This procedure does not appear to be a general blood letting - as in mere removal of some blood. There is no actual blood loss. What is removed is returned after passing through a filter and an oxygenation process.
That our blood stream can be carrying an excess of toxins that our internal blood filtering systems can be struggling to manage and not always doing a bang up job of is understood in medicine today ; and from it many different sorts of inflammation can be occurring, resulting in at best sub par health and at worst chronic ill health conditions.
The idea behind this blood treatment is to take a good degree of the blood filtering load off of the internal blood filtering organs, which not only externally achieves blood filtering but helps the internal blood filtering organs function better with a lighter load.
The toxins are to a large extent a result of a lot of the artificial things in our modern world, in our air, our water and our food. We - humans - do seem to generate more of then than does the natural world.
Yes, more primitive societies often have shorter life spans due to some major ailments that don’t get modern medical care. But they also have fewer of the modern chronic health conditions that plague many people for many years.
When you subtract infant deaths and childhood deaths, their life expectancy jumps by ten years. Cancer is mostly an old persons death. So if life expectancy is 40, then not many die from this in primitive societies. Same applies to the Middle Ages in Europe.
AI says>>>
Traditional foraging or early agricultural societies saw high burdens of infectious diseases, injuries, and malnutrition, rather than today’s dominant pattern of heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and cancer. This shift toward chronic, degenerative, and “man‑made” diseases in later stages of development is exactly what classic epidemiologic transition theory describes. So it is fair to say that many modern chronic diseases are less prominent in groups without long lifespans and industrial exposures, but people in those societies were not generally “healthier”; they just died earlier from different causes.
Correct. I can foresee kidney dialysis providers expanding into this business after procedures get approval for the general public.