Our Detoxamin Kids formula, is 375mg of Calcium Disodium EDTA, suspended in a small cocoa butter suppository. It is the exact formula used for our adult suppositories with ½ the dosage. It is very gentle and well tolerated by children. We recommend starting off with 30 Detoxamin suppositories, taking one every other evening before bed for sixty days. Then take one Detoxamin suppository weekly as needed or as recommended by your child’s healthcare professional. Many doctors and parents worldwide are using this well established formula and reporting to us excellent results.
Detoxamin Offers Heavy Metal Detoxificaton Specifically For Kids
Detoxamin is backed by two clinical studies that have proven its safety and medical superiority to IV EDTA Chelation. Detoxamin has proven to be safe and effective for thousands of people in hundreds of medical clinics worldwide. Rita Ellithorpe MD, a physician practicing integrative medicine for over 30 years has used Detoxamin on well over 2,000 patients to date with clear evidence of this amazing product’s efficacy and safety.
Autism is a complex neurobiological disorder. It is part of a group of disorders known as autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Today, 1 in 150 individuals is diagnosed with autism, making it more common than pediatric cancer, diabetes, and AIDS combined. It occurs in all racial, ethnic, and social groups and is four times more likely to strike boys than girls. Autism impairs a person’s ability to communicate and relate to others. It is also associated with rigid routines and repetitive behaviors, such as obsessively arranging objects or following very specific routines. Symptoms can range from very mild to quite severe.
- 1 in 150 children is diagnosed with autism
- 1 in 94 boys is on the autism spectrum
- 67 children are diagnosed per day
- A new case is diagnosed almost every 20 minutes
- More children will be diagnosed with autism this year than with AIDS, diabetes & cancer combined
- Autism is the fastest-growing serious developmental disability in the U.S.
- Autism costs the nation over $90 billion per year, a figure expected to double in the next decade
- Autism receives less than 5% of the research funding of many less prevalent childhood diseases
- Boys are four times more likely than girls to have autism
- There is no medical detection or cure for autism
Autism was first identified in 1943 by Dr. Leo Kanner of Johns Hopkins Hospital. At the same time, a German scientist, Dr. Hans Asperger, described a milder form of the disorder that is now known as Asperger Syndrome. These two disorders are listed in the DSM IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) as two of the five developmental disorders that fall under the autism spectrum disorders. The others are Rett Syndrome, PDD NOS (Pervasive Developmental Disorder), and Childhood Disintegrative Disorder. All of these disorders are characterized by varying degrees of impairment in communication skills and social abilities, and also by repetitive behaviors.
Autism spectrum disorders can usually be reliably diagnosed by age 3, although new research is pushing back the age of diagnosis to as early as 6 months. Parents are usually the first to notice unusual behaviors in their child or their child’s failure to reach appropriate developmental milestones. Some parents describe a child that seemed different from birth, while others describe a child who was developing normally and then lost skills. Pediatricians may initially dismiss signs of autism, thinking a child will “catch up,” and may advise parents to “wait and see.” New research shows that when parents suspect something is wrong with their child, they are usually correct. If you have concerns about your child’s development, don’t wait: speak to your pediatrician about getting your child screened for autism.
Heavy Metal Detoxification May Help Some Children With Autism
The debate about Vaccinations, heavy metals and Autism has been shifted by a recent court settlement. Jon S. Poling, the father of 9-year-old girl who received a government settlement from a federal vaccine compensation fund, published an item in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution regarding the way that the case has shifted the autism-vaccine debate. See the entire article here.


