by Dr. Vernon Coleman
August 20,
2023
from
VernonColeman Website
recovered through
WayBackmachine Website
Over the years I have repeatedly found that all medical
recommendations are best treated with a large dose of skepticism.
Nowhere is this more true than in the treatment
of cancer.
Patients who are diagnosed with cancer find themselves in a state of
shock. And yet, while in a state of shock, they find themselves
needing to make a number of vital decisions very quickly.
One of the big questions is often this one:
'Should I have
chemotherapy?'
Chemotherapy might
improve a patient's chances of survival by three to five per cent
though that modest figure is usually over generous. For example, the
evidence suggests that chemotherapy offers breast cancer patients an
uplift in survival of little more than 2.5%.
When you consider that chemotherapy can kill and does terrible
damage to healthy cells, and to the immune system, it is difficult
to see the value of taking chemotherapy.
I don't think it is any exaggeration to suggest that much of the
hype around chemotherapy has taken the treatment into the area of
fraud:
far more fraudulent indeed than treatments which are
dismissed as irrelevant or harmful by the establishment...
Chemotherapy is a cull, designed by
the conspirators and the medical
establishment to cut the cost of caring for cancer patients.
The chances are that the doctors looking after you - especially the
'specialist' oncologists in hospital - will recommend chemotherapy.
They may push hard to
accept their recommendation.
They may even be
cross or dismissive or assume you are ignorant or afraid if you
decide you don't want it.
Cancer charities often
shout excitedly about chemotherapy.
But they are also often
closely linked to
the drug companies which make money out of
chemotherapy - which in my view makes them part of the large and
thriving 'cancer industry'.
It is important to
remember that,
drug companies exist to make money and they will do
whatever is necessary to further this aim...
They lie and they cheat
with scary regularity and they have no interest in helping patients
or saving lives.
Remember that:
the sole purpose of
drug companies is to make money, whatever the human cost might.
They will happily
suppress potentially life-saving information if doing so increases
their profits.
It is my belief that by allying themselves with drug
companies, cancer charities have become corrupt.
Little or no advice is given to patients about how they themselves
might reduce the risk of their cancer returning. The implication is
that its chemotherapy or nothing.
So, for example, doctors
are unlikely to tell breast cancer patients that they should avoid
dairy foods, though the evidence that they should is very strong.
The one certainty is that it is extremely unlikely that anyone you
see will tell you all the truths about chemotherapy.
The sad truth is that the
statistics about chemotherapy are, of course, fiddled to boost the
drug company sales and, therefore, drug company profits.
And the deaths caused
by chemotherapy are often misreported or under-estimated.
So, for example,
if a patient who has
been taking chemotherapy dies of a sudden heart attack their
death will probably be put down as a heart attack - rather than
as a result of the cancer or the chemotherapy.
There may be some mealy
mouthed suggestion that the death was treatment related but the drug
will probably not be named and shamed.
Neither the chemotherapy
nor the cancer will be deemed responsible.
What this means in
practice is that,
the survival statistics for chemotherapy are
considerably worse than the figures which are made available -
considerably worse, indeed, than whatever positive effect might be
provided by a harmless placebo.
Here's another thing:
patients who have chemotherapy and
survive
five years are counted as having been cured by chemotherapy.
And patients who have
chemotherapy and then die five and a bit years after their
diagnosis don't count as cancer related deaths.
And they certainly
don't count as chemotherapy deaths...
A 2016 academic study
looked at five year survival rates and concluded that in 90% of
patients (including the commonest breast cancer tumors)
chemotherapy increased five year survival by less than 2.5%...
Only a very small number
of cancers (such as testicular cancer and Hodgkin's disease) were
treated effectively by chemotherapy.
On top of this dismal
success rate it must be remembered that,
-
chemotherapy
cripples the immune system (now, at long last, recognized as
important in the fight against cancer)
-
damages all
living cells
-
damages the
intestines
-
can cause nausea
and tinnitus
-
can damage nerves
-
can and does
damage the bone marrow with the result that leukemia
develops (staggeringly, iatrogenic myeloid leukemia, usually
known as 'therapy related' in an attempt to distance the
disease from doctors, is, in ten per cent of cases, a result
of chemotherapy)
-
damages the heart
and the hearing,
...and will, in a
significant number of patients, result in death...
