Experience...especially of the last 10 to 12 years, says never give the medics any excuse to examine your most private self. They are not doing it for your benefit, very often...
without even reading the whole article, I would like to mention a Stack a while ago, mentioning that 6 out of 10 cancer diagnoses are in fact fungus-related, the author had photos to show this, and came to the conclusion that the 'cancer' patients taking ivermectin had all fungus infection, since it that is what it is for. Most oncologists only know the pocket filling butcher-poison-burn method and won't even mention, that quite some cancers react to changes in diet and lifestyle - just this weekend I read a person who got a death sentence from the oncologist, and healed from the cancer doing that. A doctor who gives you a death sentence should be banned anyway.
100%, especially the last sentence. Many times when the doctor gives the death sentence, that's when the patient dies. Not because the doctor is that good or can read the future, but because the patient gives up. There is so much to be said about hope and belief and how your brain responds to your thoughts. Besides making healthy lifestyle changes (physically, emotionally, & spiritually), people need to believe that they can heal.
Excellent article. I have a colon cancer screening kit that's been sitting in my closet for over a month now. I have been debating on whether to use it or not because even if they did say it was positive, I would refuse any treatment or retesting. So, why do it in the first place? Just to please the doctor? I was thinking about sending the kit back, unused and unopened. What do you think?
Sheila, I had the same exact situation. Got a "Cologuard" "test" kit -- unsolicited -- because my insurance company said it was "time."
GO AWAY!
The box sat. And sat. Me waffling between exasperation and fury over this. So, hubs said, "Just send it back." I, too, had left it unopened.
So, that's what I did. I had to take it to our local UPS Store. My unopened package surprised the woman at the counter. She could tell it had not been opened. I peeled back the first label to reveal the return label -- and sent it on its way. Unopened.
I got the UPS receipt saying it had been delivered. Then the calls started coming from the "lab" that Cologuard uses. Multiple calls that I ignored.
The audacity of these insurance companies and their lab "partners." You want me to do what? With 𝒘𝒉𝒂𝒕? Then you want me to send off this material -- containing my DNA -- in a box to who-the-hell knows where? To be opened by who-the-hell knows who? To be used for a cancer test? And then what happens to it??? To get a result I can just about guarantee would warrant "further testing?"
NOT happening!
I finally answered one of the calls that came in. To make sure she had the right person, the young woman asked for my street address and date of birth. Honest to God!
I told her I did not consent to have the test kit sent. I refused to send my DNA off to anyone for any reason. And...I am not about to give you my street address and date of birth -- over the phone!
How do I make these calls stop, I asked. She told me that I'd need to call my insurance company.
Oh, yeah. I'll get right on that.
So. Up to you, of course, what you do with your kit, Sheila, but that's the story of mine. :)
I , too, got my unsolicited Cologard 'shit in a box' kit. Kept it as a souvineer. If you do your research, you find there is a 13 percent chance of false positive, or 8 Percent chance of false negative and either way you are advised to consult with your doctor on how to proceed who will inevitably recommend a colonscopy. So what was the point? $$
I read somewhere a while ago (maybe on Substack) that somebody sent a sample back...a sample of their dog's poop. 🤭 Maybe that's not funny to some, but I found it quite amusing.
I recieved one of these postal unsolicited bowel test through the post, well over 20 years ago, I noted that a Veterinarian was in charge of this wonderful new Service from the Government meaning The taxpayers.
I immediately sat down outside the Post Office scribbled/blanked out my address and wrote REMOVE ME IMMEDIATELY from this List and NEVER contact me again,
most people are too numb to even ask questions to their doctors, and certainly will not do any research even though plenty is freely available. Mention to a person with cancer diagnosis that there are lots of other methods, Moerman, Budwig, Huxsey, etc. and you are called a stupid cow, and the doctors that heal are called quacks. Not forgetting the friend who had a pap smear, after 3 weeks had serious abdominal pain, and had to undergo emergency surgery. 3 weeks later the smear came back Good. I asked the OB how come and he said, if we take the test on the left and there is cancer on the right, we don't see it. Was my last visit.
Without a medical diagnosis, the treatments would be considered assault with deadly weapons and attempted murder. After the diagnosis, injecting known harmful chemicals and bombardment with radiation becomes legal …… and profitable.
My husband was diagnosed with AML (an aggressive form of leukemia) November 2024. Looking back at his blood work, two primary care physicians missed it starting in September 2021. His dermatologist was the person who figured out he had some kind of cancer, took an oncologist eight months to figure out what kind.
Also, his PCP missed his T2D diagnosis with a glucose reading of 300 (yes, I can provide proof). Took a visit to the ER with thrush to figure out what was wrong. Eventually he radically changed his diet and now has an A1c of 5.5 with no medication since July 2024.
