keskiviikko 13. huhtikuuta 2016


Chemotherapy doesn’t work? Not so fast… (A lesson from history)


If there’s one medical treatment that proponents of “alternative medicine” love to hate, it’s chemotherapy. Rants against “poisoning” are a regular staple on “alternative health” websites, usually coupled with insinuations or outright accusations that the only reason oncologists administer chemotherapy is because of the “cancer industrial complex” in which big pharma profits massively from selling chemotherapeutic agents and oncologists and hospitals profit massively from administering them. Indeed, I’ve lost track of the number of such rants I’ve deconstructed over the years. Usually, they boil down to two claims: (1) that chemotherapy doesn’t work against cancer (or, as I’ve called it before, the “2% gambit“) and (2) that the only reason it’s given is because doctors are brainwashed in medical school or because of the profit motive or, of course, because of a combination of the two. Of course, the 2% gambit is based on a fallacious cherry picking of data and confusing primary versus adjuvant chemotherapy, and chemotherapy does actuallywork rather well for many malignancies, but none of this stops the flow of misinformation.
Misinformation and demonization aside, it is also important to realize that the term “chemotherapy,” which was originally coined by German chemist Paul Ehrlich, was originally intended to mean the use of chemicals to treat disease. By this definition, virtually any drug is “chemotherapy,” including antibiotics. Indeed, one could argue that by this expansive definition, even the herbal remedies that some alternative medicine practitioners like to use to treat cancer would be chemotherapy for the simple reason that they contain chemicals and are being used to treat disease. Granted, the expansive definition evolved over the years, and these days the term “chemotherapy” is rarely used to describe anything other than the cytotoxic chemotherapy of cancer that in the popular mind causes so many horrific side effects. But in reality virtually any drug used to treat cancer is chemotherapy, which is why I like to point out to fans of Stanislaw Burzynski that his antineoplastons, if they actually worked against cancer, would be rightly considered chemotherapy, every bit as much as cyclophosphamide, 5-fluorouracil, and other common chemotherapeutics.

Chemotherapy, not surprisingly, is easy to demonize. There are few treatments that cause such odious side effects, and when taken to its fullest extreme, such as complete ablation of a cancer patient’s bone marrow in preparation for a bone marrow transplant, chemotherapy can be brutal. It’s also true that for advanced solid malignancies, it only tends to produce palliation or a prolongation in survival, not a cure, and people with cancer want a cure. Palliation just isn’t that appealing, for obvious reasons. When people think of chemotherapy, they think of hair falling out, nausea and vomiting, fatigue, and death. Since chemotherapy is often given for more advanced malignancies, it’s sometimes hard to tell how many of these symptoms (other than the hair loss) are due to the cancer and how much they are due to side effects of the chemotherapy, and many people incorrectly blame chemotherapy for the deaths of their loved ones with cancer. Also, because, like radiation therapy, chemotherapy is often given in the adjuvant setting (i.e., in addition to curative surgery in order to decrease the risk of recurrence and death), it’s very easy to produce stories in which people with cancer refuse chemotherapy and/or radiation therapy after surgery and attribute their survival not to the conventional therapy (surgery) but to whatever quackery they chose to use. When used in early stage cancer, although its relative efficacy can seem large, for example a 30% decrease in the risk of dying, if the risk of dying of cancer is only 10% to begin with, that’s only a 3% survival benefit on an absolute basis.
I’ve made it a habit of discussing many of these alternative cancer cure anecdotes, such as one about Chris Wark that I did just a couple of weeks ago. It’s a theme of mine that goes back to the very beginning of this blog. Sometimes little or no quackery is involved, but rather patients are pushed away from chemotherapy by major news outlets publishing irresponsible news stories that offer misguided justifications for refusing chemotherapy, making treatment sound as though it will irrevocably destroy lives. In reality, the use of alternative medicine instead of effective treatment for cancer is, where it’s been studied, is always associated much poorer survival, even in pancreatic cancer, for which conventional treatments don’t do so well. Still, among the treatments in the “cut, poison, burn” terminology that believers in alternative medicine like to use to describe conventional cancer therapy, it is the “poison” that causes the most fear and is most viciously demonized in the alt-med “literature.”
It’s for those reasons that I thought that now would be a good time to do a post on the history of chemotherapy by Vincent DeVita (one of the pioneers of chemotherapy) and Edward Chu. It’s also a good time because I came across an article from about five years ago that describes this history quite well. There’s much to be learned there, and this history also explains some of the quotes of scientists often trotted out in an effort to attack chemotherapy.

