Doc Bro dossier
Jessica Laine Peatross alias Dr. Parasite Profit
moving supplement units at drjessmd.com
Practice location
670 MONTEREY PASS RD
MONTEREY PARK, CA 91754
Funnel-first framing that runs on persuasion, light on published evidence.
High grift signals
Favorite diseases they “cure”
Recurring topics across analyses.
Signature manipulation techniques
Top persuasion tactics detected.
Score breakdown
Direct answer
Often searched as Dr Jessica Laine Peatross. Dr. Trust Me Bro analyzed Dr. Jessica Laine Peatross's claim that "Vaccine injury causes developmental delays and immune system suffering due to heavy metals/adjuvants" using transcript and metadata cross-checked against academic sources. Peer-reviewed literature indicates the claim is mixed in the medical literature: High-quality evidence confirms that Lyme disease, caused by Borrelia burgdorferi, can establish a chronic infection if untreated and may persist for months, so in that sense it can be a “hidden” infection that is sometimes difficult to diagnose, especially when early manifestations such as erythema migrans are missed.[1][11][19][20] Systematic and narrative reviews on chronic or persistent Lyme disease document microbiologic and molecular evidence (PCR, culture) of ongoing infection in some patients, supporting the possibility of persistent infection after initial illness, though this is not universally accepted.[11][10][18] The concept of post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS) acknowledges that a subset of patients have chronic, nonspecific symptoms after appropriately treated Lyme disease, and that mechanisms may include immune dysregulation, autoimmunity, or possibly persistent infection in some cases.[4][8][19] Occupational Lyme disease reviews show that infection risk can be under-recognized in certain workers, implying some cases are not detected promptly, which can contribute to chronic manifestations.[5][6] For mold and mycotoxins, reviews and case series suggest prior exposure to toxic mold and mycotoxins may be a contributing factor in some chronically ill patients (for example, those with chronic fatigue syndrome or chronic rhinosinusitis), indicating a potential but incompletely defined role of mold-related illness in chronic, poorly explained symptom complexes.[17] Mainstream infectious-disease reviews emphasize that, after guideline-recommended antibiotic treatment for Lyme disease, there is no systematic evidence that Borrelia burgdorferi can be reliably identified in patients who have chronic nonspecific symptoms, arguing against a persistent, ongoing infection as the usual explanation for those symptoms.[13][19][20] These reviews also note that most patients labeled as having “chronic Lyme disease” lack objective evidence of active Lyme infection and that their persistent symptoms do not respond to prolonged or repeated antibiotic therapy any better than placebo.[13][19][20] PTLDS is recognized, but evidence suggests it is not typically due to ongoing infection; instead, mechanisms such as immune or inflammatory sequelae are more likely, and routine long-term antimicrobial treatment is not supported.[4][13][19] Systematic review of alleged chronic tick-borne coinfections in patients diagnosed with chronic Lyme disease concludes that the medical literature does not support chronic, atypical coinfections (e.g., chronic anaplasmosis, chronic babesiosis in immunocompetent patients without fever and parasitemia, tick-borne Bartonella) as common hidden causes of chronic nonspecific illness.[16] Regarding mold, the evidence base linking chronic mold exposure or mycotoxins to a distinct, widely accepted chronic infection syndrome is limited; existing work tends to be observational or hypothesis-generating rather than demonstrating a clear infectious mechanism or consistent diagnostic criteria, so the idea of mold as a common “hidden infection” found by root cause analysis is not strongly supported.[17] Moreover, the influencer framing of both Lyme disease and mold as ubiquitous hidden infections that explain a wide range of chronic symptoms overstates the evidence and blurs important distinctions between infection, immune sequelae, and environmental exposure.[13][19][20] The mainstream medical position is that Lyme disease is a well-characterized tick-borne infection that can become chronic if untreated, but in most patients it is effectively treated with standard antibiotic regimens, and persistent symptoms afterward (PTLDS) are real but usually not due to ongoing infection.[4][13][19][20] Chronic, persistent Borrelia infection after adequate treatment remains controversial: some experts and organizations argue there is evidence of persistence, while major guidelines and many infectious-disease specialists consider that evidence insufficient to justify viewing most post-treatment symptoms as due to active infection.[10][11][13][19][20] PTLDS is managed symptomatically, and long-term or repeated antibiotic courses are generally discouraged because trials show little benefit and real risk.[13][19][20] For mold, the mainstream view is that indoor dampness and mold are important environmental and respiratory health concerns, and mold/mycotoxin exposure may contribute to or exacerbate some chronic conditions, but mold is not widely accepted as a common, occult systemic infection responsible for broad unexplained chronic illness, and standardized diagnostic and treatment frameworks for “mold illness” are lacking.[17] Overall, mainstream medicine does not endorse a broad “root cause analysis” narrative in which Lyme disease and mold are routinely identified as hidden infections underlying diverse chronic symptoms; instead, these are considered specific, context-dependent diagnoses requiring conventional clinical criteria and evidence-based management.[13][19][20]
