some of the alternative options for recovering from chronic lyme disease and its symptoms.-Where did lyme disease come from?-How many people have lyme disease?-What does lyme disease do to your body?-How is chronic lyme disease different from acute lyme disease?-What is the treatment for lyme disease?-What is a fecal transplant?-What did the US government do at Plum Island?-Was mycoplasma bioengineered?-Are fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, lyme, and other diseases lab created?-What happened in 1947 that created the chronic disease epidemic?-Are there mycoplasma agents in chemtrails?-Is urine therapy real?-How do you get rid of lyme disease?FOWF Episode 107 with Dr. Sabine Hazan: https://youtu.be/d0B2ztvMtpQ?si=mfWL3gxymT9vhTkoThe Quiet Epidemic: https://www.thequietepidemic.com/Mycoplasma, The Linking Pathogen in Neurosystemic Diseases: https://docplayer.net/27609484-Mycoplasma-the-linking-pathogen-in-neurosystemic-diseases.htmlBob Beck blood electrification device: https://electronickitcomplete.com/Learn How Anti-Microbial Blood Electrification Devices Work: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1gip1Ynn4dNq4q4hX06_wnsKv5UDpamdO/view?usp=sharing*DISCLAIMER*All opinions expressed by the Program Participants in this Video Content are solely their current opinions and do not reflect the opinions of Faust Checho, Far Out with Faust (FOWF), or Red Pill Unplugged. The Program Participants' opinions are based upon information they consider reliable, but neither Far Out with Faust nor its affiliates, nor the companies with which such participants are affiliated, warrant its completeness or accuracy, and it should not be relied upon as such.The Video Content has been made available for informational, educational and recreational purposes only. FOWF does not make any representation or warranties with respect to the accuracy, applicability, fitness, or completeness of the Video Content. FOWF does not warrant the performance, effectiveness or applicability of any sites listed or linked to in any Video Content.The Video Content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read or seen in this Video Content.FOWF hereby disclaims any and all liability to any party for any direct, indirect, implied, punitive, special, incidental or other consequential damages arising directly or indirectly from any use of the Video Content, which is provided as is, and without warranties.#LymeDisease #Podcast #Lyme
Dr. Sabine Hazan, MD, a gastroenterologist and world leading expert in the microbiome discusses her research on the relationship between {ov!d and the GI tract. Her findings indicate that it might be possible that those developing severe {ov!d response have depleted bifidobacterium colonizing their GI tracts. In her practice she discusses the finding that taking vitamin C improves colonization of bifidobacterium.She goes on to also discuss the connection between the microbiome and a multitude of diseases (autism, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, and more)You can take a deeper dive into Dr. Hazan's research work here: https://progenabiome.com/our-story https://bmjopengastro.bmj.com/content/9/1/e000871You can grab a copy of her book, Let's Talk SH!T here: https://amzn.to/3oEo7KcFind Dr. Hazan's book here: https://amzn.to/45jXWZJFor more information, visit: https://progenabiome.com
My guest today is Dr. Sabine Hazan: a physician, specialist in gastro-enterology, internal medicine, hepatology and Gut Flora/Microbiome. This episode is all about Healing the body & the world through the Microbiome. Sabine has 20+ years of experience leading 300+ clinical trials for cutting-edge research. Since March 2020, she's been at the forefront of Covid research, leading clinical trials for its treatment. We talked about: 2:00 - Sabine's Covid research through the Microbiome & Bifidobacterium 10:30 - Bifido in severe Covid patients vs. immuned to Covid patients 15:00 - natural immunity to Covid: learning & researching 19:00 - how much Bifidobacterium do we have? 22:20 - censorship in science, the price we pay & building new uncensored alternatives 29:30 - Sabine's healing philosophy 36:00 - the PCR tests lie, lack of doctors' training for Covid treatment, and C19 jabs 45:00 - C19 jabs adverse reactions & the bad pregnancy clinical trials 47:40 - is mRNA affecting Bifidobacterium? 49:20 - ways to increase your natural immunity, probiotics 55:00 - doctor-patient relationship, and trust in doctors 1:02:20 - the autism Microbiome treatment, research on autism-vaccines connection 1:17:00 - Sabine's words of hope I hope you enjoy the show; please share it, and leave a review! Sabine's website | Twitter Efrat's Twitter | Telegram | You're The Voice links | Efrat's links Support Efrat's journalistic work: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/efenigson
Join us for an extraordinary episode of the #WiseNuts Podcast! This Wednesday night at 7:30pm, we're thrilled to have a true pioneer in the medical field, Dr. Sabine Hazan, as our special guest live on Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube. Dr. Sabine Hazan is no ordinary doctor – she was the first woman accepted into the University of Florida as a Clinical Gastroenterology Fellow. Her impressive track record includes publishing articles in prestigious medical journals, serving as Series Editor on the microbiome for Practical Gastroenterology, and being a sought-after speaker at various international medical conferences. As the CEO of Ventura Clinical Trials, with over 20 years of experience leading cutting-edge research, she has conducted over 300 clinical trials for pharmaceutical companies. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Hazan has been at the forefront, leading FDA-approved clinical trials for treatment and prophylaxis, making significant contributions to the fight against the virus. Not stopping there, Dr. Hazan is also the visionary behind Progenabiome, a genetic sequencing research laboratory, where she leads over 35 studies exploring the role of the gut flora in various diseases. Her groundbreaking work in COVID-19 research led to Progenabiome becoming the first lab worldwide to detect SARS-CoV-2 from patient fecal samples by Whole Genome Sequencing. Dr. Hazan's commitment to advancing medicine knows no bounds. She's a trailblazer in the field of familial fecal transplant, bringing hope to children with Autism. Plus, her creation of The Malibu Microbiome meeting has fostered an environment where physicians can freely discuss their findings on fecal transplants. Don't miss this incredible opportunity to hear from a true medical maverick! Join us live this Wednesday at 7:30pm. Follow the WiseNuts on FaceBook: https://www.facebook.com/watch/WiseNutsPodcast/ Follow the WiseNuts on Twitter: https://twitter.com/wise_nuts Follow the WiseNuts on IG: https://www.instagram.com/wisenuts_podcast/?hl=en #MedicalInnovation #ResearchRevolution #PodcastGuest #WiseNutsPodcast #podcast #covid19 #sars #covid #plandemic #pandemic --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/wisenuts/support
Dr. Sabine Hazan is a leader in microbiome research and fecal microbiota transplantation, or as she terms it, refloralization of the gut.You can find her on Twitter @SabinehazanMD I encourage you to watch her Tik Tok video which has over 2 million views on Twitter https://twitter.com/SabinehazanMD/status/1639852682008727553?s=20 Her book, Let's Talk Sh!t, is available at her website https://progenabiome.com/shopSpecial thanks to Chinwave for the intro/outro music. Please listen to their sound at https://www.chinwave.com/ Supporting music and especially live music is important. Music is love.https://twitter.com/chinwavemusic
This episode is sponsored by @PearsonRavitz - safeguarding your financial futures And, @New Leaf Hyberbarics - a non-invasive treatment that strengthens your body from the inside out Dr. Sabine Hazan joins May and Tim to discuss her new research and the challenges of studying medicine during COVID. They delve into the censorship surrounding certain topics and the corruption within the pharmaceutical industry. Dr. Hazan shares her background in research, including her experience with the FDA and her work at the University of Florida. This conversation sheds light on the importance of being in the same physical location as your significant other and the journey of a female researcher in a male-dominated field. Tune in to gain insights into the world of clinical trials and the future of medicine. BIO/LINKS! Born in Morocco, Dr. Sabine Hazan dedicated her life to medicine and understanding the microbiome. After outstanding research on obesity, she entered medical school and completed her residency during the HIV epidemic. Becoming the first woman gastroenterology fellow at the University of Florida, she presented research at the ACG National Meeting. Dr. Neil Stollman introduced her to the future of medicine lying in the microbiome. Her practice in New York attracted Canadian patients, revealing issues with socialized medicine. She moved to California, conducting over 150 clinical trials and pioneering FMT, coining refloralization™. Collaborating with Dr. Thomas Borody, she established ProgenaBiome™, a state-of-the-art genetic research laboratory. Dr. Hazan advocates for collaborative precision medicine, individual microbiome understanding, and ethical research to revolutionize healthcare. Connect with Dr. Hazan on her company website. Looking for something specific? Here you go! 00:00:44 Research experience in clinical trials. 00:08:11 Fecal transplant improves Alzheimer's symptoms. 00:14:46 Importance of clinical trials on microbiome. 00:20:24 Importance of standardized microbiome testing. 00:21:44 Standardizing tests is crucial. 00:27:46 Vaccines are immune modulators. 00:33:05 Questioning vaccine necessity and corruption. 00:43:36 No takeaway. 00:49:32 Corruption in medical journal publishing. 00:52:56 Research integrity is crucial. 00:56:03 Importance of gut health 01:01:17 Probiotics may suppress natural gut bacteria. 01:09:45 Microbiome and viral balance matter. 01:12:04 Viruses are essential for balance. 01:19:47 Stool samples reveal valuable information. Our Advice! Everything in this podcast is for educational purposes only. It does not constitute the practice of medicine and we are not providing medical advice. No Physician-patient relationship is formed and anything discussed in this podcast does not represent the views of our employers. The Fine Print! All opinions expressed by the hosts or guests in this episode are solely their opinion and are not to be used as specific medical advice. The hosts, May and Tim Hindmarsh MD, BS Free MD LLC, or any affiliates thereof are not under any obligation to update or correct any information provided in this episode. The guest's statements and opinions are subject to change without notice. Thanks for joining us! You are the reason we are here. If you have questions, reach out to us at doc@bsfreemd.com or find Tim and I on Facebook and IG. Please check out our every growing website as well at bsfreemd.com (no www) GET SOCIAL WITH US! Website: bsfreemd.com Rumble: https://rumble.com/search/video?q=bsfreemd Instagram:: https://www.instagram.com/bsfreemd/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bsfree YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@bsfreemd
Our special guest for today is Dr. Sabine Hazan, a renowned Gastroenterologist, Scientist, Speaker, and CEO of ProgenaBiome. With 30 years of experience in the medical field and over 300 clinical trials for the FDA, she is an expert in the microbiome. She's also the author of a book called "Let's Talk Shit." Over these last couple years, Dr. Hazan's lab was one of the first to identify Covid in the stool of infected individuals, and her groundbreaking research has also seemed to uncover a correlation between low bifidobacterium (a strain of flora in our gut) and poor immune health. Due to the ownership of her own lab, she shares information that you won't find on the news. Her work with microbiome, and case studies of fecal transplants improving some commonly known diseases, is nothing short of extraordinary. Get ready to be amazed by her knowledge and expertise and glean a whole new respect for the wonders of our microbiome. Dr. Hazan's Instagram DONATE to the Microbiome reserach Foundation **Stay informed by SUBSCRIBING to the 'Know Better | Do Better' Newsletter. Receive exclusive guest notifications and special content available only to our subscribers. Don't miss out, SUBSCRIBE NOW! Connect with Autumn on Instagram Facebook TikTok Discover the 'Know Better | Do Better' Storefront on Amazon!
GUEST 1 OVERVIEW: Dr. Sabine Hazan ("Hayezen") is the founder of Ventura Clinical Trials and CEO of PROGENABIOME-a state-of-the-art genetic research sequencing laboratory and has been Principal Investigator and Sub Investigator in over 150 clinical trials. She is a pioneer treating disease through insights obtained researching the human microbiome in the gastrointestinal tracts (gut). This led Dr Hazan to discover remarkable success in treating COVID-19 patients using ivermectin, hydroxycloraquine, zpack , doxycycline, vitamin C , vitamin D. Dr Hazan discovered loss of bifidobacteria as a possible severity susceptibility marker for covid-19 . Following bifidobacteria, she hypothesized Ivermectin increased bifidobacteria during the cytokine storm. She has used innovative treatment via fecal microbiota transplant (FMT), which she later coined refloralization™ and can offer hope for many conditions (think Alzheimer's & autism). She is the author of the book Let's Talk Sh!t Disease, Digestion and Fecal Transplants. http://www.progenabiome.com/ GUEST 2 OVERVIEW: Thomas Buckley is the former mayor of Lake Elsinore, CA and a former newspaper reporter. He has written for the Brownstone Institute, the California Globe, Issues and Insights, American Thinker, Daily Sceptic, Heartland Institute, Watt's up With That?, Zero Hedge, RealClear Politics and more. His runs The Point on Substack.
Dr. Sabine Hazan joins Joel and Dr. Sina to discuss the microbiome! The FDA has approved the first pill containing human feces. It was reportedly shown in clinical trials to be as effective as fecal microbiota transplants. Does it work? What do we really know about the microbiome? Are probiotic supplements a waste of money? Find out as we talk poop with the world's leading expert in the microbiome! Listen to the entire episode here: https://beyondlabels.supportingcast.fm/joinFollow on InstagramSubscribe on YouTubeFind Joel Here: www.polyfacefarms.comFind Sina Here: www.drsinamccullough.comOur Editor: https://www.youtube.com/nolangunnDisclaimer: The information provided by Joel Salatin and Sina McCullough, PhD is not intended to prevent, diagnose, treat, or cure any disease. The information provided in the podcasts, videos, and show descriptions is for educational purposes only. It is not intended to diagnose or treat any medical or psychological condition. The information provided is not meant to prevent, treat, mitigate or cure such conditions. The information provided is not medical advice nor is it designed to replace advice, information, or prescriptions you receive from your healthcare provider. Consult your health care provider before making any changes to your diet, medication, or lifestyle. Proceed at your own risk.Joel Salatin and Sina McCullough, Ph.D. specifically disclaim any liability, loss, or risk, personal or otherwise, that may be incurred as a consequence, directly or indirectly, of the use and application of any of the contents of their YouTube channel, Podcast, websites, books, Facebook pages, or any of the content during consulting sessions or speaking engagements. Proceed at your own risk. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.
GUEST OVERVIEW: Dr. Sabine Hazan is the founder of Ventura Clinical Trials and CEO of PROGENABIOME-a state-of-the-art genetic research sequencing laboratory and has been Principal Investigator and Sub Investigator in over 150 clinical trials. She is a pioneer treating disease through insights obtained researching the human microbiome in the gastrointestinal tracts (gut). GUEST OVERVIEW: Sheryl Bieler is a Hawaiian freedom fighter, fighting the tyrannical government. overreach in Hawaii. Sheryl is also the event coordinator with the Convention of States movement for the State of Hawaii. She has organized 30 Trump rallies and she fights for the rights of her family and the people of Hawaii and for the the innocence of our children. She is a native of Texas who has lived in Hawaii for 46 years and has watched the steady decline of Hawaii's quality of life under the Democratic Party. GUEST OVERVIEW: Stephen Fenech is the Editor of Tech Guide and one of Australia's most respected tech journalists. He is a regular on radio and TV talking about the latest tech news, products and trends.
