7 Day Challenge: Do you need to fix your stomach acid?
Day 2: Debunking stomach acid myths
Mentioned in the video:
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Digestive Dysfunction Deep Dive Series (pay special attention to part 3)
(Transcribed below)
On Day 2 of this week long video challenge, we're going to question a few of the ways stomach acid is often framed to us by conventional medical communities, to prepare us for a much needed change in thinking about this important topic.
Yesterday, we left off here: with you being skeptical about this whole stomach acid thing. Probably because of an understanding about conditions like GERD, acid reflux and heartburn, and how the medical community characterizes them.
The implication, with the prevalence of acid-blocking Proton Pump Inhibitor medications like Prilosec, and the staple presence of TUMS in our kitchen cabinets, is that we have too much acid and that this is the root of the problem.
However, this premise doesn't make any sense and here's why:
Given the nature of these types of conditions, they tend to come on with age, this would mean that we actually start to secrete more stomach acid as we age, which is a concept that doesn't gel with everything else we understand about the human body as it ages.
For almost every other kind of secretion, processes begin to slow down and become less efficient as we age, resulting in lower levels being produced. This is well-documented for hormones, sweat, hair and skin oils, mucus, and, actually, digestive secretions?
Yes!
This is a graph showing the results of Heidelberg Gastrotelemetry Equipment when it assessed the stomach acid of thousands of patients. As you can see, production profoundly drops off after the age of 30.


And when we substitute the variable names, we can conclude: "When stomach acid secretions decrease, acid-related symptoms such as GERD, reflux, and heartburn increase." This is not a reach, rather we're just making a very objective observation about the data.
And actually what we'll find in the later videos, is that this conclusion can be drawn for many non-acid symptoms as well, such as fatigue, protein deficiency and anemia, B-Vitamin deficiency, nervous system health, among many others.
And in tomorrow's video we'll talk about nutrient deficiencies most commonly associated with low stomach acid.
See you then!