Archive for category Medical News

EDST Testing and my experience – Electro Dermal Screening

comptest3Arriving on time for my appointment I was greeted and asked to take a seat, I was given a brief overview of the process of testing and we embarked on a three hour tour around my body.  In the process we found and dealt with a number of conditions and issues – both present and aggressive and simply showing up on the grid.  I was holding a bronze bar in one hand that had a small amount of current moving through it, the technician touched a finger on the opposite hand and this produced a result on the screen of a laptop computer.  We explored perhaps 1200 tests and each one provided another small glimpse into the landscape I have created over a my lifetime.

Some of my first impressions where how can this possibly work, then the technician asked if I had any issues with my eyes – sure enough I had recently started wearing contacts and I had a very low grade infection developing in my eye.  A few minutes after this she asked what was going on with my throat – I have had an annoying deep problem for about six weeks – impossible but she found it in just minutes.  From there we explored more than thirty conditions that have effected me.

In my experience this is one of the best diagnostic secessions I have ever had in my life.  I am going to document this journey on my blog to provide others with a look into this form of “Energy Medicine” here is a link I found to more information on the subject: http://barbfeick.com/ceds/

What is Electrodermal Screening? Electrodermal Screening (EDS) is a non-invasive data acquisition process which measures electrical currents in the body much like an EKG machine measures the electrical activity of the heart. The computerized EDS device measures that electron flow throughout the body allowing the technician to conduct an “interview” with the body’s organs and tissues. These readings are taken from pathways near the surface of the skin known as meridians, where the electromagnetic energy generated in the internal organs circulates throughout the body.

This astounding advancement in scientific technology is a modern form of biological-energetic science, which was first discovered by Dr. Reinhold Voll, M.D., of Germany in the late 1940’s. The Discovery System, used in our office, is recognized by the FDA as an investigational device. Computerized biofeedback analysis is endorsed by many doctors and dentists here in the US, including Dr. C. Shang of Harvard University who has urged the medical community to make full use of this technology in order to gain knowledge of the body’s functions. Today, this technique is used in the most progressive institutions in countries throughout the world including; Germany, France, England, South America, China, Canada, Australia, and the United States.

Why Should I Get Tested?

There are many organisms, substances and stresses of modern day living which alter normal body processes. Some of these disturbances include: allergies, bacterial and viral infections, vitamin and mineral deficiencies, parasites, pesticides, drugs, chemical toxicity, and heavy metals (lead, mercury, cadmium, nickel, etc). Many symptoms are associated with these disturbed energy imbalances.

Electrodermal Screening could benefit you if you have concerns about any of the following health issues:

Allergies
Attention disorders
Bacterial infections
Blood sugar imbalances
Chemical toxicity
Depression
Fatigue
Headaches
Heavy metal toxicity
Hormonal imbalances
Hyperactivity
Improper diet
Infertility
Irritability
Joint discomfort
Painful muscles
Parasites
Pesticides
Poor digestion
Recurring colds or flu
Recurring infections
Sleeplessness
Stress
Viruses
Vitamin/mineral deficiency
What Can I Expect?

The testing process is safe for people of all ages and the procedure is non-invasive to the skin. A technician takes a small handheld probe connected to the computer and gently presses specific meridian points on your hands and feet. The computer measures the degree of electrical resistance. These measurements detect the balances and imbalances of the organ systems and tissues in your body. Imbalances reveal disturbances which weaken the body’s immune system leaving it vulnerable to disease. Incredibly, this system also indicates the nutrients and/or natural remedies that will restore balance and health to your body.

Based on the data collected, the technician then offers a personalized natural therapy program using high-quality herbal and homeopathic remedies, therapeutic-grade essential oils, and supplements. The EDS device is then used to monitor progress, thus avoiding much trial and error. By eliminating the identified imbalances and strengthening your immune system, you can make your body a fortress against illness and disease!

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Answer this question – Where do you rank?

Where does the United States rank in healthcare among nations?

I think that is a fair question – We rank #1 in spending, no suprise there.  So do you think we rank ahead of Europe, Sweden, how about Chile or Moroco — Nope we are behind them all and falling further back.

The time for change is now!

http://www.photius.com/rankings/healthranks.html

http://www.photius.com/rankings/world_health_performance_ranks.html

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Food Matters More Than You Think

food_glance

So we have all heard the quote “you are what you eat”, well along those lines I have had the opportunity to work with researchers pushing the envelope on what food and nutrition really means to our bodies.  Today I can confidently say that we have less nutrition in our foods than we have ever had and that number is continuing to decrease.

The attack on our food supply is not simple, easy to identify or overt.  In terms of where the attack began I would say it is one of those changes that over time make inroads to our society then when no one screams it becomes a norm.  The attack came in the form of mass farming for profit at the expense of the quality of the food delivered to the consumer as well as time to market issues allowing our food to be harvested before it is ready and allowing it to become ripe off the vine.  These changes along with issues with soil quality and trace minerals have led to extreme changes in the nutrition we derive from our consumption.

Where does this leave us?

Well in the long run it has provided a steady stream of patients with degenerative conditions – cancer and diabetes being the most evident.

The good news is that with drastic changes an individual can turn things around.

- you can garden and tend to your families needs directly.

- you can make every effort to buy from farmers markets and speed the time from the vine to the table.

- you can look for those foods higher in nutritional content and become healthier simply by eating more quality foods.

Should your situation be more critical there are physicians working with patients to deliver the highest quality nutrition in a more clinical form to provide a more massive amount to your system quickly.

A great resource – Food Matters DVD

Food Matters for Cancer – Click Here

Food Matters for Diabetes – Click Here

A few suggested resources -

Dr. Dan Rogers http://www.gersonplus.com

Dr. Ralph Moss http://www.cancerdecisions.com

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Why some doctors have a problem with Complementary Medicine

Originally published in January 2003 icon

Pride & Prejudice

Dr. Graham Henderson

Why some doctors have a problem with Complementary Medicine (and the patients who ask about it).

Graham Henderson is a public health doctor working for the NHS in Surrey. He trained at the Royal London Hospital and worked in children’s and adult medicine, and in general practice in Australia, before specialising in public health. He has been a consultant for ten years and is a former medical director of an NHS trust hospital.

By Dr. Graham Henderson

Medical Report

Taking the kids to school this morning came the inevitable comments from the back seat; “Dad, you’re going too fast; Dad, you forgot to signal at that junction”.

How many of us love back-seat driving, even when we love the people who’re doing it more than life itself? It’s even worse, especially if you’re having a bad day, if the back-seat driver is right, and you know that you did in fact make a tiny little error of judgement on that last roundabout!

Open quotesIt’s in all the training – give the patient
confidenceClose quotes

When we’re ill we feel insecure, dis-empowered, unable to assert ourselves. We see our advisors, our doctors, as wise, all-knowing, confidence-inspiring. At least, that’s how we want them to be. They know that. It’s in all the training – “give the patient confidence”. But the doctor also knows that he’s human; he’s not all-knowing; sometimes he makes mistakes; sometimes he can’t deal with the emotional stress of the consultation.

So what happens to the doctor when:

»

He (or she) hears you asking about vitamins, dietary approaches to cancer, or reflexology?

»

You arrive with a sheaf of printouts from the internet?

»

You want to know his views on a book by a cancer sufferer that he’s never read?

He gets scared, that’s what.

