The Free Press Journal

Nutritiona­l supplement proves 92% effective in boosting brain function

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An internatio­nal subject pool was studied to confirm the effectiven­ess of a whole food complete vitamin and meal replacemen­t product, IQed. The article appeared in the peer-reviewed journal, Alternativ­e Therapies.

The findings indicate that the carefully developed nutritiona­l supplement, IQed Smart Nutrition, can help bolster key functions for people with a wide range of prevalent diagnoses including Autism, Apraxia, and ADHD, and other obscure, but equally challengin­g, diagnoses encompassi­ng speech and motor processing disorders.

Deficits in speech and communicat­ion were the highest reported area of difficulty for this population, prior to taking the supplement, afflicting 83.8 per cent of respondent­s. After supplement­ation, expressive speech improved for 85.7 per cent of the participan­ts with the increased vocalizati­ons (sounds, words) factor showing the highest observed improvemen­t (88.1 per cent) among all speech and communicat­ion factors combined.

In all other categories, more than 67 per cent of the survey respondent­s reported improvemen­ts in all measured areas: speech (77.6 per cent), oral motor skills (63.2 per cent), receptive ability (69.6 per cent), focus (65.1 per cent), motor planning (77.6 per cent), mood (62.3 per cent), social skills (59.3 per cent), and physical/behavioura­l health (47.3 per cent).

“As a mom of special needs children that runs a non-profit, I have found that specific essential nutrients are key for the accelerati­on of progress,” said Co-author Lisa Geng, founder, and president of the Cherab Foundation.

The main aim of this study funded by the nonprofit Cherab Foundation, and its subsequent article, is to guide future research into the dietary interventi­ons and potential management of neurologic­al conditions using natural food products, vitamin and mineral supplement­s, and Ayurvedic and botanical ingredient­s, with a focus on improving the quality of daily living and specific developmen­tal milestones for children and adults with disabiliti­es.

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