This is Women Road warriors with Shelly.
Speaker BJohnson and Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker AFrom the corporate office to the cab.
Speaker BOf a truck, they're here to inspire and empower women in all professions.
Speaker BSo gear down, sit back and enjoy.
Speaker CWelcome.
Speaker CWe're an award winning show dinner dedicated to empowering women in every profession through inspiring stories and expert insights.
Speaker CNo topics off limits on our show.
Speaker CWe power women on the road to success with expert and celebrity interviews and information you need.
Speaker CI'm Shelly and this is Kathy.
Speaker CAnti aging, regenerative medicine and good health are all buzzwords we hear a lot today.
Speaker CNot everyone understands what all that is.
Speaker CWomen want to be at the top of their game no matter what their age.
Speaker CAnd they want to find the right doctor who can assist them.
Speaker CDr. Joy Kang is an authority on the subject of anti aging.
Speaker CShe's a triple board certified anti aging physician and stem cell specialist.
Speaker CShe's the founder of Chara Health and Chara Biologics to help people with everything from diet and sleep to skin and fertility.
Speaker CAs a dedicated educator and pioneer in the field of regenerative medicine, Dr. Kang founded the American Academy of Integrative Cell Thera, or AAI C T. She's trained numerous physicians from around the world with many accolades including Stem Cell doctor of the Year and Stem Cell Doctor of the decade.
Speaker CDr. Kang continues to be a respected figure in the medical community dedicated to advancing the field of regenerative medicine and improving patient outcomes through her emphasis on scientific data, passion, authenticity and integrity.
Speaker CDr. Kang is also the author of Tiger of Beijing which recounts her remarkable journey as an immigrant from China at the age of 20.
Speaker CIt was named book of the year by IAOTP in 2020.
Speaker CRegenerative medicine and anti aging are some things we wanted to know about.
Speaker CSo we invited Dr. Kang on the show.
Speaker CWelcome, Dr. Kang.
Speaker CThank you for being with us.
Speaker AOh, thank you so much for inviting me.
Speaker AI'm excited for our conversation.
Speaker CSo are we.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker CWell, I've got a ton of questions.
Speaker CI know Kathy probably does too.
Speaker CAnd you know, Dr. Kong, you are quite the pioneer.
Speaker CWhat led you to go into this field of medicine and what exactly is all of this about?
Speaker CEverybody wants to fight aging.
Speaker CIs that possible?
Speaker AYes, the time it's actually here that we can actually stall the pace of aging and even, even reverse it.
Speaker AAnd this is the first time in history I always said no matter what you were in the past, you could get be the most powerful king or queen in the world.
Speaker AYou could not slow the aging process down.
Speaker AEverybody was going downhill.
Speaker AAnd as you saw in the portraits, but they couldn't stop it.
Speaker ABut now we actually have a chance.
Speaker AWe could probably stop.
Speaker AYou know, I don't know where the future goes, but as of the science now, I'm pretty sure we can saw the process for about 20, 30 years.
Speaker AThat's not a problem.
Speaker ASo basically keeping a person a youthful state for 20 to 30 years longer.
Speaker COh, how fabulous is that?
Speaker CNice.
Speaker AI just turned 55, so I'm quite interested.
Speaker AYes, yes.
Speaker AAnd I started doing my anti aging protocol when I was 45.
Speaker ASo now I'm 53 and I'm pretty public about it, you know, in my book Nurse My Birthday.
Speaker ASo my, the, the age I feel now is becoming less and less relevant because we're looking at the biological age really, how old you are from, from the inside, instead of what, how many years you've lived on this earth.
Speaker ASo I, you know, I want to encourage people to look at the aging from a whole different angle because you can age, which means accumulating years on earth without declining biologically.
Speaker ASo you keep in the same youthful state for a very, very long time.
Speaker COh, that's marvelous.
Speaker CThat, that's a, that's a game changer.
Speaker CYou think about it.
Speaker AIt is, yeah.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo when I got into the field, I wasn't thinking, oh, I want to be young forever.
Speaker AI mean, that wasn't even on my mind.
Speaker AI, all I wanted was to feel good, not get sick.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABe, be well for a very long time until the day I have to leave the earth.
Speaker AThat's really the purpose.
Speaker ASo I wanted to help my patients to achieve the same.
Speaker ABecause that's the whole point of becoming a doctor.
Speaker ABecause we're trying to reduce suffering.
Speaker ASo if there are ways that I can reduce the amount of suffering by optimizing people's health so they don't get sick in the first place, that'll be the best.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ABut even if they get sick, if we can understand all those underlying causes of why they got sick, then we can get them better, much faster than if you don't know the underlying causes.
Speaker AAnd that's a problem with conventional medicine, is that they are not looking at all the underlying causes because they don't know.
Speaker ABecause that's not part of the education, that's not part of the philosophy.
Speaker AThe philosophy is to wait until people get sick and then you diagnose them and hook them with drugs which are all tailored toward diagnoses.
Speaker ASo the whole point is that we wait for you to get sick so we can diagnose you and Then we can give you drugs.
Speaker AAnd that's something that I was not willing to, to, to.
Speaker ATo be kind of a slave to.
Speaker AYou know, a lot of doctors had become disillusioned because they weren't feeling very helpful.
Speaker ASo if a person comes in and chronic illnesses have skyrocketed, and if people are coming in with all these chronic conditions, Western medicine, traditional medicine, are not very well equipped at looking at chronic conditions.
Speaker ABecause there are so many causes, they are great at looking at acute conditions, trauma, you know, acute infections and injury.
Speaker AThat's all great.
Speaker ABut, but when it comes to something chronic, it has become quite helpless unless you're looking outside.
Speaker ASo when I first came out of medical school, I decided to go into psychiatry because I love the brain and understanding how the brain works and the psychiatry is the same thing.
Speaker AIf we're trying to diagnose reducing everybody to depression, anxiety, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, then we only have those medications to give.
Speaker AThat's our toolbox.
Speaker ABut we're not looking at why does this person get depressed?
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker AWhat are all the causes?
Speaker AAnd we were not trained to do that, not even nutrition.
Speaker AWe all know nutrition plays a huge role.
Speaker AWe were not equipped to talk about nutrition.
Speaker AWe know about vitamins, minerals and proteins.
Speaker AI mean, very rudimentary.
Speaker AHalf an hour of education, it basically just brushed over.
Speaker AOkay, okay.
Speaker APeople need to eat healthy.
Speaker ASo traditional route doesn't have the language for it.
