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1/8/2009
Thursday morning
This topic is closed off and you will be taken directly to the website.
Topics taken from open source list. I hope you find this useful.
This site is for our clients only as an information resource.
| The Hoxsey clinic was moved to Tijuana, Mexico in 1963 by Mildred Nelson,
Hoxseys long-time nurse. It continues its mission as the Bio Medical Center.
Information about how to contact the center is included in the book. Kenny
Ausubel deserves a Pulitzer Prize for this work. Tell everyone you know who has
lost a d one to cancer, is struggling with this disease herself or is
supporting a d one through it to READ THIS BOOK! |
| I have been told that the Cancer Treament Centers of America offer
patients a nice integrated approach. They operate hospitals in several
cities. http://www.cancercenter.com/home/ |
| Paul I. Roda, M.D., F.A.C.P. wrote:
cmchenry@hotmail.com wrote:
My father-in-law is diagnosed with incurable adenocarcinoma
now spread to liver and lungs. The family is going to send him to
tiajuana at considerable expense. I dont like their presentation,
its all anecdotal, no facts. Does anyone out there have any
experience
with this? Thanx
-------------------==== Posted via Deja News
====-----------------------
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Post to Usenet
One difference between standard oncology and the many quacks that
post to this group is that most oncologists will tell you, honestly and
without the bull..., when a cancer is incurable, and when treatment
might have value in terms of prolongation of life or quality of life.
The variety of regimens practiced in Mexico range from 5-FU (a standard
drug for adenoca) plus laetril to very aggressive (and in my opinion,
bizarre) regimens with coffee enemas (to clean the syst. |
| Nearly seven in ten cancer patients in the U.S. have used complementary or
alternative medicine, most often in combination with conventional
therapies. Surveys across 13 countries indicate that complementary and
alternative treatments are used by 7 to 64 percent of all cancer patients.
Reports of extraordinary survival ascribed to such therapies have long
been made, but full and formal medical documentation of these results is
too often lacking. |
| This book is must reading for all cancer patients and their families. It is
exhaustively researched and meticulously referenced. In addition, it is
beautifully written, much like an adventure story. Be forewarned that the book
is also extremely disturbing. It tells the story of how alternative therapies
for cancer, labeled unorthodox during the last century, were systematically
suppressed by the American Medical Association and federal government agencies
charged with protecting the public health. As it turns out, Harry Hoxsey who
treated cancer patients with an herbal tonic and diet beginning in the 1920s,
was one of a number of people who were investigating unorthodox treatments.
Most of these treatments were nontoxic plant and herb-based formulas and also
emphasized good diet and nutrition. Like Hoxsey who was finally forced to close
his cancer clinics in 1960, all of these other doctors and scientists suffered
similar persecution without valid scientific investigation into their
. |
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