Guest guest Posted January 16, 2002 Report Share Posted January 16, 2002 Hi Group! I'm new here and looking for information on alternative treatments for lung cancer. If anyone has ANYTHING, please e-mail me. My Mother was diagnosed with (non-small or large cell) squamous cell carcinoma on Christmas Day of this year. Just so you know what I am currently doing: I currently have her using flax oil and cottage cheese, Essiac tea, co-q-10, vitamin C and E, a multiple vitamin, Beta Carotene and juicing fresh veggies. I've completely changed her diet. No red meat, no refined sugar only honey or maple syrup, only filtered water, mostly fish, some chicken and turkey, all organic produce, no hydrogenated oils, veggies are eaten fresh or lightly steamed. I'm trying to research all alternatives. She will be seeing an oncologist soon and I fear that traditional medicine will go to chemo or radioation. Personally, I do not want this. Surgery may not be an option as she has a " node " on each lung (only one lung has been byopsied). She is 71 and they feel the surgery would be far too much for her to endure. We know alternative medicine works. My uncle was diagnosed with terminal pancreatic cancer almost 8 years ago. He was sent home to die - given 3 to 6 months to live. They researched like crazy and turned to alternative medicine. He is alive and well and cancer free as we speak. Any and all help is much appreciated. Thank you for taking the time to read all of this. Amy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 17, 2002 Report Share Posted January 17, 2002 - " amy48864 " <amy48864 Wednesday, January 16, 2002 3:53 PM Lung Cancer > Hi Group! > > I'm new here and looking for information on alternative treatments > for lung cancer. If anyone has ANYTHING, please e-mail me. My Mother > was diagnosed with (non-small or large cell) squamous cell carcinoma > on Christmas Day of this year. > Below is a snippet plus URL from something on Dr.Jon's website. It seems to me to be worth reading while you decide what to do. Alobar > Because cancer treatment is such a sensitive issue, I need to set > some ground rules before I tell you what I would do if I had cancer. > What follows is what I personally would do. It is not a > recommendation for you, and should not be considered as such. It is > not even what my wife would do(that would be her decision), nor is it > what my young son would do (that would be the joint decision of my > wife and myself). The choices to be made in treating cancer are not > easy ones, because there is so little certainty of cure in any of > them. The course that someone chooses to take is very personal, and > reflects not only that person's knowledge of the options, but also > his/her beliefs. Yet, because we are strongly influenced by our > natural fear of death, we lineup for conventional cancer therapy, not > so much believing that it will work, but hoping that it will not fail. > If expensive, debilitating procedures to eliminate acne scars had the > same failure rate as cancer treatment, they would be abandoned. It > is only because cancer is so often fatal that conventional approaches > were not abandoned long ago. We continue to use them not because > they work, but because those who perform them have so vigorously > eliminated any other choice. > My Imaginary Cancer Scenario > (by Dr. Julian Whitaker) > http://cat007.com/ifihadcancer.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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