Because suddenly, he can’t do his job. The doctor’s professional respect, self-esteem, position in the community, everything, is tied up in his/her ability to give you the information, reassurance, treatement you need, or to send you to a man who does. You don’t say that someone “works” as a doctor; you say he or she “is” a doctor. So if he’s not a good enough doctor, he might feel he’s not good enough at anything at all! And most doctors don’t know much about dealing with illness other than with conventional (allopathic) medicine.

Open quotesYou don’t say that someone ‘works’ as a doctor; you say he or she ‘is’ a doctorClose quotes

Clearly, it’s not the same for all doctors. They come in different shapes and sizes, like everyone else. But there is a pattern, conditioned by medical training, of feeling threatened by the knowledgable, questioning patient.

Modern medical training has spotted it, and younger doctors have been shown ways of dealing with it. But we’ve all heard too many stories of patients who “couldn’t get the doctor to listen”, felt brushed off, or even, in the worst cases got laughed at, to believe that it isn’t a problem.

So, to go back to the surgery. We’ve got one sick person (you) who’s frightended because you’re ill. And on the other side we’ve got another person, the doctor, who’s frightened as well, because your efforts to help yourself, to get some control over your illness and what’s happening to you, have accidentally threatened the doctor’s very sense of self-worth.

Now we have to careful here. You, the patient, are frightened because you’re ill. Horrible things are happening to you. You’re in the middle of a disaster. You’re entitled to be scared. The doctor, on the other hand, is a professional who ought to be able to deal with this.

Open quotesWhat both doctor and patient need is to get into a constructive
conversationClose quotes

His difficulty dealing with it is professional weakness; letting that develop into irritation or anger is professionally unethical. So let there be no confusion about who’s right and who’s wrong. The point of this article is not to dish out blame. What both doctor and patient need is to get into a constructive conversation.

In my experience there’s three groups of doctors when it comes to complementary medicine – apart from the rare enthusiasts who actually know something about it. If you can spot which one you’ve got, then you can try and make the relationship work for you.

1:

The first, and easiest to deal with, are the ones who accept that they ought to know about complementary therapies, but have never quite got round to finding out. These are the best ones to deal with, because you can challenge them to find out about it; perhaps even work with them to explore the subject together. You might want to offer them some info (gently!), but you should probably let them go off and do some research on their own before coming back to the discussion later. That way you can have a proper conversation; otherwise it’s just you giving them a lecture. Ideally, the conversation ends with “I’ve always wanted to find out about this, but never got round to it. Now you’ve given me a reason. Come and see me later in the week and we’ll go into it together”.

2:

The second group are the doctors who really don’t think it’s anything to do with them, and are fundamentally unpersuadable. They’ve either looked into it and decided its a load of old codswallop (of which more below) or, even worse, have not really thought about it but have decided the same thing anyway! Quite frankly, there’s not a lot of point pushing your ideas in this situation. You probably know more about it than the doctor, you’re very unlikely to bring them round to your point of view, and you’ll just be wasting your time. Take what they’re offering in the way of allopathic medicine and look for complementary help elsewhere. Or, if you need your doctor to understand complementary medicine, change your doctor.

3:

Finally, and perhaps the hardest to decide about, are the doctors who know very little about complementary medicine but could be persuaded if you (and they) had enough time. Here is your opportunity to lead them into the subject gently. Not intimidating them and making them feel stupid with your superior knowledge, but leading them gently to the point where they actually want to spend the next few evenings reading the book you’ve suggested, researching the internet, or going to the library.

When I worked in a factory before becoming a doctor, the woman in the packing department gave me a piece of advice I’ve never forgotten. “If you want someone to do something for you” she said, “make sure they think it was their idea in the first place”. I’ve since found out that you can earn a fortune as a “change management consultant” for telling people things like that. It was good advice then, and it’s where you’re trying to get to with your doctor. You want to leave him with the sense that he’s missing something really useful and interesting. Something that he really can’t afford not to know about.

Open quotesIf you want someone to do something for you, make sure they think it was their idea in the first
placeClose quotes

The other thing I ought to mention, in a piece that’s trying to tell you how to understand your doctor, is why conscientious, caring doctors sometimes reject the complementary approach. Doctors today are trained in the scientific approach, although the best doctors combine this with the “art” of medicine, which accepts that science can’t explain everything about people. The scientific side of medicine asks that everything, all medicines, all operations, all treatments, be subjected to rigorous testing and “proof”. So when a new drug is invented, or a new operation suggested, it has to be put to the test. Compared with the existing treatment, under controlled conditions, preferably in a “blind” trial where neither the doctor nor the patient knows whether they’re taking the old or the new treatment.

This means that all bias is put aside, and only rigorous objective measurements show whether the new treatment is as good as, better, or worse than the old. And as patients, we want nothing less. We want to know that we’re being offered the best treatment, not just the latest fad from a “modern” doctor, or the stuff they’ve always used from a traditionalist.

But a lot of complementary treatments haven’t been tested through this sort of process. Partly, this is because the process takes a long time, and is expensive, so it can only be done if you can get the money back from drug sales when the tests are complete. Or because many complementary approaches tailor treatments precisely for individual patients, making it very hard to test a “standard” treatment.

But perhaps most often complementary approaches are hard to test objectively because they rely heavily on drawing out the patient’s inner resources to fight the illness. This is often in combination with a very strong relationship between therapist and patient, and these factors are just not amenable to standardisation and reproduction so they can easily be measured.

Open quotesRemember, in the end, it’s your lifeClose quotes

So, sometimes, even the very best and most caring doctors find themselves unable to accept that complementary approaches may be the right thing for you; they may honestly believe that, in recommending you explore alternatives to their allopathic approach, they may be doing you harm. I know this article appears to ask a lot of you, the patient. It asks you to try and understand your doctor when he doesn’t understand you. It asks you to consider his vulnerability at a time when he really ought to be considering yours. But the ICON approach is about helping YOU to take control of YOUR illness.

Use your doctors for what they can give you. Help them to a greater understanding if you can. Listen to their advice, and understand their perspective. But remember, in the end, it’s your life.

The final decisions are your yours to make.


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Probiotics and Defense against Cancer

The Whole Truth about your defense against cancer

Many orthodox medical ‘experts’ claim there is no research evidence behind Complementary and Alternative Therapies. Yet when there is evidence – consistent evidence – it often gets ignored. When it comes to Beneficial Bacteria, perhaps the experts have not had time to read and digest the research results? Perhaps they are not aware of it? After all there is so much of it – and all very recent. Or could it be that the research poses some nasty questions about the direct conflict with current orthodox treatment methods? Judge for yourself.

Cfold11 Over 80 clinical trials and more than 4,000 research studies have been conducted in the last 4/5 years on the essential role of Beneficial Bacteria in your good health.

2 Scientists believe over 800 strains of bacteria inhabit your gut – they have already identified over 400 strains.

3 Thirteen strains have been studied most frequently. All offer significant benefits to your health and well-being. They are Lactobacillus Bulgaris, Acidophilus, Shirota, Caseii, Lactis, Rhamnosus, Plantarum; Bifidobacterium bifidum, langum; Streptococcus thermophilus; Saccharomyces boulardi.

4 A fundamental finding running throughout the research is that many of key beneficial bacteria strengthen your immune system, particularly stimulating the production of immunoglobulins, cytokines and Natural Killer cells.