But, his PCP was quick to write a script for a statin and chew him out for not taking it. Slightly elevated cholesterol isn't a reason for alarm except for the $$$ the PCP gets awarded.
I recently got banned from a new cardiologist office for not doing the tests that the NP wanted me to. She got upset and started yelling at me, then wrote it off as my fault in my records.
It's not my first time and I am sure it won't be my last! 😉😁
If they detect pseudo cancer as cancer, and then treat it as though it is cancer, they not only get the $$$$$ for administering unnecessary treatment, they get better response/success rates.
Test for nutrient deficiencies like Vitamin D. Don't have a biopsy done, it spreads the cancer cells.
Immune system produces E-Cadherin a sticky substance that surrounds cancer cells if your vitamin D level is not in the cellar. Then the T cells go to work to kill the abnormal cells that are produced daily in our bodies. Especilly true of prostate cancer.
Gerd Gigerenzer's books offer an intuitive way of understanding medical test fraud:
A medical test is 95% accurate and 1 out of 100 people have a disease (cancer, AIDS, COVID, etc.) If you test positive for said disease with this test, then what is the probability you really have this disease?
Gigerenzer says the vast majority of doctors say 95% but the answer is only 16%! The most intuitive way of understanding Bayesian conditional probability is to use natural frequencies. Then it should be intuitive the answer is 1/(1+~5)= 16%, not 95%! 1 out of 100 truly has the disease, but (100-1)x 5%= ~5 will falsely test positive.
Very few medical tests come close to 95% accuracy (and you could argue the PCR test accuracy is 0%) which means most "positive" results are FALSE. It's a different story, though, if you're actually sick and have symptoms in which case you should take the tests more seriously. But back in the 1980s, some people even committed suicide because they falsely tested positive for HIV.
I had a breast biopsy because of a "small spot" on my last mammogram... 5 years ago. The surgeon who performed the biopsy was furious at the number of false alarms. Needless to say, I haven't had any more screenings!
I don't do any type of testing for health concerns.
Same thing with me. So far so good 😊
Experience...especially of the last 10 to 12 years, says never give the medics any excuse to examine your most private self. They are not doing it for your benefit, very often...
without even reading the whole article, I would like to mention a Stack a while ago, mentioning that 6 out of 10 cancer diagnoses are in fact fungus-related, the author had photos to show this, and came to the conclusion that the 'cancer' patients taking ivermectin had all fungus infection, since it that is what it is for. Most oncologists only know the pocket filling butcher-poison-burn method and won't even mention, that quite some cancers react to changes in diet and lifestyle - just this weekend I read a person who got a death sentence from the oncologist, and healed from the cancer doing that. A doctor who gives you a death sentence should be banned anyway.
100%, especially the last sentence. Many times when the doctor gives the death sentence, that's when the patient dies. Not because the doctor is that good or can read the future, but because the patient gives up. There is so much to be said about hope and belief and how your brain responds to your thoughts. Besides making healthy lifestyle changes (physically, emotionally, & spiritually), people need to believe that they can heal.
Excellent article. I have a colon cancer screening kit that's been sitting in my closet for over a month now. I have been debating on whether to use it or not because even if they did say it was positive, I would refuse any treatment or retesting. So, why do it in the first place? Just to please the doctor? I was thinking about sending the kit back, unused and unopened. What do you think?
Sheila, I had the same exact situation. Got a "Cologuard" "test" kit -- unsolicited -- because my insurance company said it was "time."
GO AWAY!
The box sat. And sat. Me waffling between exasperation and fury over this. So, hubs said, "Just send it back." I, too, had left it unopened.
So, that's what I did. I had to take it to our local UPS Store. My unopened package surprised the woman at the counter. She could tell it had not been opened. I peeled back the first label to reveal the return label -- and sent it on its way. Unopened.
I got the UPS receipt saying it had been delivered. Then the calls started coming from the "lab" that Cologuard uses. Multiple calls that I ignored.
The audacity of these insurance companies and their lab "partners." You want me to do what? With 𝒘𝒉𝒂𝒕? Then you want me to send off this material -- containing my DNA -- in a box to who-the-hell knows where? To be opened by who-the-hell knows who? To be used for a cancer test? And then what happens to it??? To get a result I can just about guarantee would warrant "further testing?"
NOT happening!
I finally answered one of the calls that came in. To make sure she had the right person, the young woman asked for my street address and date of birth. Honest to God!
I told her I did not consent to have the test kit sent. I refused to send my DNA off to anyone for any reason. And...I am not about to give you my street address and date of birth -- over the phone!
How do I make these calls stop, I asked. She told me that I'd need to call my insurance company.
Oh, yeah. I'll get right on that.