Groundbreaking gastroenterologist, gut microbiome expert and author of Let's Talk Sh!t Dr. Sabine Hazan beams in to talk about the pandemic health crisis, the problem with modern medicine, and exactly what you need to know about how gut health affects our well being on episode 107 of the Far Out with Faust podcast.Dr. Hazan is a world-renowned gastroenterologist with years of experience in private practice, as well as performing over 150 clinical trials, including at her own firm, Ventura Clinical Trials. During these trials, Dr. Hazan realized how influential the gut microbiome is in terms of our overall health. She is considered a pioneer in the practice of fecal microbiota transplant (FMT), which she later coined refloralization™. Dr. Hazan has seen remarkable results in patients with a range of conditions, from C.diff infection, to Crohn's, psoriasis, Alzheimer's, and even cancer improve following transplant.During the pandemic, Dr. Hazan began researching alternative covid treatment protocols, as well as looking into exactly how the sars-cov-2 virus spreads. She's made some key discoveries in how covid infection (and the accepted mRNA intervention) may be causing damage to the microbiome.In this episode, Dr. Hazan explains how her unique interests and experiences led her to become an expert in the gut microbiome. She answers all of Faust's pressing questions, including:-What exactly is the gut microbiome, and why are these trillions of bacteria, fungi and viruses that live in our digestive tract important?-What on Earth is a fecal transplant, and how does it help patients?-How are people being cured by fecal transplant, and what type of conditions might benefit?-Why do modern doctors have such a poor understanding of our microbiome?-How does covid (and the popular intervention touted by the establishment) potentially disrupt the gut's delicate balance?-How did the pandemic negatively impact the practice of integrative medicine?-Why have so many doctors been censored for simply asking questions, or disagreeing with the prevailing narrative?-How do mainstream medical theories and medical conspiracy theories impact modern treatment practices?-Will doctors be able to cure diseases by mapping the genome of the microbiome?You're not going to want to miss a single minute of this straight-talking, fascinating and revelatory episode that lays out everything you need to know about the gut microbiome. Let's talk sh!t with Dr. Hazan!Buy Dr. Hazan's bookhttps://a.co/d/98YVCI0Connect with Dr. HazanWebsite: https://progenabiome.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/SabinehazanMDFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/people/Dr-Sabine-Hazan/100068803369388/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dr.sabinehazan/#podcast #GutHealth #GutMicrobiome
Gut microbiome specialist, Dr. Sabine Hazan, shares the shocking results of a long term study she performed comparing microbiomes in patients before and after taking the COVID-19 vaccine.
ICAN Secures Religious Exemption From Vaccination In Mississippi in Historic Legal Win for Medical Freedom; Jefferey Jaxen Reports on the Censorship Industrial Complex, which Has Stooped to New Lows, Then Science is Starting to Show Why the Antidepressant Epidemic is Destroying America From Within; New Study Suggests COVID Vaccine cuts vital bifidobacterium in half. Study Author & Microbiome Expert Joins Del In-Studio to discuss; A New Zealand Pastor Spoke Out Publicly Against Lockdowns and Mandates. Now He is Set to Serve Months in Prison While Govt Admits Overreach and Mistakes.Guests: MaryJo Perry, Lindey Magee, Aaron Siri, Esq., Billy Te Kahika, Sabine Hazan, M.D.
Dr. Sabine Hazan is a gastroenterologist and CEO of Progenabiome. She is an expert on gut bacteria. When she started studying the microbiomes of COVID-19 patients, she quickly noticed a pattern.“The people that had severe COVID lacked a certain bacteria called bifidobacteria,” she says.In this episode, she breaks down how a healthy gut impacts people's outcomes from COVID-19, and what steps people can take to improve their gut health and overall immunity.With the knowledge Hazan gained from studying the microbiomes of COVID-19 patients, she developed and patented treatment protocols combining vitamins and drugs that increase bifidobacteria including vitamin C, vitamin D, hydroxychloroquine, and ivermectin.We also discuss how the COVID-19 vaccines impact the microbiome, including the microbiomes of babies breastfeeding from recently vaccinated mothers.
In this episode we explore the relationship between our gut and brain health with returning guest Dr Sabine Hazan. Where is the research at with the gut/brain axis? Did you miss Episode 16?Check it out HERE This episode is brought to you by Namawell, the Best cold press juicers on the planet with the revolutionary J2 being the most amazing Bulk juicing champion. To get your Nama juicer at a discount, use code CHANTAL10 for 10% off! www.namawell.com Check out my 5 stars retreat In Portugal, May 5th to 10th 2023. A beautiful blend of holiday with holistic therapies and yoga with amazing plant based food. https://www.liveleanhealth.com/luxret... Sabine Hazan, MD As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of Progena Laboratory the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues. Dr. Hazan is a top clinical investigator for multiple pharmaceutical companies, and also acts as the series editor of Practical Gastroenterology on the microbiome, a peer review journal that reaches 18,000 gastroenterologists. She was and is a speaker for World Congress of Digestive Disease, MAGI, Microbiome Congress, International Drug Discovery Science and Technology Conference and NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology)Check out www.microbiomeresearchfoundation.org to continue to support good research. All publications are available on: https://progenabiome.com/publicationsThe BMJ Gatro paper is available HERE She is also the author of : Let's Talk Shit a book that covers disease, digestion and feral transplants Follow Dr Hazan's personal page on Instagram as well as her book's Let's Talk Shit To visit the clinic and make appointments:Sabine Hazan Steinberg MDGastroenterology/Hepatology/Internal MedicineCEO Ventura Clinical trialsCEO PROGENABIOMECEO Malibu Specialty Center1835 KNOLL Dr, Ventura, CA, 9300328990 PCH suite 205, Malibu, CA, 90265www.venturaclinicaltrials.comwww.progenabiome.comTel: 8053390549Fax: 8056421540
Welcome to a very special episode where we join our friends Rick Dancer and Dr. Sabine Hazan. Rick is the host of Get Real with Rick Dancer and we are honored to be on his show monthly discussing a topic of our choice, or hosting a guest interview. Today Rick joins us for the first half of the show that we share on his platform. Our guest this month is a returning friend, Dr. Sabine Hazan, author of Let's Talk Shit. Dr. Hazan starts with explaining the emerging field of Medicine in the Microbiome, and how it is becoming its own niche and possibly specialty in the future. She explains what the gut microbiome is, what it does and its importance in the influence on diseases and health conditions. Research is continually exposing the vast complexity of the gut bacteria and the potential to help heal or cure diseases in the future. She shares with us her recently published works on the microbiome in Covid, autism, Crohns, and more. Plus if you have not heard her past episodes with us, we recommend you go back and check out Episode 52!, called Eat Shit and Live. Also Episode 84 ( Let Doctors Be Doctors). This was a blast to include Rick Dancer and we ask you to check out his show, where we stream the first half of this podcast (links below) Also find us on his show weekly on Wed/Thur where we give you SNEAK PEAK updates on our podcasts to come! About Dr.Hazan Our guest expert on this subject is Dr. Sabine Hazan, a Gastroenterologist and scientific researcher in the subject of FMT. She launched ProgenaBiome, a genetic sequencing research company dedicated to understanding the gut flora at the clinical level. Her book, “Let's Talk Sh&t” is a fun, informative read for clinicians to lay people. The first woman ever accepted into the University of Florida as a Clinical Gastroenterology Fellow, Dr. Sabine Hazan is a pioneer in the medical field. Board certified in Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Internal Medicine, Dr. Hazan has published articles in numerous prestigious medical journals, including theJournal of Duval County Medical Association and Gastroenterology, and won several awards, such as the Best Fellow Scientific Presentation and Dean's Research Award awarded by University of Florida. In addition, Dr. Sabine Hazan is an acclaimed speaker and presented symposiums for influential medical organizations like the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy and Astra Merk, Inc. Links! Dr. Sabine Hazan: Ventura Clinical Trials: https://www.venturaclinicaltrials.com/physicians-2/ ProgenaBiome: https://progenabiome.com/ Amazon Link to : Let's Talk Shit!: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0578684705/ref=cm_sw_r_fa_awdb_imm_t1_DE5F7JQ50WJDSGGQMHCV Socials: Instagram or Twitter RICK DANCER: Website: https://www.rickdancer.com/ Rick Dancer on Facebook, Instagram , YouTube Channel Our Advice! Everything in this podcast is for educational purposes only. It does not constitute the practice of medicine and we are not providing medical advice. No Physician-patient relationship is formed and anything discussed in this podcast does not represent the views of our employers. The Fine Print! All opinions expressed by the hosts or guests in this episode are solely their opinion and are not to be used as specific medical advice. The hosts, May and Tim Hindmarsh MD, BS Free MD LLC, or any affiliates thereof are not under any obligation to update or correct any information provided in this episode. The guest's statements and opinions are subject to change without notice. Thanks for joining us! You are the reason we are here. If you have questions, reach out to us at doc@bsfreemd.com or find Tim and I on Facebook and IG. Please check out our every growing website as well at bsfreemd.com (no www) GET SOCIAL WITH US! Website: bsfreemd.com Rumble: https://rumble.com/search/video?q=bsfreemd Instagram:: https://www.instagram.com/bsfreemd/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bsfree Coming Soon: YouTube Channel!
Join Marty has he sits down with Dr. Sabine Hazan to discuss microbiomes, the damaged caused to gut health by both Covid and the vaccine, and standing up for the truth. Follow Dr. Hazan on Twitter: https://twitter.com/SabinehazanMD Check out Progenabiome: https://progenabiome.com/ Dr. Hazan's book: https://letstalkshit.org/ 6:31 - Broad explanation of microbiomes 11:11 - Observations during Covid 17:17 - Jabs kill microbiome 21:16 - Trusting compliant messengers over dissonant doctors 28:47 - Humanity medically shot itself in the foot 31:13 - How to regrow (and technical hiccups) 33:14 - Freedom and truth 40:06 - Keeping your body healthy 46:43 - Wrapping up, plugs Shoutout to our sponsors: Unchained Capital River TFTC Merch is Available: Shop Now Join the TFTC Movement: Main YT Channel Clips YT Channel Website Twitter Instagram Follow Marty Bent: Twitter Newsletter Podcast
Dr. Sabine Hazan, M.D. is a gastroenterologist and an expert on the human gut microbiome. She is the author of the wildly popular book "Let's talk shit." Dr. Sabine started her own clinical trial company 16 years ago, Ventura Clinical Trials, and has been the Principal Investigator and Sub Investigator in over 150 clinical trials. During her extensive clinical trial experience, Dr. Hazan observed how dramatically the microbiome could impact human health. Over the years, she followed the wise words of Dr. Stollman and explored the path of fecal matter transplant. She observed that fecal matter transplants could cure more than C. diff infection, as she saw patients with Crohn's, psoriasis, Alzheimer's, and even cancer improve following transplant. This podcast discusses the importance of the human gut microbiome and how to optimize it for better overall health.
The mission of Wholistic Wisdom Live is to guide you to discover better health, more love, and deeper spiritual awareness in your life. To watch episodes 1-16, click here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLNk0fyKjxSxfCeuaSgWJ8tvwWESuLnpH1 To be notified of future guests and livestreams, sign up to receive my newsletter at http://www.wholistic.com Episode 17 features Sabine Hazan, MD TOPIC: Bifidobacteria and the Survival of Species I had the honor of interviewing top gastroenterologist, researcher, and clinical trial expert, Dr. Sabine Hazan. In this interview, we talked about her journey to what she's doing today, what science is really showing, the importance of bifidobacteria, understanding the microbiome and how it correlates to every single disease on this planet, fecal transplants, gut health, C. Diff, Crohn's, Autism, Alzheimer's, placebo trials, precision medicine, and the pandemic. To learn more about Sabine, please visit her website: https://progenabiome.com and follow her on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dr.sabinehazan/ To further discuss this interview live, please join our private membership platform Vibrational Revelations. We have weekly live Zoom conversations and dive into revealing more truths about consciousness and our reality: https://www.wholistic.com/vibrational-revelations Wellness Wishes, Elena #microbiome #guthealth #immunity
This week, Jillian outlines the top supplements for longevity from NMN to fisetin. Learn what to take, when to take it, and how much to turn back the clock! Then, Dr. Sabine Hazan, gastroenterologist and founder of genetic sequencing research lab ProgenaBiome, is on to outline the latest research on Covid! Ground breaking studies indicate that the bacteria in your gut affects your chances of getting Covid, the severity of your case, and whether or not you will suffer with long haulers syndrome. Dr. Hazan spells out what to do to bullet proof our bodies against the flu, Covid, RSV and more. Guest Links:Website: https://progenabiome.comBook: https://letstalkshit.orgFor 25% off The Fitness App by Jillian Michaels, go to www.thefitnessapp.com/podcastdealFollow us on Instagram @JillianMichaels and @MartiniCindyJillian Michaels Community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1880466198675549Email your questions to JillianPodcast@gmail.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
GUEST OVERVIEW: As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues.
On today's show we discuss links between gut disorder and autism and other diseases. GUEST OVERVIEW: As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues.
GUEST HOST: Owen Stevens GUEST OVERVIEW: As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Sabine Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues.
On today's show we discuss... should Trump bear responsibility for the COVID vaccine disaster?
GUEST HOST: Owen Stevens GUEST OVERVIEW: The first woman ever accepted into the University of Florida as a Clinical Gastroenterology Fellow, Dr. Sabine Hazan is a pioneer in the medical field. Dr Hazan is a CEO of Ventura Clinical Trials, a leading research group for the microbiome and gut Bacteria. Dr Hazan is also the CEO of Progenabiome which looks beyond the traditional protocols to treat bacteria and viruses automatically with drugs and investigates the role of the gut microbiome. Dr Hazan has received multiple awards for her research.