Cfold25 Kids growing up on farms and those with pets in the home have stronger immune systems – you need to eat a bit of dirt. You need more bacteria to build your defences.

6 Natural birth babies have stronger immune systems. Mothers give their children some good bacteria as baby passes down the birth canal. Breast milk contains important prebiotics – the perfect food for beneficial bacteria – these stimulate the growth of important good bacteria. (So much for ‘caesarians’)

7 Our strong immune systems keep invading viruses, bacteria and cancer cells in check. Without the beneficial bacteria – our defences are greatly weakened, allowing disease to take hold more easily.

8 One hundred years ago, we ate beneficial bacteria all the time – but pasteurisation, sterilisation and irradiation of food have ended much of that.

9 Worse – our modern world kills the good guys, and alters the balance nature intended in our gut. Chlorinated water, stress, alcohol, too much salt, antibiotics in our chickens etc all reduce the levels of good guys within us.

10 Worse still, the drugs your doctor prescribes actually kill off even more; for example, antibiotics, chemotherapy, even certain statins and mercury in vaccines. Most drugs actually weaken your defences.

11 But these good guys do even more than build your immune system: at night time when you sleep, they attack, neutralise and ingest the invading microbes and yeasts you consumed during the day. Without the good guys your enemies can take control.

12Yeast and fungal infections are now commonplace among  adults – yellow toe nails, thrush, cystitis, bloating, wind, allergies are all signs.

13 Now, fungal infections in the body are increasingly being linked to serious diseases like diabetes, MS, and cancer.

14 Beneficial bacteria are essential to the processes that release vitamins from your food. Their action increases blood levels of anti-cancer vitamins like B vitamins folic acid and B-12, and vitamin K.Cfold3

15 Some beneficial bacteria have been proven to make short chain esters from your food – these pass across the gut wall and reduce bad cholesterol levels.

16 Some beneficial bacteria have been shown to neutralise excess toxins, biding to nitrosamine and oestrogenic products and to heavy metals, helping the body to eliminate these dangers.

17 Some beneficial bacteria destroy the Helicobacter pylori bacterium known to play a part in stomach cancer; they may even neutralise a microbe US researchers believe is linked to colon cancer.

18 Some beneficial bacteria can even rebuild and repair the gut lining, damaged in diseases like IBS and Krohn’s.

19 It’s not mumbo jumbo – you can increase your beneficial bacteria by supplementing with probiotics – a probiotic cannot be called a probiotic unless clinical trials have proved it delivers a real benefit in the gut!

20 Every day you need as many beneficial bacteria strains as you can ingest – and you need to feed them their favourite whole foods. Rare ones you ate as a child may never be replaced if you destroy them. Without them all, can you really hope to beat cancer?

Enhanced Super Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics, 100 vegetarian capsules Enhanced Super Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics, 100 vegetarian capsules

Enhanced Super Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics 100 vegetarian capsules Item Catalog Number: 01273 The aging process and certain health issues cause a reduction in the body’s enzyme production. One effect of this reduction is a bloated feeling soon after eating a


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Cheap Protection From FLU Season 2009

File this one away for September 2009 when we are headed into flu season.  Mark this is important and a must have item by that time and continue to use it through Nov, Dec.  Why? because it increases immune factors in your body by 1700%!   We will all want our families to be well protected from the coming flu season – this is the best protection I have seen to date.

Cheap product to protect you from the flu ->

Enhanced Super Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics, 100 vegetarian capsules

less than 25.00

From Drug Discovery and Development:

New Study Suggests That GanedenBC30 Increases Immune Response to Cold and Flu
Drug Discovery & Development – May 13, 2009

A promising new study in the March issue of Postgraduate Medicine suggests that a strain of probiotic bacteria, GanedenBC30 (Bacillus coagulans GBI-30, PTA-6086), increases the body’s immune response to viruses that cause common viral respiratory tract infections such as colds and flu. Study data showed significant increases in T-cell production of TNF-alpha, a key immune marker, versus control upon exposure to adenovirus and influenza A in healthy adults who consumed a daily capsule of GanedenBC30 for 30 days. While many health professionals believe that probiotics can help people who have specific health conditions, there has been controversy surrounding the benefits of probiotics in healthy people. The new study supports the idea that probiotics can indeed benefit those who are healthy.
The study measured the changes in blood TNF-alpha levels upon exposure to adenovirus and influenza A in 10 healthy adults prior to and following a 30 day regimen of GanedenBC30, which is marketed as a dietary supplement called Sustenex and is also available in a variety of fortified packaged foods. Results showed a 250% increase in TNF-alpha levels with adenovirus and a 1709% increase in TNF-alpha levels with influenza A after subjects took the probiotics for a period of 30 days. Increased production of TNF-alpha in response to viral exposure indicates a heightened immunological effect.

Colds and flu are the most common illnesses among humans. They have significant health and economic consequences, especially among young children, the elderly, and people with underlying or chronic conditions. Every year, an average of 5 to 20 percent of people in the U.S. contract the flu, more than 200,000 people are hospitalized with flu-related complications, and approximately 36,000 people die from the flu. It is also estimated that 1 billion colds occur annually in the US.

“These results demonstrate the ability of GanedenBC30 to boost the immune system of healthy adults against viruses that cause some of the most common human illnesses,” said Mira Baron, MD, author of the study. “The study helps support the long-suspected belief about the beneficial effects of GanedenBC30 on the immune system and adds to the emerging body of evidence that probiotics can benefit healthy people as well as those with specific health issues.

Probiotics are live, beneficial microorganisms similar to the “friendly” bacteria found naturally in the body’s digestive system and have best been known for their ability to support the body’s digestive system by helping to reduce symptoms of digestive disorders such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), diarrhea, gas, and bloating. Researchers have long postulated the role probiotics play in boosting immune function through promoting a healthy bacterial ecosystem in the digestive tract, which comprises approximately 70 percent of the body’s immune system, a hypothesis supported by the current study.

“The results of this research are interesting and set the stage for the continued study of the effects of the GanedenBC30 strain of probiotics on the immune system,” said Dr. Justin Sonnenburg, an assistant professor of microbiology and immunology at the Stanford University School of Medicine, who has reviewed the study’s findings. “The standard practice today is for people to take medicine to achieve symptomatic relief of colds and flu, but this research hints that healthy adults may be able to boost their immune system to potentially ward off infection and prevent such illnesses.”

The study points out that different strains of probiotics have different inherent properties, suggesting that the unique ability of GanedenBC30 to survive common conditions that can potentially kill other probiotics before they can have a beneficial effect, such as manufacturing conditions, extreme temperatures, and the harsh gastric environment, may contribute to its ability to support the immune system. Dr. Ken Alibek, MD, PhD, ScD, an infectious disease, microbiology, and immunology expert who has studied Bacillus coagulans extensively, believes that the strain may be the most ideal in existence, noting that “no other probiotic has the ability like that of Bacillus coagulans to survive the challenges probiotics face in reaching the intestinal tract where they can do good” and added that “once there, no other strain is as prolific in producing the beneficial by-products responsible for many of the benefits of probiotics.”

