I know a woman who is now cancer free despite being diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer a few years ago - she attributes her cure mainly to laetrile taken intravenously - she got her product - and dosage - from Mexico (I forget which clinic) but she had to persuade a UK doctor to give her the IV - strictly unofficially!
Certainly the desciption of the research on laetrile in Ralph Moss's book (The Cancer Industry - an absolute must!) has always seemed persuasive.
Perhaps you could comment on whether or not there would be a problem taking laetrile and pancreatic enzymes simultaneously. I don't know why there would be.
Jonathan Chamberlain
--- On Fri, 8/15/08, VGammill <vgammill@adelphia.net> wrote:
From: VGammill <vgammill@adelphia.net>
Subject: Re: [cancercured] Re: Apricot pits -- how many?
To: cancercured@yahoogroups.com
Date: Friday, August 15, 2008, 4:06 PM
In 1991, sometime after the death of Harold Manner, I became the
medical director of the Manner clinic in Tijuana while also
supervising the chemistry in new product development for Cytopharma
de Mexico. I was initially quite skeptical of the value of laetrile,
but I sat down and read the many letters of appreciation for the
return to health and became convinced that there was much more to the
story. I still think that it is underappreciated as a treatment.
At the time the clinic had a 21-day protocol as did most of the
clinics. I assumed that this number was used because this was about
the maximum amount of time that patients would be willing to stay or
could afford. This might be true, but I have noticed over time that
those who stay in a clinic longer do much better than those who zip
in and out. An example is the Hoxey clinic. In the days of Harry
Hoxey the patients stayed at the clinic and routinely did very
well. Now the formula has been tamed and the patients fly in for a
few hours for a work up. They are issued the standard diet and
bottle of concentrated tonic. I just don't see the results that were
seen in the old days. Of course our food and our environment are
much more polluted than it was in Harry Hoxey's time.
A 21-day protocol stills seems very artificial, be it Harold Manner's
in Mexico or Ashot Khachatrian' s in Siberia. Still I think it is a
good idea for a patient to spend as much time as possible with a good
clinic. The patients who most impress me are those who move here
just to be close and sustain their remissions. I know that I have
trouble sleeping at night if a patient leaves before we have a clear
turn-around and even then I worry about how well they will adhere to
a protocol. Sometimes I think the will to survive is second only to
the will to be lazy.
Vincent
At 04:30 PM 8/14/2008, you wrote:
>This may also be of interest. it is a transcript of interview with
>Harold Manners where he discusses in some detail the protocol for b17
>with vit a and enzymes.
><http://www.whale. to/cancer/ manner.html>http://www.whale. to/cancer/ manner.html
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