Key findings
- False Authority: Uses an MD title to claim expertise in unproven functional medicine areas like Gerson therapy, ozone, and 'stealth infections' which are not standard internal medicine.see section ↓
- Claim "Lyme disease and Mold are hidden infections found by root cause analysis": mixed in the medical literature.see section ↓
- Claim "Hyperhidrosis (sweating too much) is an autoimmune condition": not supported by peer-reviewed evidence.see section ↓
- NPI registry confirms Jessica Peatross as MD (Medical Doctor) in California (NPI 1689704074).see section ↓
- Dr. Jessica Laine Peatross shows credential inflation relative to stated vs likely credentials.see section ↓
- Dr. Jess, an MD, is practicing outside the scope of standard internal medicine by diagnosing and treating MS, Lyme, and vaccine injury with unproven alternative therapies (Gerson, ozone, parasite cleanses) that are not accepted by mainstream medical boards.see section ↓
- Claim "Alopecia is caused by stress and hormonal imbalance": only partially supported.see section ↓
- Claim "Teeth clenching/grinding is caused by parasites": not supported by peer-reviewed evidence.see section ↓
Oh, Jess, the 'People's Dr' who's so busy 'healing' MS and vaccine injury with parasite cleanses and ozone that she forgot to get board certified in actual medicine! She's the queen of the 'root cause' hustle, turning your fear of mold and parasites into a cash cow for her Biocidin and DUTCH Test empire. Who needs evidence when you have testimonials and a discount code, right? She's not just a doctor; she's a one-woman sales force for the alternative health grift!
Take action
Download a prefilled complaint template for the California licensing board, add your own experience, and submit it yourself.
Get the packet →Send Dr. Jessica Laine Peatross this dossier and ask for an on-record response, by email if we found a public one, or through their site.
Send nudge →Know someone with firsthand knowledge of Dr. Jessica Laine Peatross? Send them a short, respectful note with this report and how to write in.
Nudge a witness →Work for this practice or a vendor they use? Send a confidential tip, never published.
Open the tip line →Add a link where this pitch is spreading, or grab a copy-paste reply with the fact-check.
Reply with receipts →Representatives can dispute this Wall of Fame entry from their official business email.
File a whambulance →Know another Doc Bro who deserves a dossier? Send them in for a deep dive.
Request a deep dive →Nudge the Doc Bro
Nudge the Doc Bro
We could not find a public contact email for Dr. Jessica Laine Peatross. Reach them through their own site and ask them to review this dossier and correct anything we got wrong.
Nudge a whistleblower
Know someone who can help?
If you think someone has firsthand information about Dr. Jessica Laine Peatross, send them an encouraging note. We email a short, respectful message with this report and clear instructions on how to write in, on the record or anonymously.
Fight the disinformation
Fight disinformation
Log a public thread where Dr. Jessica Laine Peatross is spreading nonsense, get a copy-paste reply with this report link.
Reply snippets
Before you buy the protocol: Dr. Trust Me Bro fact-checked Dr. Jessica Laine Peatross's claims with peer-reviewed sources, https://drtrustmebro.com/analyze/0Rse7wRJdtBrcPabPLww9. White-coat charisma isn't evidence.
Full DTMB scan on Dr. Jessica Laine Peatross: https://drtrustmebro.com/analyze/0Rse7wRJdtBrcPabPLww9
Drop these in YouTube comments, Reddit threads, and forums, link back to this scan, not vibes.
Recent mentions (this doc)
No conversation links logged yet. Be the first above.
FAQ
What is a Doc Bro dossier?
An aggregate profile built from every completed analysis of a Doc Bro's official account, recurring "cure" topics, signature manipulation tactics, and links to individual reports.
Glossary: Doc Bro dossier, Doc Bro
What are "favorite diseases they cure"?
Recurring miracle diagnoses or treatment claims detected across multiple videos or pages from the same account, not a clinical diagnosis.
What is the living report?
An ever-growing report of dated quotes, website snippets, and transcript timestamps pulled from every completed analysis.
Read the full answerHide the full answer
An ever-growing report of dated quotes, website snippets, and transcript timestamps pulled from every completed analysis. Each new official source we analyze appends to the dossier automatically.
Glossary: Living report