The early days

For centuries, for solid tumors like breast cancer and colon cancer at least, the only “cure” was surgery. Moreover, because there was no adjuvant therapy, these surgical cures were often radical, because if the tumor recurred after surgery there was close to zero chance of salvaging the patient’s life. In addition, because there were no screening tests, most cancers were not discovered until they were relatively advanced; it was rare back then to find a breast cancer less than 2 cm in diameter. One example that I like to point to is that of William Stewart Halsted, the American surgeon who now stands as almost a god of surgery. In the late 1800s, Halsted developed the radical mastectomy, a procedure that involved taking not only the breast, but the underlying pectoralis major muscle, as well as all the axillary lymph nodes (under the arm). This procedure produced survival rates considerably higher than what were previously achieved at the time, and it relatively rapidly became the standard of care for around 80 years. (Unfortunately, that was probably about 20-30 years longer than it should have.) DeVita describes it thusly:
Surgery and radiotherapy dominated the field of cancer therapy into the 1960s until it became clear that cure rates after ever more radical local treatments had plateaued at about 33% due to the presence of heretofore-unappreciated micrometastases and new data showed that combination chemotherapy could cure patients with various advanced cancers. The latter observation opened up the opportunity to apply drugs in conjunction with surgery and/or radiation treatments to deal with the issue of micrometastases, initially in breast cancer patients, and the field of adjuvant chemotherapy was born. Combined modality treatment, the tailoring of each of the three modalities so their antitumor effect could be maximized with minimal toxicity to normal tissues, then became standard clinical practice.
As the 20th century dawned (and for quite some time thereafter), there really was no effective treatment for cancer except for surgery, which limited cancer treatments to tumors that could be excised and left people with hematological malignancies (leukemias and lymphomas) pretty much out of luck. Leukemias and lymphomas were treated mainly with arsenic, which didn’t actually work very well, if at all; they were thus generally considered to be chronic, incurable diseases.
The first major advance that helped with the development of chemotherapy as we know it today occurred in the 1910s, when George Clowes of the Roswell Park Memorial Institute developed the first transplantable rodent tumor systems. This advance allowed the testing of compounds in animal models before trying them in humans. At the time, tissue culture techniques were in their infancy, having only just been described a few years before, and would not become commonplace in laboratories for another three or four decades. Early systems included sarcomas and Erlich’s ascites tumor. These were all induced by carcinogens in mice and could be transplanted from mouse to mouse.
Decades passed, and the development of chemotherapy didn’t really go anywhere until the 1930s, when, as DeVita describes:
It was Murray Shear, at the Office of Cancer Investigations of the USPHS, a program that was later combined in 1937 with the NIH Laboratory of Pharmacology to become the National Cancer Institute (NCI), who in 1935 set up the most organized program that would became a model for cancer drug screening ( 7). Shear’s program was the first to test a broad array of compounds, including natural products, and had both interinstitutional and international collaborations. He ultimately screened over 3,000 compounds using the murine S37 as his model system. However, because only two drugs ever made it to clinical trials and were eventually dropped because of unacceptable toxicity, the program was dissolved in 1953 just as discussions began about establishing an organized national effort in drug screening. This failure was in part due to the antipathy toward the testing of drugs to treat cancer but also to a lack of information and experience on how to test potentially toxic chemicals in humans.
The failure of this drug screening initiative is part of what contributed to the pessimism with respect to chemotherapy and cancer that developed in the 1950s. Prior, in the 1940s, there had been a great deal of enthusiasm for chemotherapy based on the breakthroughs of Alfred Gilman and Louis Goodman, who tested the effects of nitrogen mustards on lymphoma based on observations that an accidental spill of sulfur mustards on troops from a bombed ship in Bari Harbor, Italy, in WWII had led to the observation that the bone marrow and lymph nodes were markedly depleted in men exposed to the mustard gas. Experiments in mice bearing a transplanted lymphoid tumor with nitrogen mustard resulted in marked regression, which led Goodman and Gilman ask Gustaf Lindskog, a thoracic surgeon, to administer nitrogen mustard to a patient with non–Hodgkin’s lymphoma and severe airway obstruction. The tumor regressed, and the same results were seen in several other patients treated this way. Publication of these results in 1946 led to widespread enthusiasm for the use of drugs related to the chemicals in nitrogen mustard, such as chlorambucil and cyclophosphamide, the latter of which is still commonly used for breast cancer and several other cancers today.
Here’s where the optimism turned sour:
The use of nitrogen mustard for lymphomas spread rapidly throughout the United States after the publication of the Lindskog article in 1946. If one reads the literature of the time, there was a real sense of excitement that perhaps drugs could cure patients with cancer ( 19). Unfortunately, remissions turned out to be brief and incomplete, and this realization then created an air of pessimism that pervaded the subsequent literature of the 1950s. A cadre of academic physicians, led by the famous hematologist William Dameshek, who having seen apparent success turn to failure could never again be persuaded that cancer was curable by drugs (20), became harsh critics of a national drug development program and the effort to prove that drugs could cure advanced cancers.
And it is here where many of the anti-chemotherapy quotes by reputable scientists and physicians originate, albeit often in exaggerated forms. For instance, one of the most famous of these statements is from a man named Hardin Jones, who is quoted as saying, “My studies have proved conclusively that untreated cancer victims actually live up to four times longer than treated individuals.” (Indeed, if you Google Hardin Jones’ name and this statement—or just his name—you will find this quote cited in many different contexts. Frequently articles quoting Jones on these issues will claim that he published these statistics in his article in Transactions, New York Academy of Science, series 2, v. 18, n.3, p.322. As our frequent commenter Peter Moran has pointed out, however, this particular study dates back to 1956 and says no such thing.
There’s no doubt, however, that Jones had a dim view of cancer treatments of his day, but he was not alone. Five or six decades ago, after the hope of the late 1940s that using alkylating agents would cure many cancers had been crushed and improvements in survival from cancer had been shown to be frustratingly elusive, there were a lot of cancer doctors who were despairing that cancer could ever be cured with chemotherapy. Interestingly, Jones used his data to build a statistical model proposing that “…the death rate for all kinds of cancer remains nearly fixed from the moment when cancer is identified…” That sounds a lot like lead time bias. Jones was, however, somewhat prescient in proposing that the biology of the tumor is arguably the prime determinant of survival, even with treatment. In any case, I tend to agree with Dr. Moran that Jones’ pessimistic view was a product of his times.
This pessimism continued into the 1960s. Indeed, one of the more interesting aspects of DeVita’s article is a series of anecdotes about how dimly the medical profession viewed chemotherapy in the 1960s and how skeptical most doctors were that any cancer would ever be cured with chemotherapy. At the time, there was no specialty known as medical oncology, and doctors who administered chemotherapy at hospitals were viewed as “underachievers, at best.” As DeVita describes, very respected physicians and chairs of departments viewed chemotherapists as the “lunatic fringe.” Louis K. Alpert, who had published one of the earliest reports using nitrogen mustards to treat lymphoma was routinely referred to by the house staff and the faculty as “Louis the Hawk and his poisons.” Here is more evidence of the low esteem with which doctors administering chemotherapy for cancer were viewed at the time:
At Yale, the first institution to test chemotherapy in humans in the modern era, the chemotherapist Paul Calabresi, a distinguished professor and founding father in the field, was forced to leave because he was involved in too much early testing of new anticancer drugs, an exercise as unpopular with the faculty and house staff at Yale as it was at Columbia.
At the Clinical Center of the NCI, where so many of the early breakthroughs with chemotherapy occurred, the well-known hematologist George Brecher, who read all the bone marrow slides of the leukemic patients, routinely referred to the Leukemia Service as the “butcher shop” at rounds.
And these are only the stories that can be told. It took plain old courage to be a chemotherapist in the 1960s and certainly the courage of the conviction that cancer would eventually succumb to drugs. Clearly, proof was necessary, and that proof would come in the form of the cure of patients with childhood acute leukemia and in adults with advanced Hodgkin’s disease.
It took the success of studies like the ones described in detail by DeVita to start to change the tide. For instance, new protocols for Hodgkin’s lymphoma increased the complete remission rate from near zero to 80%, with 60% of patients with advanced Hodgkin’s disease who attained a complete remission never relapsing. Follow-up is now well-beyond 40 years. By 1970, Hodgkin’s disease went from a death sentence to being viewed as largely curable with drugs, the first adult malignancy cured by chemotherapy. Add to this the amazing progress being made in childhood cancers at the time, and the tide was turning. Successes in hematological malignancies piled on successes, and the principle that some cancers could be cured with drugs became accepted. What amazes me is that this acceptance didn’t really take hold widely until the mid-1970s, which in the scheme of things is really not that long ago. It is also ironic to me that the attitude towards chemotherapy exhibited by believers in alternative medicine is very much akin to the attitude towards chemotherapy exhibited by mainstream science 50-60 years ago. The difference is that science has evolved; chemotherapy critics in the antiscience fringe have not.