Would you let your plumber do your colonoscopy?? Just because he works with poop doesn't mean he is equipped to advise you on your colon health or even perform medical procedures! Our friend, renowned Gastroenterologist Dr. Sabine Hazan recently started a twitter campaign that went viral called “Suits vs Labcoats” Why are we listening to so-called ‘experts' that have financial incentives in our healthcare, whether selling products, pharma compensation, academic promotions or grants. Those who push an agenda and oftentimes never see a patient in real life now have taken over the media AND our healthcare advice. This is SO WRONG! There is a huge difference between physicians in private practice than those in academic settings. Now we have experts in research, pharma and billionaires that are angel investors in research and development taking over the airwaves and social media platforms telling YOU what to do with your health. Pay attention to the message. Stop and think what the agenda is and follow the money! Why are we listening to a ‘SUIT' about our healthcare when we SHOULD be listening to a“LABCOAT? Lets' let Doctors be Doctors again! “The practice of medicine is an art, not a trade; a calling, not a business; a calling in which your heart will be exercised equally with your head.” Sir William Osler More about Dr. Hazan: Dr. Sabine Hazan is a Gastroenterologist and scientific researcher in the subject of fecal transplant and the gut microbiome. She launched ProgenaBiome, a genetic sequencing research company dedicated to understanding the gut flora at the clinical level. Her book, “Let's Talk Sh&t” is a fun, informative read for clinicians to lay people. The first woman ever accepted into the University of Florida as a Clinical Gastroenterology Fellow, Dr. Sabine Hazan is a pioneer in the medical field. Board certified in Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Internal Medicine, Dr. Hazan has published articles in numerous prestigious medical journals, including theJournal of Duval County Medical Association and Gastroenterology, and won several awards, such as the Best Fellow Scientific Presentation and Dean's Research Award awarded by University of Florida. In addition, Dr. Sabine Hazan is an acclaimed speaker and presented symposiums for influential medical organizations like the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy and Astra Merk, Inc. Sponsor: Check out New Leaf Hyperbarics in Eugene, OR and experience the benefits of hyperbaric therapy! Links! ProgenaBiome: https://progenabiome.com/ Ventura Clinical Trials: https://www.venturaclinicaltrials.com/physicians-2/ Amazon Link to : Let's Talk Shit!: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0578684705/ref=cm_sw_r_fa_awdb_imm_t1_DE5F7JQ50WJDSGGQMHCV Episode #52: Eat Sh$t and Live! With Dr. Sabine Hazan On IG: Dr. Hazan Let's Talk Shit, the book On FB: Dr. Sabine Hazan On Twitter: Sabine Hazan MD Our Advice! Everything in this podcast is for educational purposes only. It does not constitute the practice of medicine and we are not providing medical advice. No Physician-patient relationship is formed and anything discussed in this podcast does not represent the views of our employers. The Fine Print! All opinions expressed by the hosts or guests in this episode are solely their opinion and are not to be used as specific medical advice. The hosts, May and Tim Hindmarsh MD, BS Free MD LLC, or any affiliates thereof are not under any obligation to update or correct any information provided in this episode. The guest's statements and opinions are subject to change without notice. Thanks for joining us! You are the reason we are here. If you have questions, reach out to us at doc@bsfreemd.com or find Tim and I on Facebook and IG. Please check out our every growing website as well at bsfreemd.com (no www) GET SOCIAL WITH US! Instagram:: https://www.instagram.com/bsfreemd/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bsfree
GUEST OVERVIEW: As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Sabine Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues.
GUEST OVERVIEW: As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Sabine Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues.
Thank you for tuning in for another episode of Life's Best Medicine. Dr. Sabine Hazan is a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology. Dr. Hazan is the Founder and CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials. Dr. Hazan is a top clinical investigator for multiple pharmaceutical companies, and also acts as the series editor of Practical Gastroenterology on the microbiome, a peer review journal that reaches 18,000 gastroenterologists. She was and is a speaker for World Congress of Digestive Disease, MAGI, Microbiome Congress, International Drug Discovery Science and Technology Conference and NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology). In this discussion, Drs. Brian and Sabine talk about fecal transplants, the effects of stress on the microbiome and the effects of lifestyle changes on stress, regional varieties of microbiome organisms, what the microbiome is doing during COVID, Dr. Sabine's treatment and prevention protocols for COVID, hydroxychloroquine, the evolution of COVID treatment, the role of vitamin D in the microbiome, ivermectin, the need for doctors with varying hypotheses to come to the table to discuss their findings, and Dr. Sabine's current research projects. Life's Best Medicine According to Sabine: “I love my job when I'm doing fun things and evaluating microbes and seeing improvement of a disease in a patient. To me, that is what thrills me; that's so empowering.” Thank you for listening. Have a blessed day and stay healthy! Links: Dr. Sabine Hazan: Progenabiome Twitter Ventura Clinical Trials Dr. Brian Lenzkes: Website Low Carb MD Podcast Simply Snackin'
GUEST OVERVIEW: Born in Morocco, Dr. Sabine Hazan has always been dedicated to understanding life. She sought a career in medicine and was accepted to medical school based on outstanding research on obesity conducted as an undergraduate. She completed her residency at the University of Miami during the peak of the HIV epidemic, treating extremely ill patients at Jackson Memorial Hospital and in the local jail. There, she was awarded two prizes for her research. After completing her residency, Dr. Hazan became the first woman gastroenterology fellow at the University of Florida. There, she completed a year of research and presented her findings in poster format at the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) National Meeting. It was at that moment that she was approached by the esteemed Dr. Neil Stollman. He told her that the future of medicine lies in the microbiome. For her exceptional work with visceral hyperalgesia she was awarded the Dean's Research Award. Dr. Stollman is now an expert and leader on fecal transplant and Clostridioides difficile (C.diff) and serves on the governing board of the ACG. GUEST WEBSITE: http://progenabiome.com
In this episode we will explore the relationship between our health and our gut; mostly related to the latest Covid infections. Dr Hazan is joining me today to speak about her findings in correlation of the microbiome and C19 and how her research is showing how important our gut health truly is in fighting diseases. Sabine Hazan, MD As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of Progena Laboratory the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues. Dr. Hazan is a top clinical investigator for multiple pharmaceutical companies, and also acts as the series editor of Practical Gastroenterology on the microbiome, a peer review journal that reaches 18,000 gastroenterologists. She was and is a speaker for World Congress of Digestive Disease, MAGI, Microbiome Congress, International Drug Discovery Science and Technology Conference and NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology)Check out www.microbiomeresearchfoundation.org to continue to support good research. All publications are available on: https://progenabiome.com/publicationsThe BMJ Gatro paper is available HERE She is also the author of : Let's Talk Shit a book that covers disease, digestion and feral transplants Follow Dr Hazan's personal page on Instagram as well as her book's Let's Talk Shit To visit the clinic and make appointments:Sabine Hazan Steinberg MDGastroenterology/Hepatology/Internal MedicineCEO Ventura Clinical trialsCEO PROGENABIOMECEO Malibu Specialty Center1835 KNOLL Dr, Ventura, CA, 9300328990 PCH suite 205, Malibu, CA, 90265www.venturaclinicaltrials.comwww.progenabiome.comTel: 8053390549Fax: 8056421540
Tune in to this very interesting episode to hear what microbiome expert, Dr. Hazan has found when studying the
Tune in to this very interesting episode to hear what microbiome expert, Dr. Hazan has found when studying the
GUEST OVERVIEW: Dr. Sabine Hazan is a Gastroenterologist, Researcher, Consultant and Speaker. As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues.
GUEST 1 OVERVIEW: Sabine Hazan was the first woman ever accepted into the University of Florida as a Clinical Gastroenterology Fellow, Dr. Sabine Hazan is a pioneer in the medical field. Dr Hazan is a CEO of Ventura Clinical Trials, a leading research group for the microbiome and gut Bacteria. Dr Hazan is also the CEO of Progenabiome which looks beyond the traditional protocols to treat bacteria and viruses automatically with drugs and investigates the role of the gut microbiome. Dr Hazan has received multiple awards for her research. GUEST WEBSITE: https://www.venturaclinicaltrials.com/ GUEST 2 OVERVIEW: John Parsons describes himself as an undereducated biologist. He's been involved in science research projects since 1995. John is an avid researcher on all things Covid and a regular guest on TNT Radio.
Dr. Sabine Hazan is a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, hepatology, a top clinical investigator, author of “Let's Talk Shit,” the Founder & CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials. On the podcast we discuss letting doctors be doctors, the impact the pandemic has had on kids, therapies, interference by the media, microbiomes and more. PLEASE LIKE SHARE AND SUBSCRIBE this podcast!! Website https://progenabiome.com/ Link to purchase her book https://progenabiome.com/shop/ols/products/lets-talk-sht Social Media Twitter https://twitter.com/SabinehazanMD
The Perfect Stool Understanding and Healing the Gut Microbiome
Fecal transplants or FMT are only allowed in the US for recurrent C Difficile infections. Hear from Sabine Hazan, MD, a researcher who conducts clinical trials using FMT and lead author of the 2020 book “Let's Talk Shit: Disease, Digestion and Fecal Transplants” about her experience with FMT (versus antibiotics) for C Diff, the importance of gut health, Covid and the microbiome, incidental conditions that have improved while conducting FMT, including alopecia areata and Alzheimer's, and current clinical trials underway with FMT for various conditions from autism to IBD. Lindsey Parsons, your host, helps clients solve gut issues and reverse autoimmune disease naturally. Take her quiz to see which stool or functional medicine test will help you find out what's wrong. She's a Certified Health Coach at High Desert Health in Tucson, Arizona. She coaches clients locally and nationwide. You can also follow Lindsey on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or Pinterest or reach her via email at lindsey@highdeserthealthcoaching.com to set up a free 30-minute Gut Healing Breakthrough Session. Show Notes
Julie speaks to Dr. Sabine Hazan, expert in the microbiome and author of Let's Talk Shit: Disease, Digestion and Fecal Transplants about the human microbiome - the dynamic world of bacteria, fungus, and viruses that comprise more than 50% of our mortal selves.
In this episode we get to nerd out a little bit about fecal transplant. What it is, why is it important, how is it done, and why it might not be for everyone. Joining us today at Maximal Being Fitness, Nutrition, and Gut Health, is Dr. Sabine Hazan, a renowned gastroenterologist and researcher, creator of ProgenaBiome, a state-of-the-art genetic research sequencing laboratory, and author of Let's Talk Sh!t. Today she released a groundbreaking study on Covid and how it can alter the microbiome. Topics- Fecal Transplant- Bifidobacteria- Microbiome and COVIDDoc Mok an advanced GI doctor specializing in nutrition, gut health, and cancer. Joining him is the podcast's layman, Jacky P, smashing the broscience on this week's podcast. Their guest Dr. Sabine Hazan is a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology. She is also the Founder and CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues. Also, she is a top clinical investigator for multiple pharmaceutical companies.If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a differenceReach out to us at team@maximalbeing.comOr https://www.maximalbeing.com/site/contactFREE STUFF3 NUTRITION HACKS (that Your Doctor Won't Tell You) FREE e-book: https://www.maximalbeing.com/3-nutrition-hacksThe Perfect Human Diet: A FREE 5 part training video: https://www.maximalbeing.com/the-perfect-human-dietWE CAN HELP YOUSign-up for our Kombucha Course: https://www.maximalbeing.com/kombuchaThe Meal Prep Bootcamp Course: https://www.maximalbeing.com/offers/oGLXwoof/checkoutNeed a Sustainable Nutrition Solution for Gut Health: https://www.maximalbeing.com/sustainable-nutrition-solutionOur sponsorsEmerson Ecologics (10% OFF All Supplements): https://wellevate.me/maximal-beingiHerb supplement BDB5528 and receive 10% off your orders: https://www.maximalbeing.com/iherbResourceshttps://www.maximalbeing.comSocialFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/maximalbeing/Twitter: https://twitter.com/maximalbeingInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/maximalbeings/Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/maximalbeing/Linked'in: https://www.linkedin.com/in/maximal-being-13a5051a1/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi7KVUF8U-gfhOE1KSNAqIgSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/maximalbeing)
In this episode we get to nerd out a little bit about fecal transplant. What it is, why is it important, how is it done, and why it might not be for everyone. Joining us today at Maximal Being Fitness, Nutrition, and Gut Health, is Dr. Sabine Hazan, a renowned gastroenterologist and researcher, creator of ProgenaBiome, a state-of-the-art genetic research sequencing laboratory, and author of Let's Talk Sh!t. Today she released a groundbreaking study on Covid and how it can alter the microbiome. Topics- Fecal Transplant- Bifidobacteria- Microbiome and COVIDDoc Mok an advanced GI doctor specializing in nutrition, gut health, and cancer. Joining him is the podcast's layman, Jacky P, smashing the broscience on this week's podcast. Their guest Dr. Sabine Hazan is a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology. She is also the Founder and CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues. Also, she is a top clinical investigator for multiple pharmaceutical companies.If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a differenceReach out to us at team@maximalbeing.comOr https://www.maximalbeing.com/site/contactFREE STUFF3 NUTRITION HACKS (that Your Doctor Won't Tell You) FREE e-book: https://www.maximalbeing.com/3-nutrition-hacksThe Perfect Human Diet: A FREE 5 part training video: https://www.maximalbeing.com/the-perfect-human-dietWE CAN HELP YOUSign-up for our Kombucha Course: https://www.maximalbeing.com/kombuchaThe Meal Prep Bootcamp Course: https://www.maximalbeing.com/offers/oGLXwoof/checkoutNeed a Sustainable Nutrition Solution for Gut Health: https://www.maximalbeing.com/sustainable-nutrition-solutionOur sponsorsEmerson Ecologics (10% OFF All Supplements): https://wellevate.me/maximal-beingiHerb supplement BDB5528 and receive 10% off your orders: https://www.maximalbeing.com/iherbResourceshttps://www.maximalbeing.comSocialFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/maximalbeing/Twitter: https://twitter.com/maximalbeingInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/maximalbeings/Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/maximalbeing/Linked'in: https://www.linkedin.com/in/maximal-being-13a5051a1/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi7KVUF8U-gfhOE1KSNAqIgSupport the show
In this episode we get to nerd out a little bit about fecal transplant. What it is, why is it important, how is it done, and why it might not be for everyone. Joining us today at Maximal Being Fitness, Nutrition, and Gut Health, is Dr. Sabine Hazan, a renowned gastroenterologist and researcher, creator of ProgenaBiome, a state-of-the-art genetic research sequencing laboratory, and author of Let's Talk Sh!t. Today she released a groundbreaking study on Covid and how it can alter the microbiome. Topics - Fecal Transplant- Bifidobacteria- Fecal transplant for C. diff.Doc Mok an advanced GI doctor specializing in nutrition, gut health, and cancer. Joining him is the podcast's layman, Jacky P, smashing the broscience on this week's podcast. Their guest Dr. Sabine Hazan is a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology. She is also the Founder and CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues. Also, she is a top clinical investigator for multiple pharmaceutical companies.If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a differenceReach out to us at team@maximalbeing.comOr https://www.maximalbeing.com/site/contactFREE STUFF3 NUTRITION HACKS (that Your Doctor Won't Tell You) FREE e-book: https://www.maximalbeing.com/3-nutrition-hacksThe Perfect Human Diet: A FREE 5 part training video: https://www.maximalbeing.com/the-perfect-human-dietWE CAN HELP YOUSign-up for our Kombucha Course: https://www.maximalbeing.com/kombuchaThe Meal Prep Bootcamp Course: https://www.maximalbeing.com/offers/oGLXwoof/checkoutNeed a Sustainable Nutrition Solution for Gut Health: https://www.maximalbeing.com/sustainable-nutrition-solutionOur sponsorsEmerson Ecologics (10% OFF All Supplements): https://wellevate.me/maximal-beingiHerb supplement BDB5528 and receive 10% off your orders: https://www.maximalbeing.com/iherbResourceshttps://www.maximalbeing.comSocialFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/maximalbeing/Twitter: https://twitter.com/maximalbeingInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/maximalbeings/Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/maximalbeing/Linked'in: https://www.linkedin.com/in/maximal-being-13a5051a1/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi7KVUF8U-gfhOE1KSNAqIgSupport the show
