Frequently Asked Questions About the DP™Plan
Cost
It will cost $200-$500 per month.
The cost of the Deanna Protocol® Metabolic Plan (also known as the DP™ Plan) depends on which substances you choose to take. The most important substances (AAKG, AKG, GABA, CoQ10, Niacin, and 5HTP) will cost you roughly $200 per month. If you choose to take the most important substances along with the ancillary substances, it could cost roughly $500 per month. The ancillary substances provide extra benefit because they help maintain the health of the nerves and muscles, but it is not necessary to take the ancillary substances for the DP™ Plan to work.
What are the risks of taking the substances in the DP™ Plan?
The substances in The DP™ Plan are naturally found in the body. They are not pharmaceutical drugs, like Riluzole/Rilutek, and are not foreign chemicals being introduced into the body. Taking them at the published doses should not be harmful, provided that you do not have any other medical issues that would make you sensitive to any of the substances or a combination of them and provided that there are no contraindications with substances or drugs you are already consuming. You should check with your doctor to ensure that following The DP™ Plan is safe for you, specifically.
Will my neurologist approve?
Most are neutral toward The DP™ Plan.
Neurologists who have heard of the DP™ Plan usually will not object to their patients following the plan, but they will not officially recommend it either. Why? Physicians expose themselves to legal liability if they recommend ALS treatments, therapies, or plans that are not already widely known and accepted in the medical community, and have not undergone human clinical trials. Therefore, officially recommending the DP™ Plan could put him/her at risk for lawsuits. Regardless of doctors’ inability to recommend the DP™ Plan, most doctors do not object to patients following it if their patients choose to.
Many neurologists have not heard of the DP™ Plan yet. If your neurologist has not heard of it, one reason is because it is relatively new. Another reason your doctor may not know about the DP™ Plan is because it is a group of supplements, not a pharmaceutical drug. Supplements receive much less attention from the medical community than pharmaceutical drugs do. One could argue that supplements receive almost no attention at all. Therefore, even some of the most renowned neurologists in the country may not have heard of the DP™ Plan.
It will cost $200-$500 per month.
The cost of the Deanna Protocol® Metabolic Plan (also known as the DP™ Plan) depends on which substances you choose to take. The most important substances (AAKG, AKG, GABA, CoQ10, Niacin, and 5HTP) will cost you roughly $200 per month. If you choose to take the most important substances along with the ancillary substances, it could cost roughly $500 per month. The ancillary substances provide extra benefit because they help maintain the health of the nerves and muscles, but it is not necessary to take the ancillary substances for the DP™ Plan to work.
What are the risks of taking the substances in the DP™ Plan?
The substances in The DP™ Plan are naturally found in the body. They are not pharmaceutical drugs, like Riluzole/Rilutek, and are not foreign chemicals being introduced into the body. Taking them at the published doses should not be harmful, provided that you do not have any other medical issues that would make you sensitive to any of the substances or a combination of them and provided that there are no contraindications with substances or drugs you are already consuming. You should check with your doctor to ensure that following The DP™ Plan is safe for you, specifically.
Will my neurologist approve?
Most are neutral toward The DP™ Plan.
Neurologists who have heard of the DP™ Plan usually will not object to their patients following the plan, but they will not officially recommend it either. Why? Physicians expose themselves to legal liability if they recommend ALS treatments, therapies, or plans that are not already widely known and accepted in the medical community, and have not undergone human clinical trials. Therefore, officially recommending the DP™ Plan could put him/her at risk for lawsuits. Regardless of doctors’ inability to recommend the DP™ Plan, most doctors do not object to patients following it if their patients choose to.
Many neurologists have not heard of the DP™ Plan yet. If your neurologist has not heard of it, one reason is because it is relatively new. Another reason your doctor may not know about the DP™ Plan is because it is a group of supplements, not a pharmaceutical drug. Supplements receive much less attention from the medical community than pharmaceutical drugs do. One could argue that supplements receive almost no attention at all. Therefore, even some of the most renowned neurologists in the country may not have heard of the DP™ Plan.