Originally published March 21 2004
Sham cancer industry relies on unproven diagnostic tests to scare people
into cancer treatments
by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor
The anti-cancer industry in the United States is largely a sham. Read,
"The Cancer Industry" by Ralph Moss, a former high-level researcher at
the National Institutes of Health. Here's how the cancer scam works:
cancer industry operatives rely on entirely unproven cancer "screening"
tests that have absolutely no scientific merit. (In fact, mammograms
have been shown to actually cause cancer.) These tests produce a
large number of false positives, which are then shared with patients.
These patients are then herded into consultations with surgeons who,
naturally, recommend radical anti-cancer surgical procedures like
mastectomies. Click here for an
article discussing why many mastectomies are entirely unnecessary.
Or, in many cases, the patients are scared into other radical
anti-cancer procedures like chemotherapy or radiation therapy. The whole
system exploits patients for no reason other than to create profits for
hospitals, pharmaceutical companies and cancer specialists, and it all
starts with those "free" cancer screenings. What a brilliant gimmick!
Let's face it: 90% of all cancers are entirely preventable through
nutrition and exercise. People don't need useless cancer screening
scams, toxic chemotherapy, unproven surgical procedures and a health
care system designed primarily to financially exploit the public. What
people need are healthy, natural foods, free from metabolic disruptors,
regular physical exercise, and major stress reduction programs. That's
the cure to cancer. We don't need a gigantic cancer "industry." What we
need is to stop giving ourselves cancer through our foods and
environment.
Some forms of cancer screening encouraged within the health service
have not been scientifically proven to cut deaths and may do more harm
than good, a leading doctor says today.
Malcolm Law of the Wolfson Institute of Preventive Medicine says
prostate specific antigen (PSA) blood tests for prostate cancer, and
self-examination of the breasts and testes are forms of cancer screening
that have not been shown to work.
In the case of the PSA blood test for prostate cancer, not only will
it make men anxious, but it could end in them receiving treatment that
could make them incontinent and impotent.
Prof Law, writing an editorial in the British Medical Journal, says
there is no published evidence that the PSA test reduces mortality.
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