Speaker AAnd that's when.
Speaker AIf I wanted to enhance my own health or enhance my patients health, then I have to look outside of the box.
Speaker AUnfortunately, there's these burgeoning specialties called anti aging medicine or functional medicine or integrated medicine.
Speaker AThey're all the same thing.
Speaker AThey're looking at many, many causes that are triggering our decline, which triggers diseases.
Speaker ASo if we can reverse those conditions, then we can get back to, to true health.
Speaker AAnd regenerative medicine, stem cell therapy, that's all part of it.
Speaker AIt's part of addressing some of the root causes.
Speaker ACause of why we decline, get old, get cancer and get sick is because we are running out of stem cells.
Speaker ASo if we can replenish that and we can harness the power of stem cells, which were actually the cells that made us right from the first fertilized egg, that was the first stem cell.
Speaker ASo we all came from a single stem cell.
Speaker AAnd how did become us?
Speaker AAnd go figure.
Speaker AWe don't know exactly how we know that there's this complex, you know, embryology, how a fetus is formed, how we don't know how the cells know.
Speaker ASo this is a Huge mystery.
Speaker AAnd what I'm doing with stem cell therapy is that I'm tapping into that mystery, that intelligence, that unbelievable miraculous intelligence.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AHow did it know?
Speaker AHow did it do that?
Speaker ASo I don't know how, but they're doing it.
Speaker AWe're beginning to understand the different mechanisms of how the cells work.
Speaker ASo that's unraveling some of the mystery.
Speaker ABut what I know, I do know is that when I give people these stem cells, it addresses so many causes.
Speaker AIt addresses break down their scar tissue, it can enhance the blood vessel formation, so enhancing blood supply.
Speaker AIt can calm the immune system, balancing the immune system.
Speaker AIt calms the inflammation drastically and it tells your local stem cells to wake up and start replicating and replenish the tissue.
Speaker AGet rid of the bat cells, the cells that don't function well, and then have the new cells, new tissue to come in place so that you have new healthy organs.
Speaker ASo these are just a few of the mechanisms, but they're, they're, they're, they're more.
Speaker AYeah, so that's, that's kind of the, the background of how I got into regenerative medicine is really because the quest for holistic healing and oh, wow.
Speaker CThis, this is just wow.
Speaker CI mean I'm just.
Speaker AMe too.
Speaker AThe only word that comes to mind is wow.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CBecause I think that, you know, when looking at Hollywood and stuff, the only hope we ever had of looking fabulous forever is to be a vampire.
Speaker AOh my goodness.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AActually the vampire facial is part of regenerative medicine because you're tapping into your body's own healing potential.
Speaker CNow, now what is that exactly?
Speaker CA vampire facial?
Speaker AReally?
Speaker AThat was obtaining a person's blood.
Speaker AThat's where the vampire part comes in.
Speaker AObtaining person's blood.
Speaker AAnd you centrifuge it down where you can get not the red blood cells, but the part that's clear, the plasm.
Speaker AAnd within the plasm, a plasma, the, is very rich in PRP platelets.
Speaker ASo it's platelet rich plasma.
Speaker AAnd when you smear that on the face and use microneedling to drive the, the, these platelet rich plasma, which really the platelets will secrete a lot of growth factors that triggers your skin to regenerate.
Speaker AAnd then when you do microneedling, you're disrupting the skin.
Speaker ASo you're creating a little bit of injury, controlled injury.
Speaker AWhen you control that inj, you're triggering this whole cascade of signals.
Speaker AYour body basically screaming, oh my God, I need to fix this.
Speaker AAnd then when the new growth factors, everything is there to help you fix it.
Speaker AAll of a sudden you can form new tissue that's healthier.
Speaker ASo that's really tapping into what your body can do.
Speaker AIf you just let the wrinkles and, you know, the lesions just sit there and they're not going to do anything.
Speaker ABut if you disrupt it and put some growth factors on there, all of a sudden the cells can start to make better tissue.
Speaker AAnd now that the wrinkles and you know, are replaced with, with good smooth, you know, nice looking skin.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CWow, that, that's pretty incredible.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CI don't think a lot of people are familiar with the vampire facial or treatments and they may go, ooh, that sounds disgusting.
Speaker CBut if it works, you know why.
Speaker AIt looks very bloody.
Speaker AThat's another reason it's called vampire facial.
Speaker AYou have something better, you know, we can do, we can inject stem cells which is so much more powerful than just the prp, I call it PRP on steroid.
Speaker ASo the stem cells will give much, much higher level of result and longer lasting.
Speaker CNow is that using somebody's own stem.
Speaker ACells, you can do that, you can use a person's own fat or bone marrow.
Speaker ABut one thing I've been talking about in the field is to let people know of the differences between different sources.
Speaker AWhen I first came into this entire regenerative medicine field, I was faced with whether or not I can use a person's own stem cells or I can go get something really young, which are the birth tissue, so umbilical cord, placenta, so I can get those sources, but which one is better?
Speaker ASo I dug really deep into research which resulted in this presentation I gave in various medical conferences is called our OMS Created Equal.
Speaker ABut because the answer is no, they're actually quite different.
Speaker AWhen you use your own stem cells, your own stem cells have aged with you.
Speaker ANot only has declined in the number drastically, but also declined in quality.
Speaker ASo when you use younger sources, the cells are more potent and they are actually safer because your own cells tends to tell everything to grow, including existing cancer.
Speaker ABut whereas the younger cells have more of an intelligence to detect a cancer and then helping your body get rid of it, actually sending signals to tell the cells to die.
Speaker ASo the, even though they're all called mesenchymal stem cells, they're all a type of crucial stem cells in your body.
Speaker AThat's everywhere in your, in your body, but they decrease sharply.
Speaker ASo but if you use these younger sources, you're going to get better results and it's going to be safer for you.
Speaker AYou, you know if you have concerns about cancer.
Speaker AOf course, all of us, we all have cancer, cancer cells popping up here and they're just part of life, but your immune system will get rid of it.
Speaker ABut all of a sudden, if you put in signals that is telling everything to grow and can overpower or override some of the signals from the immune system, then yes, you can actually get exacerbation.
Speaker AAnd that's what different studies have shown that there's a risk of causing promoting cancer.
Speaker AThat may be one of the only potential side effects.
Speaker AEverything else is pretty much kind of operator dependent.
Speaker AOnce in a while, maybe the cryopreservatives in the product can cause a little bit of side effects.
Speaker ABut in general, these treatments using nature's intelligence to heal ourselves is just extraordinarily safe.
