To do a Google Custom Search of our ARF (Autoimmunity Research Foundation) site and the MarshallProtocol.com site, see the top right of the ARF page. (You can get there quickly by clicking the DVDs at the upper left of each page).
How to use the search features on marshallprotocol.com
To narrow your search, find the forum page such as "FAQs", "Required Reading" or "Side Topics" you think the information you are looking for might be in.
Locate the green search button at the top of each page (in the middle).
Type up to 6 words in the search box provided.
Click on "Search in this forum only" just below the search box.
Click 'Search' or hit your 'Enter' key.
A list of forums/threads with this word/s will appear. Click on the thread listed.
The word/s will be highlighted on the page. Scroll down to find them.
To quickly find the word/s on a long page, press the 'Ctrl' key and the 'F' key at the same time. A dropdown 'find' window will appear with a space to type in the word/s you are looking for. Click 'next' or hit the 'Enter' key to find each instance of the word/s on that page only. (Or go to the toolbar. Click 'edit', then click 'find on this page')
Note the site: command will limit your search to just this site and the little '-' between words means that they should be in close proximity to each other. '+' keys mean the terms must be somewhere in the citation -- and you can use something like +"how much" -environment (skip the 'iron' in environment!) to get even more accurate positioning. Google cannot search for punctuation and things like that -- it just ignores them -- seems to ignore capital lettering too.
This specific kind of Google search brings up more findings than a local search on the MP site.
For example, if someone wants to find more results for others dx'd with CFS, they should type into the Google search bar:
The same goes for all other terms, dx's, etc. You should also remember to use variations of the subjects, as sometimes a few terms are used for the same thing.
Examples:
CFS & CFIDS
RA & Arthritis, etc.
A Google citation may have the original signature line (at time of posting/google scan) that contains a certain symptom that might have been taken out of a later one (perhaps to gain space for other things) -- so Google can find addition entries that a forum search won't pick up.