Saturday, October 22, 2005

What Is Cancer?

What Is Cancer?: "What Is Cancer?




Cancer is a process that has always effected animals, it is just as common in domestic and farm animals, birds and fishes as it is in humans. Western scientific medicine has been effective in minimising infectious diseases. Many of us are living longer and cancer has almost been accepted as a normal feature of the ageing process. But statistics do not bear this out. The incidence of cancer is increasing in all age groups.

Because cancer cells take some time to grow to a stage where they are a large enough mass to be identifiable, it might be 18 months to 3 years, even 30 years before the disease is diagnosed by a doctor. By then we can be more than half-way down the path to a terminal illness. Due to our psychological make-up we are often immobilised by the news.

We tend to minimise it or deny that it has happened to us. We get depressed. �Why me?� A cycle of immobilisation - minimisation - depression often occurs. Those who do break out of it and manage to accept the reality start testing for options, often �against the clock� find out that cancer is an awesome and complex subject providing a great example of opening a �whole can of worms�. Information overload, specialist language, ignorance of alternatives, vested interest, lack of co-operation, paradigm gaps, lack of access to specific information or treatment and a host of barriers such as language translation exist that prevent understanding the problem let alone the latest research.

Since an allopathic doctor (Western surgical doctor) is generally the first point of contact for this dis-ease, cancer is mostly treated only with chemotherapy, radiotherapy, surgery and more recent biological breakthroughs in hormone treatment. Despite billions spent on research these are basically the same options we had fifty years ago"

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Awesome blog on alternative cancer treatments. No one should have to go through the discomfort of radiation or chemo-therapy so blogs that offer lung cancer are a very valuable resource.

Thanks,
Jim

10:16 AM  

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