Speaker AExtraordinary.
Speaker AStay tuned for more of Women Road warriors coming up.
Speaker BDean Michael, the tax doctor here.
Speaker BI have one question for you.
Speaker BDo you want to stop worrying about the irs?
Speaker BIf the answer is yes, then look no further.
Speaker BI've been around for years.
Speaker BI've helped countless people across the country and my success rate speaks for itself.
Speaker BSo now you know where to find good, honest help with your tax problems.
Speaker BWhat are you waiting for?
Speaker BIf you owe more than $10,000 to the IRS or haven't filed in years, call me now at 888-1557-4020 or go to mytaxhelpmd.com for a free consultation and get your life back.
Speaker CIndustry Movement Trucking Moves America Forward is telling the story of the industry.
Speaker COur safety champions, the women of trucking, independent contractors, the next generation of truckers, and more.
Speaker CHelp us promote the best of our industry.
Speaker CShare your story and what you love about trucking.
Speaker CShare images of of a moment you're proud of and join us on social media.
Speaker CLearn more@truckingmovesamerica.com.
Speaker BWelcome back to Women Road.
Speaker AWarriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker CIf you're enjoying this informative episode of Women Road Warriors, I wanted to mention Kathy and I explore all kinds of topics that will power you on the road to success.
Speaker CWe feature a lot of expert interviews, plus we feature celebrities and women who've been trailblazers.
Speaker CPlease check out our podcast@womenroadwarriors.com and click on our Episodes page.
Speaker CWe're also available wherever you listen to podcasts on all the major podcast channels like Spotify, Apple, YouTube, Amazon, Music, Audible, you name it.
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Speaker CWe want to help as many women as possible.
Speaker CWhat if I told you you could slow down the aging process or even start to reverse it?
Speaker CSounds futuristic, right?
Speaker CWell, it's very real.
Speaker CAnd Dr. Joy Kong is at the forefront of this breakthrough science.
Speaker CShe's a triple board certified anti aging physician, a stem cell specialist, and the founder of Chara Health and Chara Biologics.
Speaker CDr. Kang helps people improve everything from their sleep and skin to fertility and overall health using cutting edge regenerative medicine.
Speaker CWith honors like stem cell doctor of the year and doctor of the decade, she's the real deal, and we're talking to her.
Speaker CShe's been telling us how all this works.
Speaker CDr. Kang, much of what you've been discussing sounds a lot like reprogramming the body in many ways.
Speaker CWell, when you think about it, the body's basically kind of like a computer program, isn't it?
Speaker AIt's.
Speaker AYeah, it's very, very sophisticated.
Speaker AYou want to.
Speaker AYeah, it's the DNA that's contained in the cells is where the magic comes from.
Speaker ABecause everything the cell's doing is directed by the DNA that's the blueprint.
Speaker AAnd the DNA is the most energy dense substance in the universe.
Speaker ASo what is energy?
Speaker AAnd to me, that really means intelligence.
Speaker AIt's the condensed intelligence and how much more intelligent it is than any computer we can invent.
Speaker AI think it's way superior as far as what we can.
Speaker AWe can grow life.
Speaker ALet's see if a computer can do that.
Speaker CSure.
Speaker CNow, in terms of the younger stem cells, I know that that can be an ethical issue with a lot of people, too.
Speaker CCan the placenta be used?
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AThe placenta is usually tossed right when a baby is born.
Speaker AIt's healthy, live birth.
Speaker AAnd they cut the cord and the cord and placenta, everything just tossed in the biological waste basket.
Speaker ABut now we have much more information about what these tissues contain, that they have some of the most powerful regenerative elements.
Speaker ANow, ask the mother, hey, do you want to save these tissue for your baby's future?
Speaker AYou know, for, you know, in case your baby gets sick or, you know, the baby needs it.
Speaker AI would.
Speaker AYeah, a lot of mothers do, but believe it or not, 90% of mothers say, say no because it's very expensive.
Speaker AIt takes a few thousand dollars a year to keep these.
Speaker AOh, yeah, yeah.
Speaker ACells stored in the bank.
Speaker ASo a lot of people say no.
Speaker AAnd once they say no, then they're Asked if they would like to donate.
Speaker ASo if they say yes, they have to go through very stringent, very, you know, it's a very strict process out their own illnesses, family history of any conditions, any travel history that could be exposing them to, you know, for toxic elements or their own work history, sexual history.
Speaker ASo everything's screened for.
Speaker AAnd then once the tissue is brought to a lab that process them, they have to check certain infectious diseases to make sure that these are good for transplantation, because it's as strict as any organ transplantation.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ABut it's actually stricter for what we do.
Speaker ASo I have a stem cell company.
Speaker AWe manufacture, you know, contract manufacture these products that I designed, and we make sure that our process is strictest in the whole industry to avoid any potential risk.
Speaker ASo we screen for things like Lyme disease or Chagas.
Speaker AAnd we also do not accept mothers who've been vaccinated with the, the COVID vaccine, the MRNA vaccines.
Speaker COh, interesting.
Speaker AYou know, we, we don't know what the potential risks are, and I'm just not willing to put anybody in that risk, including myself.
Speaker AI'm using these cells all the time, every three months.
Speaker ASo I think for everybody's safety to be, you know, because we swore an oath, first do no harm.
Speaker AAnd I'm just not willing to put people at risk.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ADid anyone tell you today how amazing you are?
Speaker COh, yes, you're super amazing.
Speaker CAnd for the listeners who can't see you, you look like you're in your 20s.
Speaker CI mean, you're beautiful.
Speaker AAnd it's just like, I am so appreciative.
Speaker AYeah, you know, it was interesting.
Speaker AI mean, you, you guys, you know, you've been doing this for a long time, so you, you would, you would know what social media is doing.
Speaker AIt's just so funny.
Speaker ASo as I become more public about what I do, my age, etc, and I've seen people just making very mean comments and it's a.
Speaker AThere's a lot, there are a lot of.
Speaker CThey're jealous.
Speaker AIt was funny.
Speaker AOkay, this is funny.
Speaker AI'm.
Speaker AI'm going to do an episode about this because I have my own podcast.
Speaker ABut some, some say, okay, I wish Dr. Kong is honest about it.
Speaker AAnd she obviously has done facelift.
Speaker AShe's done all these things, and she should just come out and be honest about it.
Speaker ASo I want to invite, I want to invite people.
Speaker ACome, you know, pick somebody, your representative.
Speaker ACome, let's do a live session.
