User:Max.friedland/sandbox

Aspirin
Research has indicated that nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), like aspirin, protect against certain forms of cancer. As early as the 1970s aspirin was found to have a positive effect on blocking intestinal tumors and reducing the risk of colon cancer. More recent research has found that aspirin may protect against other types of cancer. A series of studies in the United Kingdom offers the most significant evidence from placebo-controlled clinical trials that regularly taking low doses of aspirin wards off other types of cancer as well.   In the UK study, people in the experiment group took daily aspirin (less than 75 mg). The study found the aspirin reduced risk in cancers in the colon, lung and prostate by 46%, and other cancers, such as those in the bladder and kidney, by 18%. Moreover, in six prevention trials, aspirin users had reduced cancer incidence from three years onward by 324 cases compared with 421 cases in the groups who did not consume aspirin. 

No Fours Diet
The No Fours Diet was developed by Professor Roc Ordman of Beloit College. This diet calls for zero consumption of four legged animals. Four legged animal meat has sailic acid. When humans consume sialic acid, our cells incorporate this molecule and insert it into our cell membranes, so it sticks out like an antigen of the cell surface. This antigen binds toxic bacteria, it causes inflammation, and “makes humans more susceptible to a variety of diseases”.