Description
"I just want somebody from Pennsylvania, someone who actually grew up here," Lynn Johnson, a 55-year-old restaurant server from Ligonier, Pennsylvania, told Insider.
Dr. Oz, whose political experience is made up of a medical degree, 10 emmys, nutrition advice to athletes, and a trump endorsement, may have difficulties attaining a seat on the United States Senate as it appears that even Republicans fear quack doctors.
Personally speaking, I watched Dr. Oz for a few weeks when his show first aired and I thought it was awful; although I was content with the fact that if he was on TV, thankfully, he wasn't in the operating room.
In a 2015 letter to Columbia University, where Oz is a professor, 10 doctors said he promoted "quack treatments and cures in the interest of personal financial gain." A 2014 study in the peer-reviewed British Medical Journal found that of 40 randomly selected episodes from Oz's television show, his health recommendations were based on evidence just 46% of the time.
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