Speaker AI want you to take a look at my face, you know, examine everywhere on my Head, let's look for the.
Speaker CScars because they'll be there somewhere.
Speaker ABut it's such a, in a sense, such a compliment because they're saying it's impossible for you to look the way you look you do without surgery.
Speaker ABut that's exactly my point.
Speaker AI'm trying to show people you can do that now.
Speaker AYou can look naturally radiant and youthful without cutting yourself up.
Speaker COh, isn't that awesome?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWho wants to go under the knife?
Speaker CI mean, that's a scary proposition.
Speaker CNot to mention you're paying a lot of money to do it.
Speaker AYeah, a lot of money.
Speaker AAnd it may not look good, but.
Speaker CAs we see that, don't we?
Speaker CAnd some of the celebrities, it's like, who did they go to?
Speaker CWhat on earth?
Speaker CI mean, men and women both.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker ASo that's my whole point.
Speaker AI'm trying to show people, hey, you don't have to decline.
Speaker AI mean, who wants to get older and older and get, you know, feeling worse and, and, and lack of energy or start to get sick here and there?
Speaker AYou know, it's, it's, it's tiring.
Speaker AHow about just be well?
Speaker AYou know, that's what I'm showing you.
Speaker ABut the side effect of being well is to look youthful and to feel really good about how you look, because a lot of times when people age, you probably, you know, you've seen that people look tired.
Speaker CYes, yes.
Speaker AWhen they're aging, and they, they said, no, I'm not tired.
Speaker ABut yeah, you look tired or you look pissed off.
Speaker CAnd sometimes the people really are kind of crotchety and TikTok.
Speaker AStay tuned.
Speaker AMore of women road warriors coming up.
Speaker BDan Michael, the tax doctor here.
Speaker BI have one question for you.
Speaker BDo you want to stop worrying about the irs?
Speaker BIf the answer is yes, then look no further.
Speaker BI've been around for years.
Speaker BI've helped countless people across the country, and my success rate speaks for itself.
Speaker BSo now you know where to find good, honest help with your tax problems.
Speaker BWhat are you waiting for?
Speaker BIf you owe more than $10,000 to the IRS or haven't filed in years, call me now at 888-557-4020 or go to mytaxhelpmd.com for a free consultation and get your life back.
Speaker CIndustry movement Trucking moves America Forward is telling the story of the industry.
Speaker COur safety champions, the women of trucking, independent contractors, the next generation of truckers and more.
Speaker CHelp us promote the best of our industry.
Speaker CShare your story and what you love about trucking.
Speaker CShare images of a moment you're proud of and join us on social media.
Speaker CLearn more@truckingmovesamerica.com.
Speaker BWelcome back to Women Road.
Speaker AWarriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker CImagine having the ability to slow or even reverse your body's aging process.
Speaker CDr. Joy Kang is proving it's entirely possible.
Speaker CShe's a trailblazer in regenerative medicine, a triple board certified anti aging specialist, and the founder of both Chara health and Chara Biologics.
Speaker CDr. Kang helps people restore their vitality, boosting sleep, skin health, fertility, and more using cutting edge stem cell therapies and regenerative medicine.
Speaker CShe's trained physicians worldwide and earned titles like stem cell doctor of the year and doctor of the decade.
Speaker CShe taps into the intelligence of stem cells to reverse aging to improve health and increase youth.
Speaker CShe's been walking us through the process and the possibilities.
Speaker CSo, Dr. Kung, what exactly do your facilities and your physicians and charobiologics do?
Speaker CAre there stem cell injections?
Speaker CI mean, how does all of this work?
Speaker AYeah, so the stem cell injections at my clinic, that is definitely a cornerstone of everything because without doing that and seeing firsthand how many conditions, how many people I can help, really, that wouldn't get me the, the incentive to develop the products and to, to share with other doctors.
Speaker ASo I do a lot of education, I've trained a lot of doctors, and we, I have also developed a stem cell product, you know, a few of them and to send to doctors so they can use it for their patients.
Speaker ABut everything started with me providing treatment.
Speaker AAnd I'll just give you an example.
Speaker AI think, you know, examples always speak to people because it's, well, that's what got me excited the first time I did stem cell treatment because everything sounds great.
Speaker AOh, stem cells, amazing.
Speaker AAll these potentials.
Speaker ABut does it actually work?
Speaker ASo the very first patient I treated was 69 years old, and he was told by two orthopedic surgeons that he needed bilateral knee replacement because they were in such bad shape.
Speaker ASo he was in a lot of pain and he was very active.
Speaker AHe, he goes to lots of trade shows and walk around a lot.
Speaker AAnd so he did not want to do surgery.
Speaker AI decided to give him an IV infusion and also injection into each knee.
Speaker AAnd I, you know, the reason I did both is because within the knee joint, which is very large, the outer third of the cartilage is nourished by the blood supply.
Speaker AThe inner 2/3 is nourished by synovial fluid.
Speaker ASo you want to attack from both angles.
Speaker AAnd what's Interesting was the next day he said, hey, I slept through the night and I wasn't woken up by pain off his shoulder.
Speaker ASo he never told me about his rotator cuff injury.
Speaker AAnd all I was focusing on was his knees.
Speaker ABut he had a bad car accident when he was a teenager, so his rotator cuff was torn and never fully healed.
Speaker ASo every time he was rolling over, moving, he will be woken up from the sharp pain, but without me touching his shoulder, not knowing anything about his shoulder.
Speaker AHis shoulder was fine, actually.
Speaker AStill fine.
Speaker AThis day is fixed.
Speaker ASo I.
Speaker ABut I didn't know about it, right?
Speaker ASo, so I was like, wow, that's amazing.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker AAnd the knees, the knees are doing great.
Speaker ASo he was walking from, you know, having a lot of pain, been really worried to walking four miles every day for years.
Speaker AYou know, even now, now he's what, 70, should be 77 years old.
Speaker AAnd he never had the surgery.
Speaker ANever.
Speaker AStill going to a lot of trade shows.
Speaker AHe goes to more trade shows than anybody I know.
Speaker AAnd, you know, walking miles every day.
Speaker AHe said, I almost don't realize I have knees that I don't even think about it once in a while.
Speaker ASaid when I, when I walk uphill, I feel a little.
Speaker ANo, I think walking downhill, he feels a slight twinge that.
Speaker ABut that's, that's the only thing he notices.
Speaker ASo I saved somebody from knee replacement surgery, and I was not an orthopedic surgeon.
Speaker ALike, who was I who was actually trained in psychiatry?