Adjuvant chemotherapy

Hematological malignancies (such as leukemias and lymphomas) are much less common in adults than solid malignancies (e.g., breast, colon, lung, and other “solid” organ cancers). Many of these solid malignancies are treated primarily with surgery and have been for many decades. Breast and colon cancer are the most prominent (and among the most common) examples. From the 1970s on, the primary rise in the use of chemotherapy has been as adjuvant therapy; i.e., as therapy added to the curative therapy (surgery) to decrease the rate of recurrence and death. Ironically, using chemotherapy for adjuvant treatment met almost the same level of resistance as the use of chemotherapy to try to cure advanced hematological malignancies. In this, Bernie Fisher at the University of Pittsburgh was a pioneer, and DeVita tells us why:
The main problem was where to test these treatment regimens as adjuvants to surgery. Despite the excitement over the new chemotherapy data, most surgeons in the United States were still reluctant to participate in clinical trials testing its use postoperatively. The courageous Bernard Fisher was the first choice (Fig. 8). He and his group, the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast Project (NSABP), had done an early adjuvant study, sponsored by the CCNSC, testing the use of the alkylating agent thiotepa postoperatively to kill cancer cells dislodged at surgery (81). They were also in the process of challenging the status quo, questioning the need for radical mastectomy and postoperative radiotherapy, and were in position to test chemotherapy. The late Paul Carbone of NCI contacted Bernard Fisher, and he agreed to test L-PAM in a randomized controlled trial. But still no person or institution in the United States was prepared to test combination chemotherapy as an adjunct to surgery in breast cancer. Paul Carbone then contacted Gianni Bonadonna of the Istituto Nazionale Tumori, in Milan, Italy, about doing the study. Under its director, the surgical pioneer Umberto Veronesi, the Istituto was treating a large number of breast cancer patients and, like Fisher, was exploring the use of lesser operations than the radical mastectomy. Bonadonna came to the NIH Clinical Center to review the results of the CMF protocol, which had not yet been published and agreed along with Veronesi to conduct a randomized controlled trial of a slightly dose-reduced version of CMF versus no therapy. The U.S. NCI Chemotherapy program, under Zubrod, paid for the study through a contract with the Istituto Tumori. This contract also provided for costs of a permanent statistical center and was the beginning of long time collaboration between the two National Cancer Centers.
In other words, the National Cancer Institute had to look outside of the U.S. to find an investigator willing to do a trial of adjuvant chemotherapy with a regimen containing more than one drug. Both of these studies were positive and set off a flurry of studies trying to see if the addition of adjuvant chemotherapy could decrease recurrence and prolong survival after curative surgery for cancer. It was also around this time that Lawrence Einhorn developed a chemotherapy regimen that resulted in the cure rate of metastatic testicular cancer going from 10% to 60%. By 1981, Dr. Norman D. Nigro, a colorectal surgeon at my home institution, developed the protocol named after him to treat anal cancer in many cases without having to do an abdominoperineal resection (APR). This was considered a major advance, because an APR basically involves removing the rectum and anus, sewing the hole shut, and leaving the patient with a permanent colostomy.

Chemotherapy and breast cancer

There’s one study that I like to cite to people who claim that chemotherapy doesn’t work, and this post seems as good a place to do it as any. It’s a large meta-analysis from two years ago. Funded by Cancer Research UK, the British Heart Foundation and the UK Medical Research Council, this study was carried out by the Early Breast Cancer Trialists’ Collaborative Group (EBCTCG) at the Clinical Trial Service Unit at the University of Oxford, United Kingdom and entitled “Comparisons between different polychemotherapy regimens for early breast cancer: meta-analyses of long-term outcome among 100,000 women in 123 randomised trials.”
It’s really quite an incredible effort to collate patient-level data for so many women in so many clinical trials. I sometimes say about meta-analyses the prototypical complaint about meta-analyses, namely that the quality of the output is critically dependent on the quality of the input. In other words, “garbage in, garbage out.” However, the inclusion criteria for the EBCTCG are actually pretty stringent. More importantly, the EBCTCG has access to unpublished data and patient-level information, as is explained here. The EBCTCG also goes to great lengths to try to include data from every randomized trial ever published, or an unbiased subset of them, in order to try to minimize selection bias that all-too-often results from too-rigid selection criteria used for meta-analyses. All in all, it’s an enormous effort.
Overall, this meta-analysis involved over 100,000 patients involved in 123 randomized trials over 40 years, and the authors made these comparisons: (1) taxane-based versus non-taxane-based regimens (data for 33 trials, begun in 1994-2003); (2) any anthracycline-based regimen versus standard or near-standard (cyclophosphamide/methotrexate/5-fluorouracil (CMF, 20 trials, begun in 1978-97); (3) higher versus lower anthracycline dosage (six trials, begun in 1985-94); and (4) polychemotherapy versus no adjuvant chemotherapy (64 trials, begun in 1973-96, including 22 of various anthracycline-based regimens and 12 of standard or near-standard CMF). Several meta-analyses were performed, which produced five main findings:
  1. Standard CMF and standard 4AC (ACT without the “T,” which is an older chemotherapy regimen used before taxanes were developed) were roughly equivalent in efficacy. Both of them roughly halved two-year recurrence rates and resulted in a proportional decrease in recurrence over the next eight years by approximately one-third. Overall, breast cancer mortality rates were reduced proportionally by 20-25%.
  2. Regimens with lower chemotherapy doses per cycle were less effective.
  3. Regimens with a lot more chemotherapy than the old standard 4AC (but not so nasty that they required stem-cell rescue) were somewhat more effective. They further decreased breast cancer mortality by 15-20%. The most prominent of these regimens is 4AC plus four cycles of “T” (a taxane), which became the standard of care for node-positive breast cancer after taxanes were developed.
  4. In all chemotherapy comparisons, the ten year overall mortality was reduced because there was not very much excess mortality due to causes other than breast cancer during the first year.
  5. In all meta-analyses looking at taxane-based regimens or anthracycline-based regimens (doxorubicin is an anthracycline), the proportional reductions in early recurrence, any recurrence, and breast cancer mortality were more or less independent of age, nodal status, tumor size, or even estrogen receptor status.
The authors conclude:
While awaiting the results of these new trials, it appears that ER status, differentiation, and the other tumour characteristics available for the present meta-analyses had little effect on the proportional risk reductions with taxane-based or anthracycline-based regimens. The more effective of these regimens offer on average a one-third reduction in 10-year breast cancer mortality, roughly independently of the available characteristics. The absolute gain from a one-third breast cancer mortality reduction depends, however, on the absolute risks without chemotherapy (which, for ER-positive disease, are the risks remaining with appropriate endocrine therapy). Although nodal status and tumour diameter and differentiation are of little relevance to the proportional risk reductions produced by such chemotherapy (and by tamoxifen therapy), they can help in treatment decisions as they are strongly predictive of the absolute risk without chemotherapy, and hence of the absolute benefit that would be obtained by a one-third reduction in that risk.
The bottom line is that, contrary to what you will hear from cranks and alt-med supporters who believe in “alternative” cancer cures, in the case of early stage breast cancer, chemotherapy saves lives. In women with breast cancer, it decreases the risk of their dying from breast cancer by approximately one-third. This is nothing to sneeze at, as it means thousands upon thousands of women who would have died but did not, thanks to chemotherapy. This study simply represents yet another in a long line of studies, another strand in the web of evidence that support the efficacy of chemotherapy in prolonging the lives of women with breast cancer. It’s not perfect, and it has a lot of potential complications, but it works. This is but one example.
Indeed, as DeVita points out, besides its well-demonstrated role in treating hematological malignancies, chemotherapy now has a role in the primary treatment of advanced malignancies such as bladder cancer, breast cancer, cervical cancer, colorectal cancer, esophageal cancer, gastric cancer, head and neck cancer, nasopharyngeal cancer, non-small cell lung cancer, ovarian cancer, pancreatic cancer, and prostate cancer. It’s also used to prolong survival in the adjuvant setting for breast cancer, colorectal cancer, cervical cancer, gastric cancer, head and neck cancer, pancreas cancer, melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, osteogenic sarcoma, and ovarian cancer. I must admit, though, I’m a bit surprised that other soft tissue sarcomas weren’t included on the list.

