Introduction
I’ll write a series of posts in which I'll introduce alternative cancer care. I’ll explain why it can be a rigorous form of biohacking rather than mere quackery. I’ll review books popular in the alternative cancer care world like: Surviving Terminal Cancer by Ben Williams and How to Starve Cancer by Jane McLelland, both written by cancer survivors who overcame terminal stage 4 cancer. I’ll review the historical development of combination chemotherapy. I’ll review some famous cases e.g. the virologist Beta Halassy curing herself via self-experimentation. And I’ll review select phase 1/2 clinical trials. Throughout, I’ll criticize the FDA and the medical establishment for being too risk-averse, for having the wrong framework for clinical... (read 4252 more words →)
Great article! A related thought occured to me after I read the 'Death Of Cancer' by Vince DeVita. One reason the NCI program was successful is because the NCI operated a research hospital; the hospital was free for the patients in exchange for their participation in clinical research programs. Physician-scientists developed protocols, including combination chemotherapy, while basically experimenting on patients in ways that would not be allowed today. With our current regulations, its inconceivable that combination chemotherapy could've been developed.
My takeaway from that was that perhaps we could re-create a similar institution, but for dogs, as a circumvention measure [I continue to think that the best animal disease model for humans are... (read more)