“This study is another step forward in our understanding of probiotics and the many health benefits they can deliver,” said Andrew Lefkowitz, CEO of Ganeden Biotech, which helped fund the study through a research grant and has completed a total of seven clinical trials using GanedenBC30, including trials in immunity, IBS, intestinal gas, Crohn’s disease, osteoarthritis, and rheumatoid arthritis. “We will continue to fund research investigating the benefits of GanedenBC30 and its ability to improve the quality of life.”

Enhanced Super Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics, 100 vegetarian capsules Enhanced Super Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics, 100 vegetarian capsules

Enhanced Super Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics 100 vegetarian capsules Item Catalog Number: 01273 The aging process and certain health issues cause a reduction in the body’s enzyme production. One effect of this reduction is a bloated feeling soon after eating a


Date: March 12, 2009
Source: Ganeden Labs

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John needs our help – Gulf War Vet

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Swine Flu – What You’ve Not Been Told

My desire over the last year has been to create awareness of the competing agendas of medicine and the pharmaceutical industry.  Unfortunately we the American people have been convinced over the years that our health is centered around symptom control instead of curative healing systemically.   In his article regarding the swine flu Mike Adams, the health ranger, provides us with a view into the pharmaceutical industry that is so clear we may have overlooked the knowledge we can gain by reviewing it more carefully.

So Roche owns Tamiflu the great savior of us all when it comes to swine flu, Mike points out that Tamiflu is at its core nothing but a Chinese cooking herb modified by Roche so that it can patent its properties.  Mike further describes many alternatives to Tamiflu that are all around us and can act in a manner similar to Tamiflu without any issues with distribution.

One 75mg dose of Tamiflu is at its core 1/10 of 1.3 grams of star anise a chinese spice used in cooking.

It took me 30 seconds to find 22 grams of Star Anise for $3.95 that is enough raw material to make more than 160 doses.

Tamiflu on the other hand is available on the Internet at 10 capsules for 44.00 I guess it costs a lot to grind the Star Anise and put it into the little 75mg gel caps.

Today from Food Matters by way of Natural News -

By Mike Adams

If you read the stories on H1N1 influenza written by the mainstream media, you might incorrectly think there’s only one anti-viral drug in the world. It’s name is Tamiflu and it’s in short supply.

That’s astonishing to hear because the world is full of anti-viral medicine found in tens of thousands of different plants. Culinary herbs like thyme, sage and rosemary are anti-viral. Berries and sprouts are anti-viral. Garlic, ginger and onions are anti-viral. You can’t walk through a grocery store without walking past a hundred or more anti-viral medicines made by Mother Nature.

And yet how many does the mainstream media mention? Zero.

The totality of influenza preparedness is defined by the mainstream media as the number of doses of Tamiflu a nation has stockpiled. To live in a world that’s saturated with natural anti-viral medicine and then not even acknowledge it in the media is beyond bizarre. It’s Twilight Zone-like. It’s like we’ve been teleported to an alternate universe where anti-viral plants have disappeared… or at least everyone is pretending they have.

Where do you think Tamiflu comes from, by the way?

It’s extracted from the Traditional Chinese Medicine herb called Star Anise. It’s one of hundreds of different anti-viral herbs found in Chinese Medicine, not to even mention anti-viral herbs from South America, North America, Australia, Africa and other regions.

I find it downright comedic that Big Pharma and the world’s health authorities extract their “champion” anti-viral drug Tamiflu from a Chinese Medicine herb, and then they go out of their way to announce to people that herbs and natural remedies are useless against influenza. If that’s the case then why are they using herbs to make their own medicine?

How many stories have you read that bother to tell you Tamiflu is made from the star anise herb that’s been used for over 5,000 years in Traditional Chinese Medicine? Virtually none. The powers that be don’t want anybody to know they could actually grow their own medicine in a garden or a windowsill. If you can grow cilantro, you can grow medicine. If everybody figured that out, Big Pharma wouldn’t be reaping the enormous profits it’s making right now from Tamiflu sales, and the governments of the world wouldn’t be able to scare and control people by promising to distribute Tamiflu (but only if you behave).

H1N1 influenza is not a hoax. But the way it’s being reported by health authorities and the mainstream media certainly is. The scam in all this is what they leave out of the stories — the fact that human beings live among a huge natural medicine chest of anti-viral drugs found in every city park, every forest, every swamp and every open field.

You cannot walk across any patch of natural land in America and NOT find anti-viral medicine. It’s everywhere! It’s in the weeds growing in the cracks in the sidewalks; it’s in weeds on the side of the stream; and it’s growing in the small patch of dirt left remaining in the median between highway lanes. In the deserts of the American Southwest, you can’t even drive to work without passing mile after mile of abundant anti-viral medicine grown by Mother Nature and just waiting for humans to wake up and be smart enough to recognize it.


I found this on the web after reading the article regarding Star Anise -

According to Roche, the major bottleneck in oseltamivir production is the availability of shikimic acid, which cannot be synthesised economically and is only effectively isolated from Chinese star anise, an ancient cooking spice; the herb is also used in Traditional Chinese Medicine. Although mostautotrophic organisms produce shikimic acid, the isolation yield is low. A shortage of star anise is one of the key reasons why there is a worldwide shortage of Tamiflu (as of 2005). Star anise is grown in four provinces in China and harvested between March and May. It is also produced in Lang Son province, Vietnam. The shikimic acid is extracted from the seeds in a ten-stage process. Thirteen grams of star anise make 1.3 grams of shikimic acid, which can be made into 10 oseltamivir 75 mg capsules. Ninety percent of the harvest is already used by Roche in making oseltamivir.

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Cancer Clinical Trials May Be Biased

The simple truth is that our system is for sale.  There you have it, researchers are capitalists too.  Yes this is first hand knowledge, research is done because someone with an agenda is willing to pay to have a point of view propagated – further they are willing to do so at any level and at almost any cost.  It is absolutely no surprise to me that cancer research has gone no where in the last thirty years.  Think about it what happens to the American Cancer Society if cancer gets cured, what does your friendly radiologist do for a living if a new cancer vaccine is discovered that can cure most cancers with a couple of shots.   Why is it that apricot seeds are not sold in stores like sunflower seeds? 

Some answers are hard to swallow this article for me is not supprising just simply disappointing.

A new analysis finds that a considerable number of clinical cancer studies published in respected medical journals have financial connections to pharmaceutical companies. Published in the June 15, 2009 issue of CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, the study indicates that conflicts of interest may cause some researchers to report biased results that are favorable to companies. Ties between clinical researchers and companies that make medical devices and drugs have become increasingly complex and controversial, particularly as more researchers compete for scarce federal research funds. In addition to using industry money to support their research, some investigators receive consulting fees, own stock and hold positions within companies that profit from selling the very products they are investigating. These conflicts of interest have raised concerns that studies with ties to industry are biased and are not designed to provide a true test of medical therapies. Many medical journals now require researchers to disclose potential conflicts of interest in the articles they submit for publication.

To get sense of the frequency and impact of conflicts of interest in clinical cancer research, Dr. Reshma Jagsi of the University of Michigan and colleagues reviewed cancer studies appearing in eight highly regarded journals in 2006. These journals included the New England Journal of Medicine; JAMA; the Lancet; the Journal of Clinical Oncology; the Journal of the National Cancer Institute; Lancet Oncology; Clinical Cancer Research; and CANCER.