Chemotherapy and cancer

I’m no Pollyanna, as I’m sure regular readers realize. You just have to read my posts over the years about screening for cancer or how little better newer drugs seem to be than old drugs used to treat cancer to see that. I realize that chemotherapy is imperfect and doesn’t work well for a lot of cancers. Many of the drugs cause bad side effects, and, as I’ve explained before, in the adjuvant setting you have to treat a lot of patients to benefit relatively few. I also realize that chemotherapy is sometimes oversold. At the same time, I also know that now is the best time there has ever been for treating cancer with drugs. Targeted agents allow us to attack more precisely the molecular derangements driving cancer growth with lower toxicity. Molecular profiling is paving the way for precision medicine, in which someday (or so we hope) we will be able to target treatments to the specific abnormalities in a specific patient’s tumor. Certainly, I have no illusion of how difficult this is to accomplish, but I do believe that over time we will find ways to do it.
It’s helpful to look at the scope of advances over the last 100 years or so, as provided in these helpful diagrams in DeVita’s article:
ChemotherapyHistory1
ChemotherapyHistory2
As slow as it seems to those of us living it, cancer research has produced a lot of breakthroughs. Those who wonder why we haven’t cured “cancer” yet should read earlier posts I’ve written on the topic. Cancer is hard. Real hard. It is also hundreds of diseases, not some monolithic disease, just as chemotherapy is dozens of drugs and hundreds of drug combinations, not some monolithic mythical “chemotherapy.” It is not reasonable to expect that a span of a mere few decades or even a century is enough to cure all cancer. We have, however, brought the cure of several cancers within reach and do actually cure many cancers. Also, contrary to popular belief, the death rate from cancer is decreasing. In the US, it’s been decreasing for nearly the last 25 years, as shown in this graph from the most recent American Cancer Society statistics:
Cancer statistics, 2013
Note that this is happening even as the age-adjusted incidence of cancer is remaining steady or slightly increasing. Fewer and fewer people with cancer die of their disease. I realize that this is no consolation to anyone who has lost loved ones to the disease (as I have), but it does give hope for the future.
And, yes, promoters of alternative cancer cures can deny it all they like, but chemotherapy is indeed a major part of the reason for better outcomes and more hope in cancer. “Cut, poison, burn”? Well, yes. Unfortunately, that’s what works, including the “poison” part. Until we find something that works without as much morbidity, “cut, poison, burn” will have to do.
That reminds me. I really need to review the movie of the same title.

https://www.sciencebasedmedicine.org/chemotherapy-doesnt-work-not-so-fast-a-lesson-from-history/

5-year cancer survival rate for chemotherapy is 2.1%


5-year cancer survival rate for chemotherapy is 2.1%


Posted by: Dena Schmidt, staff writer in Natural Healing April 3, 2016




(NaturalHealth365) There has been an ongoing debate about the effectiveness of chemotherapy drugs for cancer patients as well as their effect on cancer survival rates. However, American and Australian studies have shown that cancer survival rates after receiving chemotherapy can be as startlingly low as 2.1%.


These studies took a 5-year look at cancer survival rates in cancer patients who received chemotherapy. The overall contribution of chemotherapy to 5-year survival was found to be just 2.1% for cancer patients in the U.S. and 2.3% for patients in Australia. While the 5-year cancer survival rate for Australian cancer patients is at this time more than 60%, these studies have shown that the use of chemotherapy makes a negligible contribution.

Revealing the negative side effects of chemotherapy versus health benefits

The side effects of chemotherapy and negative impact upon health comprise a very long list.
These ill health effects include vomiting, loss of appetite, diarrhea, constipation, bladder issues, bleeding, anemia, bruising, hair loss, edema, infections, lymphedema, neutropenia, nerve issues, mouth and throat issues, fertility problems and ongoing physical pain.
Those who undergo chemotherapy also report ongoing fatigue, memory issues, difficultly in concentrating, insomnia and sexual issues.
Furthermore, the use of chemotherapy drugs with clients experiencing end-stage cancers worsens their quality of life while providing no overall survival benefits, according to a study published in JAMA Oncology.
With such a poor effectiveness rate along with horrible side effects, these harsh and harmful chemicals are clearly not worth the risks.


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Why kill the immune response – when it’s needed most?

Some researchers theorize that the reason for resistance to chemotherapy in so many patients is that they build up a cellular tolerance to the drugs. The drugs used in chemotherapy also aren’t generally engineered for specific types of cancer, further diluting their effectiveness. Since chemotherapy drugs usually only target cancer cells that divide, any dormant cancer stem cells are often not effectively addressed by chemotherapy.
Clients who are given chemotherapy as a treatment become increasingly affected by drug detoxification. This in turn suppresses the immune system, exhausts the cellular repair mechanism, lowers drug receptor sensitivity, and alters pH gradients in negative ways.
In short, chemotherapy is very often a self-defeating therapy, decreasing white cell counts and weakening the immune system.

Fighting cancer with less harmful and more effective measures 

While the side effects and negative health consequences of chemotherapy can be assisted with a ketogenic diet and key supplements like green tea polyphenols, some research has shown that these measures alone are more effective than chemotherapy.
ketogenic diet is one that eliminates carbohydrates and starches in favor of vegetables, healthy fats and small amounts of high-quality lean proteins. It is believed that the reduction in glucose in the body helps to starve cancer cells, which feed on glucose. Lowering protein intake also contributes to slowing cancer cell proliferation.
Clearly, the funding and use of chemotherapy drugs as a cancer treatment should be reconsidered by the entire medical establishment. At the very least, a rigorous re-evaluation of the impact upon quality of life and their financial cost should be undertaken.

http://www.naturalhealth365.com/chemotherapy-cancer-patients-1796.html
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References:

https://www.burtongoldberg.com/home/burtongoldberg/contribution-of-chemotherapy-to-five-year-survival-rate-morgan.pdf

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15630849

http://oncology.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=2398177

http://nutritionandmetabolism.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1743-7075-4-5

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3157418


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Orthodox Cancer Treatments Don’t Treat Cancer