Speaker AWho was I to fix somebody's knees when his highly trained orthopedic surgeons have no way of helping him that way?
Speaker AThe only way they could think of was to cut him up and give him a new knee.
Speaker AOh, yeah, right.
Speaker ASo how would I not be hooked?
Speaker AHow empowering is that for a doctor?
Speaker CSo this can reverse a lot of conditions, people with degenerative conditions in their joints, in their back, all of the different things.
Speaker CAnd does it also have a side benefit where you just start looking really fabulous?
Speaker AYou know, I think that is a side benefit because I didn't know, you know, when I started doing the treatment, I was doing it every three months because I, I heard for anti aging benefits is every three to six months.
Speaker ASo, so I did every three months.
Speaker AI wanted to be a little bit more proactive.
Speaker AAnd within about a year, yeah, a year or so, my neighbor at the time, she was my neighbor for eight years, she said, joy, what have you been doing?
Speaker AYou're looking younger and younger.
Speaker AWhat's going on?
Speaker AAnd not just her that noticed that, but her mother in law and her daughter, they all had the same comment and this.
Speaker AAnd to me it was very surprising because that wasn't why I did it.
Speaker AI just wanted feel good.
Speaker ASo the thing is, I don't have there, there's not enough human studies.
Speaker AAlthough people who have done regular IV stem cells, the few people I met, they all look fantastic for their age.
Speaker ASo that, that's, that's one thing I know.
Speaker ABut there are animal studies.
Speaker ARats and mice, they only live for about 18 to 20 months.
Speaker ASo they don't live very long.
Speaker AYou can actually conduct longevity studies.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AIt's like fast forward for humans.
Speaker AYou can actually see what's going on in these animals.
Speaker ASo when they start to give animals these regular IV stem cells, they realize that animals consistent consistently they live for about 30% longer.
Speaker ANot just living longer, but they look, they look better.
Speaker ATheir furs are shinier and more even their spine is straighter.
Speaker AThey are running around like young mice.
Speaker AYou know, they, they, they, their locomotion is fantastic and their cognition is better because they, they still remember how to do the maze and et cetera.
Speaker ASo everything was reverted to the younger state.
Speaker AAnd then when they actually dis animals, that's, that's like the nail on the coffin right?
Speaker ANow we know for sure.
Speaker AWhen they dissected the animals, their muscles and their brain, every marker they looked at whether or not it's neurotransmitters, it's growth factor secretion, or different senescence markers.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThe markers are showing that they were declining, they were getting older, toxic waste buildup, everything was reverted back to the younger state.
Speaker ASo that's, that's definitive evidence.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CYou know, and that's what people are looking for.
Speaker CThey want to live longer, but they want to have a quality of life because you can live longer.
Speaker CBut if you have a really an awful quality of life, it isn't living.
Speaker CAnd that's something people are really seeking.
Speaker CAnd a lot of people have pain.
Speaker CPain is a super big issue that you hear about all the time.
Speaker CI mean obviously you're hearing advertisements for that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd actually one of my first patients had chronic severe pain.
Speaker AYears, probably 20, over 20 years of severe pain and lots of tissue injuries.
Speaker AAnd he's tried everything and just was not doing well.
Speaker AAnd then I gave him stem cells, very simple IV stem cells.
Speaker AI didn't do anything extraordinary, but giving him an IV infusion and everything was transformed and then he was ecstatic.
Speaker ASo that just, you know, the cases like this keep piling up and then you were Asking me what kind of conditions stem cells are helping, Basically what I say is if you're looking at any condition that has inflammation and tissue damage and immune dysregulation as part of the problem, stem cells fits right in because those are the things it excels at.
Speaker ASo any chronic condition will have inflammation as part of the problem, including all kinds of.
Speaker AEqually, including neurodegenerative conditions.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AOne of the toughest diseases to treat.
Speaker ABut autoimmune issues, immune dysregulation.
Speaker AMy daughter's got really severe psoriatic arthritis ever since the second Covid shot.
Speaker AAnd she's 30, but she walks with a cane.
Speaker AOh, my goodness.
Speaker ALike, it's crazy.
Speaker AYeah, it's, it's.
Speaker AShe should definitely give this a try.
Speaker AThere are studies, There are studies showing.
Speaker AThat's what I was going to see.
Speaker ASpecifically psoriatic arthritis, but psoriasis in general, definitely.
Speaker AIt can be incredibly helpful.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker ASo definitely she should give that a treatment.
Speaker CNow, where do people get this treatment and does insurance cover it?
Speaker COf course.
Speaker CThat's.
Speaker CThat's a big question right now.
Speaker AVery few insurance companies will cover it.
Speaker AI don't know if you guys are aware of the entire medical establishment, how big?
Speaker APharma, drug companies and insurance companies, they all work together so that people are kept in this system of disease, drugs, insurance coverage.
Speaker AIt's a very convenient system for the insurance companies and the drug companies to make incredible amount of fortune.
Speaker AI mean, why are insurance companies so rich if they're covering all these expensive drugs?
Speaker ANo, there's subsidies from the government and there are hard discounts between the drug companies and the insurance company.
Speaker AI mean, it's a racket.
Speaker AIt's, it's.
Speaker AIt works so well for them, but not for the people.
Speaker AThe people are still sick and stuck, and they think that, oh, insurance doesn't cover it.
Speaker ASo then, then I can't, I can't do it because then it's, it's.
Speaker AIt may not be worth it.
Speaker AThen, you know, the FDA has not recognized it.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker ASo if you want to stay in that system and suffer, that's definitely everyone's choice.
Speaker ABut the thing is, the system has made it more difficult for people to jump out of that mindset that they think that, oh, I need insurance to cover my treatment.
Speaker ANever mind.
Speaker AIf the insurance company's treatment is keeping you sick and is making you live shorter amount of time with more illness, but spending lots of money paying the insurance company and paying for the drugs.
Speaker AA lot of drugs are not cheap at all.
Speaker AThe company are pretty Pretty expensive.
Speaker ASo if you want to be stuck in that system, that's your choice.
Speaker ABut what I'm seeing is that more and more people are really sick of it.
Speaker ASo they realize, okay, I spent, you know, a few thousand dollars, 10, whatever at our clinic.
Speaker AMaybe the most, $20,000.
Speaker ABut it can be transformative.
Speaker AHow much suffering is that going to reduce and how much money is it going to save you in the long run?
Speaker ASo people really need to think of it.
Speaker AAnd some companies, for example, there's one company with insurance that they're not really an insurance company.