It is true that chemotherapy may reduce the size of a tumor but,
in stage 4, cancer
chemotherapy seems to encourage a cancer to return
more quickly and more aggressively.
The cancer stem cells
seem to be untouched by the chemotherapy drugs.
Despite all this, the
protocol in the treatment of cancer is to turn to chemotherapy and
doctors are always reluctant to try anything else.
The Academy of Royal Medical Colleges, which represents 24 Royal
Colleges, and a number of other important health bodies, has
reported that,
chemotherapy
can do more harm than good when prescribed
as palliatives for terminally ill cancer patients.
The colleges criticize
chemotherapy advocates for 'raising false hopes' and doing 'more
harm than good'.
They concluded that
chemotherapy drugs are unlikely to work...
On the other hand, I
wasn't surprised to see a big cancer charity disagreeing with the 24
medical colleges and claiming that thousands of patients do benefit.
My view, which I
recognize is probably not shared by the majority of family doctors
or oncologists, is that many cancer charities around the world are
the unacceptable face of cancer care.
It seems to me to be more
concerned with making money and keeping the drug companies rich than
in caring for patients.
Another report has concluded that chemotherapy can, in some
circumstances, actually promote the spread of cancer cells.
It was reported in 2017,
for example, that when breast cancer patients have chemotherapy
before surgery the drug can make the malignant cells spread to
distant sites - resulting in metastatic cancer and sending the
patient straight from Stage 1 to Stage 4.
Scientists analyzed tissue from 20 breast cancer patients who had 16
weeks of chemotherapy and the tissues around the tumor was more
conducive to spread in most of the patients. In five of the patients
there was a five times greater risk of spread.
In none of the patients
was the tissue around the tumor less friendly to cancer cells and to
metastasis.
The problem, it seems, is
that cancer cells have a great ability to transform themselves and
the chemotherapy, designed to kill cancer cells, may encourage the
development of cells which are resistant to drugs, which survive the
treatment and which form a new cancer.
The one side effect associated with chemotherapy that is widely
known is the loss of hair. But that is, to be honest, the least of
the problems.
Chemotherapy kills
healthy cells as well as cancer cells and the
severity of the side effects depends on the age and health of the
patient as well as on the type of drug used and the dosage in which
it is prescribed.
And whereas some side
effects do disappear after treatment (as the good cells recover)
there are some side effects which may never go away.
I mentioned the serious side effects a little earlier but here, as a
reminder, is a list of just some of the problems that can be caused
by chemotherapy drugs:
The cells in the bone
marrow can be damaged, producing a shortage of red blood cells
and possibly leukaemia.
The central nervous system can be damaged with a result that the
memory may be affected and the patient's ability to concentrate
or think clearly changed. There may be changes to balance and
coordination.
These effects can
last for years. Apart from affecting the brain, chemotherapy can
also cause pain and tingling in the hands and feet, numbness,
weakness and pain. Not surprisingly, depression is not uncommon.
The digestive system is commonly affected with sores forming in
the mouth and throat. These may produce infection and may make
food taste unpleasant.
Nausea and vomiting
may also occur. The weight loss associated with chemotherapy may
be a result of a loss of appetite.
In addition to hair loss (which can affect hair all over the
body) the skin may be irritated and nails may change color and
appearance.
The kidneys and bladder may be irritated and damaged.
The result
may be swollen ankles, feet and hands. Osteoporosis is a fairly
common problem and increases the risk of bone fractures and
breaks.
Women who have breast
cancer and who are having treatment to reduce their estrogen
levels are particularly at risk.
Chemotherapy can produce
hormone changes with a wide variety of symptoms.
-
The heart may be
damaged and patients who already have weak hearts may be
made worse by chemotherapy.
-
And the other
problem with chemotherapy is that it can damage the immune
system.
-
And it is known
that chemotherapy can damage DNA.
And does chemotherapy
alter the nature of cancer cells?
Can it, for example,
trigger a change from an estrogen sensitive cancer cell to a
triple negative cell - much harder to treat?
And then there is that
risk that chemotherapy might spread cells around the body.
Finally, there is increasing evidence to show that chemotherapy may
hasten the death of a number of patients.