Dr. Sabine Hazan, MD is an internally recognized gastroenterologist in Southern CaliforniaIf you want to have a blast and learn from this renowned Doctor and Author of the best selling book, "Lets Talk Sh!t: Disease, Digestion and fecal transplants, Then this episode is for you!Dr. Sabine Hazan is a firm believer that disease can only be understood through precision medicine by focusing on the individual and the changes that happen within. Much like each person has a unique fingerprint, no two people have the same Microbiome.She also believes in the importance of assessing disease by looking at family. Her overall goal is to understand the microbes that allow us to function, from those we are born with to those that will decompose us when we pass on. http://www.letstalkshit.org http://progenabiome.comSo much knowledge that can help everyone
In this episode we get to nerd out a little bit about fecal transplant. What it is, why is it important, how is it done, and why it might not be for everyone. Joining us today at Maximal Being Fitness, Nutrition, and Gut Health, is Dr. Sabine Hazan, a renowned gastroenterologist and researcher, creator of ProgenaBiome, a state-of-the-art genetic research sequencing laboratory, and author of Let's Talk Sh!t. Today she released a groundbreaking study on Covid and how it can alter the microbiome. Topics - Fecal Transplant- Bifidobacteria- Fecal transplant for C. diff.Doc Mok an advanced GI doctor specializing in nutrition, gut health, and cancer. Joining him is the podcast's layman, Jacky P, smashing the broscience on this week's podcast. Their guest Dr. Sabine Hazan is a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology. She is also the Founder and CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues. Also, she is a top clinical investigator for multiple pharmaceutical companies.If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a differenceReach out to us at team@maximalbeing.comOr https://www.maximalbeing.com/site/contactFREE STUFF3 NUTRITION HACKS (that Your Doctor Won't Tell You) FREE e-book: https://www.maximalbeing.com/3-nutrition-hacksThe Perfect Human Diet: A FREE 5 part training video: https://www.maximalbeing.com/the-perfect-human-dietWE CAN HELP YOUSign-up for our Kombucha Course: https://www.maximalbeing.com/kombuchaThe Meal Prep Bootcamp Course: https://www.maximalbeing.com/offers/oGLXwoof/checkoutNeed a Sustainable Nutrition Solution for Gut Health: https://www.maximalbeing.com/sustainable-nutrition-solutionOur sponsorsEmerson Ecologics (10% OFF All Supplements): https://wellevate.me/maximal-beingiHerb supplement BDB5528 and receive 10% off your orders: https://www.maximalbeing.com/iherbResourceshttps://www.maximalbeing.comSocialFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/maximalbeing/Twitter: https://twitter.com/maximalbeingInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/maximalbeings/Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/maximalbeing/Linked'in: https://www.linkedin.com/in/maximal-being-13a5051a1/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi7KVUF8U-gfhOE1KSNAqIgSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/maximalbeing)
Today on the Gut Health Reset Podcast, we are diving into a discussion on your microbiome and obesity with returning guest Dr. Sabine Hazan! The gut microbiome plays a key role in how your body retains weight, much more than most people realize. In fact, Dr. Hazen shares a relevant study on the microbiomes of mice, and how the smallest differences in gut bacteria radically affected the weight and obesity of these mice.In this episode, we will discuss fatty liver disease, food sensitivities, what you should be eating, gut bacteria, and more with Dr. Hazan! - We answer these questions:- How is obesity linked to the microbiome?- Are there any types of bacteria that can help you lose weight?- How should fatty liver be treated?- Why you have to prioritize eating whole foods and smaller portions- What you should know about oat sensitivities- And more!-Schedule a consultation with Alexis: www.altfammed.comSupplements: Prebiotics: https://drannmariebarter.com/product/binding-fiber-support-capsules/ - About Dr. Sabine Hazan:Dr. Sabine Hazan is a renowned gastroenterologist and researcher, creator of ProgenaBiome, a state-of-the-art genetic research sequencing laboratory, and author of Let's Talk Sh!t. Recently, she released a groundbreaking study on Covid and how it can alter the microbiome. As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues. Dr. Hazan is a top clinical investigator for multiple pharmaceutical companies, and also acts as the series editor of Practical Gastroenterology on the microbiome, a peer review journal that reaches 18,000 gastroenterologists. She was and is a speaker for World Congress of Digestive Disease, MAGI, Microbiome Congress, International Drug Discovery Science and Technology Conference and NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology). Her book: https://amzn.to/3AjNG4B Her website: https://progenabiome.com/ -Subscribe for more gut health content and share this podcast with a friend! Take a screenshot of this episode and tag Dr. Ann-Marie Barter:http://instagram.com/drannmariebarter-Dr. Ann-Marie Barter is a Functional Medicine and Chiropractic Doctor at Alternative Family Medicine & Chiropractic. She is the clinic founder of Alternative Family Medicine & Chiropractic that has two offices: one in Longmont and one in Denver. They treat an array of health conditions overlooked or under-treated by conventional medicine, called the "grey zone". https://altfammed.com/https://drannmariebarter.com/
Today on the Gut Health Reset Podcast, we are diving into a discussion on your microbiome and covid infection with Dr. Sabine Hazan! Dr. Hazan has tested, researched, and treated over 2,000 patients with COVID, spanning across all ages and genders, some vaccinated, some not. The microbiome provides the answers to what your gut says about you - how to treat Covid and how to understand why some people get sick and others do not.In this episode, we will discuss viral infection, testing methods, the gut microbiome, bio-individuality, and more with Dr. Sabine Hazan! - We answer these questions:- How does covid affect the microbiome?- Why should we move beyond a “one size fits all” approach to medicine?- Why is blood testing and antibody testing for covid so important?- What can we do to boost our helpful gut bacteria?- Why does bio-individuality matter? - And more!-Enjoy our previous episode with Dr. Mark Pimentel: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-ultimate-guide-to-overcoming-ibs-with-dr-mark/id1478167193?i=1000540864777 Schedule a consultation with Alexis:www.altfammed.comSupplements:Prebiotics: https://drannmariebarter.com/product/binding-fiber-support-capsules/ - About Dr. Sabine Hazan:Dr. Sabine Hazan is a renowned gastroenterologist and researcher, creator of ProgenaBiome, a state-of-the-art genetic research sequencing laboratory, and author of Let's Talk Sh!t. Recently, she released a groundbreaking study on Covid and how it can alter the microbiome. As a specialist in gastroenterology, internal medicine, and hepatology, Dr. Hazan has used her expertise in many regards over the last two decades. Dr. Hazan is also the Founder & CEO of the Malibu Specialty Center and Ventura Clinical Trials, where she conducts and oversees clinical trials for cutting-edge research on various medical issues. Dr. Hazan is a top clinical investigator for multiple pharmaceutical companies, and also acts as the series editor of Practical Gastroenterology on the microbiome, a peer review journal that reaches 18,000 gastroenterologists. She was and is a speaker for World Congress of Digestive Disease, MAGI, Microbiome Congress, International Drug Discovery Science and Technology Conference and NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology). Her book: https://amzn.to/3AjNG4B Her website: https://progenabiome.com/ -Subscribe for more gut health content and share this podcast with a friend! Take a screenshot of this episode and tag Dr. Ann-Marie Barter:http://instagram.com/drannmariebarter-Dr. Ann-Marie Barter is a Functional Medicine and Chiropractic Doctor at Alternative Family Medicine & Chiropractic. She is the clinic founder of Alternative Family Medicine & Chiropractic that has two offices: one in Longmont and one in Denver. They treat an array of health conditions overlooked or under-treated by conventional medicine, called the "grey zone". https://altfammed.com/https://drannmariebarter.com/
You've heard all the jokes- what's your poo telling you?, eat sh&t and die, you're full of sh&t. Today we are going in deep and discussing how “eating” poo can actually save people! ( no they don't really have to eat it, but it makes a great title!) Fecal microbiota transplant ( FMT) aka a stool transplant, is the process of transferring stool from a healthy patient into another individual. Currently in the USA, the only FDA approved use of this treatment is for C. difficile infections. It has been used experimentally to treat other GI diseases such as IBS, colitis, and even some neurological conditions like MS, Parkinsons and even autism. What is even more amazing, is that the 10,000 plus species of microorganisms in the GI tract make up a unique “microbiome” in each individual. There is huge diversity in the gut microbiome depending on diet, genetics, environment and overall health of the individual. Research is exploring the potential curative role of gut bacteria in various diseases. Our guest expert on this subject is Dr. Sabine Hazan, a Gastroenterologist and scientific researcher in the subject of FMT. She launched ProgenaBiome, a genetic sequencing research company dedicated to understanding the gut flora at the clinical level. Her book, “Let's Talk Sh&t” is a fun, informative read for clinicians to lay people. The first woman ever accepted into the University of Florida as a Clinical Gastroenterology Fellow, Dr. Sabine Hazan is a pioneer in the medical field. Board certified in Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Internal Medicine, Dr. Hazan has published articles in numerous prestigious medical journals, including theJournal of Duval County Medical Association and Gastroenterology, and won several awards, such as the Best Fellow Scientific Presentation and Dean's Research Award awarded by University of Florida. In addition, Dr. Sabine Hazan is an acclaimed speaker and presented symposiums for influential medical organizations like the American Society for Gastrointestinal Endoscopy and Astra Merk, Inc. Sponsor: Our sponsor this week is Laurel Road! Visit them for all your banking needs! Visit: https://www.laurelroad.com/ Links! ProgenaBiome: https://progenabiome.com/ Ventura Clinical Trials: https://www.venturaclinicaltrials.com/physicians-2/ Amazon Link to : Let's Talk Shit!: https://www.amazon.com/dp/0578684705/ref=cm_sw_r_fa_awdb_imm_t1_DE5F7JQ50WJDSGGQMHCV Our Advice! Everything in this podcast is for educational purposes only. It does not constitute the practice of medicine and we are not providing medical advice. No Physician-patient relationship is formed and anything discussed in this podcast does not represent the views of our employers. The Fine Print! All opinions expressed by the hosts or guests in this episode are solely their opinion and are not to be used as specific medical advice. The hosts, May and Tim Hindmarsh MD, BS Free MD LLC, or any affiliates thereof are not under any obligation to update or correct any information provided in this episode. The guest's statements and opinions are subject to change without notice. Thanks for joining us! You are the reason we are here. If you have questions, reach out to us at doc@bsfreemd.com or find Tim and I on Facebook and IG. Please check out our every growing website as well at bsfreemd.com (no www) GET SOCIAL WITH US! Instagram:: https://www.instagram.com/bsfreemd/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bsfree
Dr. Hazan's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sabine-hazan-steinberg-md-5343b241/Dr. Hazan's book: https://www.amazon.com/Lets-Talk-SH-Digestion-Transplants-ebook/dp/B08PQ739JJJoin this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvw9kVKHEyAlZPZ6ZuOd2VA/joinText Me: (949) 415-6256My podcast is Random Musings From The Clinical Trials GuruListen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7JF6FNvoLnBpfIrLNCcg7aGET THE BOOK! https://www.amazon.com/dp/1090349521/...Text "guru" to 855-942-5288 to join VIP list!My blog: http://www.TheClinicalTrialsGuru.comMy CRO and Site Network: http://www.DSCScro.comMy CRA Academy: http://www.TheCRAacademy.comMy CRC Academy: http://www.TheCRCacademy.comLatinos In Clinical Research: http://www.LatinosinClinicalResearch.comThe Clinical Research Circle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgOSm8EN_M7xf9Xfw1m778wMy TikTok: DanSfera
Are tiny microbes in our digestive systems the key to outcomes from COVID-19? Today, we are joined by Dr. Sabine Hazan, a California gastroenterologist who has over 22 years of experience in clinical trials, to discuss her emerging research on the microbiome. She hypothesizes that the health of a person's gut might hold the keys to outcomes from COVID, as well as other common ailments and diseases. She believes that if science, rather than greed, directed the research, this is where it would head in the coming days. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today's Episode is with Dr.Sabine Hazan, Renowned gastroenterologist Dr. Sabine Hazan, creator of ProgenaBiome, a state-of-the-art genetic research sequencing laboratory with next-generation whole genome shotgun sequencing capabilities on-site. She can discuss: Why this study is important to our understanding of COVID risk How she has found COVID in the stools of many patients - and cured them Why neglecting the bacteria in your gut can put you at more serious risk for COVID Much more! Dr. Hazan is the founder of Ventura Clinical Trials, and has been Principal Investigator and Sub Investigator in over 150 clinical trials. Many of these trials were for Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI), enough that through her impressive recruitment she became known as the Queen of C. difficile in the clinical trial community. When her patients with C.diff did not respond to traditional or clinical trial therapies, she resorted to treatment via fecal microbiota transplant (FMT), which she later coined refloralization™. She is the author of Let's Talk Sh!t, a humorous, easy to digest explanation of gastrointestinal disorders, treatments, and next generation hope for gut-related diseases. Her GI treatments have proven to help Covid patients survive. Resources: Facebook: Dr. Sabine Hazan Instagram: dr.sabinehazan Website: venturaclinicaltrials.com
Science isn't about who can pay the most money to get the answers they want…it's about being curious, asking the right questions, and having the courage to explore the unknown unmolested by special interests. Joining us in this episode of Energetic Health Radio is one of the world's foremost authorities on the microbiome, Dr. Sabine Hazan...
Science isn't about who can pay the most money to get the answers they want…it's about being curious, asking the right questions, and having the courage to explore the unknown unmolested by special interests. Joining us in this episode of Energetic Health Radio is one of the world's foremost authorities on the microbiome, Dr. Sabine Hazan...
Here at the HER Podcast, we're not afraid to talk about any part of a woman's body. Including her poop. It sounds gross, but paying attention to your poop is pretty important. Bowel habits are a strong indicator of your digestive health. The color, shape, and texture of your stool can reveal signs of infection, digestive issues, or more serious health problems, such as cancer. Plus, your poop can hold the secret to recovery for Covid long haulers.That's right, we're going there. And taking us down this path is Dr. Sabine Hazan. She is is the founder of Ventura Clinical Trials and has been Principal Investigator and Sub Investigator in over 150 clinical trials. Many of these trials were for Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI), enough that through her impressive recruitment she became known as the "Queen of C. Diff" in the clinical trial community. We discuss what our poop says about us, and the role the gut microbiome plays on overall health, fecal transplant, and reveal the secrets behind our digestive habits and the rest of the body!
