Make sure the NATIONAL HEALTH FEDERATION is on your whitelist.

Depending on what e-mail service or program you use, it's possible that you need to "whitelist" the NHF in order to make sure your newsletter comes to your Inbox each time it is released.

Whitelist us by putting our "From" address in your address book, safe list, or some other "trusted senders" list. The "From" address is:

thenhf@thenhf.com

Have your e-mail provider or ISP whitelist our sending
IP address. You'll need to give them the IP address.
The sending IP address is:

66.34.134.206

If you or your e-mail provider or ISP whitelist based on the names of the domain, you'll need to give them the domain name the NHF broadcasts from. The domain name is:

thenhf.com

An explanation of whitelisting vs. blacklisting:

In this era of massive e-mail spamming, most of us have come to know how to use a blackhole list, sometimes simply referred to as a blacklist. This is the publication of a group of ISP addresses known to be sources of spam, a type of e-mail more
formally known as unsolicited commercial e-mail (UCE). The goal of a blackhole list is to provide a list of IP addresses that a network can use to filter out undesirable traffic.

A whitelist is a list of e-mail addresses or domain names from which an e-mail blocking program will allow messages to be received. E-mail blocking programs, also called spam filters, are intended to prevent most unsolicited e-mail messages (spam) from appearing in subscriber inboxes. But these programs are not perfect. Cleverly crafted spam gets through, and a few desired messages are blocked. Most Internet users can tolerate the occasional unsolicited e-mail advertisement that a spam filter misses, but are concerned by the thought that an important message might not be received. The whitelist option is a solution to the latter problem. The list can be gradually compiled over a period of time, and can be edited whenever the user wants.