See, now I know you didn't actually watch that Hoxsey documentary.rcs619 said:Also, and this is the interesting one, the FDA actually interviewed a bunch of people who claimed they had been cured of cancer by Hoxsey (three or four-hundred I believe). Turns out a lot of them never had cancer to begin with. He completely misdiagnosed them. Some of the ones who had been cured had been successfully treated for cancer *before* they even went to Hoxsey's clinics. People who actually went to him first, and had active cancer at the time were either dead, or still alive with cancer. The FDA never found a single case of anyone actually being cured by him.
Hoxsey never administered treatment himself, he always staffed his clinics with several maverick doctors and many nurses to run the facility. And every patient was biopsied before being admitted.
rcs619 said:So how about the Canadians? Because a group from the University of British-Columbia actually went to Hoxsey's clinic in Mexico to check the records of 71 Canadian citizens who'd been treated by him. They found that:
The ONE patient of Hoxsey's they found that *might* have been cured by his methods (a patient with skin cancer) had been physically disfigured by his treatment, in a way that could have been avoided had they sought out traditional surgical treatment.For over one-half of the [cancer] patients from British Columbia, the result [of treatment with the Hoxsey method] has been either death or progression of the disease. In nearly one-quarter there was no proof that the patient ever had cancer. Nearly one in ten of the patients had curative treatment before going to the Hoxsey Clinic. In only one case, an external cancer, was there any evidence at all that the Hoxsey treatment had an effect on the disease; in that case, better results could have been obtained by orthodox means.
So, does this mean that it isn't just a conspiracy of American medical interests, but now the Canadians are propping this up too for what I'm sure are nefarious reasons?
You think I haven't read what Wikipedia has to say about Hoxsey? Honestly? If you follow the footnote reference, you are redirected to a pretty famous site called Quackwatch, run by Stephen Barret, MD. This guy even thinks Vitamins are quackery.rcs619 said:Now you're intentionally twisting my words. I said that there hasn't been a single peer-reviewed piece of research to show that it's anything besides quackery. That doesn't mean that it's never been tested in the last 60 years. It has been tested, by multiple medical and anti-cancer organizations. It has even been tested on lab mice, and they found *no* difference in tumor growth between the untreated control mice and those given Hoxsey's treatment.
The only thing you've proven to me is that you haven't taken the time to actually watch the Hoxsey documentary.rcs619 said:Then again, I'm sure that'll just be proof of a government conspiracy to you.
Seriously, rcs, watch that documentary, then come back here and point specifically to any inconsistencies you find, and whether or not Hoxsey was just trying to take people on the ride of their lives.
At least compare the content in the documentary with Wikipedia, and see if the latter doesn't come off as just a tad biased.
If you aren't willing to at least do that, then we've really reached an impasse.