5 prescription drugs doctors had no idea could hurt their patients
Most fine doctors like Dr. Ben Goldacre like to have all the available facts about a prescription drug before prescribing it. However, when it comes to pharmaceutical medicines, it’s nearly impossible to find real data, so doctors really never know the true dangers about the drugs they use.
Not only are they not sure about the side effects and the possibility of death but they are also not sure whether or not the drug will help the patient at all. In short, modern medicine is based on research fraud and we find doctors and medical officials, including the FDA, abandoning their public health mission by revolving everything they do and promote around pharmaceutical interests. Anything non-pharmaceutical in nature is patently condemned.
In a study published in Nature in March 2012, researchers tried to replicate the results of 53 basic preclinical cancer studies. Of those 53 studies, only six were replicable. In his new book, Bad Pharma, Dr. Goldacre sounds a warning bell on the fact that drug manufacturers are the ones who fund trials of their own products. One of the most widely recognized and true tests of scientific proof is when these studies showing positive results can be and are replicated by independent researchers (not researchers chosen or paid by the drug manufacturer providing the original finding).
“Drugs are tested by the people who manufacture them in poorly designed trials, on hopelessly small numbers of weird, unrepresentative patients, and analyzed using techniques that are flawed by design, in such a way that they exaggerate the benefits of treatments,” writes Goldacre in his book. “When trials throw up results that companies don’t like, they are perfectly entitled to hide them from doctors and patients, so we only ever see a distorted picture of any drug’s true effects.”
This dishonest, inaccurate and incomplete representation of many of the pharmaceutical drugs coming to market is what most doctors are basing their holy allopathic medical practices on. What kind of medical science do we have when negative scientific information is not published, not accessible to practitioners, denied, repressed and simply not included in medical conclusions?

This is a systematic flaw in the
core of medicine.
Dr. Ben Goldacre
Erick Turner did a survey, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, of all the antidepressant trials filed with the United States Food and Drug Administration. There were 38 studies that produced positive results and 36 that produced negative results. Of the positive-result group, 37 of the studies were published. Of the negative results group, only three were published.
Almost every day we are hearing medical horror stories that should completely frighten the public away from their doctors’ offices. The latest scare was in October of 2012 where U.S. health officials ramped up warnings about a Massachusetts specialty pharmacy linked to a widening outbreak of a rare kind of meningitis, urging doctors and hospitals not to use any products from the company.
Investigators found contamination in a sealed vial of the steroid at the New England Compounding Center in Framingham, Mass., according to Food and Drug Administration officials. Tests are under way to determine if it is the same fungus blamed in the outbreak that has sickened 35 people in six states. Five of them have died. All received steroid shots for back pain. Almost everyday we hear another grim report of another death.
Medical and pharmaceutical science should be able to identify an appropriate mechanism and what the active ingredient might be for each drug that doctors are supposed to use. The problem is that they cannot do this without their fraudulent research, clinical trials and even FDA approval.

Orthodox Cancer Treatments Don’t Treat Cancer

I have always said that orthodox oncologists use treatments and diagnostic procedures that cause cancer to treat and diagnose cancer. A perfect example is mammography. Every mammogram a woman gets increases her risk of breast cancer by 5%[1],[2] due to the radiation involved and mammograms frequently lead to over-diagnosis and unnecessary treatment.
Most people sense that modern oncology is very dangerous. What is most terrible about it though is that treatments are in no way intended to target the cause or causes of cancer so even though the cancer industry is constantly talking about finding the “cure,” that’s the last thing on their agenda. The only treatments oncologists have to offer are therapies that do not treat cancer but rather make the person sicker and ultimately die a more horrible death.
Various analyses show that past media coverage often gave incorrect messages about the complexity of breast cancer, the age at which women are at highest risk, the progress made and the importance of early detection.
Fran Visco, the president of the National Breast Cancer Coalition, believes the solution lies in science—specifically, in studying how breast cancer develops and metastasizes.

“We get sidetracked by efforts to focus on getting every woman a mammogram,” she recently told The Daily Beast.
“We could screen every woman in the world, and we would not have stopped breast cancer. I am not saying to stop funding for screening; however, we cannot afford to make it a main focus.”
Recent research indicates that the cause of cancer has very little to do with genetics. We know some basic things about why cancer starts. We know it is initiated under low-oxygen conditions. We know that it is initiated also by trauma and especially by inflammation. We know with low-oxygen conditions and inflammation we have infectious agents running around out of control.
So we have low O2, low CO2, low pH (acidity) and low cellular energy;
- we have infection hordes fighting for their existence. Mix in some inflammation, heavy-metal and chemical contamination and nutritional deficiency (along with some genetic disruption) and we have the recipe for CANCER—a beast that is eating the human race alive starting with the old but now increasingly working its way down to the young and very young where death should not be lurking.
Does chemotherapy or radiation treat this condition? Does it treat cancer? Does it kill cancer when it provokes more of it? There is nothing real about orthodox oncology. How such inaccurate ideas like those of modern oncology could be born in an intelligent race of beings is beyond comprehension.
A new MIT study offers a comprehensive look at chemical and genetic changes that occur as inflammation progresses to cancer

One of the biggest risk factors for liver, colon or stomach cancer is chronic inflammation of those organs, often caused by viral or bacterial infections.
In 2008 researchers in France found that one in six cancers are caused by treatable infections.[3] Helicobacter pylori, hepatitis B and C viruses, and human papillomaviruses were responsible for 1.9 million cases, mainly gastric, liver, and cervix uteri cancers. In women, cervix uteri cancer accounted for about half of the infection-related burden of cancer; in men, liver and gastric cancers accounted for more than 80%. Around 30% of infection-attributable cases occur in people younger than 50 years.
The Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine tells us that, “Tumor promotion and progression are dependent on ancillary processes provided by cells of the tumor environment but that are not necessarily cancerous themselves. Inflammation has long been associated with the development of cancer. This review will discuss the reflexive relationship between cancer and inflammation with particular focus on how considering the role of inflammation in physiologic processes such as the maintenance of tissue homeostasis and repair may provide a logical framework for understanding the connection between the inflammatory response and cancer.[4]
“It is believed that cancer is caused by an accumulation of mutations in cells of the body,” says Dr. Carlo M. Croce, professor and chair of molecular virology, immunology and medical genetics.
“Our study[5] suggests that miR-155, which is associated with inflammation, increases the mutation rate and might be a key player in inflammation-induced cancers generally.”
This and many other studies show how inflammation can help cause cancer. Chronic inflammation due to infection or to conditions such as chronic inflammatory bowel disease is associated with up to 25% of all cancers.
Chemotherapy and radiation only make inflammation worse! These are not instruments of cancer treatment and everyone knows that they have nothing to do with cancer cures, which are illegal anyway. The best they can say is that these treatments can extend your life beyond their predictions of what would happen to you if you did not treat it in any coherent way.
“Pre-malignant tumors are ‘wound-like’. Such tumors are similar to healing or desmoplastic tissue in many ways, such as the presence of activated platelets. As described by Coussens and Hanahan, tumor growth may be ‘biphasic’. In the first phase, the body treats early tumors as wounds. This phase is characterized by tumor growth mediated by the actions of the stroma ‘indirect control’ as occurs in physiologic tissue repair.”[6]
Are chemotherapy and radiation appropriate treatments for wounds? The most amazing thing about these treatments is that many do survive these treatments, showing us how resilient the human body really is.

