About MedBeaconHub
Clinical-grade nutrition knowledge. Written by a real doctor. For real patients.
Why MedBeaconHub Exists
Every week in my outpatient clinic, I see the same thing. A patient comes in with months of unexplained fatigue. Another has been losing hair for a year. A third is complaining of bone pain, tingling in the hands, or a brain fog so thick they can barely concentrate at work. They’ve seen doctors. They’ve had tests. Nobody found anything ‘seriously wrong.’
And yet the answer was there all along — a vitamin D deficiency, a B12 level that had fallen through the floor, an iron store running on empty. Simple. Correctable. Missed.
I am Professor Qazi Taqweem ul Haq, a consultant physician with 32 years of clinical practice and a Fellow of the College of Physicians and Surgeons Pakistan (FCPS Medicine). I created MedBeaconHub.com for one reason: to close the gap between what medicine knows about nutritional deficiencies and what patients are actually told.
The information exists. The research is solid. What has been missing is a doctor who will sit down and explain it — clearly, honestly, and completely. That is what this site is for.
What You Will Find Here
MedBeaconHub.com is built around a single, focused niche: nutritional deficiencies — every vitamin, every mineral, every clinical nuance.
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Vitamin Deficiencies |
Vitamins A, B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, B7, B9, B12, C, D, E, K — causes, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment |
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Mineral Deficiencies |
Iron, Calcium, Magnesium, Zinc, Iodine, Selenium, Potassium, Copper — the full clinical picture |
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Special Populations |
Children, pregnant women, the elderly, vegans/vegetarians, post-surgical patients, ICU patients |
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Drug-Nutrient Interactions |
How common medications deplete critical nutrients — and what to do about it |
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Lab Interpretation |
What blood tests mean, what normal ranges really tell you, and when to push for more testing |
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Diet & Supplementation |
Evidence-based guidance on food sources and when supplements are genuinely needed |
Our Editorial Standards
This is a YMYL (Your Money or Your Life) website. That means the information here can directly affect your health decisions. We take that responsibility seriously — and so does Google.
Every article on MedBeaconHub.com meets the following standards:
- Written by a qualified physician. Prof. Qazi writes every article personally — no outsourcing, no AI generation.
- Evidence-based. All clinical claims are referenced to peer-reviewed journals, WHO guidelines, NIH resources, Mayo Clinic, or Cleveland Clinic.
- Medically reviewed before publication. Articles are checked for clinical accuracy against current guidelines.
- Regularly updated. As guidelines change, articles are revised to reflect current evidence. The publication and last-updated dates are shown on every article.
- Honest about limitations. This site provides medical education, not individual medical advice. We always recommend consulting your personal physician for diagnosis and treatment decisions.
Meet the Author
Prof. Qazi Taqweem ul Haq, FCPS Medicine, has been practising Internal Medicine for 32 years. He served for 22 years as a physician in the Pakistan Armed Forces before transitioning to academic medicine. He is currently Professor of Medicine and Consultant Medical Specialist at Women Medical and Dental College and Jinnah International Hospital in Abbottabad, Pakistan. He has authored 15 peer-reviewed publications in international medical journals.
He writes for MedBeaconHub.com because he believes that the patient who understands their condition is the patient who gets better faster — and that clinical knowledge should not be locked inside medical journals and consultation rooms.
→ Read the full author profile here: https://medbeaconhub.com/author/

A Note on AI and Content Integrity
In an era where AI-generated health content is flooding the internet, we want to be explicit: the articles on MedBeaconHub.com are written from real clinical experience, real patient encounters, and real engagement with the medical literature. Where research tools assist in organisation or referencing, all clinical judgement, patient stories, and professional insights are genuine.
If you ever find an error, outdated information, or a claim that needs a source — please contact us. We will correct it promptly.
Contact
For reader questions, media inquiries, or collaboration proposals: