Question:  Does the Zapper and Zappicator “kill off” mold,yeast and fungus?  If the Zappicator can zapp parasites in the brain, how safe is this device to be placed so close to the brain (brain cancer?)?

Answer:  Regarding the function of the zapper, please read this post, which is the transcript of the video  Does the Hulda Clark Zapper kill parasites?  As it wakes up and energizes the body’s own immune system, we believe it does not kill or zap anything in the body directly. The magnetic accessory to the zapper is the Zappicator, and Dr. Clark has found that the North Pole side placed against the body is beneficial.  Watch the video here on what is a Zappicator.

Regarding fungi and bacteria, we place high priority on our own GUT health (or the “microbiome”).  The following is a layperson’s view of this topic which is essential to understanding Dr. Clark’s work.

The research shows that we have many bacteria, fungi and microbes living in and on us, in a mutually beneficial way, and it’s like a good mini-ecosystem in our body. There are a number of them, i.e. skin, mouth, bowel etc.  When we understand that most microbes and bacteria are helpful to us, and we actually benefit from them, we should focus more on strengthening the good bacteria vs destroying the bad bacteria.  Your strong immune system is your best ally.

The Ecogenetics paper says it like this:
We humans are mostly microbes, over 100 trillion of them. Microbes outnumber our human cells ten to one. The majority live in our gut, particularly in the large intestine. The microbiome is the genetic material of all the microbes – bacteria, fungi, protozoa and viruses – that live on and inside the human body. …..The bacteria in the microbiome help digest our food, regulate our immune system, protect against other bacteria that cause disease …..the microbiome was not generally recognized to exist until the late 1990’s. …….The microbiome is essential for human development, immunity and nutrition. The bacteria living in and on us are not invaders but beneficial colonizers.…”

I hope this helps in understanding that not all microbes and bacteria are bad. The overgrowth of the bad ones will ultimately become overpowered by the good ones – which we intentionally nurture through fermented foods and probiotics.  This is good news, and is the essence of natural health – that our body can rebuild itself if we give it a chance.

So keep on zapping!

The BestZapper team