Of the 1,534 cancer studies identified in these journals, 29 percent had conflicts of interest that were apparent from review of published author declarations and authorship lists (including industry funding, consulting fees to authors, co-authorship by industry employees, etc.), and 17 percent declared industry funding. Conflicts of interest were most often found in articles with primary authors from departments in medical oncology (45 percent), those from North America (33 percent), and those with male first and senior authors (37 percent).

According to the authors, randomized clinical trials that assessed patient survival were more likely to report a survival advantage associated with the intervention when a conflict of interest was present. These trials are the foundation by which drugs, technologies, diagnostic tests, etc. get approved for use in the clinic and therefore shape the way oncologists practice medicine.

The findings also show that studies with industry funding were more likely to focus on treatment than studies without industry funding (62 percent vs. 36 percent). They were less likely than studies not declaring industry funding to focus on epidemiology, prevention, risk factors, screening or diagnostic methods (20 percent vs. 47 percent).

This analysis revealed that conflicts of interest exist in a considerable number of clinical cancer research articles published in important journals. The authors noted that “attempts to disentangle the cancer research effort from industry merit further attention, and journals should embrace both rigorous standards of disclosure and heightened scrutiny when conflicts exist.”

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Diet and Cancer – Critical Choices

Originally published in icon Issue 1 2007

Diet1To change, or not to change, that is the question.

When it comes to cancer, many people diagnosed with the disease make significant changes to their diet, in order to give themselves the best possible chance of survival. However, at the end of November 2006, the British Medical Journal carried a ‘personal view’ from Professor Waxman of Imperial College, London, in which he states that ‘we know that once cancer has been diagnosed, no change in diet will lead to any improvement in cancer outcomes. In a recent review of 59 randomised trials of dietary manoeuvres in cancer no evidence was found that supported this approach’.

Surely this cannot be true? Professor Jane Plant, of the same Imperial College, London thinks this is complete rubbish; that diet clearly can help survival. And she should know having beaten her own cancer that way, when orthodox medicine had failed her.

For my own part I wondered about all the research we had covered in Cancer Watch. For example:
- That lycopene helps reduce prostate cancer symptoms by up to 40 per cent (Harvard)
- That vitamin D can have a significant benefit when incorporated in treatment programmes (Harvard, various)
- That Ellagic Acid (eating raspberries!) can help with Cervical lesions (Johns Hopkins)
- That 4-10 cups of green tea per day ‘can stop leukaemia ion its tracks’ (The Mayo Clinic – although I’m really not sure I believe that one!)
- That vitamin K stopped liver cancer progression in 6 of the 30 cases in clinical trials (Washington Uni/Tokyo)
- That beneficial bacteria in clinical trials had a significant benefit for colon cancer patients – as did fish oils and vitamin D. (Various)
We have reports that natural vitamin E aids the action of tamoxifen, that indole 3 carbinol aids breast cancer drugs, that vitamin D improves the success of radiotherapy, that Red Clover improves survival rates in breast cancer patients. Can they all be wrong?

So to help all readers of our web site to get started in this area, we have prepared this thorough review of what ‘diets’ you may or may not contemplate using alongside your orthodox medicine. A separate review of specific Diet Therapies, which can be used as ‘Alternative’ treatments (e.g.Gerson, Plaskett, Gonzalez, Hoxsey and Pfeiffer etc) can be found under the section marked Diet Therapies.

I Changing Diets to Help Beat Cancer.

There can be absolutely no debate that poor diet is a contributory factor in the cancer forming process.  The World Health Organisation believes at least 35 per cent of cancers have poor diet as their root cause.

We find this rather misleading.  Cancer development is a complex issue and involves a multi-step process.  Many factors may combine and in a way that is as individual as you are. Everyday each of us makes cancer and pre-cancer ‘rogue’ cells as by-products of our metabolism. These are normally ‘killed off’ by a healthy immune system. We believe it is easier to understand that, whilst a few factors (like radiation) may cause direct damage to your DNA, many factors (like poor diet, toxins, infection) may weaken your immune system.  If the immune system cannot cope with rogue DNA messages, cancer cells are freer to start their ‘colonisation’ of your body.  Even then they must multiply, taken on blood supplies, fire off around the body, etc. So you can see that diet may play a part, but rarely is it the only contributing factor to the development of a cancer.

Preventing cancer. Or preventing cancer recurrence

At our 2004 Cancer Prevention Conference, the audience was a little surprised when one speaker, our own patron Professor Tony Howell stood up and talked not about preventing the first cancer in the body but about  preventing the cancer taking a further hold once a patient had been diagnosed, treated and given an all clear. In other words, preventing recurrence. Of course, he was absolutely right to do so as that is where the majority of the Breast Cancer budget is successfully directed. But why should the same logic not apply here? You’ve been diagnosed, even treated and are ‘in  remission’. Given we know that diet plays a vital role in cancer prevention, why wouldn’t it play a vital role in preventing the cancer coming back?

For most cancer patients this is exactly the issue: ‘I don’t want my cancer coming back. I’m going to do everything in my power to prevent it’.

Poor Diet as a contributor to cancer

The stark fact is that nothing beats a good, nutritious diet, involving whole grains, fruits and vegetables and fresh fish.  But how does an individual know if they are getting a good diet?  There is so much conflicting advice.

Take the Government’s recommendation of five lots of fruit and vegetables per day.  In France this is ten and, in America since 2006, it is 13.

Then we have had ‘healthy eating pyramids’ and all too numerous food fads.  The current Food Standards Authority recommendation is equally unhelpful in that it suggests you should ‘eat a little of everything’.  Personally, I don’t want to eat a single molecule of trans or saturated fats, dairy, or refined carbohydrates, let alone excess salt or glucose – as is commonplace in our supermarkets.

One self-evident problem is rising levels of obesity. US research shows that people more than 7 kgs overweight are statistically more at risk of cancer than if they smoke. Part of this is a link to our rising insulin levels, manifested in rising late-onset diabetes, and increasingly thought to be a driving force in cancer. Indeed ‘insulin control’ and cancer is a new ‘hot-topic’ in the USA. Here is the first clue that the research Waxman quotes may be misleading. A study at the end of 2006 from the University of North Carolina has provided evidence about a link between breast cancer survival times and a woman’s excess girth.  In this particular 9-year study the overweight women had an increased risk of death of 48 per cent overall, which increased the more they were overweight. However if they lost weight, they increased their chances of survival. Isn’t correct diet the main way of losing weight?

Deficiencies and cancer risk

It is becoming increasingly clear that deficiencies in certain vitamins, minerals and even hormones are linked to increased cancer risk.

For example, Harvard Medical School have done a lot of research on omega 3 (fish oils) and vitamin D.  Professor Hollick has stated that there would be ’25 per cent less fatalities from Breast Cancer if women took adequate daily levels of vitamin D’.

The Americans conducted the China study using various antioxidants and a total sample of over 200,000 people over five years to 1993 and showed figures of 13-17 per cent less cancers with groups taking three antioxidants; beta-carotene, vitamin E and selenium.

The French conducted the seven-year Su.Vi. Max study and concluded that the group taking a five-ingredient antioxidant supplement (beta-carotene, vitamin E, vitamin C, zinc and selenium) had 31 per cent fewer cancers during the period.

