Deborah Manners BSc(Hons)DipEd: food toxins specialist and thought leader on nutrition and disease.
As founder of the The Food Intolerance Institute of Australia Deborah gathers research on the links between food toxins and serious disease.
She is an advocate of medical reform – having exposed that medical diagnosis is not helpful for patients – and only leads them deeper into disease. The breakthrough Manners-Xenos Theory is explained in her book, ‘Unravelling the Mystery of Disease.’
Although gluten, caseins, lactose and other food toxins seem like familiar topics, few people appreciate the full impact of these poisons on the human body over time.
Working across two decades since 1996 Manners has revealed that common food staples like bread, cereal, milk, cheese, beans and others inflict slow-burn damage on tissues, organs and bodily systems. The resulting inflammation, plaque deposits, neural damage and organ dysfunction compound over time to breed dozens of serious chronic and incurable diseases – arguably humankind’s greatest challenge. She argues that moving a low toxin diet (foodintol® LoTox) as a simple preventative and therapeutic option.
Indigenous Nations: Manners-Xenos Theory is the only viable explanation for the observed greater disease prevalence among First Nations Peoples around the world. The theory not only explains why disease happens more frequently among these populations – but it presents a potential solution that is low-cost and easy for people to adopt.
For example educational programs to correct entrenched but misleading dietary advice, (regarding say, diabetes) could save many lives … and prevent the tragic rate of amputations and cases of blindness currently seen in Alice Springs. This approach allows sufferers to start healing themselves rathger than progress to full blown disease.
Book and short film: ‘Unravelling the Mystery of Disease. The medical reform needed to cure the incurable, Manners-Xenos Theory – a Kuhnian shift.