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At the end, the article states the young boy is a Husker fan...Must beat cancer

David3464

Red Shirt
5 Year Member
http://www.foxnews.com/health/2017/...ng-photo-10-year-old-son-fighting-cancer.html

So sad to hear about children that have cancer. I have heard of cancer treatments, such as 'hemp oil' that actually kill the cancer cells in many cases, but of course they are not approved. I would try anything...to help a cancer patient. And I would definitely look at the non-chemo cures such as 'hemp oil'. Let's say prayers for this boy and all those who are going through the battle of having cancer. Show support for this young Husker fan!
 








Many articles online about it. Look up hemp oil anti-cancer treatment. Here's three:

https://www.cancertutor.com/hemp_oil/
http://www.naturalhealth365.com/hemp-oil.html/
http://www.cureyourowncancer.org/

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life...-oil-can-hurt-more-than-help/article20946140/

Snake oil. I'm not here to rain on anyone's parade, but anyone can make any claim on the internet, and anyone can make any claim about a supplement. Expending your precious energy on hocum is wasted energy.

The article:

Internet medicine, conspiracy theories and misinterpretation of medical evidence are a dangerous mix.

That became all too clear in the case of an Ottawa father who, last month, was officially denied a say in his 18-month-old son’s treatment. The boy had been diagnosed with leukemia and the doctors recommended chemotherapy. The father refused.
The child’s disease – acute lymphoblastic leukemia – has a 95-per-cent cure rate when chemotherapy, the standard front-line treatment, is used.

But the boy’s father wanted him to be treated with hemp oil instead, an idea he got from Rick Simpson, a Canadian celebrity in cannabis circles who claims that hemp oil can cure cancer and numerous other afflictions. As a helpful caveat, Simpson’s website is careful to point out that while hemp oil can cure disease, it will not provide those who take it with eternal life.

But this is not the first or only case of hemp oil being used in place of a proven conventional treatment. In recent months, the movement to embrace hemp oil as a cure-all “natural” remedy that can heal without any of the toxicity of traditional treatments has begun to take hold.

Hemp oil, also known as cannabis oil and hash oil, contains tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, a compound that’s known as a cannabinoid. Proponents claim that cannabinoids lock onto the body’s cannabinoid receptors to fight disease.

The concern over the growing popularity of hemp oil and cannabinoids more generally was enough to prompt the Canadian Cancer Society to put a warning on its website last fall warning about them. A Google search for “hemp oil cure” will yield about 245,000 results. Among those are convincing testimonials from people who beat all the odds to survive when they eschewed the traditional treatment in favour of hemp oil. The Ottawa father told a reporter at The Ottawa Citizen that he had so many facts about the proven abilities of hemp oil that he could “sink a battleship.”

So, what are the facts? There’s no end to the number of websites pointing to medical studies that show how hemp oil zaps tumours and kills cancer cells. The vast majority of the studies were conducted in mice, or on tissue in petri dishes, and the results of those kinds of studies often don’t translate well to humans. Cancer Research UK also combed through the evidence and pointed to one cannabinoid trial that involved humans. Nine people with advanced glioblastoma multiforme, a brain tumour, were given purified THC in their brains. The results showed that eight people had some response to the treatment, but all of the study participants died within a year. There’s no proof that the THC had a meaningful impact.

Dr. Charles Loprinzi, the Regis professor of breast-cancer research at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., has not studied hemp oil. But he’s seen plenty of examples of overhyped miracle “cures” that fail to live up to their promise. Even standard medical advances are hard to come by, with plenty of money and time spent on new drugs or treatments that ultimately fail to make a difference in patients.

“There are a lot of things that go by the wayside,” he said.

It’s hard not to get pulled in by the lure of fantastic promises, particularly in the face of grim diagnoses.

And it’s still possible that scientists will discover a certain cannabinoid is effective at targeting a certain disease, or works well in a certain group of patients. Much more research is being done in this area and it will be interesting to watch the results. It’s also worth noting that the scientists conducting the studies are typically using high-quality isolated cannabinoid compounds, not an oil they bought online or made in their basement.

Amid all the questions, one thing is clear. The peddling of Internet testimonials and the falsehoods that these miracle “cures” are a better alternative to conventional treatments doesn’t help anyone. It can only stand to hurt those who buy into the claims.
 
That was a great response. I have read or seen other "natural cures" or treatments, though for cancer, such as radio-frequency waves (60 Minutes did a story about that and its effectiveness, Joan Von Budwig's cancer treatment, etc...that tell me that there are other treatments that CAN cure cancer, without the toxic effects of chemotherapy. When I see patients die excruciating painful deaths while taking chemo (which certainly is hurting them too), I can't help thinking there are other approaches that work without its deadly side effects.
 



Much respect, Adam. This is why I am GBR always.

As the father of a child with a tumor, it is great to see all the support from former players from Nebraska. It means the world to the kids. We attended the Team Jack Gala last weekend and it was fantastic to see all the former Huskers there to support the brain cancer research fundraising effort. Lots of great people throughout the athletic department at NU.
 
As the father of a child with a tumor, it is great to see all the support from former players from Nebraska. It means the world to the kids. We attended the Team Jack Gala last weekend and it was fantastic to see all the former Huskers there to support the brain cancer research fundraising effort. Lots of great people throughout the athletic department at NU.

I'll be keeping your family in my thoughts as well, Aqua. That is one of my biggest fears as a parent. I love the way the Husker program and fans rally around each other in times of need. We may not agree on much and sometimes it gets nasty, but in the end we are all bonded together.
 
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