Here at the HER Podcast, we're not afraid to talk about any part of a woman's body. Including her poop.Here at the HER Podcast, we're not afraid to talk about any part of a woman's body. Including her poop. It sounds gross, but paying attention to your poop is pretty important. Bowel habits are a strong indicator of your digestive health. The color, shape, and texture of your stool can reveal signs of infection, digestive issues, or more serious health problems, such as cancer. Plus, your poop can hold the secret to recovery for Covid long haulers.That's right, we're going there. And taking us down this path is Dr. Sabine Hazan. She is is the founder of Ventura Clinical Trials and has been Principal Investigator and Sub Investigator in over 150 clinical trials. Many of these trials were for Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI), enough that through her impressive recruitment she became known as the "Queen of C. Diff" in the clinical trial community. We discuss what our poop says about us, and the role the gut microbiome plays on overall health, fecal transplant, and reveal the secrets behind our digestive habits and the rest of the body!
These days, most of us are taking a more hands-on approach to our health. And this week's guest is going to explain why both physical and mental health are all in the gut. Dr. Sabine Hazan is a leading researcher and practitioner in the field of the gut microbiome. She's here to talk about what a gut microbiome is, how it affects our overall well-being, and how to improve your own gut microbiome. In this episode, you'll learn: What a gut microbiome is. How your gut microbiome affects your mental health. Why your gut microbiome is key to a healthy immune system.
Dr. Sabine Hazan is on to talk about how microbiome dramatically impacts aging, immune system function, dermatological health, cognitive function, and more. Dr. Hazen is one of the world's experts on the genetics of the gut biome. Dr. Sabine Hazan has always been dedicated to understanding life. She sought a career in medicine and was accepted to medical school based on outstanding research on obesity conducted as an undergraduate. During her extensive clinical trial experience, Dr. Hazan observed how dramatically the microbiome can impact human health. As the founder & CEO of Progenabiome, a genetic sequencing research laboratory, she leads 35+ studies investigating the role of the gut flora in various diseases. Since March 2020, she has been at the forefront of COVID-19 research, leading ongoing FDA-approved clinical trials for treatment and prophylaxis. Dr. Sabine Hazan: https://progenabiome.com/our-story *It's time to get a NEW mattress!! www.engineeredsleep.com USE code LIVE10 for 10% off*
Eric Rieger 0:00 Hello gut check project fans and KB MD health family. I hope you're having a great day. It is now time for episode number 58. And of course we got an awesome guest. It's Dr. Sabine Hasan, who is she a world renowned research gastroenterologist, she is based in California, and she is an expert in faecal microbial transplants, FMT trusted it fast. I couldn't do it. Anyhow FMT. So essentially you're taking healthy poop from a healthy person, and using that microbiome that's inside of there to be transplanted into somebody else who may not be doing so well and could have all kinds of disease etc. Regardless, she's at the forefront of finding real solutions that can be accepted by our bodies to make us better make us well even help you lose weight. That's right. Could poop because somebody else's poop Have you lose weight, and earmuffs in case you have any young kids in the car, but she wrote a book and it's called let's talk shit, although the AI is upside down like a exclamation point. So regardless, let's get to her interview. And well first got to pay the bills though of course brought to you by artron to artron to get your daily polyphenols that are Tron teal.com or just go to love my tummy calm get your daily polyphenols. That's right. Developed by my partner, Dr. Kenneth Brown, gastroenterologist, these polyphenols are terrific for you. Whether you having digestive issues, maybe you have symptoms that are similar to those of IBS. Or you're just an athlete and you want to be your best artron to love my tummy.com use code. gut check and save I believe 20% Next, of course, unrefined bakery they've been a longtime supporter, unrefined bakery.com excellent, incredible food, regardless of your specialty diet that's unrefined bakery.com if you are keto, paleo or vegan, they've got it in that is desserts breads, etc. pie crust yeah pie crust, do you think that you are gluten free or celiac disease and you can't have pie crust, unrefined bakery.com use code gut check and save 20% off of your entire first order delivered to all of the lower 48 states and last but not least go to KB Md health.com to get your very own KB MD health CBD and Brock elite which has severe veins or ultra until you can get the signature package from Dr. cans Brown. kb Md health.com. Now it is time for oh I'm sorry, KB Md health.com. Use code GCP to save 20% off of any order. Now it's time for episode number 58. Dr. Sabine HasanKen Brown 3:03 Hey, what's up everybody? Welcome to Episode 58 of the gut check project. Ooh, today's a really, really cool one. We have Dr. Sabine Hasan, who will be our very first gastroenterologist as a guest. So I'm a gastroenterologist, but she's way smarter than I am and does all kinds of really cool stuff on read. What's that? Cool stuff? Yes. Cool stuff. Indeed. It's awesome. So I put together a quick little bio for you. I apologise that I don't have your probably standard bio. So I hope I get some of this stuff, right. This is Oh, and you'll notice there's an empty seat here where my co host, Dr. Eric riegert crna, who's usually here on time. Don't do that. It'll make it blurry. It'll make it blurry. It'll get us out of focus. He almost photo bombed us. Dr. Hayes in this is Eric reser. We've already been talking and we practically had a whole podcast before this podcast. You missed it. Sorry. Oh, that'sEric Rieger 4:05 okay. Another topic that I'd like to talk about is promptness, and being on time, that's another thing that really well, apparently I wasn't very good at today.Ken Brown 4:14 So I'm really surprised. You know, what is what's interesting, and I hope it's something that we can comment later is that Eric got a round of antibiotics. And ever since then, it's so weird. He's just always late for everything, and I'm blaming it on the microbiomeUnknown Speaker 4:26 100% I think we should test this microbiome. I'll send you a kit. That's the first thing I do.Ken Brown 4:34 Alright, so Dr. Sabine Hasan is a Board Certified gastroenterologist and avid researcher. She has a thriving practice in Ventura, California, and she started her own clinical trial company 16 years ago called Ventura clinical trials, and has been principal investigator and sub investigator in over 150 clinical trials. Now you say that number but I'm in like, For, and it was exhausting. So 150 Holy cow. Alright, so during this period, she became an expert in the microbiome with an interest in cdiff. Clostridium difficile. So through this process, she became one of the world's leaders in faecal microbial transplant. And through her research and expert, and through research and experience, she realised the unmet need to dive deeper into the microbiome. And she founded progenitor biome. So she is the founder of her own company, progenitor biome. And most recently, she published a fun, easy to read book for the lay person called let's talk shit. And I got it, and I read it and I laughed a lot. And it's really good. Written in a great lay, lay person point of view. And I loved it. So Dr. Hayes, you want to talk some shit? Talk?Unknown Speaker 5:57 Let's talk shit, for sure. Oh, at least finally a podcast that's like willing to go there? Like, oh, I don't think we should talk about it. Or we should say another word. And I'm like, Are you kidding me? I've seen half the books that are out there. The Art of not giving a f EU Oh, that's number one bestseller. But let's talk shit. We can't even say the word shit. Since when is the F word more acceptable than the shit? Come on?Ken Brown 6:28 This is true. Unfortunately, I think I use the words quite frequently, both of them often. So I really do not discriminate.Unknown Speaker 6:36 I named it that way. Because too often, you know, we sugarcoat microbiome, right? We made it pretty. But I think we're entering in a world of microbiome, we got to tell the public and the consumer what it's all about. And that's why I wanted it. First of all, I thought it was funny. I mean, this is like a tough topic, right? People come to us as gi doctors, bloated, gassy symptoms of you know, bowel changes, etc. And so we hope to, we have to explain to them and how do you explain a topic like the microbiome, without, you know, a little bit of humour to digest it a little bit better? My opinion, that's what I that's why I named it. So to give it full transparency. And then the other thing was to, essentially, you know, make people smile, because there's so many jokes you could say about it.Ken Brown 7:30 I heard you on another podcast where you're exactly right. As gastroenterologist, we have no problem talking about it. But I have the same issue with patients. They're like it was so embarrassing. I don't want to discuss this. I'm like, we have to discuss this. And then that goes from that to Okay, well, as long as you're comfortable with it. Here's some pictures.Eric Rieger 7:49 Not all the time, like no pictures, please. Okay, sometimes randomly the nurses they showed up with the bag.Unknown Speaker 7:58 Field great. I mean, you know, you probably know Neil Stallman, right? Yeah. So Neil, when I was a fellow at University of Florida, and I was presenting my research on visceral hyperalgesia, which was super clean, would come to me and say, You better start getting your hands dirty, because we're going into the ship business. I said, No, please, they call me Gucci girl in the GI lab, because if it's dirty, if the colonoscopy was not clean, I was out of there. I'm like, sorry, we do the prep, come back next week. I'm not cleaning the patient, right. And then the mere mention of having to actually play with tools and putting it in there was just something I never ever thought that would even happen to me. And, um, you know, when a patient is about to die from C diff, and you tried everything from, you know, antibodies after antibiotics to, you know, clinical trials, and that was my, my path, right? I was doing clinical trials, and Neil was doing people transplants. And we met when I was doing a clinical trial on faecal material in a capsule because every time I would do a clinical trial for pharma, if the pharmaceutical product didn't work, I would do faecal transplant, because I would say, Well, you know, the patient trusted me to heal them. And whether they got placebo or the drug didn't work, it's my obligation to make sure they're fine. So I would do people transform them. And then I discovered all these things. And of course, I you know, I blame Neil in a way for stepping into this because I've stepped in fully and every day I play with it, I can tell you the first time I I was, you know, looking at collecting stools, I think I almost passed out. But then you develop you know, that survivor or that, you know, warrior mentality that you're like, I can do this, I can do this. I went into gi I'm tough and blameless goes I can do this. And that's what happened.Ken Brown 9:59 So I'm really curious about your history. Can you just give us a little background about like your family and where you came from who you're married because I find it all really interesting. Your, your past is fantastic to where you are right nowUnknown Speaker 10:13 increasing the volume. So I'm I was born in Morocco. My parents, you know, my background is pretty much a mud like Spanish background German, you name it. It's all mixed in Italian, I was happy to see on 23andme I have some Italian blood and Greek. So I'm a mutt. And essentially, my parents immigrated to Montreal, I was raised in Montreal, went to medical school in Nova Scotia. My siblings all went to McGill and wanted the McGill route. And I went down housing because I didn't want to, you know, in my family, you had to live at home if you're going to college in Montreal, but if you go to college elsewhere, then that's the only exception to moving out of the house. So I said, Okay, I'm going to Dalhousie and Dalhousie was, was fun because it was you got into the rotations of, of medicine right off. You know, from day one, you were seeing patients. So that was kind of fun for me. And then I was gonna go back to Montreal, and I had a cold and I was interviewing for positions for internal medicine and gi for internal medicine, I don't even think I was going to be a GI at the time. And I got an interview a University of Miami Jackson Memorial Hospital, and they paid for my plane tickets, because they love Canadians back then. And they paid for my hotel. So I said, Oh, free trip to Miami. And then I show up in Miami, and I'm interviewing, I'm doing the interview. And they're telling, they're showing me like a room of 10 CAT scans, and you know, just like beautiful hot. I mean, you've been I don't know, if you've been to Miami Jackson Memorial, it's it's a city in itself. And back then, I mean, we had one CAT scan and the whole country of Canada, I mean, show up in my app, and you've got like 10 CAT scans in the room, and it's like, and then they sell you on Miami, and they're like, Oh, you could live in, you know, on the beach. And then you could go to the hospital, like, I'm there. I'm coming. So I showed up. And that was during the, the world of HIV. You know, that's when HIV was really, you know, really starting and all right, I remember here I am this, you know, kid that my parents kept like in a, you know, protected and clean environment. And then I'm the move, I'm moving to Miami, and I'm dealing with, you know, HIV, like 12 HIV patients a night and patients are like throwing blood all over the walls. And you remember the, I don't know, you're probably much younger than I am. But, you know, this was this was war, right? And so, me and Neil and my colleagues from Miami, we we trained under those circumstances of patients coming and crashing from HIV, kind of what we're seeing with COVID. Right?Ken Brown 13:04 It does have some and yes, I did have that we had our aids Ward where you would have to rotate, and then you have to make sure because their CD forecasts are so low that you you know, so you didn't want to give them any microbes that could hurt them. We just didn't know back thatUnknown Speaker 13:20 you didn't know. And we were so scared, right? We were if we got pricked by a needle, we, you know, you'd hear the residents like chopping their fingers. You know, going into a room of a patient that was altered mental status and being dressed like an astronaut going into space. And I met my husband, by the way, in Jackson Memorial first day of internship. And we became best friends because we were on call together. And it wasn't like scrubs or er, although kind of, but it was kind of fun. We were together we like work hard and do call and then we'd go party after on South Beach. So we met under this circumstances, and I think some of my best friends and you know, I've been married to my husband almost 30 years. So I think that really that environment really, you know, bonded us forever The memories, my colleagues because it was really survival. And he used to joke because he used to say, you look like an astronaut going into space. Going to see these spaces are like I'm not coming because we had TB resistant TB and HIV. We had all sorts of infections in that hospital. So it was really Warzone. And at the same time, you're treating these patients that are swallowing bags of cocaine, and in condoms, right and you have to like wash the bag evacuated. So it was really it was intense. I mean, we were I was taking care of your HIV patients criminals. I mean, it was just it was a interesting times but it forms you and makes you you know, a top doctor that you can do survive, you know, helping people no matter who they are. Right. So I think that that was it was great for me. It was a great education. It was great. And then in Miami and residency, some guys said, because we were, my husband wanted to go into cardiology, and I said, Well, maybe I'll go into cardiology. And then some guy said to me, you know, we don't take an eye and I said, how's gi his gi a good feeling looks kind of fun. I mean, it's like surgery but without doing surgeries, and he said, we don't take women in gi so don't bother well. That's all it took.Ken Brown 15:40 In there on challenge taking you ripped off your space suit room is roomful of AIDS people vomiting blood me like I'm gonna do giEric Rieger 15:52 the lion You sound like you're talking shit. Let's talk shit.Unknown Speaker 15:56 So basically, yeah, and back then gi and it was actually a miracle because back then gi was like the the flexible StG where you're like, touching your like, baby, you train with that. You were still you were probably kaleidoscope. IKen Brown 16:12 am actually a few years older than you. And so I went through everything you're saying I'm 100% dead. But I will say this, you've got way more guests than I did. I interviewed at Miami. And I went I looked at the volume and what was wrong because Miami had that they had more than a bigger HIV population, tonnes of age, lots of trauma, all that stuff. And I'm like, I like the warp. So I was training in Nebraska and I just got sick of the cold. And so I just moved south, I just drew a line from California, Arizona, across and it basically Texas is like Midwest but south. So I just but Miami I was I remember thinking, Oh my gosh, if I do residency here, you're just you're just not gonna sleep.Unknown Speaker 16:53 And actually, I was sleeping because I came out. So I was a Canadian train. So we trained with like physical exams, right? you examine the patient, you actually