Speaker AIt's like a co op.
Speaker AIs a Christian organization called Samaritan Ministries.
Speaker AThey actually started to cover stem cells.
Speaker AOh, okay.
Speaker AI think.
Speaker AI think they realize, okay, if we just pay for this amount of money for people to get stem cell treatment, it saves so much money in the long run.
Speaker CIt really does.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CIf you, if you can reverse a condition, if you can prevent a condition, in the end, it's a lot cheaper because when you end up in an acute condition, it costs thousands, millions of dollars.
Speaker CI mean.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CIt's just astronomical.
Speaker CIt really blows my mind how much medical.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CCan be.
Speaker ASo I think this is going to be a trend.
Speaker AThe insurance companies are going to wake up and realizing we're going to save a lot of money by covering this service.
Speaker ASo that's going to come, but not yet.
Speaker AThe, the existing system is very strong in this.
Speaker CWell, the pharmaceutical companies are some of the strongest.
Speaker CI mean, they.
Speaker CThey're one of the biggest lobbyists in Congress.
Speaker CSo you've got a lot of pushback and it's very political.
Speaker CAnd of course, that's where people have to become educated, which is.
Speaker CI want to commend you for educating people on all of this, because I think a lot of people don't know where to turn.
Speaker CThey don't know anything about this, and they should.
Speaker CAnd what you're offering is an alternative to, say, bioidentical hormones.
Speaker CCorrect.
Speaker AI mean.
Speaker COr do you endorse that sort of thing too?
Speaker AYeah, that's all part of the integrative medicine, using a holistic, natural approach to enhance health.
Speaker ASo bioidentical hormone will be one of the natural approaches.
Speaker AA lot of the supplements and a lot of the energy therapy.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AUsing ultrasound or red light, and all these are natural therapies.
Speaker AAny of these.
Speaker ASo drugs have a lot of problems.
Speaker AI'm not completely against drugs.
Speaker AI think strategic use is important.
Speaker AYou know, Western medicine has brought a lot of great things, but as a philosophy of help preventing the people People from getting sick and then getting them recover quickly.
Speaker AI think the drug approach is misguided.
Speaker AI think we need to focus on all the other things and maybe sometimes we sprinkle.
Speaker ASome drugs is great.
Speaker AI still use drugs and some antifungal medications, maybe anti nausea.
Speaker AYou know, it sometimes is useful.
Speaker AIt's helpful to have them.
Speaker AEven ketamine, great for brain health.
Speaker AThat's a synthetic chemical, but can have profound effects on people's depression, anxiety, ptsd.
Speaker ASo I'm not against anything synthetic per se, but we really need to put them in their place.
Speaker CSure.
Speaker CGotcha.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker CNow.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AAnd also I want to just one thing about the practice of medicine.
Speaker AThe powerful, the power of big pharma.
Speaker ASo we all know Google bought, you know, big pharmaceutical company and it's interesting that.
Speaker CNo, I didn't know that, but a pharmaceutical company.
Speaker CI did not know that.
Speaker AYeah, that was as some years ago.
Speaker AYeah, five, six years ago.
Speaker ABut the doctors who are doing stem cell therapy, no one can run an ad on Google, on Facebook, Instagram, no one can say I do stem cell therapy and this is how you can find me.
Speaker ABecause Google, I mean these entities will simply not let you run.
Speaker ABecause guess what?
Speaker AThey say this is considered fake news.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AConsidered miracle cure.
Speaker AIn the category of basically snake oil.
Speaker AThey put stem cell therapy in the same category as unproven therapies like snake oil.
Speaker ANever mind.
Speaker CThere are then behind the curtain, essentially they're not telling the public we have a vested interest in keeping this in this category because we got something we want to sell.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd also, when do they become experts in medicine?
Speaker CThey're a search engine.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AHow do we, you know, how do you.
Speaker ASo the, the, the.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AThe power of these entities has gone really, you know, it's a little scary.
Speaker AAnd it's not just in medicine.
Speaker AI'm sure it's in many areas, but in medicine it's, it's relevant because they're contributing to the force that's keeping people sick.
Speaker AIf people cannot know and are afraid to talk about what actually works.
Speaker CExactly.
Speaker CAnd that's the only way that people are going to get better.
Speaker CYou have to have the open discussions.
Speaker CAnd science is constantly changing.
Speaker CYou know, are we back in the middle ages where people aren't allowed to talk about some of the scientific discoveries?
Speaker CLike the world isn't flat?
Speaker AYeah, unfortunately.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AIt's the history.
Speaker AHistory does repeat itself.
Speaker CIt really does.
Speaker CAnd, and we.
Speaker CIf you want to know what the real reason is, follow the money.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker AAnd that's exactly Right, Yeah.
Speaker AAnd what's, what's interesting is that even doctors, I will have patients who really want to do stem cell therapy and then they want to talk with their doctors about it.
Speaker AAnd I hear so often the doctors say, oh, well, there's still no evidence that stem cells actually work.
Speaker ASo it sounds great, but it, you know, there's no evidence.
Speaker AI was like, oh my God, what evidence would he like?
Speaker AI have hundreds of articles all categorized by organ systems, disease categories.
Speaker AWhich organ system would he like to see?
Speaker ASure, I'll happily send him all the articles.
Speaker ABut the problem is that doctors are burying their hand, their head in the sand.
Speaker AThey really don't want to know.
Speaker AThere's no reason for them to know because they are in the insurance and big pharma bubble and they're living a very safe life.
Speaker AGuess what?
Speaker AIf you use medications, you can make a person really sick from the side effects.
Speaker ASome are very severe.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AA person could die from the medication you gave them.
Speaker AYou are completely free of any repercussions as a provider because you're protected, because you're doing quote, unquote, standard care.
Speaker AYeah, you are, because that's what everyone does.
Speaker AAnd that's why you're safe, because you've informed people how bad and how, how detrimental these medications are.
Speaker ASo if something terrible happened to them, you're completely safe.
Speaker ASo if you are looking for safety, then you're not going to venture out of it because you're pretty protected.
Speaker CWell, and doctors worry about liability certainly very much.
Speaker CI don't think a lot of people realize that a lot of the medical schools are sponsored by the pharmaceutical companies.
Speaker AOh yeah, yeah.
Speaker AIf people want to know details that look up Rockefeller medicine.
Speaker ASo how Rockefeller basically changed the entire medical system from a natural approach to petroleum, medical, you know, chemical based practice and squeezing out everybody else.
