Fruit: Your lungs’ secret weapon against air pollution

Woman and Apple

Groundbreaking research reveals a surprising defense against toxic air: eating more fruit could protect your lungs from pollution damage.

Scientists analyzed data from 200,000 participants in the UK Biobank and discovered that women eating four or more portions of fruit daily showed significantly smaller lung function declines when exposed to air pollution compared to those eating less fruit.

The numbers are striking: For every additional 5 micrograms in fine particulate matter (PM2.5), women with low fruit intake lost 78.1ml of lung capacity, while high fruit eaters lost only 57.5ml—a 26% difference!

The secret lies in fruit’s powerful antioxidants and anti-inflammatory compounds, which help combat the oxidative stress caused by polluted air. With over 90% of the global population breathing air that exceeds WHO safety guidelines, this simple dietary strategy could be a game-changer for respiratory health.

An apple a day might just keep the doctor away—and your lungs breathing easier in our polluted world!

Dr Berg On Cortisol Risk

Dr Berg On Cortisol Risk

I read some time back that a glass of water reduces overnight heart attacks by 40%. Have had one ever since. For those fearing more night time bathroom trips if they do that, here is a solution. I front load my daily water intake and rarely drink between 5 or 6 pm and 10 pm.

Spider Plants

Spider Plants

A recent study found that spider plants were able to remove 95% of chemicals from the air in 24 hours. Through a process known as phytoremediation, spider plants can absorb and break down volatile organic compounds (VOCs) present in the air. In fact, one spider plant can purify the air in a room up to 200 square feet in size.

Flu Vaccine Negative Efficiency 27%

Flu Shot Result Graph

Jeff Childers writes:

Earlier this month, the gold-standard Cleveland Clinic published a shocking study titled, “Effectiveness of the Influenza Vaccine During the 2024-2025 Respiratory Viral Season: A Prospective Cohort Study.” In short, the Clinic found that last year’s flu vaccine was at least as effective at preventing the potentially deadly disease than using Himalayan prayer beads or nailing a dead raccoon over your front door.

Haha, I’m just kidding. According to the study of some 53,000 healthcare professionals, dead raccoons and prayer beads work better than the flu vaccine. The Clinic found that, after about 90 days following the injections —well after any FDA-required postmarketing trials stop looking— staff who got the shots became increasingly more likely to get the flu than their unjabbed coworkers.

In technical terms, the Clinic’s researchers discovered the flu vaccine had a negative efficacy of -27%.

Now look, dummies, I know what you’re thinking. You’re thinking I’ll just stick with the raccoons. But that’s because you aren’t a $cientist. Unlike you, those profit-seeking professionals know how to say “correlation does not prove causation.” Just because thousands of healthcare workers were more likely to come down with the flu after getting the shots doesn’t prove the shots caused it. It could be anything, like witches. Or anti-vaxxers. Either one.

You really need to learn this lesson. Correlation definitely does not prove causation … unless it tends to show that vaccines work. Then it’s Katy, bar the door.

Finish reading: https://open.substack.com/pub/coffeeandcovid/p/preparedness-monday-october-27-2025

A Tale of Two Wikis: How Grokipedia Corrected Wikipedia’s Misinformation & Cleared My Name

When a machine’s neutrality outshines a platform’s propaganda.

Grokipedia

Sayer Ji writes:

I didn’t expect much when I typed my name into Grokipedia, the new knowledge layer that just launched inside X.

Honestly, I braced for another digital hit job.
But what appeared on screen stopped me cold.

There it was — a calm, accurate, beautifully structured description of who I actually am.

Not the cartoon version that’s haunted Google for years. Not the “anti-vax misinformation spreader” fiction seeded by a British NGO and embalmed into Wikipedia’s bloodstream.

But a living, factual account: researcher, author, founder of GreenMedInfo, student of philosophy, advocate for evidence-based natural healing.

It even got the details right — my studies at Rutgers, my work curating over 100,000 peer-reviewed studies, the intent behind Regenerate, and my advocacy for informed consent.

No slander. No ideological framing. Just clarity.

An AI saw me more accurately than the so-called free encyclopedia, whose anonymous editors have spent years dragging my name through the mud.

https://open.substack.com/pub/sayerji/p/grokipedia-just-did-what-wikipedia

Quote of the Day

“Then let us all do what is right, strive with all our might toward the unattainable, develop as fully as we can the gifts God has given us, and never stop learning.” – Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 – 1827)