Even the description on the imdb home page is sensationalist by it's use of the word "bizarre". I am not bizarre, my illness is not bizarre (approx 1-2 million people are affected in the US, many undiagnosed by the exact stigmas this film perpetuates). Yet what IS bizarre is for a filmmaker to mislead its subjects and viewing audience in favor of clicks and views. What story are they trying to tell here? Images of desperately ill people in gas masks and fringe treatments to titilate the audience into watching like a sideshow attraction. My heart breaks for the subjects who probably thought they were finally getting awareness out there for their respective diseases only to be betrayed by the film makers. Consider watching "Unrest" instead--an award winning documentary (short-listed for an Acadmy Award nomination) that portrays what it means to be a human living with a devastating chronic illness. This "documentary" is nothing short of negligent.