The Man Who Questions Chemotherapy
Dr. Moss' work documents the
ineffectiveness of chemotherapy on most forms of cancer. However, he is fair in pointing
out that there are the following exceptions: Acute Iymphocytic leukemia, Hodgkin's
disease, and non- seminomatous testicular cancer. Also, a few very rare forms of cancer,
including choriocarcinoma, Wilm's tumor, and retinoblastoma. But all of these account for
only 2% to 4% of all cancers occurring in the United States. This leaves some 96% to 98%
of other cancers, in which chemotherapy doesn't eliminate the disease. The vast majority
of cancers, such as breast, colon, and lung cancer are barely touched by chemotherapy.
However, there is another category where chemotherapy has a
relatively minor effect--The most "successful" of these is in Stage 3 ovarian
cancer, where chemo- therapy appears to extend life by perhaps eighteen months, and
small-cell lung cancer in which chemotherapy might offer six more months.
Effective cancer treatment is a matter of definition. The FDA
defines an "effective" drug as one which achieves a 50% or more reduction in
tumor size for 28 days. In the vast majority of cases there is absolutely no correlation
between shrinking tumors for 28 days and the cure of the cancer or extension of life.
When the cancer patient hears the doctor say
"effective," he or she thinks, and logically so, that "effective"
means it cures cancer. But all it means is temporary tumor shrinkage.
Chemotherapy usually doesn't cure cancer or extend life, and it
really does not improve the quality of the life either. Doctors frequently make this claim
though. There are thousands of studies that were reviewed by Dr. Moss as part of the
research for his book--and there is not one single good study documenting this claim.
What patients consider "good quality of life" seems to
differ from what the doctors consider. To most it is just common sense that a drug that
makes you throw up, and lose your hair, and wrecks your immune system is not im- proving
your quality of life. Chemo- therapy can give you life-threatening mouth sores. People can
slough the entire lining of the intestines! One longer-term effect is particularly tragic:
people who've had chemotherapy no longer respond to nutritional or immunologically-based
approaches to their cancers. And since chemotherapy doesn't cure 96% to 98% of all cancers
anyway...People who take chemotherapy have sadly lost their chance of finding another sort
of cure.
It's especially telling that in a number of surveys most
chemotherapists have said they would not take chemotherapy themselves or recommend it for
their families. Chemotherapy drugs are the most toxic substances ever put deliberately
into the human body. They are known poisons, they are designed poisons.
Extract from The Man Who Questions Chemotherapy:
Dr Ralph Moss. Full text available at www.mercola.com/newpage73.htm |
If you have access
to a computer and the WWW then you have the ability to find a seemingly endless number of
web sites that offer advice and information about all forms of cancer. For old hands on
the web this article is probably redundant although there are always new places to seek
out which you may have missed.
With the introduction of digital television this autumn (!) we
are told that the internet will explode in the number of users, even though its
growing at a phenomenal rate without digital TV.
The trick is to sort out the dross, the advertorial and the vast
number of sites that offer very little in information but consume a lot of your time.
Its also worth deciding the route that you want to follow:
whether you want pure medical information or whether you want to find complementary
routes. The medical route is quite easy; just go to one or two of the large medical sites
and youll find all the medical information you could possible want.
Alternative or Complementary sites are different and really good
information will take more effort to find.
If you dont already have a selection of
sites to search, the obvious place to start would be with the main search
engines: Yahoo!, AltaVista, Infoseek, HotBot, Lycos, WebCrawler. Or go
to a meta searcher like Debriefing www.debriefing.com and it will search
the other search engines for you. A very interesting search engine is
Humansearch http://humansearch.com or Ask Jeeves at
www.askjeeves.com where you type in a
question in real English and they will send you a list of web sites that
could be appropriate for your question. It may take up to 24 hours before
they reply but they do come up with some places you might not have found
yourself.
For pure medical information you need to look at the large web
sites. Some of these sites do have complementary health information although you may not
find it all that useful. The web site from Richard & Hinda Rosenthal Centre for
Complementary and Alternative medicine at Columbia Universitys CPMCNet http://cpmcnet.columbia.edu/dept/rosenthal/
has many on-line databases plus links, articles and much more.
The US National
Cancer Institute is a useful resourse for all kinds of information,
including everyting from types of cancers, treatments and clinical trials,
to information on how to obtain research grants! Their cancer
information service is also an excellent resource, and well worth
a visit..
CancerBACUP www.cancerbacup.org.uk/
offers a free search to Medline, Drug information searches, Cancer Literature searches,
Cancer organisation database, website links, on-line journals and other information.
If I wanted to search the web and learn about cancer, my starting
point would be Jonathan Chamberlains site located at www.fightingcancer.com. Jonathans wife was
diagnosed with cancer and he determined to find out all that he could about this disease.
After her death he wrote a book called Fighting Cancer: a survival guide; we extracted a
few paragraphs in issue 28. His book is now available from Positive Health (see page 56).
In a letter to me, Jonathan wrote, Many people, of course,
dont wish to think about cancer, and just want their doctors to deal with it. For
them the BACUP website is more than adequate. But for those who wish to have a better
understanding of cancer and how to approach it, something more is needed. That is why I
have set up a website providing an alternative orientation to cancer. Come and visit my
site. Here you can read extracts from a number of books written for cancer patients,
review books you may wish to read, find links to information on both orthodox and
complementary, read advice and share experiences.
And if they have something to say to cancer patients: a
book to recommend, a reading that has affected you, an experience that might help another
then I invite you to use the site to reach out to others who might benefit. Cancer
is a wake up call not a shout to get in line. And for those who wake up it is an
adventure.
Dr Ralph Moss (see sidebar The Man Who Questions
Chemotherapy), considered by some to be the most knowledgeable writer in the
world on alternative therapies for cancer, writes the Cancer Chronicles, a newsletter
reporting on new cancer treatments and therapies. This is available at no charge at
www.ralphmoss.com. Dr Moss has written several books, among them The Cancer Industry that
detailed the financial and political corruption within the cancer establishment. Another
book (1992) is called Cancer Therapy: The Independent Consumers Guide to
Non-Toxic Treatment (Equinox Press, New York 1992 ISBN 1-881025-06-3).
We published a review of Larry Clapps book Prostate Health
in 90 Days in issue 30 and failed to mention his web site at www.prostate90.com. Larry cured himself of prostate
cancer and his site is a good source of information with links to other sites etc.
Also on the prostate trail you could go to www.capcure.org. This is the site of CaP CURE set up by
Michael Milken (of junk bond fame, himself diagnosed with prostate cancer) and claiming to
be the largest funder of prostate cancer in the world. You can check out the latest
research, read articles on prostate cancer, diet etc and follow links to other prostate
cancer sites.
Talking of links, if you do find a site that talks the kind of
language you want to hear, the chances are they will have valuable links to other sites
that are worth following. Links are the key to finding your way around the web.
Another fascinating place to visit is Deja News at www.dejanews.com. Type in cancer and it
comes up with 28,071 items to view. Type in breast cancer and it gives you
2,285 items.
If you are not familiar with news groups then youre in for
a treat. If someone asks a question they may or may not receive an answer, but assuming
they do you can follow these question and answers through a thread. You can
also join in this on-line discussion or you can join a newsgroup devoted to a particular
subject.
The World Wide Web may not give you the answers to your questions
about cancer but you can reach an overload of useful and useless information very quickly
and easily. This article is merely a starting point and has barely touched the surface of
what is available.
If you know of really worthwhile sites to visit (not those
commercially set up to sell a product, please) then Id be happy if you let me know
their url. Send it to mike@positivehealth.com.
|