say, oh, gallbladder problem just by doing, you know, Toby's face and percussion, etc. So, you know, it was much faster for me to take care of patients. So me and my husband used to have like, gone, you know, he would, he would come in the column. He's like, you're sleeping, I didn't sleep. And I'm like, Oh, you know, and then we would have this competition of who would discharge the patient and treat the patient the fastest. So there'd be a board. And it'd be like Hasan and Steinberg and HIV patients and I'd be like, I'm giving them this, this, this, that and that. Okay, they're fine out of the hospital one day, and then it'd be like zero. He's in 20, Steinberg and thenKen Brown 17:42 eventually he just made everybody DNR and just flowing out.Unknown Speaker 17:48 He was it was a you know, it was it. We do things for challenges, right. I mean, we do things. Why do you go into medicine? Otherwise, if it's not the treat, that's what bothered me with this whole COVID is like, was the idea of doing nothing. I the patient's having shortness of breath, oxygen, the SATs and you do nothing? I couldn't understand that mentality because you have to try.Ken Brown 18:12 So I have a feeling that this we're just going to go all over the map here. So I'm going to get right off because there's something I was super impressed that you did, you gave a lecture on COVID and ivermectin way back. So now ivermectin, now, all these things were being said, are now coming to light and going, what the heck, why don't we? Yeah. How did you realise ivermectin fairly early.Unknown Speaker 18:36 So it was I started the protocol with the hydroxychloroquine, which went completely political. And my idea was, well, makes sense, right? That's kind of like what we do with H. pylori, multiple drug combo. So I thought, well, hydroxychloroquine azithromycin would be killing the virus and then vitamin C, D and zinc would boost the microbiome, right? So in other words, you kill but you boost right? So you we we bring the balance. And so Dr. Berg when hydroxy glow. At the same time, Dr. Brody said you know what, I think ivermectin is a better solution, because he was investigating himself. And you know, Dr. Brody is the man we all follow for his leadership on faecal transplant, but also he was the one the brain behind H. pylori and triple therapy. So he was the one that said combination therapy, and he's big on combination therapy. I mean, he's used combination therapy for two patients in Parkinson's, he published on that. So, basically, for me, it was following his direction. And he said to me, you know, what we need to do ivermectin, doxycycline zinc. And I said, Yeah, but you got to add the vitamin C and vitamin D. Nothing should be done without vitamin C, and D because you're killing the virus. And in fact, the microbiome is going to tell the story, and it's going to be amazing, because I showed the data to Dr. Ayman quickly, and you know, Dr. COVID,Ken Brown 20:02 right. The Godfather of probiotics,Unknown Speaker 20:05 yes. And and by the way, he was like fantastic data. Fantastic. And he's on my paper that's coming out. So yeah. So I got I got Dr. bozkurt from Turkey. I got Dr. Brody, of course in the paper and even quickly, so and it's basically blank, blank, blank susceptible marker for COVID-19. And we know we're going to show in the microbiome why ivermectin is working. Oh, that's cool.Ken Brown 20:39 So both Eric and I are big fans of the podcast. Brett Weinstein the Dark Horse podcast. Yes. And he had the critical care doctor from New York, pa Corey. Yeah, up here. And I was just floored because, you know, like all of us. We, we there's only so many hours in the day and we do quite a bit of research and I'm and ivermectin caught me off guard. I went, I was like I was, I was behind the curve on that one. I looked back and went. How did I miss that? How did I miss ivermectin? That's why I was so impressed that you were on it right away.Unknown Speaker 21:09 Yeah. And by the way, when you see what is doing to the microbiome, it's going to be as clear as life because what happened is because I have a CR O, and I'm able to put these protocols through pipelines through the FDA. And by the way, I did it because I had enough of pharma. You know, I had enough of putting these products and then you saw with the Alzheimer study, this Alzheimer drug goes into market, and the benefits are like, you know, what's going on there. So I said, we need to have doctors lead the path for pharma. In other words, doctors come up with these solutions, and bring them to the FDA. And so I kind of started this with COVID was more of a lead to show it Look, I'm taking combination therapy, and I'm putting them through a pipeline, I wrote the protocol and I submitted to the FDA and the FDA approved it right off the bat. Then the FDA then had second thought, because they said, Well, you need to have a placebo, and I said a placebo and COVID in the middle of a pandemic. I'm like, that's like. And I said, we're in the middle of a pandemic. Rome is burning. Are you asking me to use a bucket that doesn't have water? On the fire?Ken Brown 22:30 Okay, the house is on fire. I'm going to give you a bucket. Yeah. And you're gonna get a bucket. Now go put it out. Yeah. And then walk one of those bucket was gonna have water and one's gonna have nothing makes gasoline. More than anything, because we're talking about COVID here. I mean, it's like giving a placebo is like giving gasoline.Eric Rieger 22:48 Okay, so some burning Sinan fire truck. And over here sim school bus?Unknown Speaker 22:52 Yeah. So that's basically what happened. And then I started, when I submitted these protocols, I said, Okay, find the, the placebo is going to be a vitamin. So we did vitamin versus the other thing. But what we discovered is when we started looking at the microbiome and looking at we found COVID, in the stools, whole genome sequencing presented at an american college of gastro and then it got published, took six months to get published on gut pathogen, because they couldn't believe it. Right? They were, what is this real, we had to like submit, it was sent to the who I mean, it was just too ridiculous, you know, long term time to get that paper published. And so when we started looking at the microbiome, we discovered something in the microbiome. And we discovered something in the microbiome of those that were super sick, compared to those that were not so sick, compared to those who never got COVID to begin with. But yet we're exposed to patients with COVID. So we said, Wow, if this is a susceptible marker, so it was so basically became like a susceptibility marker, right. And so we determined that if we don't know the baseline of the microbiome in a patient, and we're giving them placebo, and that person has those microbes are super high. In other words, where's your immunity in your gut, right? And your immunity at baseline is super high, and I'm giving you a sugar pill? Well, of course, it doesn't matter because you already have like super strong microbiome to survive. COVID So is it fair to compare a placebo to a person, you know, that doesn't have a good microbiome? You know, you're comparing like an athlete running a marathon to a person on a wheelchair. Unless you know, the microbiome, you're really doing placebo controlled trials useless and COVID in mind,Ken Brown 24:47 you're bringing up something that is, I mean, could be a complete game changer in how pharma would do and type of research in the future. Yes, because what we're saying what you're saying is, if You do not have. And we've discussed this kind of stuff on the on other podcasts. If you do not have a diverse microbiome, are you able to take full advantage of these medications that we believe are helping because the FDA determined that there's a safety profile on it, therefore, it goes to the second trial. And then just like you said, in phase three and four trials, you're 6% better than placebo. So because of that, it's now a $14 billion drug that got bought by a bigger company.Unknown Speaker 25:26 Yes, absolutely. And we are entering into a world of research now, that is no longer research. In my opinion, medicine is no longer an art, it's a business. And that's scary to me, because that's not why I went into medicine. I'm sure that's not why you went into medicine. We're all individuals, we should all have an individual treatment. We have the technology now, especially with what we do with Regina biome, to understand with precision, these microbes of the individual, and the future is beautiful, because it's going to be a readjustment of microbes to attain that precision medicine. We need to get there, we can't be stopped, because roadblocks is what stops innovations and stops answers. And we got to keep asking questions and say, is this is this correct? Is this safe? Why are we doing this? Why are we not? The moment we stop asking questions, we stop science, we stop research, we stop finding answers. And then in my opinion, humanity is lost. I mean, you're talking about diversity. Look at the diversity of microbes. Over the last 100 years, we've gone from diverse microbiome to now an diverse look at 1980 the rate of autism was one in 2000. Now it's one in 20. In New Jersey, something is happening in the microbiome that we have to pay attention to and is it the herbs we're giving? Is it these vitamins that are over the counter and supposedly have the vitamins right? Or is it the probiotics? Is it the right probiotics, the wrong probiotics? So I think all that we need to fine tune a little bit more.Ken Brown 27:06 fine tune is an understatement thatUnknown Speaker 27:09 sure, like people come to you and say, Doc, I want I'm on this probiotic. And you're looking at this bottle and you're shaking your head, right. Probably. Dr. Hasan,Ken Brown 27:21 have you met Kiran Krishnan from microbiome labs? Yes, yeah. Very, very, very smart microbiologist. We had him on the podcast and we discussed this exact thing about the fact do you know if it's alive, do you know that you can get a a railcar, you know, like one of those big giant crates for like $2,000. From who knows where and then anyways, we went into the whole aspect of probiotics and how easy it is to make your own probiotic. Yes, put your label on it, but you have no idea if it's gonna do that, you know, you have no idea if there's data it's gonna survive. So absolutely on the same page. bacteria in the gut that's live is dangerous, in my opinion. Yeah. And that's in your book, your offices. It's funny, because in your book, you you had a brief segment about how people in the desert when they would get I don't know, dysentery, they would eat Kagame. And Kiran brought up that exact same thing. oil based, soil based people figured out early on that somebody got sick, they would eat the camel dung, and they would get better. Yes. And you brought it up there, which was fascinating.Unknown Speaker 28:27 To the soldiers were stuck. I forget where but they they had Calera and that's how, you know, the Bedouins told them. Just eat the apples from the camel, which is really the poop from the camel, and they cure the colour all of a sudden.Ken Brown 28:45 Isn't that crazy?Unknown Speaker 28:46 I know. We're not going to go into that because I don't think people want to eat that. But I think we can understand the microbes that are play. Right. So that was my thing is we're heading up.Ken Brown 28:58 I just saw Eric trying to order a camel off Amazon. No,Eric Rieger 29:02 no, no, I've got a coupon for camel apples. Oh, that's what it is.Unknown Speaker 29:05 I already trademarked sisters of Camelot. I was in Jordan with my sisters. And we were on camels. And of course, you know, they're pooping all over. And it came to me. I said, I need to analyse the stools. So of course, I took my eye because I did bring some kids with me. And I'm taking it. I took it home and looked at it. So I said, Okay, we're starting sisters of Camelot. But we're not going to start that because I'm my plan not to make people eat pizza becauseKen Brown 29:36 of you. You're the reason why when I'm coming back from a from a country and in customs, they're like, Did you bring any animals? Do you have any food? Do you have any camel dung on you? And I'm like, why would I have Canada? No.Unknown Speaker 29:50 It was me. It was me. Actually one time my husband brought in an apple to an island and actually we got fine. I think they got the memo. They were like Dr. Hasan's come in, there's probably some microbes in there, stay away. $200 fine.Ken Brown 30:07 Alright, so we got so many things I would love to talk about. But I do want to really hone in on progen ibiam for several different reasons. Number one, I am also trying to run a different company and you know, have all this stuff, you've got a lot of stuff going on, we got a lot of similarities and how your enthusiasm and your need to keep your curiosity forces you to start other companies to sort of meet the need that you're trying to find. So can you please tell everybody what progetto biome is?Unknown Speaker 30:36 So progenitor biome is a genetic sequencing lab, what does that mean? It basically looks at the microbes, the genetics of the microbes, so the fingerprint of your microbiome, kind of like your DNA, but the DNA of all your microbes that co exist and cohabitate in your gut. It's so when I explain this, we have a choice. When we look at the microbiome to look superficially, it's kind of like scuba diving and being at the ocean, in the top of the ocean and seeing guppies or going super deep into the ocean and seeing the life and so we go super deep with every patients. So we can look superficially and do a lot of patients with that cartridge. So when we do genetic sequencing, you have to take that stool sample, which is the size of a fingernail, and then we have to tag it and do library preps are called and then we put them on these cartridges, and then essentially the cartridge we have a we have a choice, we can use the cartridge and do multiple development and see the surface. Or we can go deep, deep and use that same cartridge into the depth. So we go into the depth of the microbiome, to look at the microbes a species because that's what we want. We want species of microbes because we as doctors understand species, you know, to the rest of the for the forever the world of microbiome has been from acuities bacteroides. Right? But that's very superficial. So if you remember microbiology you go phylum class, order family, genus, species. I don't want to be at the phylum phylum is like looking at Planet Earth, right? I don't want to be at the class. That's like looking at London. I want to be almost at the family to say Mr. And Mrs. Jones, but I really want to see the species to see the kid of Mr. And Mrs. Jones, who has autism, the species tells the story, right? Because when you see mycoplasma for the first time, which is a cellular doesn't have a cell wall, and you see 40,000 sequences or 40,000 mycoplasma shapes into the microbiome. You say this kid has mycoplasma, and that's the cause of his problem. Maybe, right? Because then the next step would be, well, what is mycoplasma succeeding, and is mycoplasma. So creating something and therefore active in that patient, or it's just a dead organism? But even if it's a dead organism, why does that kid have so much relative abundance of that? So really, it's looking at the species and understanding the species yesterday, I was excited because I had a Crohn's patients. So remember, for Crohn's, I'm always looking for mycobacterium tuberculosis, right? Because that was Dr. Brody's idea. That map is the cause of Crohn's. Right? But when, but other scientists have come in and says said, well, you're sending your your sindhya and turistica is the cause of Crohn's. And then others have said, malice sees your firfer. And so you look at all that and you go Well, which one is it is a mouse, he's your first and your semi analytic as a map. So it's important to look at the species. And when you look at the species, you start going, Wow, this patient has a lot of eco lie a lot of Shigella, a lot of demopolis. There's definitely a dysbiosis there, right, because we know that these microbes have been the culprit of problems E. coli, chronic urinary tract infections, you know, Shigella, you know, all these bugs. So when you look at the species, and you see the species, and you can kind of make a correlation, it helps in the diagnosis and helps guide you with the patient. And so, to me, that's what it was basically. So that's why I started 42 clinical trials, we're actually up to 59. Now on every diseases, because it was that look, every time a patient comes in with Crohn's, we would say, Crohn's database going there, but what we discovered from the beginning with progetto biome when we looked at everyone, and that was something that made me think, you know, what's out there like you biome is not legit, because they're comparing individuals to others, but we're all different. How can we be compared? So what we so the first thing we discovered Regina biome is we're all different, which, you know, I know, you know, by common sense, right? We all have different fingerprints. How can we have the same microbiome? and Why would my microbiome that was in Jordan, B compared to someone that lives in Greece, right? Completely different microbiome. But why am I healthy with this microbiome? And this person is not healthy with down microbiome, right? That's the million dollar question. So we started noticing, well, if we are all different, how do we compare? How do we understand the microbiome, so the only thing that you can compare is really within the family. And then the other thing that you can compare is within the individual. So whenever you have a product that you want to give it, you have a patient with Crohn's, and you attain a cure. And that was my thing that I would speak about at conferences, attain a cure, understand the microbiome, right? Because if you attain a cure on the same patient, and you see the microbiome before and after the cure, you know that something changed in the microbiome, and what was it that changed that obtain