Drug companies, cancer charities and doctors recommend chemotherapy
because there is big money in it. The least forgivable of these are
the cancer charities which exist to protect people but which are
ruthless exploiters of patients.
As always the medical literature is confusing but in the 'Annuals of
Oncology' I found this:
'the upfront use of
chemotherapy does not seem to influence the overall outcome of
the disease'.
Most doctors won't tell
you this, or even admit it to themselves, but cancer drugs are
killing up to 50% of patients in some hospitals.
A study by Public Health
England and Cancer Research UK found that 2.4% of breast cancer
patients die within a month of starting chemotherapy.
The figures are even
worse for patients with lung cancer where 8.4% of patients die
within a month when treated with chemotherapy.
When patients die that
quickly, I feel that it is safe to assume that they were killed by
the treatment not the disease. At one hospital the death rate for
patients with lung cancer treated with chemotherapy was reported at
over 50%.
Naturally, all the
hospitals which took part in the study insisted that chemotherapy
prescribing was being done safely.
If we accept this then we
must also question the validity of chemotherapy.
The study showed
that the figures are particular bad for patients who are in poor
general health when they start treatment...
Next think about this.
In the UK, the National Health Service publishes comprehensive
guidelines on what must be done if chemotherapy drugs are spilt.
There are crisis
emergency procedures to be followed if chemotherapy drugs fall on
the floor.
And yet these drugs
are put into people's bodies.
And residues of these
dangerous chemicals are excreted in urine and then end up in the
drinking water supply. (I explained several decades ago how
prescription drug residues end up in our drinking water.)
It is hardly surprising
that many patients being treated with chemotherapy report that their
quality of life has plummeted.
The standard oncology approach to cancer is to give chemotherapy and
then wait and see if the cancer returns. If it does then more
chemotherapy is prescribed.
The tragedy is that for
so many patients chemotherapy will do more harm than good.
Astonishingly, a quarter of cancer patients die of heart attacks -
often triggered by deep vein thrombosis and by emboli and brought on
by the physical stress of chemotherapy.
But these deaths are not
included in the official statistics - either for cancer or, just as
importantly, for chemotherapy.
It is no exaggeration to
say that the establishment fiddles the figures to suit its own
largely commercial ends - extolling the virtues of drug company
products at every opportunity and never failing to throw doubt on
any remedy which might threaten the huge cancer industry
Here's another thing you might not know.
During
the lockdowns
and concerns about Covid-19, patients who were on chemotherapy
were taken off their treatment.
They were told that
since their treatment would affect their immune systems they
would be more vulnerable to the coronavirus.
That's an important
admission because the one thing we know for certain is that a
healthy immune system is vital for fighting cancer.
Doctors probably won't
tell you any of this but they won't deny it because it is all true.
The bottom line is that treatments described in clinical trials,
paid for by drug companies and generally reviewed by doctors with
drug company links, and then published in medical journals which
accept huge amounts of drug company advertising, are the only
treatments the medical profession accepts.
There is much talk about
'peer review' trials but all this means is that another doctor or
two, with drug company links, will have looked at the paper and
given it their approval.
The word 'corrupt' doesn't come close to describing this whole
incestuous system.
Anyone who wants to have chemotherapy should have it.
I'm not trying
to dissuade anyone from using whatever drugs they believe might help
them.
I'm only interested in
providing unbiased, independent information which might help
patients make the right decision for themselves.
But too often, I fear, patients beg for treatment, completely
understandably, because they want something to be done and because
they have been misled by the drug company inspired, and paid for,
hype about chemotherapy.
And doctors provide that
treatment, even though a little research would tell them that they
may be doing more harm than good.
There are a very few
cancers which can be treated well with chemotherapy - but they are
very few and they are unfairly and unreasonably promoted as success
stories by the drug companies and their shills.
The thing that is forgotten is that chemotherapy can badly damage
the patient's body's own protections - and with some patients may,
therefore, do infinitely more harm than good.
Every patient should
decide for themselves - and discuss with their doctors the
evidence for and against chemotherapy in their situation.
But I think that all
patients are entitled to be provided with the background
information they would need to help that process of assessment.
Tragically, however, the
ignorance about chemotherapy is, sadly, widespread and all
pervasive...
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