Speaker CSo they're, they're trained and conditioned by companies that want to stay in business.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker ASo when Rockefeller started to donate all these money to medical schools and they said, hey, we just gave you all this money, wouldn't it make sense that we have somebody on your board to help you to make sure the money's well spent?
Speaker AThat's how it started of the medical education, that's how it got started.
Speaker CThat's just crazy.
Speaker CSo now how do people reach out to a physician who's been trained and in someone who's approved by your group so that they know that they're getting the right kind of stem cell therapy?
Speaker CIs this available across the nation or in North America?
Speaker AYeah, Actually, a lot of doctors are doing it despite the fact that there's, there's opposition that that is not FDA approved.
Speaker AThat is, you know, that is a little bit on the, the fringe, on the edge, even though it's extraordinarily safe.
Speaker ABut because if you don't use cells that have been manipulated, then you are providing a tissue transplant.
Speaker ASo the FDA did say if you're not manipulating anything and if you're not claiming that you're treating diseases, then you're just performing an organ transplantation, that you can do it as a doctor without going through a drug study.
Speaker ABut if you, if you start to do certain things, changing the cells in any way or putting the body in a particular manner, that makes it a drug.
Speaker AAnd then you have to conduct drug study.
Speaker AAnd drug studies are very expensive.
Speaker AI don't know if, you know, oh, yeah, it takes on, on an average $2.1 billion to bring a drug into the market.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker ASo, so who has that kind of money?
Speaker AJust, just, just think about it, right?
Speaker AWho has that kind of money?
Speaker ASo that's, that's one of the obstacles.
Speaker ABut a lot of doctors are able to do it because it's a tissue transplant.
Speaker AMore and more are doing it.
Speaker ADespite that, it's, you know, some are scared to do it.
Speaker ABut the, in the last four years, the number, last five years, the number of stem cell clinics have quadrupled in the U.S. i always say this is a grassroots movement.
Speaker AIt's not the doctors who are driving this movement is the patients.
Speaker ABecause it works.
Speaker AYeah, the word spread.
Speaker AEverybody is seeking for solutions.
Speaker AThen I, that's why I hear all the time from doctors, hey, I have four or five people interested in stem cell therapy.
Speaker AI don't know how to do it.
Speaker ACan you teach me how?
Speaker ASo that's what's going on.
Speaker AThe patients are driving this.
Speaker CSo can patients go to Chara Health and Chara Biologics to find.
Speaker AYeah, Chara Biologics provides stem cell products to doctors.
Speaker ABut Chara Health is my clinic in Los Angeles, so absolutely they can, they can find me.
Speaker AActually, the easiest way to find me, probably just my website, joycon md.com and then that has everything in there.
Speaker AAnd they can send in a contact form.
Speaker ABut yeah, Chara Health is where we do some really interesting stuff.
Speaker ANot just using stem cells, but stem cells is definitely the key feature.
Speaker ABut we want to make sure we're addressing the complex nature of health altogether.
Speaker ASo we do a lot of adjunct treatment, different supplements, different peptides.
Speaker AWe do ozone therapy before stem Cells, we use laser technology so comprehensively we can target the cells even more efficiently and more precisely.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo it's fabulous.
Speaker CThat's everything else.
Speaker AFabulous.
Speaker CThis is exciting.
Speaker CIt's the potential to improving the quality of life for people.
Speaker CI mean that's a huge bonus right there.
Speaker CAnd it just makes sense.
Speaker AAnd it's going to be, you know.
Speaker CBecause they keep talking about the aging population and how it's going to be a major burden.
Speaker CWell, if you keep people in a healthy state, that's not going to be a problem.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo do you guys know the statistics?
Speaker AIf you can slow the aging process down by seven years, you can reduce the amount of chronic illness in the world by half.
Speaker ASo 50% reduction in the, in the number of chronic illnesses, you know that people cases.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AThis basically 50% of the suffering will be gone.
Speaker AAnd I do believe if we start to give people regular IV stem cells, starting at the age whatever, 35, that's when the decline is much more obvious.
Speaker AIf we can start there, 35, 40 years old, we start the IV stem cells on a regular basis.
Speaker AI don't think it's difficult to slow down the aging process by 50, by 15 to 20 years.
Speaker AAnd I do believe that will result in 75% of the illness being gone.
Speaker AImagine a much healthier human species and happier too.
Speaker AYes.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AYou have more time, you have less time to be self absorbed of your illness and more time to devote to helping others, to have a good family, you know, to, to add to the joyfulness of being alive.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker CAnd I would think this could be a wonderful breakthrough for maybe things like Alzheimer's where there's cognitive decline.
Speaker AYeah, it can definitely help.
Speaker AIt's very neuroprote protective.
Speaker ASo it can help protect against these neurological conditions.
Speaker AAnd even when people are suffering from it because of the, you know, the multiple mechanism, how it works, we know it can help reduce the symptoms.
Speaker AAnd I've seen that clinically getting people to, you know, to even regain personality back to go from urinary and bowel incontinent to, you know, becoming continent to from not verbal to conversing, not feeding themselves, to actually starting eating.
Speaker AAnd all these improvements showing that the neurological, all the highways in your brain are starting to, to flow.
Speaker ARight.
Speaker ASo information are passing through so you can do all these things that you were actually prevented from doing because you were so sick.
Speaker CAnd I would imagine too with fertility, if someone is struggling with that, this could help too.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker ASo that's interesting.
Speaker AThere are animal studies showing, believe it or not, Perimenopausal rats.
Speaker ARats.
Speaker AIf you start to give them stem cells.
Speaker ASo these are aging rats with aging ovaries, and you start to give them stem cells, IV stem cells.
Speaker AThey actually start the ovary.
Speaker AThe size gets bigger.
Speaker AThere are more follicles.
Speaker AThey are better hormone secretions or improved hormone levels and more pregnancies.
Speaker CCan it help with somebody.
Speaker CCan it help with somebody who's been.
Speaker CHas gone through menopause as well?
Speaker AOf course.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI was going to say, I'm thinking this helps.
Speaker AI don't, I don't know if it's going to revert to you back into, you know, premenopause, but it just definitely it's going to help you with all your functions.
Speaker ABut, yeah, overall it, it's just so good.
Speaker ASo good.
Speaker AI think it's just a foundation.
Speaker AIt's a foundational therapy.
Speaker AOne day, the mystique, you know, around it is going to be gone.
Speaker AIt's not going to be no big deal.
Speaker AAnd right now, it's no controversy.