I could give more vitamin examples, but instead let us turn to minerals.  Deficiencies in potassium and magnesium, heightened by excesses of sodium, help to poison our cells, increasing their acidity and decreasing their oxygen levels.  This, in turn, weakens the energy production system and weakens the p53 gene, which defends the cells from becoming cancer cells.  US research in 2005 showed that 40 per cent of US citizens were magnesium deficient; you can bet that’s the case in the UK too.  Magnesium and potassium are plentiful in nuts, whole grains, greens, apricots, carrots, apples and all the foods young people do not eat any more.

A research study carried in Cancer Watch in 2005 showed the dreadful diet of our children – their top ten foods included no fruits, vegetables or fish but plentiful chips, crisps, pizza, chocolate, cakes and ice cream.  When they do eat grains and cereals, they are ‘refined’ and virtually vitamin free.

But how nourishing are today’s fruits and vegetables?  Two studies reported in 2005 (for example, Cornell University), both carried in Cancer Watch, recorded mineral declines in our fruit and vegetables over the last 40 years of up to 70 per cent depending upon the mineral and item concerned. This ‘soil deficiency’ (and it applies whether you are eating organic or non-organic unless the soils have been enriched) is clearly noted in the USA, where three Senate Hearings since 1934 have concluded that people should supplement because of increasing demineralisation of our soils through overproduction.

But worse, our food is increasingly picked unripe and sent from Thailand or Kenya.  A week later it moves from Covent Garden to your supermarket.  This process means that the items carry fewer vitamins to start with and the delay reduces levels further.  Fruits can lose nearly 50 per cent of their vitamin C after just 5 days storage.

The figures and the facts are there for all to read.

Dietary factors that heighten risk?

Worse still; are there foods that might actually do more harm than good?  Again there is hard evidence of increased risks with certain foods.

We’ve known about the dangers of saturated fats for years, but the worst are undoubtedly trans fats.  McDonalds has been fined over theirs; many firms have cut them out.  The US government requires on-pack labelling on all foods, warning on trans fat levels; the UK is not up to speed yet.

Then there are foods such as glucose, salt and dairy.

Glucose is the favourite food of the cancer cell and we have covered several studies in icon, notably from Harvard, which show that glucose encourages and feeds cancers – directly or indirectly through insulin levels.  This is aided by our move to one or two large meals per day rather than six small ones, especially as our meals are so full of refined carbohydrates.  Refined pasta has a very high glycaemic index – i.e. it’s rather like eating neat sugar.

Then there is salt.  The Food Standards Agency still recommends 6gm per day.  In my book The Tree of Life: The Anti-Cancer Diet, I recommend a maximum of 1gm.  The USA recommendation in 2005 was lowered to 1.25gms.  Sodium, in excess, poisons your cells and sets up pre-cancer conditions, reducing oxygen and increasing acidity.  Fact.

Finally, there’s Insulin-like Growth Factor 1, and you find that in cow’s milk.  IGF-1 is what makes baby calves grow to full size in ten months.  You do not want your cells dividing that fast and there is now plenty of research (For example, the Karolinska Institute in Sweden) linking this hormone to increased risk of cancer.

The ideal diet?

One diet well worth looking into is the Macrobiotic diet.  Unfortunately, it has been given a rather ‘cranky’ press because of its association with certain pop stars.  You will find the detail of the diet on by clicking here

Over 100 years ago, Sagen Ishizuka, a Japanese army doctor, lamented the increased westernisation of the traditional Japanese diet.  After eleven years of studies, he developed a diet based on five principles:

1. Food is the core of your health.
2. Sodium and potassium are opposites – the latter must balance the former.
3. Whole grains are the staple food of man.
4. Food should be unrefined, whole and natural.
5. Food should be freshly picked, locally grown and in season.

How ‘cranky’ is that?

Another we have covered in detail was prompted by in-depth US research – the Mediterranean Diet. This diet is based on whole grains, plenty of locally picked fresh fruit and vegetables, olive and nut oils, garlic, fresh oily fish and sunshine. Oh and apparently, according to the research, you can drink up to 4 glasses of red wine a day!

If you want longevity, the diet for you is the Okinawan Diet. They actually consume 40 per cent less calories than even the Japanese, and live on atolls surrounded by coral reefs – so their fresh fish, fresh fruit and vegetables and whole rice diet is full of minerals. They also consume virtually no sodium salt other than from the sea – a major factor in all the Epidemiology studies on groups of people (like the Bush people) who live longest in the world.

Calorie reduction is also a major factor. I mentioned the increased risks of cancer with being overweight or obesity above. A number of studies (for example, on populations during wartime, and on laboratory rats) on calorie reduction – where you consume 5-10 per cent less calories than you actually ‘need’ – show less illness and increased longevity.

Many people write to us and complain that we do not take anti-meat, pro Vegetarian Diet stance.  It is quite clear from research studies that increased levels of red meat consumption heighten cancer risk and increase factors such as blood cholesterol levels, so we do think people should moderate their red meat consumption……..but…….research findings that vegetarians have less cancer usually omit the fact that vegetarians smoke less and consume less alcohol.  They do not live longer as they still consume high salt levels like the non-vegans, and some even consume too much dairy.

Moreover our view, put simply, is that one man’s meat is another’s poison and we support the whole principle of professional metabolic typing. Many health writers point East and talk about low meat consumption and low cancer levels, neglecting to talk about lowered stress levels, lower dairy levels or considerably higher levels of everyday physical activity.  Moreover, there are at least four different biochemical types of person in the world.  The foods that one population group thrive on may well not do so well for a different biochemical population group.  We may well all be ‘humans’ but we have developed over the last 20,000 years in an equilibrium with our localised environment. Metabolic typing was also the basis for William Kelly’s successful work in the US in the 1970s, and that has led to Dr. Gonzalez and his diet therapy regime, currently performing with great success in clinical trials in New York.

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Why the debate? Does changing diet help or not?

The truth is that, whilst we can find specific research on specific natural compounds with specific cancers, there just do not seem to be any significant studies on cancer groups where groups making diet changes have been balanced by groups that have not.

The problem is that logically if a poor diet contributed significantly to a person’s cancer, you would expect that at least some of these patients might benefit equally from a good, corrective diet. At least that was the principle which originally drove the work of Dr Max Gerson. We will cover his work more fully in the next issue. However, maybe cancer cells are not logical.

Changing one’s diet is not simply for corrective nourishment reasons. It allows the patient to ‘take some control’ over their own cancer treatment. It nourishes the soul, and the mental state too. But this takes us well outside a Doctor’s training and understanding. There are no UK clinical trials on mental state.

Losing patient control is a real concern for your doctor but I have little sympathy for this. Patients want knowledgeable dialogue and discussion, not ‘control’ especially where their own lives are concerned. Too often they are ignored, ‘spoken down to’ and even belittled by oncologists.

So they go looking for alternatives. And we all know that there are professionals out there who really do know their subject; experts like Naturopaths and Nutritionists, who have studied at university for just as long as the oncologists, who spent just a few days learning about nutrition at best. And herein lies the biggest problem.  I won’t ask my plumber to do the conveyancing on my house, and I wouldn’t ask an oncologist to advise me on nutrition.  He is simply not adequately trained in the subject. But. The truth is that despite the expertise of Naturopaths and nutritionists, we do not have research numbers – only anecdote. And clinicians and oncologists, like Lina Evangelista, don’t get out of bed in the morning unless serious numbers are involved.

Is there any hard evidence?

