Consider safety of alternative therapy – Health Clinic

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: August 8, 2002

Q: I have read about some of the controversy surrounding alternative

medicine. Are there any valid alternative therapies? What do you think

of Dr. Lorraine Day’s approach to treating advanced cancer?

A: According to Steven Barrett, a Vancouver psychiatrist who runs the

website quackwatch.com, “alternative medicine has become the

politically correct term for the questionable practices formerly

labeled quack and fraudulent.” He said such therapies can be either

genuine, experimental or questionable.

Promoters of alternative therapy like to gain public support with a

Read Also

Close-up of the

Rural emergency room closures continue to be vexing problem

Staffing issues are at the root of disruptions and closures in hospital emergency departments, both in rural and urban Canadian locations.

conspiracy theory that the establishment, big business and drug

companies are plotting to keep them down for financial gain. But

doctors like myself or Barrett have nothing to gain financially by

recommending mainstream, proven medical treatments.

A genuine therapy is one that has met the scientific criteria for

safety and effectiveness and has passed a number of properly conducted

clinical trials. In these cases, the therapy is no longer alternative

by definition and has entered the realm of mainstream medical practice.

Some therapies are still in the experimental stage and have yet to be

proven effective. They may or may not be valid.

Questionable therapies are either ineffective or could be dangerous to

your health. Day’s approach to treating advanced cancer appears to fall

into this category, but it is still under investigation.

Day, a medical doctor from San Francisco, claims to have cured her own

advanced case of breast cancer by eating organically grown fresh fruits

and vegetables and drinking 13 or more glasses of blended raw

vegetables per day. Her method is similar to that of the Mexican Gerson

clinic that I have written about before.

The Gerson clinic allows some cooked vegetables and recommends coffee

enemas, which cause severe dehydration in cancer patients.

Three-quarters of Day’s diet consists of organic raw fruits and

vegetables. She also recommends enemas, but of plain water, which is a

little safer.

Both the Gerson clinic and Day claim they can improve the functioning

of the body’s immune system with these diets. The problem is that most

cancers have nothing to do with a poorly functioning immune system.

There are some exceptions, such as Karposi’s sarcoma, a rare tumour

found in AIDS patients.

The immune system fights any foreign proteins that enter the body, such

as bacteria or allergens. Cancer cells do not contain a foreign protein

as they are formed from the body’s own cells “gone wrong.” The immune

system does not recognize them as abnormal.

Day’s cancer probably went into remission, or was cured by the surgery

she had. She refused radiation and chemotherapy.

I know a number of patients who have had the same degree of breast

cancer who are still alive after 10 years or more. They all took the

normal medical treatments, and most of them attended group therapy at

the Cross Cancer Institute in Edmonton, which

uses conventional methods of treatment.

Clare Rowson is a medical doctor with a practice near Belleville, Ont.

Her columns are intended for general information only. Individuals are

encouraged to also seek the advice of their own doctor regarding

medical questions and treatments.

explore

Stories from our other publications