Speaker AWell, okay, in hopefully 15, 20 years, everybody's going to be using stem cells, and it's going to be no big deal.
Speaker AOf course you're going to do some stem cells so you don't decline.
Speaker AYou know, like, if, if all your friends are not declining, you're the only one declining.
Speaker AWould you.
Speaker COh, yeah.
Speaker AUp on the bandwagon, right?
Speaker ALike, why are we declining?
Speaker AYou know, if, if I can look youthful until I'm 75, why am I willing to allow myself to start, you know, looking old at 55?
Speaker ARight.
Speaker AWhy?
Speaker ASo you want to jump on it so you can, you know.
Speaker AReally?
Speaker CYeah, exactly.
Speaker AAnd so, so everyone's going to be doing it.
Speaker AAnd of course, humans, we're always going to have sickness, always going to have accidents and injuries.
Speaker AAnd so anytime, if you do need surgeries, you can always do stem cells to accelerate your healing.
Speaker AAnd no matter how sick you are, what's going on, infections, you know, even Covid, the, the Chinese were doing studies.
Speaker AI mean, they were devastated.
Speaker ARight before.
Speaker AWe were devastated and they were freaking out.
Speaker ASo they started doing stem cell research.
Speaker ASo at the very early stage, I think it was March, I was talking about these six studies they did using stem cells, getting people, almost all the people off ventilators and out of the hospitals within five, I think five or six days.
Speaker ASo they, they were on it.
Speaker AIt's like, okay, let's try stem cells, and boom, it works because it will prevent you from that cytokine storm and really calm the inflammation and shift things around.
Speaker ASo even infections, whatever suffering that we're dealing with, you can do some stem cells so that you can just elevate your ability to repair and heal.
Speaker CIt makes total sense.
Speaker CSo would you recommend people reach out to Chara Health first if you want to?
Speaker COkay, yeah.
Speaker AThey can always go to my website, joycon md.com and put in a contact form.
Speaker AAnd I welcomed people to learn more about stem cells on my YouTube channel.
Speaker AIt's just JoyCon, Maryland.
Speaker ASo I have so many videos going in deeper into different aspects about stem cell therapy because there's a lot, a lot to talk about, you know, including people's concerns.
Speaker AOh, well, I don't want other people's DNA in my body.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AI talked about that.
Speaker AOkay.
Speaker AHow often do it?
Speaker ADo I need a treatment?
Speaker ADo I need a treatment for the rest of my life?
Speaker AI talked about that.
Speaker AAnd, and.
Speaker AAnd difference between stem cells and exosomes, which is really hot right now.
Speaker AI talk about that.
Speaker ASo there are a lot of subjects.
Speaker AI go into greater depths, so I want people to be educated.
Speaker CThis is revolutionary.
Speaker CI really appreciate you being on the show.
Speaker CThis is very educational, and I think you're giving a lot of people a lot of hope.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AWhat an honor to have you on our show.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AI just give people an idea.
Speaker AI've seen people with autoimmune conditions.
Speaker AFor example, there's one lady with rheumatoid arthritis.
Speaker AShe was a surgical technician, and she couldn't work for months.
Speaker AAnd in the middle of a stem cell infusion, she made a fist and started crying.
Speaker AShe said, I haven't been able to make a fist for two months, and it can happen that fast.
Speaker AWe've got people with Parkinson's, wheelchair bound for a year or two and standing up from our bed and walk toward the doctor and giving the doctor a hug.
Speaker AYou know, people who previously, someone with Alzheimer's, not talking for months, all of a sudden, in the middle of the treatment, telling doctors, thank you.
Speaker AIt.
Speaker AI mean, autistic kids.
Speaker AI just gave a presentation at a big autism conference in Brazil talking about the cases, you know, of how it can help autistic kids.
Speaker AYou know, people with, you know, heart, lung diseases.
Speaker AThese are.
Speaker AYou know, most of these people I see have exhausted the traditional therapies.
Speaker CSure.
Speaker AThey came to the end of their hope, and then they see something incredible with stem cells.
Speaker ASo it's definitely making my work really meaningful and inspiring and really fun.
Speaker CYou are changing lives.
Speaker CThank you so much, Dr. Kong, for doing what you're doing.
Speaker CAnd we really appreciate you being on the show, and I definitely encourage people to do more research on this and reach out to you.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AOh, just one thing, so I don't deprive your audience of this.
Speaker AI did develop a cream called Chara Omni is a stem cell cream.
Speaker ASo for people who, who may not have the resources to actually do a stem cell treatment, at least they can use this cream for their face, for rejuvenation.
Speaker COh, excellent.
Speaker AIt's a hundred percent natural.
Speaker ASo it's very important for me not to give people these synthetic ingredients that you can't pronounce because so many of them have a lot of unforeseen issues in the body.
Speaker AThe body's complex.
Speaker AAll of a sudden you're introducing completely different molecules that your, your, your biology has never seen for millennia, and they can have all kinds of problems.
Speaker ASo I'm not, I'm just not willing to do that.
Speaker ASo everything's natural and we have stem cells, which are not alive, by the way, but all the beneficial ingredients from the cells, all the signals are still there.
Speaker AAnd then all these really effective peptides for skin regeneration and a lot of herbal extracts, antioxidants, prebiotics.
Speaker ASo it's an amazing cream.
Speaker ASo I just want to make sure that people know that, that they can replace some benefits from stem cells, even if they can't go get stem cell treatment.
Speaker COkay, and what's the name of the product again?
Speaker CAnd where would they find that?
Speaker AIt's Chara Omni.
Speaker ASo C H A R A N O m n I so charaomni.com that's.
Speaker AYeah, that's the website with a list of all the ingredients and they can read up on what, what the ingredients do.
Speaker CI'll be checking it out for sure.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker CAnd you're always looking for the perfect elixir, you know, I know.
Speaker CDr. Kong, this has been an absolute pleasure.
Speaker CThank you for being on the show.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AYou two are wonderful.
Speaker AAnd thank you for what you do to bring, you know, great information to help women all around.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAnd I'm honored to be here.
Speaker CIt's been an honor having you.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker CDr. Kung.
Speaker CWe hope you've enjoyed this latest episode.
Speaker CAnd if you want to hear more episodes of Women Road warriors or learn more about our show, be sure to check out womenroadwarriors.com and please follow us on social media.
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Speaker AYou've been listening to Women Road warriors.
Speaker BWith Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker AIf you want to be a guest on the show or have a topic or feedback, email us@sjohnsonomenroadwarriors.com.