In truth, the biggest problem is that the supporting ‘evidence’ is nearly all anecdotal – and that’s not good enough. But then who would organise the research, or pay for it? Cancer Research UK don’t seem interested, and we have no Government body as they do in America to check out these things. Recently, UK research to study the effects of six natural compounds each of which had already shown promise in treating brain tumours could barely raise any funding at all. If the $70 billion pharmaceutical business thinks clinical trials are prohibitively expensive, what chance the much, much smaller vitamin industry?

Many people choose to ‘turn vegan’ in their attempts to beat the disease. One such plan involves following the Bristol Cancer Centre (now renamed Penny Brohn Cancer Care) Diet.  So we contacted Chris Head, CEO of Penny Brohn Cancer Care, and he confirmed that they have no research that supports their diet, adding that this doesn’t mean the diet doesn’t help, just that we don’t have any research. In a further e mail to me he added that they have now decided to conduct research to cover this – we will keep you informed.

This diet is based around whole grains (but not wheat), lots of pulses, seeds, cold pressed oils and organic fruit and vegetables.  They suggest avoiding dairy, red meat, and saturated fat.  The full diet can be found here. Again, no one is suggesting using this instead of orthodox therapy. For my part I would emphasise that, if you do cut out meat, please add vitamin B-12 into your supplements list – a good source would be chlorella. There is a wealth of evidence that B-12 deficiency is linked with an increased cancer risk. And meat is the prime dietary source. You could even be exacerbating your problems.

a) Correcting the deficiencies

Surely it makes enormous sense to give yourself the best possible chance of beating your cancer? If you were overweight or consumed too much salt or too little potassium and magnesium before diagnosis at least correct and give yourself a fighting chance??  Isn’t it simply common sense for a cancer patient to want to eat as healthy a diet as possible, thus trying to overcome any shortfalls in vitamins, or minerals that they might have amassed? Isn’t it logical that they would now want to ‘take care of themselves’? Shouldn’t the cancer patient be encouraged in this – encouraged to eat the good things and cut out the bad?  Or are our medical professionals recommending you carry on with the hamburgers, pizza and chips?

Well actually, yes. The Royal Marsden Dieticians produce a booklet on a diet for chemotherapy which has little pictures of milkshakes, cheeseburgers and sugary buns in it – a complete failure to understand the biochemistry of cancer, and one highlighted only recently by research on glucose from Harvard which concluded that people with cancer should cut their glucose levels significantly. Frankly it beggars belief. At the very moment the doctors are trying to kill off a patient’s cancer cells, the dieticians are chucking animal fats, salt, glucose and refined rubbish down their throats. Now we do understand that they only see the seven per cent of patients with serious weight loss problems and this can prove fatal in itself, but publishing booklets for ALL chemotherapy patients suggesting this Dieticians’ Diet is lunacy. Dieticians would be well advised to examine in detail the Russian clinical trials on the use of Hydrazine Sulphate, as a way of breaking the weight loss cycle that can occur in cancer patients.

Personally, I favour the nuts, pulses and whole grain approach, as I’d like my cancer cells to starve rather than be fed!  Click here and here for our diet for chemotherapy .

New patients ringing our offices are almost always nutritionally deficient, and nutritionally toxic. Quite simply, many patients have eaten such a poor diet, high in refined sugary, salty foods, aided and abetted by stress, coffee, fizzy drinks and so on, that their bodies have deficiencies and their cells are acidic. As we said above, this pushes the cells to a state of lowered oxygen and lowered energy. The cells have excesses of certain factors, and deficiencies in others like potassium and magnesium. One simple approach to diet is to try to return the body to its correct pH, which is slightly alkaline. You will find the Alkaline Diet here on our web site and you will find the foods and factors that can return you to this more natural state, increasing cellular oxygen. Again, the approach is the basis for the Gerson Therapy, refined by Lawrence Plaskett, who is Vice Chair of the UK Nutritional Council, and part of the Gonzalez Therapy for which there are clinical trials.

b) Supplementation

Various hospitals in the USA use supplementation like vitamin D, or melatonin (Asphalia) to treat cancers.  Others use herbs like astragalus or red clover. Some use genistein or fish oils.

Now, we have consistently taken a strong line against US websites claiming that coral calcium, or essiac, or those high street bottles of shark cartilage ‘cure’ cancer.  They don’t. We could give many other examples, and we do on our web site, based on factual evidence and research.

But the fact is that there is also a lot of excellent research involving large numbers of people where, clearly, certain vitamins, minerals and hormones – when supplemented – do play a significant and beneficial role.  A visit to the Nutritionals section of our website will show the sheer depth of top quality research available.

The French Su.Vi. Max study previously mentioned also reported a 37 per cent decline in male deaths from cancer during the 7-year period, the US China Study showed a 21 per cent decline in mortality during the 5-year study.  Both studies indicate supplementation doesn’t just prevent cancer, it clearly can have an effect in increasing survival times.

But drugs companies know this.  In Cancer Watch (Issue 1, 2007) we cover a new drug and its clinical trials – What is it?  A concentrated form of vitamin D.
Then there’s the whole history of plants and herbs, again much studied by the pharmaceutical companies. Recently Alan Hopking, writing in icon, said, ‘Many plants have furnished modern medicine with drugs that are used in cancer therapy as cytotoxic agents: recently the product known as Taxol, from the Pacific Yew tree, for breast cancer, and the vinca alkaloids from the Madagascar periwinkle. These compounds are effective as anti-cancer agents by virtue of their nature as poisons, which disrupt the cell cycle. Their destructive nature as poisons is clear. However the fact that plants were the original source of some pharmaceuticals, the classic example being Withering’s use of the cardiac glycosides of the foxglove for dropsy, can blur the distinctions between two very different kinds of agents – medicines and poisons’. In other words, just because some herbs are lauded as the basis for chemotherapy drugs, please don’t think that is their only – or even major – benefit, as he went on to show. Herbs have helped in a curative role since man existed. Red Indian cures and Essiac, the Hoxsey formula for skin cancers and more, Indian Ayurvedic medicine and compounds such as Carctol. In almost every case that icon has covered, the ‘quacks’ potions’ which were originally dubbed useless have subsequently been shown to contain herbs with anti-cancer properties. Alan took us through the specific proven benefits of many herbs – after all, again, he is a qualified expert in this field. Follow this link for more details.

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At icon we always stress that supplements should be natural. Sadly the way the new EU laws have been interpreted, many natural supplements will fall by the wayside, and only synthetic ones (which seem to do less well in research) will be allowed on the high streets.

c) Avoiding the dangers

Surely, if you have cancer, it is wiser not to continue to smoke?  Why then would it not be wiser to avoid increasing your oestrogen, insulin or IGF-1 levels?

If that means cutting down on dairy and red meat, then so be it.  Indole 3 Carbinol (broccoli and cabbage) has been used since Roman times with cancers; research shows it converts aggressive oestradiol into oestrone.  Melatonin supplementation is also known to reduce aggressive oestradiol and is used in the treatment of breast cancer.  Hormones in meat, toxins in meat fats and animal fats, IGF-1 in dairy have all been shown to boost oestradiol levels.

Which brings us to the subject of pesticides and organic food.  Readers of David Broom’s article will know that the Environmental Working Group in Washington has shown that certain foods are sprayed more, whilst others retain more pesticide.  Conversely, others are much safer and do not warrant the expense of purchasing the organic equivalent.