the cure. And so that's basically my bath is, is looking at families. And then from there, once you have like a group of microbes that you've identified and said, Okay, well, that makes sense. This is the bugs, these are the bugs that are related with Alzheimer's, because I've improved the patient's memory. And now these bugs have disappeared. Now, let me look at other groups and see if those bugs are in those patients with Alzheimer's, and let's come up with an essay. That's a formula. So ideally, what I want is the dictionary of all the bugs with diseases.Ken Brown 36:43 Let me back that up just a little bit. First of all, it's super fascinating. And there's a lot going on here. But as the as gastroenterologist, and I know that my colleagues get this, I get second opinions. And so they'll come in, and they'll just hand me this pile. And in evitable, II, there's some sort of stool analysis. And then somebody will circle things and then say, you need to take this supplement for this, this supplement for this this supplement. And I've always just flipped it over and said, I'm sorry, just because we can analyse it doesn't necessarily mean that we need to make recommendations on this or that we can manipulate it. You're saying, just to clarify is that progen A biome your company is doing a much deeper dive and making the association with diseases, yes, with the person that comes in so that you can at least develop a trend and start to predict how or what I need to do for it.Unknown Speaker 37:43 And the other thing we did is basically we created an assay that we felt were the 25 actually 15 most important microbes for disease. And we validated that. So what does that mean? We took microbes that were cultured, we bought them, and we put them through the pipeline. And lo and behold, see this was seeded because we had the microbe. So that's validation process, right? The second thing we did is we verified the validation process. In other words, let me repeat that to sample Am I getting the same value? And then let's reproduce it right. So let's reproduce it at month one that's reproduce it by someone else, another technician takes on the same standard operating procedure of how we develop this asset. And basically, we produces the asset. So I was very vague at the beginning. And I hired a genetic sequencer, PhD physician, who is actually behind the bracket gene. And his genius, who developed the essay for me with me. And I said to him from the beginning, I said, Listen, I want to be able to give you a stool sample, and I want you to be able to reproduce the same thing. In other words, I give you my stool sample today, tomorrow, next year, it should be the same fingerprint, the same exact colours. Because if you I'm giving you a stool sample today, and in a month, I'm giving you another sample, but it's no longer the same colours, and the same fingerprint while you're comparing apples and oranges. And that was the whole problem with all these sequencing lab because I remember and again, you'll see them and I would call them because like you I was getting patients that would bring me Sue samples, and I would say what does that mean? I mean, like bacteroides in your gut, what does that mean? And I would call I would call Neon is like nothing, it's all bogus. And I know there's a whole holistic path out there that has looked into this, but you know, they have their vision but unfortunately, you know, we need to bring the holistic and we the idea that holistic healers have achieved and bring in into gi to understand it with the microbiome In my opinion, right. Bring everything that's out there and say, Okay, well, we all see this from this guy and this from this guy. Let's put it all together to say, yes, this is accurate information. This is valid, verified and reproducible data, because everything in science, you have to reproduce it right? If I do faecal transplant on a patient that's has alopecia areata, and my patient grows hair like Dr. Colleen Kelly. Then I've just reproduced Dr. Colleen Kelly's data. And I can say, Well, I did this ABCD like Dr. Kelly, and I got ABCD the same thing and my patient blue hair, right. So reproduction of validation, verification, and reproduction of data is very important in research. But, you know, the problem is just too many we live in a world where people want to just fast, fast development of products fast sell, you know, like sell a probiotic, sell this sell that. And we've stopped the research because it takes time to do research, but it doesn't have to take time to do research.Ken Brown 41:06 Where you're gonna say something? Yeah,Eric Rieger 41:07 I had a quick question is, so you've talked about the microbiome. And obviously, you've been able to look at different diseases and then figure out where they match up. And whether the same somebody it's kind of interesting to me, though, is that locally, that makeup of that microbiome, of course, is at the local level in the colon. But they've all looked at the second level and tried to map out that it also matches not just in the makeup of the microbiome, but what those post biotic metabolites would look like. So that the systemic responses are also the same to mimic what what the makeup isUnknown Speaker 41:44 absolutely an excellent point. There's so the microbiome is different at every location in the coalmine, that what we're doing is really a beginning of seeing what it's looking like at a deep level. The next step that we're going to do, and we're going to be working with a company that developed a capsule that is guided that takes a sample of Seoul, from every different locations, where we can show with precision that the stomach microbiome looks like this, the small bowel microbiome looks like this, the seachem looks like this, the transverse colon. So that's going to be coming because that with that technology, hopefully we can deliver precision microbes to those areas to achieve cures in the future. And, you know, capsule endoscopy, I was the first one Well, one of the first doctors to start using it. And that was the first time that we saw that I saw myself a parasite floating in the small bowel. That was a revelation, right? When you look at the, the sequencing of the microbiome, and you see all these microbes, and I said that I found c diff in my gut, um, you start going, Wow, this there's a mystery there that needs to be figured out. Yeah. Because the microbiome is everything. You're you're born with a lot of good microbes, you die with very little good microbes, right? You live, and then the microbes consume your body and put you back into the earth. So from the earth to the earth. I mean, we're proving that with the microbiome. So even on a and I think for me, the biggest lesson about the microbiome is really that diversity is key to life, key to health. And I was just speaking on the microbiome at a farm polyface Farm that's really big on regenerative farming. And so they believe in diversity of farming, they believe in, you know, coconut, you can't just put like avocado trees, you got to put the avocados with the blueberry trees with the tomatoes with everything. And it's the diversity that creates the beauty of the soil and the amazing, you know, matrix of microbes underneath the ground that feeds us really.Eric Rieger 43:55 So yeah, they they try to discourage monocropping now, because it will destroy the soil. They wanted, they want to switch it up. Yeah, right.Unknown Speaker 44:04 Well, you see, Amazon jungle, they tried to do that they tried to utilise things from the Amazon jungle.Ken Brown 44:11 So one more time in your book, you're you're not discussing the examples that you have in the book. But I was just thinking you had that great section on we should be doing green burials because what we're not doing is giving our microbiomes back we have micro biomes are trillions of microbiome we should give them back to the soil so that then other you know, it'll fertilise plants. We shouldn't be embalming ourselves. We shouldn't. We should be green burying and let that happen.Unknown Speaker 44:42 We should, we should. So that's what we should be doing. I have someone at the door but I'm gonna ignore them. You can go get him. You can.Eric Rieger 44:49 I am on bring him on.Ken Brown 44:51 Let's listen, we have some reach. Maybe Dr. Brody saw this and said I'm gonna fly over there and see Right or Yeah, that would be great. Do you have one quick question about progetto biome and then IUnknown Speaker 45:12 talked to Dr. Brody like every day two to three times a day times on love the man will have toKen Brown 45:19 genius I've never personally met him obviously read tonnes of his tonnes of his work even quickly I've met a tonne of times and you know he's just so nice and so approachable and everything. Quick question for you not for Dr. Hasan but to Sabine is it Sunday now you're sitting clean, it's fine. So being the how I built this aspect. So as a as somebody that built presented by him, how did you think about organising like that stuff? That's that was really intimidating to me. How do you how do you build a business?Unknown Speaker 45:51 You know, I built it basically, I just my attitude with everything in life is I just jump in, and I just expect, you know, to find something. So I basically jumped into it. I saw, you know, it was it was during the Woolsey fire, the whole backyard burned. And I was in communications with Dr. Feingold, who was the father of bacteria in anaerobic bacteria in the gut, he actually wrote the book anaerobic infections. And I was in communications with him because earlier on, I had done a faecal transplant on a patient who had Alzheimer's and he remembered his daughter's Date of Birth six months later. So to me, that was one of those, you know, and Dr. Brody likes to call it Martians. It's one of those Martians that comes in your front door and you say, wow, there's life on Mars. And so I called Dr. Feingold. And so what am I seeing? When I change the mind? Which microbe Am I seeing when I changed the microbiome in a patient with Alzheimer, and he remembers his daughter's date of birth. And Dr. Feingold said, You're seeing this bacteria that I cultured for so many years, nobody wanted to take on the study and to support it. So I'm giving you the protocol. Get yourself a next generation sequencer machine gets yourself alive, a scientist, and he showed me the path, right? He was 97 years old. And he showed me the path he gave me the paper. And then he put I put it in my Sage because I said, Well, I'm not going to start a genetic lab that's like, you know, at least a couple million. And so what happened is he passed away during the Woolsey fire, my whole backyard burns. And the family calls me and they go, Dr. Hayes, and we want to give you like all the books of our dad, and he signed all his books. So I had like, I have about 1000 books in my I picked up I took a pickup truck, and I picked up the books. My husband thought I was crazy. It's like, our house is burning. And I said, Don't worry about the house. I don't care. This is more important that this is like a seat. This is his work. I wanted to take it on. And I felt like and I felt like it was like tag you're it right. And about a month later, I started communicating with Dr. Brody because Neil had introduced us at ACG and said, oh, by the way, Sabine also cured Crohn's disease with faecal transplant. And he said, what he took my card, and then called me in December, and I said, By the way, I got the paperwork from, I got everything. And I found a couple of patents with you and Dr. feigl. You guys were communicating together those wonderful man, wonderful scientists, brilliant mind. And I said, Well, we got to continue this. And then he said, by the way, I'm working with Dr. Adams, who's publishing a data on autistic children post faecal transplant. So I said, he said, Be ready. You're gonna have the flood. This is Dr. Brody. I'm autism, I don't even know anything about autism. No way. And then next thing, you know, I start my lab. And I told my husband, I said, we're not rebuilding the backyard. I don't care about the house. I'm building a genetic sequencing lab. So he goes Sure, honey, and my if you know, my husband, my husband's a great guys, cardiologist. You know, hi, doctor. Amazing. And he's like, yeah, sure money, do whatever you want. You want to analyse shit, go for it.Unknown Speaker 49:15 I said, Okay, I'm buying a machine. So, and it was kind of at that point in my life where, you know, my, you know, you your kids are growing up and you've done the raising and they're blooming on their own and you're, you know, at that point where you say, Okay, well, what is my life mean? I'm no longer a mom. Okay, great. I'm a GI doctor, I do research for pharma. But now farmers getting into the shed business, and we don't even understand it. So I saw this light and I just said, I think this is my path. And then lo and behold, everything was just opened up. I mean, my first case of faecal transplant was a patient with metastatic melanoma. That I submitted the protocol to the FDA, the FDA thought I was crazy for wanting to put stools in a woman's body Hold on who was dying, but her haemoglobin was seven. She wasn't eating anything. She was dying. I had to fight with them to let me do it. And I saw her starting to crave chicken nuggets after the faecal transplant, the same cravings that her grandson had. So that was an open an eye opener for me. She ended up living a lot more months than she was supposed to, to to begin where she should have died within the month. But I think the faecal transplant really helped her and I think we're seeing that with, you know, MD Anderson's work with faecal transplants, and chemo, etc. So I think that was the path. I didn't really think of money because people always ask me, Well, how do you support it? How do you venture and I said, Well, let me create a nonprofit. So I created a nonprofit. And then next thing, you know, I wrote the book was shali. And, and everything, like even Shelley came to me in my office, it was just like divine intervention.Ken Brown 50:56 Shelley? Who is Shelly, I don't know her.Unknown Speaker 50:58 So Shelly is an author, she writes, you know, she writes books. And she, her husband, was a friend of mine. And we started talking, he's a pilot. And he said, you know, and I said, I need to write this book. And he goes, one is why don't you have Shelly, I'll pay you. And she puts it in the book. And she wrote, I helped Dr. Hayes and get her shit together. Because this is what happened. I gave her all my stack of papers. I said, this is chapter one. Let's start chapter one. And then she started. So as she was building, and we were building dog book. And then Dr. Brody, of course, every time we had a chapter, we're like, what do you think is that said, it's like, I like the quotes I like, you know, because he's very much into, you know, quotes and old quotes from, you know, people in the past. So we started, you know, writing. And then at the same time, I started building these protocols. And I had a team of writers that I basically, I had my, my, my main writer that I said, you know, let's start writing these protocols. And little by little, it was built, and I and Andrea showed me from day one, a patient with Crohn's disease. And he showed me the microbiome, and I changed the microbiome, I played with it with certain products like you that I believed could change the gut. And I was able to reach a cure in this kid, and I was able to see the cure in the microbiome. So before and after. And so when I saw that, I said, I have something. And then I saw see this in 17, the first 17 patients, I saw c diff, and all of them. So I said, you know, maybe we're wrong about C. diff May, and I and I actually challenged the industry, the infectious disease doctors, because I said, maybe we all have C diff, and maybe it's what we give our gut that kills off all the microbes, the diversity, that causes c diff to start succeeding, it's toxin, right? And so, you know, infectious diseases are very pragmatic. They're like, well, if you didn't call to it, then it's not there. And I can't say, Well, how do you culture a dead bacteria? How do you take a tree that's dead and expect to plant it? It doesn't work. I mean, you almost have to culture it anaerobically, right. And so I said, well, but the next generation sequencing shows the whole genetic sequence of the microbe, right? And then when we did RNA pipeline, which is the you know, so we have a bunch of pipelines when we look at microbes, right? So we actually can do a DNA pipeline that looks at our bacteria, or we can do an RNA pipeline, which looks at the bacteria reproducing. So if you see a microbe is reproducing, and you see it high in the messenger RNA pipeline, then you know that this microbe is active.Ken Brown 53:48 That that's that's a game changer. That's awesome. Yes. Nobody showed it. Nobody. Nobody's ever said that before. Because I remember mark, you know who Mark Pimentel is and cedars? Yes, I know, Mark. So I remember Mark was describing Well, when we're doing these stool studies, where basically it's like going into a neighbourhood and looking at the trash, and then making these assumptions about what's going on inside. That that's just trash is what you're looking at. Oh, the mRNA that's huge. That's big fish.Unknown Speaker 54:18 Yes. And then the metabolomes is the next step, right? Are those microbes to creating something like the sofa Vibrio in the gut, right, then we know that sofab embryo was linked with autism from Dr. Feingold. So he thought that the sofa Vibrio or Clostridium perfringens could play a role with autism. Well, when you see the sofa Vibrio in a family in one kid that has autism, and the rest of the family doesn't have autism, and don't have it, but the kid has 40% relative abundance of the sofa of embryo you don't even need to do metabolomic studies on that because you know, that there's that The problem most likely, and then that good faecal transplant would be a solution. Oh, that's, that's so cool.Ken Brown 55:06 I talk to my patients that, especially people with certain food cravings are battling