So. Up to you, of course, what you do with your kit, Sheila, but that's the story of mine. :)
I , too, got my unsolicited Cologard 'shit in a box' kit. Kept it as a souvineer. If you do your research, you find there is a 13 percent chance of false positive, or 8 Percent chance of false negative and either way you are advised to consult with your doctor on how to proceed who will inevitably recommend a colonscopy. So what was the point? $$
What you did was the right thing. Lets these bastards know that you're on to them.
Thanks. I appreciate the information.
I read somewhere a while ago (maybe on Substack) that somebody sent a sample back...a sample of their dog's poop. 🤭 Maybe that's not funny to some, but I found it quite amusing.
What were the results? 😆 🤣
I recieved one of these postal unsolicited bowel test through the post, well over 20 years ago, I noted that a Veterinarian was in charge of this wonderful new Service from the Government meaning The taxpayers.
I immediately sat down outside the Post Office scribbled/blanked out my address and wrote REMOVE ME IMMEDIATELY from this List and NEVER contact me again,
Dropped it into the PO Postal box, end of story,
So, I wouldn't have to take it to UPS? Just drop it off with a "return to sender" at the post office?
Send it back with a link to this article.
Is there real informed consent concerning the cumulative impact of radiation exposure from the screenings?
most people are too numb to even ask questions to their doctors, and certainly will not do any research even though plenty is freely available. Mention to a person with cancer diagnosis that there are lots of other methods, Moerman, Budwig, Huxsey, etc. and you are called a stupid cow, and the doctors that heal are called quacks. Not forgetting the friend who had a pap smear, after 3 weeks had serious abdominal pain, and had to undergo emergency surgery. 3 weeks later the smear came back Good. I asked the OB how come and he said, if we take the test on the left and there is cancer on the right, we don't see it. Was my last visit.
and the Airport and other screenings
Without a medical diagnosis, the treatments would be considered assault with deadly weapons and attempted murder. After the diagnosis, injecting known harmful chemicals and bombardment with radiation becomes legal …… and profitable.
Great comment.
🎯
May be one of the best things I've ever read! Thank you and God bless you.
Article dated 2004.
How many listened then?
How many are listening now?
This is the first time I have seen this article.
My husband was diagnosed with AML (an aggressive form of leukemia) November 2024. Looking back at his blood work, two primary care physicians missed it starting in September 2021. His dermatologist was the person who figured out he had some kind of cancer, took an oncologist eight months to figure out what kind.
Also, his PCP missed his T2D diagnosis with a glucose reading of 300 (yes, I can provide proof). Took a visit to the ER with thrush to figure out what was wrong. Eventually he radically changed his diet and now has an A1c of 5.5 with no medication since July 2024.
But, his PCP was quick to write a script for a statin and chew him out for not taking it. Slightly elevated cholesterol isn't a reason for alarm except for the $$$ the PCP gets awarded.
I recently got banned from a new cardiologist office for not doing the tests that the NP wanted me to. She got upset and started yelling at me, then wrote it off as my fault in my records.
It's not my first time and I am sure it won't be my last! 😉😁
If they detect pseudo cancer as cancer, and then treat it as though it is cancer, they not only get the $$$$$ for administering unnecessary treatment, they get better response/success rates.
Tech without comprehension, becoming tech instead of comprehension. Important points made there.
Excellent article.
Can you do one on OA? I, don't want crappy pills.
BTW: I've now Beat GERD and Type 2 Diabetes. A year free of Humalog, now unthethered from the Sencor.
Is OA Osteoarthritis? If so read the borax conspiracy, it has helped many with arthritis.
Test for nutrient deficiencies like Vitamin D. Don't have a biopsy done, it spreads the cancer cells.
Immune system produces E-Cadherin a sticky substance that surrounds cancer cells if your vitamin D level is not in the cellar. Then the T cells go to work to kill the abnormal cells that are produced daily in our bodies. Especilly true of prostate cancer.
Gerd Gigerenzer's books offer an intuitive way of understanding medical test fraud:
A medical test is 95% accurate and 1 out of 100 people have a disease (cancer, AIDS, COVID, etc.) If you test positive for said disease with this test, then what is the probability you really have this disease?
Gigerenzer says the vast majority of doctors say 95% but the answer is only 16%! The most intuitive way of understanding Bayesian conditional probability is to use natural frequencies. Then it should be intuitive the answer is 1/(1+~5)= 16%, not 95%! 1 out of 100 truly has the disease, but (100-1)x 5%= ~5 will falsely test positive.
Very few medical tests come close to 95% accuracy (and you could argue the PCR test accuracy is 0%) which means most "positive" results are FALSE. It's a different story, though, if you're actually sick and have symptoms in which case you should take the tests more seriously. But back in the 1980s, some people even committed suicide because they falsely tested positive for HIV.
Excellent article!
Thank you 🙏
I had a breast biopsy because of a "small spot" on my last mammogram... 5 years ago. The surgeon who performed the biopsy was furious at the number of false alarms. Needless to say, I haven't had any more screenings!