Cancer Cures vs. Cancer Death

Doctors rarely talk about “curing” cancer. Instead, the success of treatment is judged on whether a patient is alive five, 10 and 15 years after diagnosis. It is amazing that, after all the slashing, burning and poisoning that oncologists do, survival rates are actually up a little. For instance at the turn of the decade the statistics for England and Wales show that the five-year survival rate for all cancers in men is 31%, while for women the survival rate is 43%. The figures are similar for Scotland. Today though still dismal, they are somewhat better.
But are they really better? Certainly they would like us to think so but one of the reasons for this is statistics. As Mark Twain said: “There lies, damned lies and statistics.”

The statistics look better because they don’t put down that the person has died of cancer when they have died of the side effects of radiation and chemotherapy.

“Recently a friend of mine died from rectal cancer and his wife was stunned to see that the cancer was the third cause of death on the death certificate after the infection and other problems caused by the treatment,” wrote one of my readers.
This would not have been counted as a cancer death. Also when a person is treated for breast cancer and it moves from the breast to another area, but they live five years after the breast cancer has been diagnosed, it is recorded as a survival from breast cancer.
_
http://drsircus.com/medicine/cancer/orthodox-cancer-treatments-dont-treat-cancer
[1] The Neoplastic Transformation Potential of Mammography X Rays and Atomic Bomb Spectrum Radiation; G. J. Heyes1 and A. J. Mill; RADIATION RESEARCH 162, 120–127 (2004)
http://iamtonline.org/pdfs/neoplastic.pdf
[2] One percent of American women carry a hard-to-detect oncogene, which is triggered by radiation; a single mammogram increases their risk of breast cancer by a factor of 4-6 times. “The usual dose of radiation during a mammographic x-ray is from 0.25 to1 rad with the very best equipment; that’s 1-4 rads per screening mammogram (two views each of two breasts). And, according to Samuel Epstein, M.D., of the University of Chicago’s School of Public Health, the dose can be ten times more than that. Sister Rosalie Bertell-one of the world’s most respected authorities on the dangers of radiation-says one rad increases breast cancer risk one percent and is the equivalent of one year’s natural aging. “If a woman has yearly mammograms from age 55 to age 75, she will receive a minimum of 20 rads of radiation. For comparison, women who survived the atomic bomb blasts in Hiroshima or Nagasaki absorbed 35 rads. Though one large dose of radiation can be more harmful than many small doses, it is important to remember that damage from radiation is cumulative.”
http://rense.com/general48/mam.htm
[3] Global burden of cancers attributable to infections in 2008: a review and synthetic analysis. Catherine de Martel MD,Jacques Ferlay ME,Silvia Franceschi MD,Jérôme Vignat MSc,Freddie Bray PhD,David Forman PhD,Dr Martyn Plummer PhD The Lancet Oncology – 1 June 2012 ( Vol. 13, Issue 6, Pages 607-615 )
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1994795/
[4] Why Cancer and Inflammation?
Seth Rakoff-Nahoum
Yale J Biol Med. 2006 December; 79(3-4): 123–130.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1994795/
[5] E. Tili, J.-J. Michaille, D. Wernicke, H. Alder, S. Costinean, S. Volinia, C. M. Croce. Mutator activity induced by microRNA-155 (miR-155) links inflammation and cancerProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011; 108 (12): 4908 DOI:10.1073/pnas.1101795108
[6] Yale J Biol Med. 2006 December; 79(3-4): 123–130;
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1994795/




tiistai 12. huhtikuuta 2016

Terveydenhuollon ja lääkekartellien yhteinen historia

torstai 12. marraskuuta 2015



Tämä artikkeli antaa vastauksia mm. kysymyksiin:
Miksi syöpää saa hoitaa vain kolmella tavalla;
1) kemoterapialla,
2) sädehoidolla ja
3) leikkauksella?

Milloin parantamisesta tulee rikos?
Miksi lääkäri ei ole motivoitunut perehtymään hoitomahdollisuuksiin ravinnolla ja ravintolisillä?


Artikkeli panee myös epäilemään lääketeollisuuden todellisia motiiveja tutkimuksessa, johon vapaaehtoisia helsinkiläisiä värvätään koekaniineiksi.  

On selvää, että lääketiede ja lääkkeet ovat tarpeellisia, mutta niiden tuottamisesta ei saa syntyä monopoleja, joiden tavoitteena on luontaishoitojen ja ravintolisien eliminoiminen.
Suomentaja

Aiheeseen liittyvä artikkeli Lopun alku lääketieteessä luettavissa tässä 


Nykyinen terveydenhuoltojärjestelmä sai muotonsa 1900-luvun alussa, kun AMA (American Medical Association - Amerikan lääkäriyhdistys), Rockefeller-säätiö ja Carnegie-säätiö liittyivät yhteen. He sijoittivat rahansa lääkeperustaiseen tutkimukseen, johon “terveydenhuolto” pääasiassa keskittyi.
Tämän jälkeen Rockefellerit ja muu huomattava pankkieliitti ovat kyenneet hallitsemaan ja hyötymään suunnattomasti lääketeollisuudesta. AMA, joka on suurin lääkärien liittouma Yhdysvalloissa, ajaa lääkehoidon paradigmaa lobbaamalla vahvasti kongressissa.

Sen julkaisu JAMA (the Journal of American Medical Association) on yksi vaikutusvaltaisimmista lehdistä, jota lääketeollisuuden mainostajat rahoittavat. Sen tehtävänä on myös tukahduttaa vaihtoehtoiset hoitomuodot, esimerkkinä Royal Rifen syöpähoito.




Tässä esitetään aikajärjestyksessä Rockefeller-säätiön rooli terveydenhuoltoteollisuuden kehityksessä.

1901 Rockefellerin lääketieteellinen tutkimuslaitos avataan.
Vuoteen 1928 mennessä John D. Rockefeller oli lahjoittanut tutkimuslaitokselle 64 miljoonaa dollaria. Tutkimuslaitoksesta tuli myöhemmin Rockefeller University.

1910 julkaistaan Flexnerin raportti, jossa määritellään lääketieteellisen koulutuksen uudet standardit.
Tässä Rockefeller- ja Carnegie-säätiön erittäin vaikutusvaltaisessa raportissa arvioitiin lääketieteen oppilaitokset ja luotiin uusi lääkärikoulutus. Siinä asetettiin uusi standardi siten, että koulut hyväksyttäisiin vain, jos niissä korostettiin lääkeperustaista tutkimusta ja hoitoa. Homeopatiaa ja muita vaihtoehtoisia menetelmiä ei enää tunnustettu. Raportin kirjoittaja Abraham Flexner osallistui Carnegie-säätiön opetuksen edistämiseen. Vuonna 1910 lääketieteellisiä oppilaitoksia

oli 161. Vuoteen 1919 mennessä jäljellä oli vain 81.

