The chlorine dioxide compositions are administered (preferably, by injection) directly into the cancerous tumor and the resulting tumor is effectively eliminated from the patient or subject over a period of one to several days to a few weeks, often after a single injection or multiple injections at one time into the tumor. Often, an initial injection or multiple injections at one time are sufficient to dissolve the cancerous tumor. Often the cancer is eliminated (as evidenced by remission) in a period of no more than several days to about two-three months and does not recur.
We just had cancer in my family- not immediate family where I had any say in treatment. However, I was a very close observer and dutifully kept my mouth shut.
The cancer care is unbelievable. The treatment chosen was one of our country’s top care. But what I mean by unbelievable is HORRIBLE! And it doesn’t even work. The hospitals have teams of specialists. Which means NO ONE is responsible. They send in someone different every day. The experts tell you a bunch of mumbo jumbo and contradict the last person then ask if you have questions. Which you don’t because who takes notes- uh-We did. That’s how we knew this was B.S.. Many of the doctors were still wet behinf the ears and women- who started EVERY SENTENCE with the word, “So,.....”
“Okay um, So, here’s what we want to do.....[kill you]”
It was impersonal as all hell and money was spent. Like real money, because they have it.
I literally decided to save my family’s money by dying of cancer (if I got it) rather than enrich these bastards. And my insurance pool with appreciate it too.
This is a story I can’t share often enough. I watched this person literally disintegrate before my eyes. This person died of course.
It isn't just cancer. In his last years, my dad was on so many medications that he had trouble keeping track of them. He had meds for diabetes, cardio, depression, and sometimes anxiety. I'm sure there were interactions and side effects that reduced his quality of life. I lived far away and his day to day care was managed by mom and my brother, so I didn't push for changes in his medications. I think we all knew it wasn't ideal, but it sort of worked.
It just seems like most doctors these days follow a protocol for treating each condition but don't do much to customize the treatment or to address preventive treatment. Given the insurance mandates and liability, I guess I'm not surprised, but it is very frustrating. I suspect it robs doctors of a lot of job satisfaction. They spent all that time pursuing medical education only to be restricted to cookbook protocols.
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monababy_11 ago
GOogle is blocking this link. I had to go outside the link https://mmsforum.io/goto/cancers/32177-patent-us10105389b1-method-compositions-for-treating-cancerous-tumors-text
threesevens ago
From patent description:
Wow.
Ps37-27 ago
We just had cancer in my family- not immediate family where I had any say in treatment. However, I was a very close observer and dutifully kept my mouth shut.
The cancer care is unbelievable. The treatment chosen was one of our country’s top care. But what I mean by unbelievable is HORRIBLE! And it doesn’t even work. The hospitals have teams of specialists. Which means NO ONE is responsible. They send in someone different every day. The experts tell you a bunch of mumbo jumbo and contradict the last person then ask if you have questions. Which you don’t because who takes notes- uh-We did. That’s how we knew this was B.S.. Many of the doctors were still wet behinf the ears and women- who started EVERY SENTENCE with the word, “So,.....”
“Okay um, So, here’s what we want to do.....[kill you]”
It was impersonal as all hell and money was spent. Like real money, because they have it.
I literally decided to save my family’s money by dying of cancer (if I got it) rather than enrich these bastards. And my insurance pool with appreciate it too.
This is a story I can’t share often enough. I watched this person literally disintegrate before my eyes. This person died of course.
ladslassie ago
It isn't just cancer. In his last years, my dad was on so many medications that he had trouble keeping track of them. He had meds for diabetes, cardio, depression, and sometimes anxiety. I'm sure there were interactions and side effects that reduced his quality of life. I lived far away and his day to day care was managed by mom and my brother, so I didn't push for changes in his medications. I think we all knew it wasn't ideal, but it sort of worked.
It just seems like most doctors these days follow a protocol for treating each condition but don't do much to customize the treatment or to address preventive treatment. Given the insurance mandates and liability, I guess I'm not surprised, but it is very frustrating. I suspect it robs doctors of a lot of job satisfaction. They spent all that time pursuing medical education only to be restricted to cookbook protocols.
Ps37-27 ago
That’s a good point. Physicians specialize and it’s as if they have forgotten the body is one, symbiotic and systemic.