Date:13 November 2025
Sections du contenu
- ● En bref (cliquez sur les liens pour en savoir plus)
- ● Natural News
- ● Post-covid related
En bref (cliquez sur les liens pour en savoir plus)
- Melatonin linked to heart failure
- International agreement to end use of mercury fillings
- Carb restricted diets improve metabolic health
- Agrohomeopathy regenerating India’s agriculture
- U.S. EPA approves first PFAS pesticide (4 more in the pipeline)
- Big Ag fastracks biologics to replace conventional pesticides
- Solar geoengineering takes centre stage in climate debate
- Voluntary carbon-offset market collapses
- Post-Covid related
Natural News
- A conference research abstract presented at the American Heart Association’s Scientific Session 2025, has hit media headlines as it claims the use of melatonin supplements to combat insomnia increases the risk of heart failure or death. The study associated with the abstract hasn’t been published, it’s preliminary, observational data that hasn’t been peer reviewed, so it’s impossible to understand the nuances and implications of the research. It’s also impossible to glean from the abstract whether the study has looked at underlying health issues in the study population and other contributary factors to cardiovascular disease. Melatonin, which is generally considered safe, could well be the innocent bystander. However, it is still a hormone and we would recommend consulting with a healthcare professional to ensure you use the correct dose for your specific needs
- The sixth meeting on the Conference of the Parties to the Minamata Convention on Mercury took place in Geneva, Switzerland from 3-7 November and reached an historic agreement to stop the use of mercury fillings by 2034. The agreement, designed to protect both human and environmental health, is set to change dentistry globally. Find out more about the campaign to ban the continued use of amalgam fillings from the European Network for Environmental Medicine
- Carbohydrate-restricted (low-carb) diets significantly improve multiple metabolic health markers. A comprehensive meta-analysis published in Nutrition clinique, found that low-carb diets are helpful for managing blood sugar control, insulin levels, liver stress markers, kidney function, and leptin concentrations. Low-carbohydrate and moderate-carbohydrate diets (rather than strict ketogenic approaches) showed the most consistent benefits, with improvements independent of calorie reduction, reinforcing that it’s macronutrient composition itself that matters for metabolic health. These findings support the value of moderating carbohydrate intake as part of a balanced approach to improving metabolic wellness.
>>> Reset Eating, Revised 1st Edition, will help you to switch from carb rich to carb restricted so you can unlock unrestricted health and wellbeing
>>> Scientific attack on low carb diets
- Agrohomeopathy is replacing the use of chemical pesticides and fertilisers in a region of India. The AHAR project was developed in response to mounting financial and environmental costs associated with conventional farming techniques. Although yields dropped initially they increased over the following years and soil health improved enormously.
>>> Une petite dose pourrait-elle aider à régénérer l'agriculture ?
- The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has approved the use of a PFAS based pesticide, cyclobutrifluram. The approval arrives just two days after the agency published its fifth proposal to approve a PFAS pesticide since Donald Trump took office. Environmental and public health advocates warn that cyclobutrifluram breaks down into trifluoroacetic acid (TFA), a pervasive and persistent contaminant linked to global water pollution and potential irreversible health harms. Critics say the agency is advancing industry interests under the guise of “robust review,” despite growing evidence that PFAS pesticides threaten ecosystems and human health for future generations.
- As the race to replace existing pesticides and fertilisers continues, Big Ag corporates are stepping up efforts to engineer soil microbes to reduce the use of synthetic fertilisers under the banner of regenerative and sustainable agriculture and in Bayer’s case, dodging the mass of glyphosate-related lawsuits. However, the technology carries enormous uncertainties. Unlike natural symbiosis in legumes, these microbes must survive, colonise, and function across varied soils and climates. Once released, they cannot be recalled. Relying on lab-created organisms over nature’s original designs opens the door to unpredictable ecological consequences.
- Geoengineering is stepping from the shadows as authorities become more brazen about its use. A new report from the UK’s Royal Society backs the global use of solar geoengineering (blocking the sun) as long as it’s coordinated, in order to deal with ‘climate change’. The researchers emphasise that geoengineering is a sticking plaster that won’t tackle the root cause of the issue and will likely cause a myriad of detrimental consequences. While cutting human-induced carbon emissions is crucial, true climate resilience also requires boosting natural carbon capture through healthy, living soils and plants—not just relying on costly new technologies.
- The voluntary carbon‑offset market has collapsed. Investigations have revealed that up to 90% of rainforest carbon offsets failed to represent genuine emissions reductions. This collapse fuels concerns that carbon markets are a tool to greenwash industry and allow it to continue with polluting behaviours, while handing over control of natural ecosystems to financial interests, rather than letting nature manage itself.
>>> Planète en crise - au-delà du changement climatique
>>> Crédits de biodiversité : tirer profit de la dernière frontière de la nature
Post-covid related
- A landmark constitutional case is unfolding in Canada, as two Canadians challenge the federal government’s covid-era travel vaccine mandates, arguing they were coerced to trade one Charter right for another—mobility for bodily autonomy. Their legal team contends that banning unvaccinated Canadians from air and rail travel was a politically motivated act, not a science-based public health measure. With the court’s decision pending, the case raises critical questions about governmental overreach and the enduring need to safeguard fundamental freedoms in times of crisis.
- Can covid shots help cancer patients using immunotherapies survive for longer? A new study published in Nature says they can. On the surface of it the research is compelling, however there is a significant issue with the design of the study in that it used data looking at cancer patients treated with immunotherapies from 2015 through to 2022—way before covid shots came on the scene. When findings were restricted to the pandemic years there was no longer a statistically significant signal. Whilst mRNA gene therapy may be helpful in the treatment of cancer, as indicated by the researchers’ preclinical work, this study does not support its conclusions. Alex Berenson dives into the study and its findings.
- Covid infection not vaccines put children at higher risk of developing myocarditis. Media headlines are screaming the news but how robust is the study published in The Lancet that reported the data? Not very it turns out. The team at the Health & Resistance Trust (HART) find that the methodology used by the researchers leaves a lot to be desired in order to attain the desired outcome of making the vaccines appear safer than they really are. Read more.
>>> Visitez covidzone.org pour notre contenu complet sur la crise des coronavirus.