1913 Rockefeller-säätiö perustaa Kansainvälisen terveyskomission.
Siinä luotiin perusta sille, kuinka terveys- ja tiedetutkimus sekä kehitystyö oli suoritettava. Monet nykyajan terveyslaitokset muodostettiin tämän komission käytäntöjen ja tutkimustapojen mukaan, kuten YK:n Maailman terveysjärjestö, Yhdysvaltain hallituksen kansallinen tiedesäätiö ja Kansallinen terveysinstituutti.
Jo olemassa olonsa ensimmäisenä vuonna lääketeollisuuden investointibusiness kohtasi suuren uhan: vitamiineja ja muita mikroravinteita mainostettiin yleisölle terveysohjelmina. Nämä estäisivät patentoituihin lääkkeisiin perustuvan laajan liiketoiminnan. Sen tähden tämän epätoivotun kilpailun eliminoimisesta tuli kuoleman vakava ongelma lääketeollisuudelle.

1918 Julkisesta terveydestä tulee Rockefeller-säätiön toiminnan painopiste.
“Säätiö pitää julkista terveyskasvatusta yhtenä sen pääasiallisista tehtävistään ja rakentaa ja rahoittaa ensimmäisen julkisen terveyden koulun Johns Hopkinsin yliopistoon.”
Rockefeller-säätiö käyttää Espanjan flunssaepidemiaa ja mediaa (jota se jo tuolloin hallitsi) aloittamaan noitavainon kaikkia lääketieteen muotoja vastaan, jotka eivät kuuluneet sen patenttien piiriin.
Seuraavien 15 vuoden aikana kaikista lääketieteen oppilaitoksista, useimmista sairaaloista ja Amerikan lääkäriliitosta tuli varsinaisesti Rockefellerin strategian pelinappuloita. Tämän strategian tavoitteena oli alistaa koko terveydenhuollon sektori lääketeollisuuden liiketoimintamonopolin alaiseksi.
“Äiti Teresaksi” naamioituneena Rockefeller-säätiötä käytettiin myös ulkomaiden ja kokonaisten maanosien valloittamiseen lääketeollisuuden investointitoiminnalle, aivan kuten Rockefeller itse oli tehnyt muutamia vuosikymmeniä aiemmin öljyteollisuudellaan.

1921 Rockefeller-säätiö avustaa lääketieteen oppilaitoksia 357 miljoonalla dollarilla ympäri maailman.
Näin lääkkeisiin perustuva lähestymistapa leviää merkittävimpiin oppilaitoksiin kaikkialla maailmassa.

1922 tohtori Royal Raymond Rife aloittaa syöpätutkimukset.
1920-luvulla tohtori Rife, etevä bakteriologi ja Johns Hopkinsin ylipiston entinen oppilas, ryhtyy tutkimaan ja kehittämään vaihtoehtoista syöpätutkimusta.

1924 Morris Fishbeinista tulee JAMA:n päätoimittaja.
JAMA on yksi maailman vaikutusvaltaisimmista lääketieteellisistä julkaisuista. JAMA:n johtajana Morris Fishbein kuului tuohon aikaan vaikutusvaltaisimpiin miehiin lääketieteessä. Hän muutti yrityksen rahaa tuottavaksi koneeksi ja käytti kielteisiä kampanjoja murskatakseen kilpailijansa. Hänen panoksensa oli ratkaiseva Rifen syöpähoidon tukahduttamisessa.

1924 Harry Hoxsey perustaa ensimmäisen syöpäklinikan Illinoisin Taylorvilleen.
Harry Hoxsey tarjoaa syöpähoitoon luonnollisen yrttiyhdistelmän, jonka tuhannet väittävät toimineen. Tämä on ensimmäinen hänen 17 klinikastaan.

1925 Atlantin toisella puolella Saksassa perustetaan ensimmäinen kemian- ja lääketeollisuuden kartelli kilpailijaksi Rockefellerin pyrkimykselle hallita globaaleja lääkemarkkinoita. Perustettiin I.G. Farben -kartelli, jonka johdossa olivat Bayer, BASF ja Hoechst, työntekijöitä yhteensä yli 80 000. Kilpailu globaalista hallinnasta oli alkanut.

1926 JAMA julkaisee ensimmäisen hyökkäyksen Hoxleya vastaan. Hän pelottelee lääkäreitä ja tutkijoita pidättäytymään yhteydenotoista Hoxseyn kanssa.

1927 John D. Rockefeller Jr antoi ensimmäisen vuotuisen 60 000 dollarin lahjoituksen Memorial Sloan-Ketteringin syöpäinstituutille.

1929    Rockefeller-kartelli (USA) ja I.G. Farben-kartelli (Saksa) päättävät jakaa koko maapallon etupiireihin, mikä oli aivan sama rikos, josta Rockefeller oli aiemmin saanut 18 vuoden tuomion, kun hänen trustinsa oli jakanut Yhdysvallat “etupiirivyöhykkeisiin”.
Kyltymätön I.G. Farben ei halua enää olla vuoden 1929 rajoitusten sitoma. He tukevat nousevaa saksalaista poliitikkoa, joka lupaa I.G. Farbenille valloittavansa maailman sotilaallisesti. Miljoonien dollareiden vaalikampanja-avustuksin tämä poliitikko anasti vallan Saksassa, muutti Saksan demokratian diktatuuriksi ja piti lupauksensa aloittaa sotilaalliset valloituksensa, jotka pian tulivat tunnetuksi toisen maailmansodan nimellä.
Kaikissa maissa, joihin Hitlerin joukot hyökkäsivät, ensimmäinen tehtävä oli anastaa öljy- ja lääke- ja kemianteollisuus ja antaa ne I.G. Farben-imperiumille korvauksetta.

1932 tohtori Rife kehittää syöpähoidon.
Tohtori Rife kehitti laitteen, jolla voitiin taajuuksia käyttämällä neutraloida tautia-aiheuttavat mikro-organismit syöpäsolut mukaan lukien.

1932 Rockefeller-instituutin johtaja tohtori Thomas Rivers kiistää Rifen syöpähoidon.

1932 Northwestern Universityn lääketieteellinen tutkimusjohtaja tohtori Arthur Kendall puhui amerikkalaisille lääkäreille Johns Hopkinsin yliopistossa Rifen syöpähoitojen alustavista onnistumisista. Rockefeller-instituutin (pääasiallinen lääketieteellisen tutkimuksen rahoittaja) virologi ja bakteriologi tohtori Thomas Rivers ja tohtori Hans Zinsser nimittivät Kendallia valehtelijaksi vasten kasvoja kokouksen edessä.