Again in Cancer Watch, we covered US research in 2006 that showed how just five days on organic food removed a number of nasties from the bodies of the children in the study.

Some pesticides are oestrogen mimicking chemicals, once inside the body. Lindane and DDT have been directly linked to breast cancer and their use stopped in the Western World. Unfortunately the Pharmaceutical companies still make both and they are still used in certain third world countries. All this at a time our own FSA is reporting that levels of pesticides on imported food are above our UK limits (but they are still allowed onto the High Streets!) If Doctors treat certain breast cancer patients by cutting their oestrogen production, doesn’t it make sense at the same time to cut out the chemicals that can add to the oestrogen ‘pool’ in the body?

The dangers of pesticides are made clear in two articles by experts on our website – Georgina Downs, UK Pesticides Campaign and Andre Leu, Chair of the Organic Federation of Australia

d) Preventing recurrence

A friend of mine has colon cancer. Her oncologist has treated this, but she is frightened it will return.  A precursor to cancer is inflammation and the growth of intestinal polyps.  Certain factors (including foods) are known to aggravate the situation, whilst others have been proven to keep polyps under control.  To date, my friend’s top oncologist has not mentioned diet, nor talked about polyps.

There is a lot of research, including a Nobel Prize, for work that shows salicylin (aspirin, aloe vera), long chain omega 3 (fish oils), garlic, ginger and curcumin can reduce the inflammation and polyp growth.  Further studies confirm the importance of vitamin D and, to a lesser extent, B vitamins like folic acid.  Other studies, including clinical trials, show the importance of beneficial bacteria in the breakdown of dangerous products and the production of helpful ones, some even showing the reduction of risk of recurrence.

A US study over a thirty-year period, covered in Cancer Watch confirmed that people who took a multivitamin at least four times per week had 40 per cent less colorectal cancer.

Isn’t it actually neglect of duty and responsibility for top oncologists dealing with intestinal cancers not to be experts in nutrition?  Why do they not have professional nutritional qualifications?  Why do they not give advice that is very clear from the volumes of research available?

Why cannot oncologists recommend a naturopath or a nutritionist? Except that they would be acknowledging that someone had skills and knowledge beyond their own.

While Harvard, MD Anderson, UCLA and others routinely provide research on vitamins, minerals and supplements, we pooh-pooh them. Back in 2001, John Boik of the MD Anderson Center, Texas, wrote a book entitled Natural Compounds in Cancer Therapy.  It included over 4000 scientific references and should be compulsory reading for all doctors at medical school. Sadly, doctors in the UK hardly receive any education on diet and nutrition during their seven years training. My local GP not only had never heard of lycopene – he even asked how to spell it!

Our view is similar to Boik’s – there is no one cause of cancer, and nor will there ever be one ‘cure’; one ‘magic bullet’. Diet programmes need to be scientifically built so that certain foods with certain proven properties address each stage in the cancer process – Boik defined 20 such stages and put the relevant foods and supplements against each.

The cheapest shot that critics frequently use is that this ‘diet’ or that supplement claims to be a ‘cure’ for cancer and then they pour derision onto it. No professional in the Diet and Nutrition arena would ever claim that a particular diet is a cancer cure – there is no single cure for cancer. All cancer. And, despite the claims of the Press Releases sitting on my desk, Herceptin, Temozolomide and radiotherapy are not ‘cures’ for cancer either!

Mind over Matter

Taking charge of one’s own life is vitally important to some people and doctors ignore this all too frequently when they belittle (yes, they do – we receive the letters!) their patients and their exercise or diet regimes, the hands-on-healer, the Indian head massage, the switch to soya, the findings on the internet, and even the desire for a second opinion.

The mind is an important weapon in the fight to beat cancer. And there is scientific evidence on the role of food here. To give one example, people who are depressed get more cancers, and cancer patients often suffer depression – it is linked to a lowered blood oxygen level. But we know certain foods can help significantly in this area. In 2005 and 2006 there were a number of US studies that showed fish oils were more effective at dealing with depression than even the best ‘clinically approved’ drugs – and they don’t have the side effects. Diet is most definitely a factor in someone’s mental well-being.

On Reflection

That a good diet – providing vitamins and minerals, and avoiding potential dangers – coupled with corrective supplementation using vitamins (e.g. vitamin D), minerals (like magnesium and potassium), antioxidants and certain anti-carcinogenic herbs can help a cancer patient is without question as far as nutritional experts are concerned.

The critics, of course, argue that – without hard numbers and clinical trials – the evidence is not there.  But time and time again this office receives stories – yes, anecdotes – of diets, and diet therapies making a big difference. Professor Baum, also of UCL, calls this the Urban Myth – that someone ‘given six months to live beats all expectations and survives ten years’. He implies that it’s a factor of averages – there will always be people who ‘beat the norm’. But I don’t know. I think that argument is a bit of a cop-out.

Can you ignore the anecdote?  Too small to look into?  What if there are only 150 or so people each year who gain a real benefit from changing their diet?

As we reported in Cancer Watch, the Herceptin trials for early diagnosis in Breast Cancer have been a huge success.  At £20,000 per annum, the mathematic extrapolation of the UK trials indicate that 150 lives will be saved.

We are very supportive of Herceptin.  We are very supportive of diets and diet therapies too. Each has their place in a sensible multi-step and integrative battle to beat cancer.

The icon Diet?

Consider the following, every single point of which has featured in research in icon:

1. Only eat whole grains like whole oats, complete brown rice and barley or millet.
2. Eat at least five lots of vegetables per day, especially greens, reds, purples and yellows.
3. Eat at least two portions of fruit – but only on an empty stomach, first thing in the morning.
4. Eat pulses like beans and lentils at least three times per week.
5. Eat fresh nuts and seeds (especially pumpkin, sunflower and linseeds).
6. Do not fry, or roast at high temperatures.  Grill or steam where possible.  Eat at least one raw meal per day.
7. Eat five to six small meals per day, not one or two big ones.
8. Use only unsaturated oils like olive oil or walnut oil.
9. Restrict your use of salt.  Cut out all processed, prepared, tinned and packaged foods.  Avoid crisps, peanuts, sausages, bacon, soy sauce and other condiments, and especially Chinese food with mono-sodium glutamate.
10. Limit your consumption of red meat and focus on oily fish and on organically farmed meats with less added drugs/pesticides.
11. Avoid all dairy, especially if your cancer is hormonally driven (breast, prostate, colon, etc)
12. Avoid all glucose – especially sweet fizzy drinks.
13. Drink 3 – 4 cups of green tea per day; a glass or two of red wine per week.
14. Take a daily probiotic or two – with ideally several different strains of bacteria.
15. Supplement (but make sure they are natural where possible)

- Take a quality multivitamin and mineral, preferably in a liquid format.
- Take antioxidants (such as beta-carotene, ‘total’ vitamin E, vitamin C, zinc and selenium – ideally in a natural form eg. Chlorella for beta-carotene), but beware doubling up with the multivitamin
- Take vitamin D and fish oils.
- Consider coenzyme Q10 and curcuma longa.
- Look into taking Herbshield (it will have to be prescribed by a professional herbalist)
- If the cancer is hormonally driven,
i. Consider taking red clover and/or soya isoflavones plus Indole 3 Carbinol.
ii. Consider melatonin supplementation (Asphalia is a natural alternative).
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