their weight and stuff. And I'm like, well, it could be that you're not really it's not really you and controlled your microbiome, would you discuss briefly your two daughters? In your experience?Unknown Speaker 55:20 Yeah. So. So I took antibiotics, my young, my old, my oldest also, and, you know, I have a hard time I used to eat like, in Miami, I used to eat the whole tuna subway, and you know, would not gain a pound naito cucumber, and I get a pile. And my little one eats 5000 10,000 calories. Sometimes she'll eat like a one o'clock in the morning, the whole pizza, and then an apple pie doesn't gain weight. She's a toothpick, right. And so we looked at the family microbiome, and actually, there was a group of microbes that is potentially the obesity marker. There's also a group of markers that are potentially the cholesterol. And so this is a new world, right that we're entering. So even with Alzheimer's, we're seeing similarities in the microbiome. So we need to understand, but more important, I think, then understanding the microbes isn't is understanding the environment of the microbes. Because you saw studies when they do so we know that when we do faecal transplants, we are achieving improvement in patients, right. But you saw the studies where they remove the faecal material and they just had the liquid then they implanted it and they still got improvement, right? So something in the substance, something in the environment, the substances, I think, make a big, big difference. It's all gonna make sense to you. When you read the paper with ivermectin.Ken Brown 56:44 I'm so excited. I just I'm literally like thrilled.Unknown Speaker 56:49 Vitamin C and vitamin D, because I'm going to be writing Linus Pauling was right.Ken Brown 56:54 That's coming. I agree. With everything you said. I have a couple quick comments. Number one, your doorbell rang. And he did tell you that emotion would show up on your front doorstep that could have been, and Oh, well. And then I got a I have a I have a quick story for you. Yes, that we were interviewing a fellow. He was from Yale. And this is gonna be about eight to 10 years ago. So before faecal microbial transplant FMT was being discussed. We're out to dinner with them. I've took them to a nice steak restaurant here in here in my city. And I was asking him about his research. And he goes, Well, what we're showing is and he's talking, and the waitress was there, and she was like, This is interesting. And she was listening. And she was a little bit obese. And he goes, Well, we're taking stool from skinny mice and giving it to fat mice. And those fat mice are losing weight. And then vice versa. Right, like, no, that's so cool. Because like the first time I'd ever heard of it, he was doing the original research on this. And then the funniest thing happened. She was once again I said she was a little overweight. She looks over at this busboy who's all about six for 120 pounds. She was Bill, you are the sexiest person in this restaurant, right? Cuz he went on to say that if you live with somebody, you end up sharing the microbiome. Yeah, and she yells to this poor guy was probably like, 17. She's like, you want to move in? You want to move in? A little premature, but I don't know. Maybe she wasn't. SoUnknown Speaker 58:25 hey, you know what I do every day as a routine. I take my little one my 17 and I rub my face to her. I'm like, I want some of that microbiome on my skin. That's the best lotion right there. I mean, I don't need to put lotion on my face.Ken Brown 58:38 Your I'm scared that I'll ruin my kid's Mojo by giving them my kids,Unknown Speaker 58:46 my little one who actually is a hyper metabolizer. That's what I call her. I asked her to donate stools from me. I said, you know, your skills could be worth a lot of money, because that could cure for obesity. And I said $1,000 for one sample Scarlet. She's like, Nope, not giving it I'm not going to grab it. She's like, I'm not going to be a rat lab. Mom, she gave me one sample. That's it. That was all.Ken Brown 59:10 That's it. And this is this is not hyperbole. In your book you discuss about how the marathon runner they took his store he gave it to mice, and the mice immediately with no extra training could run 13% moreEric Rieger 59:21 than they could before. Before we publish this episode we need we need to get shit studying calm. have it ready to go?Ken Brown 59:31 Well, I will give you credit. A lot of the things that come across you do trademark it's like you'll just like call your trademark attorney and they're just trademarking everything.Unknown Speaker 59:41 Yeah. Because so yes, it's it's kind of funny because I, you know, in medicine and you know, you come up with an idea. A businessman takes an AI takes your idea and make something out of it. And then you're like, wait a minute, that was my idea how many doctors have I seen over the course of my career that have come up with cures, and a businessman came, took that cure and made it a business and the doctor now, you know, Dr. Feingold, his book is the beginning of so many pharmaceutical companies, because that was without his book. Without that foundation, none of these pharmaceutical companies, you know, existed. And, you know, the fact that he had to struggle to get money for his research and keep putting all his money into his work. It was just not okay. And so when I started this, and I started the company, I said to myself, first of all, I'm trademarking everything. And I learned from the best Dr. Brody, because he said, patent everything, trademark everything, because they will always say, somebody will take your idea and try to make something out of it. So the man is genius on multiple level. Yeah.Ken Brown 1:00:57 And the fact that you actually are doing what people don't realise is that you're going down this microbial path, a speaker microbial path. And to get these studies done, you have to file these nd eyes, these new drug sounds like that. Yes, I end that's it. Yeah, I end in Yeah. And that's, it's super expensive. And they make it they make it difficult, or maybe they do on purpose or not, I don't know. I mean, obviously, as as an investigator, where we have to deal with that a little bit with our supplement, we kind of skirt the FDA, but we still have to walk such a careful line, you want to talk science, but if you start talking too much science, then you have to file that ind andUnknown Speaker 1:01:40 and I think, you know, it's not hard to file it's not hard to do it. I think this is where doctors need to join forces because really, um, you know, we lose when we don't work together when we were in residency and internship we were collaborating together to fix you know, what happened with COVID was really sad to me because the collaboration disappeared. All of a sudden, the media is telling you how to take care of your patients, and the politicians and the whole time it was like, wait a minute, the moment the politician can tell me what the Latina does in COVID, or Rosa Yuria or fasula, bacterium, press neiti let alone they should probably spell fasula bacterium proxy, never mind what it's doing. The moment a politician can tell me that, then I will respect what they're saying or immediate person. But the reality is we're entering a world of microbes, I think we should let the people that are in the microbiome world, lead that path and lead the treatment. At the end of the day, achieve success listen to the people that achieve success. You know, those doctors on the front line that realise different methods to to meet, forget ivermectin, let's talk about others, right. kosha seen, you know, cheap solutions be that cyanide, you know, eliquis all these I think those were hints right? When when I have a patient that's oxygen saturation 73%. And I'm freaking out because the patient doesn't want to go to the hospital, but I know he's gonna die on my shift. And I don't want him to die. I'm going to do everything in my power. So I'm going to give him everything I know. And then I'm going to call, you know, my buddies. You know, Brian Tyson say, Brian, what did you do with this? And then he would say, you know what, I've this. And then Peter McCollum. What did you do on this? And so I think this is where the collaboration of physician comes into play. Because we are the ones on the front line, taking care of patients. And at the end of the day, who do you trust with your life? The doctors that guided you this way? Right. I trusted with my life. Tom perrotti. Let me Yeah,Ken Brown 1:03:50 I just want to ask a quick question on this, because I saw that you have done presentations you have submitted for different trials. You've done this, have you? A lot of the doctors that have had the guts to do this have had backlash. Did you receive any backlash from social media, from the media from anything?Unknown Speaker 1:04:07 So I'm because I'm working with the FDA oversight. And right now we're doing actually clinical trials with the Department of Defence sponsoring it, which is another product altogether? I've not had the backlash as much, I'm sure I've had backlash when I tried to advertise to get patients. You know, definitely my there were criticisms and you know, and I always try to stay under the radar as much as possible talking about treatment. I'm more the microbiome girl and I don't think anybody really knows about the microbiome and if they want to go one on one with me and start trashing me, bring it on the ship is going to be caught starting. And I call the book and in January because let's talk shit because I said Look, I couldn't be full shade or I could know my shit. But I think I know my shiftKen Brown 1:05:02 to that is awesome.Unknown Speaker 1:05:04 So we'll see. I mean, it's a it's a path. It's a, it's a discovery path. It's, it's, it needs to be done. And I think I say to people, if you stop the innovation, you're going to be the patient coming for an innovation that's not going to be happening. You know, right now we get how many patients do get probably as much as me that wants faecal transplant for Alzheimer's, for Parkinson's, for autism, etc. You can't offer it. We're not there yet.Ken Brown 1:05:31 So let me ask you this. So you've got your lab set up to do a really good job. We were doing it heavily. A guest standing for this podcast, Dr. Stuart Ackerman, him and I did a few of these super intelligent doctor, my colleague who trained in New York, we were lucky enough to steal him and bring him over about five years ago, he jumped all in on the on the faecal transplant, and he signed up, he did everything. And then like overnight, he said, Well, this was like, in between the FDA saying it's a drug and this and then he was able to get the frozen capsules. And then it was like overnight, it became cost prohibitory because something happened with the lab. And we just quit doing it because we couldn't get it approved insurance wouldn't pay it suddenly, it was super expensive. Right?Unknown Speaker 1:06:17 So that's the peer pressure and the lobbying power, right? of lobbyists that basically, and I'm gonna say it out there because I think it needs to be told, you know, there is a lobbying movement that is basically stopping these, these drugs, these, these cheap solutions. And I think we need to stop that we need to fight as physicians for that because the moment we stop, you know, trying to do what was right for the patient, faecal transplant being one of them. I think all of us that were doing faecal transplant join forces in the microbiome meeting, the Malibu microbiome meeting that you probably saw, because of the fact that we saw that our ability to help patients were being cut. We were doing, we were helping patients we were doing using a bank that was good. And that ability was cut. I think, you know, the onus is to go from that product that was sold of open biome to go to Finch, right, which is now a pharmaceutical product, then, you know, that's fine, as long as you know, the data shows that it's working, etc. But I think you know, stopping the right to try and doctors from doing faecal transplant or scaring them, you know, I still do faecal transplant, you know, who's gonna stop me? I mean, the the FDA, you know, has said you can do faecal transplant for C diff, provided you do all these things. And even if you want to do it for autism, you have to submit an ind, well, I just have to write the ind, I have to follow the protocol and follow the guidelines. Nobody's gonna stop you if you're doing things the right way.Ken Brown 1:08:03 So you don't have to wait for them to approve the ind. JustUnknown Speaker 1:08:07 wait for them to approve the ID. But for C diff, you can do faecal transplant. You just have to f
Dr. Sabine Hazan-Steinberg is a gastroenterologist and hepatologist. She has been the principal investigator on over 22 peer review published medical trials. Dr. Hazan has published studies on Covid and our biome and has a new paper coming out on the specific role of one bacteria in our gut that makes us more vulnerable to Covid infections as well as enhanced severity. Dr. Hazan is past Chief of Medicine at Community Memorial Hospital. She has spent the last several decades doing deep dives into fecal transplant research, biomes and the link with overall health as well as specific diseases. In this show you will learn: What the biome has to do with our health and the top issues and foods that make a biome unhealthy. What “biome diversity” means and if you want it, or not. How fecal transplant eliminated disease in some patients and increased it in others. How pathogenic gut infections, even C. diff, is more an issue of loss of “balance” of a healthy biome rather than the virulence of that particular microbe. The role of gut biome health and Covid. Risk vs. benefit of scientific medical research. Early intervention Covid protocols, and more. You will also learn some of the best and easiest “probiotic foods” to consume such as umeboshi plum paste, and where to get it. This is a dynamic conversation about the reality of the health of the gut and diverse diseases from autism to severe upper respiratory tract infections. Dr. Hazen is one of the world's experts on the genetics of the gut biome and now you get to hear it straight from the experts.
Gut health. It's everywhere. It's hard not to go a day without hearing about the microbiome or the launch of a new probiotic. But the more we learn about this enigma within us, the more questions arise.
Gut health. It's everywhere. It's hard not to go a day without hearing about the microbiome or the launch of a new probiotic. But the more we learn about this enigma within us, the more questions arise.
Dr. Sabine Hazan is on to talk about how microbiome dramatically impacts aging, immune system function, dermatological health, cognitive function, and more. Don’t miss it!Guest Links:Website: https://progenabiome.comBook: https://letstalkshit.orgStart your FREE 7 day trial for Jillian’s App at https://go.jillianmichaels.com/WNt1rL7uyZFollow us on Instagram @JillianMichaels and @MartiniCindyThis Week’s Sponsors:BETTERHELP.com/JILLIANMICHAELS for 10% off your first monthANALUISA.com/JILLIAN, promo code JILLIAN for 10% offSTRANDSHAIRCARE.com, promo code JILLIAN for 20% off a 1-time purchaseYou can find new episodes of Keeping It Real: Conversations with Jillian Michaels, completely ad free, on Wondery+ https://wondery.app.link/jillian
These doctors are practicing physicians, innovators, business leaders, authors, and most of all, American heroes in a very dark time. Dr. Sabine Hazan, Dr. Ben Marble, Dr. Craig Wax, and Dr. Peter Breggin, join Dr. Peter McCullough on The McCullough Report on the podcast.
These doctors are practicing physicians, innovators, business leaders, authors, and most of all, American heroes in a very dark time. Dr. Sabine Hazan, Dr. Ben Marble, Dr. Craig Wax, and Dr. Peter Breggin, join Dr. Peter McCullough on The McCullough Report on the podcast.
Got an upset stomach? Are those really “butterflies” you're feeling, or is that your microbiome, about to stage an uprising against your continuation of eating poorly? Have you ever heard the expression, “You are, what you eat?” Tis true, not in all cases, as there are hereditary factors, or secondary medical conditions. at play, such as use of antibiotics. The good news is that we can improve the quality AND longevity of our life, making wise dietary choices, along with the help of evidence based research, to incorporate FMT, should lifestyle changes in itself, may not be enough.Get the “skinny” on the facts, from a well known gastroenterologist, Dr. Sabine Hazan, who is also a scientific researcher, along with being the CEO of Progenobiome. Dr. Hazan will explain exactly what a microbiome is, how it influences & governs our bodily processes. What is it that we can do, to re-establish bacterial harmony, giving our immune system a fighting chance against the risk of developing chronic diseases, thus improving the quality of our life. Apex Training also “footnoted” references related to Dr, Hazan's clinical trials related to her research.Dr. Sabine Hazan's emailDrhazan@progenabiome.ComDr. Sabine Hazan's websitehttps://progenabiome.com/Dr. Sabine Hazan's results of her clinical trialshttps://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/results?cond=Autism+&term=Progenabiome+&cntry=&state=&city=&dist=Dr. Sabine Hazan's recently published bookhttps://www.amazon.com/dp/0578684705/ref=cm_sw_r_fm_api_glc_fabc_.ildGbXX6ZT2Chttps://microbiomeresearchfoundation.com/If you wish to reach Jackie Mah, at Apex Training BBC, related to this episode, the below e-mail & website is listed.Jmah@apextrainingforlife.comApextrainingforlife.com
Join us with our special guest, Sabine Hazan, MD, a gastroenterology specialist in Ventura, CA and has been practicing for 22 years. Dr. Hazan will be explaining Clinical Trials and how individuals can participate in trials to help themselves -- to help others. There will also be discussions about C. difficile infections, recurrent CDI's, and the Microbiome and why it is so important in our health today. We look forward to receiving your questions at info@cdifffoundation.org and enjoy the episode.