1934 16 terminaalisyöpäpotilasta paranee Rifen hoidolla.
 Vuonna 1934 Scripps-instituutissa La Jollassa etelä-Kaliforniassa Rife suoritti kliinisiä kokeita 16 terminaalista syöpää sairastavalla potilaalla ja onnistui parantamaan kaikki. Ryhmä lääketieteen erikoistuntijoita vahvisti tulokset. Ryhmään kuuluivat tohtori Milbank Johnson (Chairman of the Special Medical Research Committee of USC),  George Fischer New Yorkin lastensairaalasta ja tohtori Wayland Morrison.

1938  Amerikan lääkäriliitto asettaa Rifen syytteeseen harhaanjohtavista lääkärinhoidoista.

1939  Philip Hoyland haastaa Royal Rifen yhtiön Beam Ray Corporationin oikeuteen.
Philip Hoyland myönsi saaneensa 10 000 dollarin lahjuksen Hahn Realty Groupilta (AMA:n agentti) Beam Ray Corporationin haastamiseksi oikeuteen.

1939 uusi Memorial Sloan-Ketteringin syöpäkeskus avataan. John D. Rockefeller  lahjoitti tontin ja 3 miljoonaa dollaria.

1940-luvulla Rifen työ tuhotaan ja tukahduttaminen jatkui.

1942-45 Sinetöidäkseen globaalin patentoitujen lääkkeiden hallintansa I.G. Farben-kartelli testaa patentoituja lääkeaineitaan keskitysleirien vangeilla Auschwitzissa, Dachaussa ja monissa muissa kohteissa. Maksut näiden epäinhimillisten tutkimusten suorittamisesta siirrettiin suoraan Bayerin, Hoechstin and BASF:n pankkitileiltä SS:n tileille, jotka ylläpitivät keskitysleirejä.

Yllättävästi todelliset syylliset 60 miljoonan ihmisen kuolemaan toisessa maailmansodassa, I.G. Farbenin johtohenkilöt. saivat lievimmät tuomiot. Nekin johtohenkilöt, jotka olivat suoraan vastuussa rikoksista Auschwitzissa, saivat enintään 12 vuotta vankeutta. Heitä tarvittiin.
Vain muutaman vuoden kuluttua Nürembergissä tuomitut I.G. Farbenin johtajat vapautuivat vankilasta ja heidät sijoitettiin aikaisempiin asemiinsa  Rockefellerin etujen sidosryminä. Esimerkiksi Fritz Ter Meer, joka tuomittiin 12 vuoden vankeuteen rikoksistaan Auschwitzissa, palasi Saksan suurimman monikansallisen lääkeyhtiön Bayerin johtajaksi vuonna 1963!

1949 Hoxsey haastaa JAMA:n ja päätoimittajat kunnianloukkauksesta ja panettelusta. Hoxsey voittaa.

1949 Morris Fishbein syrjäytetään AMA:sta.

1956 FDA julkaisee julkisen varoituksen Hoxseyn syöpähoidosta.

1960 Hoxseyn menetelmä kielletään Yhdysvalloissa FDA:n toimesta.

1960 Laurance Rockefeller toimii New Yorkin Memorial Sloan-Ketteringin syöpäkeskuksen johtajana 1960-1982.
 Tämä keskus on maailman vaikutusvaltaisimpia syöpäkeskuksia. Toisen maailmansodan aikana siellä suoritettiin ensimmäisiä kokeita, joissa sovellettiin kemiallisen sodankäynnin aseita “syöpähoidossa”. Tästä kehittyi kemoterapia.

1963 Bio-Medical keskus (Hoxsey) avataan Tijuanassa, Meksikossa.
Sen toiminta jatkuu ja sen onnistumisprosentin väitetään olevan 80.
Rockefellerin etujen valvojana lääketeollisuuden banaanivaltio Saksa johti yhtä häpeällisintä pyrkimystä, joka on koskaan toteutettu YK:ssa. Kuluttajansuojan nimissä se käynnisti neljä vuosikymmentä kestävän ristiretken tehdäkseen vitamiinihoidot ja muut luonnolliset ei-patentoidut terveyttä edistävät menetelmät laittomiksi kaikissa YK:n jäsenvaltioissa. Tavoitteena oli yksinkertaisesti vain kieltää kaikki kilpailu, joka kohdistui patentoituja lääkkeitä valmistaviin yrityksiin. Suunnitelma oli yksinkertainen: kopioida koko maailmaa varten se, mikä oli jo tehty Amerikassa 1920-luvulla eli monopolisoida terveydenhuolto patentoiduilla lääkkeillä.
Koska lääketeollisuuden kaupankaupankäynti lääkkeillä riippuu siitä, että sairaudet jatkuvat, sen kehittämien lääkkeiden ei ole tarkoitus ehkäistä, parantaa tai kitkeä pois sairauksia. Näin ollen globaalin strategian tavoitteena oli monopolisoida miljardien ihmisten terveys pillereillä, jotka likimain peittävät oireet mutta tuskin koskaan vaikuttavat sairauden perussyyhyn. Patentoitujen lääkkeiden monopolista on aiheutunut mittaamaton määrä sairautta jopa kuolemaa, kun luontaislääkinnästä ja hoidoista on vaiettu.
Lääketeollisuuden harjoittama kaupankäynti sairauksilla on tuottanut vammaisuutta ja kuolemaa niin suuressa määrin, että se hakee vertaistaan historiassa.

1971 Presidentti Nixon julistaa “sodan syöpää vastaan” ja allekirjoittaa 1,6 miljardin lain.

1977 Sloan-Kettering hylkää Laetrilen (aprikoosinsiemenuute) syöpähoitona huolimatta Sloan-Ketteringin oman kuuluisan tutkijan Kanematsu Suguiran saamista positiivisista tuloksista. Marraskuussa 1977 Sloan-Kettering julkisten asioiden apulaisjohtaja tohtori Ralph Moss piti lehdistötilaisuuden laetrilen menestyksestä ja mahdollisuuksista välittämättä keskuksen salailusta. Ralph Moss sai potkut seuraavana päivänä, koska “oli epäonnistunut perustehtävänsä suorittamisessa”. (Seikkaperäisempi esitys laetrile-hoidon vaiheista sivulla
http://terveystuuletusta.blogspot.fi/2015/10/luonnon-salainen-vitamiini-syopaan.html)
1991 Rockefeller-säätiö auttaa lasten rokotusaloitteen käynnistämisessä.
Säätiö liittyy Yhdistyneiden kansakuntien kehitysohjelmaan, UNICEF:iin, WHO:hon ja maailman pankkiin lasten rokotusaloitteen muodostamiseksi.

2010 yli puolimiljoonaa amerikkalaista kuolee syöpään.


Lopun alku kiistassa lääketieteestä tässä
Lue myös tohtori Antti Heikkilän kirjoitus tästä

Suomennos Jussi Yli-Panula
Lähde www.thrive movement.com, Dr Rath Health Foundation